A Bulls fan celebrates Chicago's record-breaking 70th
win.
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The honor of being recognized as "the greatest team in NBA history" is
one fans can debate endlessly, but supporters of the 1995-96 Chicago Bulls can point to one objective
yardstick in making their case.
The Bulls' 72-10 record and .878 winning percentage during the 1995-96
regular season was the best in NBA history and stands as one of the great team accomplishments in all of sports.
The Bulls eclipsed the marks set by the 1971-72 Los Angeles Lakers, who went 69-13 for a .841 percentage.
The Bulls won 18 games in a row in one stretch of the 1995-96 season and on Feb. 2 their record stood
at 41-3. They became the first team in NBA history to win 70 games with an 86-80 victory at Milwaukee on April
16.
The Bulls finished 39-2 at the United Center and 33-8 on the road, their 33 road victories the most
ever. They continued to steamroll the opposition in the playoffs. They lost only one game in series wins over
Miami, New York and Orlando, setting up a Finals matchup with Seattle.
Jordan was back in the NBA Finals.
After an eighteen-month layoff from basketball, a brief dip into a professional baseball career, and a comeback
which fell just short of the 1995 NBA Finals, he wasted little time putting Chicago in position to win a fourth
championship. Chicago won the first three games, before Seattle rallied to send the series back to the United
Center for Game 6.
Back at home, Jordan gave the Chicago fans what they came to see. He responded to the
87-75 clinching win by falling to the court as tears streamed down. He then rushed into the Bulls'
lockerroom, where he allowed more of the emotion he'd kept bottled inside to come spewing forth while his
teammates celebrated.
Though he had returned to lead the NBA in scoring with 30.4 per game, and had been
named NBA MVP for the fourth time, it was by leading his team to the title he'd proven to himself that he could
come all the way back. Coincidentally, the Bulls wrapped up the title on Father's Day, an important day to a man
who'd lost his father, James Jordan, before suddenly retiring from basketball in 1994.
"I was blessed
to be able to get the game ball of the championship game and bring a championship back to Chicago," Jordan said
later. "It happened on Father's Day, which makes it even more special. There's no way to really describe it."
By the time Jordan rejoined the Bulls' celebration, the entire team was perched atop the
scorer's table, sharing their moment with the United Center fans. They then moved to a podium in front of the
table, where NBA Commissioner David Stern presented team owner Jerry Reinsdorf with his fourth Championship
trophy in six years. And somewhere down the line, Jordan got the trophy and hugged it. His trophy.