Possible but seems kind of petty. Reinsdorf can do what he wants as the owner. He can override Krause and offer what he wants to get Jackson to stay with the promise of keeping the band together if he thought it was the right thing to do.I believe that if Reinsdorf had fired Krause he could have gotten everyone to come back for 1 more year.
But that was the only way.
Longwinded answer to say nothing that refuted anything I said.Before the season started -- Krause told Phil Jackson it was his last year, even if he went 82-0. Krause wanted Jackson gone after 1997 -- Of course, they won another title, so they brought him back on a 1 year deal. Jackson was more ready to move on than Jordan.
Why do you think the players and coach always talked trash to Krause? He wanted to tear the team up multiple times, but they kept winning titles. And why after every game -- MJ was asked the same question? Is this his final year? It was in the writing -- everyone knew it was coming.
The title of the documentary was literally the name Jackson gave the season before it started. Jackson knew it was his last year (or Last Dance), MJ knew it was his last year, Pippen knew he'd be leaving to get that contract he wanted the Bulls to give him a few years ago. The whole, we wanted to come back or everyone would have Signed a one year deal was never happening. As a fan, I WISH they would have. But outside of Jordan -- the rest of the players wanted to go make money on the open market.
And the talk of Jordan not wanting to undertake a new challenge is foolish. He couldn't have went to another team. Chicago was paying Jordan what would be the equivalent to a team paying a player $130 million for one year today (He made almost 34 million in 1998 and the salary cap was 26.9 million).
In that case not sure it was Pippen......you'd have had to convince Reinsdorf (or Kraus) to pay him that much and I think they might have seen what actually happened. Pippen was ready to regress, as he did in each of his last 6 seasons.Yeah -- that is definitely a possibility. Though I just don't see how they'd convince Pippen. Reinsdorf would have had to pay him $25 million or more to get him to even think about it.
Maybe he could have made an exception but I can see that philosophy in a league with guaranteed contracts. The busts don't give money back.And that's where Reinsdorf deserves some blame.
As the owner, he had the ability to put a stop to it at any point and he never did.
It was actually him who prevented Pippen's contract from being re-negotiated. His philosophy was, once the contract is signed, I don't want to see you until it's up.
Possible but seems kind of petty. Reinsdorf can do what he wants as the owner. He can override Krause and offer what he wants to get Jackson to stay with the promise of keeping the band together if he thought it was the right thing to do.
Players could then go on ripping Krause in front of him and behind his back as they always did...why would they care if he was still around if it was just one more year to go for #7?
Ummmmmm.........disliking him is fine. Idea he wouldn't play if he was still there is petty.Ummmm....
Pippen’s reasons for disliking Krause were not petty.
Even still, Pippen and Jordan both were very petty men.
Actually, it was the opposite.
The Heat quickly raised ticket prices, and/or yanked a bunch of inventory from normal sales avenues to sell through 3rd party sites as soon as they knew LeBron was coming.
They knew if would have a direct impact on pricing out some people from being able to attend games.
So, once this event was created, they basically went out of their way to make sure that group of people had first access to the tickets for that night.
Season ticket holders were not given any preference.
Sponsors and Premium seat holders were invited.
I know it was Rileys idea. Whether the players objected or not, I'm not sure.
As far as TV, of course, but it was just local. ESPN, etc got hold of it, and it blew up nationally.
I viewed it for what it was. Heat fans were hyped up and the players were there to celebrate with them.
I understood why 'outsiders' thought it was disrespectful etc, but whatever.
Maybe he could have made an exception but I can see that philosophy in a league with guaranteed contracts. The busts don't give money back.
Ummmmmm.........disliking him is fine. Idea he wouldn't play if he was still there is petty.
Were his reasons for disliking him he would not renegotiate his deal (which would be as much or more on Reinsdorf)?
It compares with the Lue contract offer.Hard to know what to make of this as it doesn't say what Jackson was offered. Were they supposed to make their best offer first?
I don't think it compares much to the Lue situation.
To me, the idea Krause gets all the flak is all I didn't like. I mean, he built a 55 win team solely with guys he acquired. Phillip built the Knicks and MJ built the Bobcats/Hornets. Krause drafted Pippen, MJ drafted Adam Morrison. It's possible Krause knows more than both of them when it comes to building a team.
Yeah. I don't know the financials for NBA teams in the 90's, but I don't know if that would have been a possibility. If they paid MJ and Pippen the same as Jordan's 1998 salary -- that'd be $68 million in just those two players and a salary cap of only $27 million.
I think the Bulls may have lost money to try and field a team in 1999.
I agree 100%. But I do think that exceptions should be made when a player is as grossly underpaid as Pippen was.
Having said that, it's also not me who has to re-negotiate that contract and pay that money...so maybe I'd have a different point of view if I did.
Then firing Krause would have been a show of good faith on Reinsdorf’s part to show that he was committed to bringing everybody back.
Because Krause was committed to rebuilding. And he declared his intention publicly on multiple occasions.
It compares with the Lue contract offer.
Both were offended because they thought their championship pedigree warranted a longer deal/ higher per year salary.
Agree with the other factors....
what did he let go on too long? I can understand making a guy who has a guaranteed deal honor his contract. sure, he could have renegotiated it, but as mentioned players who don't live up to their deals don't give money back.The big ass pink elephant in the room is Pippen.
He wasn't coming back for a 1 year balloon payment when the Blazers had 100 mil on the table.
Too much had happened by then, he was done.
The Owner let the shit go on way to long.
Longwinded answer to say nothing that refuted anything I said.
AFTER the season the fellow who owns the team asked Jackson to stay and Jackson turned him down saying "it's time to go."
By challenge for MJ I meant staying and - oh, the horror - playing for a different coach. Not leaving.
At no point did I threaten to ban you.
But I'll tell you what I can do for you. I can see that your banned from a hell of a lot more than a thread if that'll make you happy and fulfill your desire to be an e-martyr.