NBA Dynasty Series – Chicago Bulls – The 1990s
Thursday, April 29, 2010 11:31- Officially Licensed
- Highest Quality Recording
Description
Discipline, dedication and desire were the hallmarks of the Chicago Bulls of the 1990s. Capturing six (6) NBA titles between 1991and 1998, the Bulls were the most dominant and arguably the greatest basketball team ever assembled. Enjoy over 15 hours of spectacular highlights from those Championship seasons on 4 discs. And for the first time ever on DVD, see the greatest Finals games in Bulls championship history.Amazon.com
Over the course of 15 hours on four double-sided DVDs, Chicago Bulls: The 1990s documents the Bulls’ incredible run of six NBA championships in eight years led by the game’s greatest-ever player, Michael Jordan. Like the earlier DVD release Ultimate Jordan, it collects a number of programs originally released on VHS, in this case the yearly highlight videos that summarized each of the six championship seasons, plus a five-minute introduction that covers the franchise starting in the 1960s and ending with its drafting of Jordan. Whe… More >>
NBA Dynasty Series – Chicago Bulls – The 1990s

markoni says:
April 29th, 2010 at 2:31 pm
I dont know what they are thinking, but the Bulls dynasty and the Lakers dynasty pales in comparison to the Celtics dynasty which doesnt even have its own DVD. Save your money
Rating: 2 / 5
Ann Lesters says:
April 29th, 2010 at 3:04 pm
Magic on the break, Worthy fills the lane, Magic to Worthy… here comes MJ… and Worthy takes it over MJ for the jam! Facial!…. Half-court set, Magic at point. Back door Coop-a-loop — over both MJ and Pippen! In their face!! That’s what time it is, baby! The Bulls will never be in the same class as the Lakers in their prime. But second best is not too shabby, and the Bulls deserve their props. Just get the Lakers DVDs first. And if a Celtics Dynasty DVD set was available, I’d get that just to see more Lakers games. But no Celts, so the Bulls must suffice. So, this is good stuff. Excellent team, footage, packaging and layout cannot be beat. One thing I’d change; the Bulls disc has 1991 NBA Finals Game 5. I’d prefer to see game 2; where the Bulls, after losing game 1, started to pull away… and MJ did the “I’m gonna dunk, no, think I’ll lay it up” move, and looked at the Laker bench like “whassup?!” as he ran back for defense. At that exact moment, all was crystal clear: The Bulls had turned it on and pulled ahead in the game, they would win the series (you could see it), and the Lakers were eclipsed — quite easily, once the Bulls changed gears. So, game 2 was the changing of the guard. Otherwise, great DVD set. But get the Lakers first, and see the greatest team ever!!! (And good ownership and management too
!!!)… And better looking cheerleaders and crowd…. Besides all that, full props to Da Bulls!
Rating: 5 / 5
Anonymous says:
April 29th, 2010 at 3:36 pm
Don’t get me wrong. This dvd set of the team of the 90’s, is magnificent. Even though I am a laker fan, I have great respect for what the Bulls did in the 90’s.
I purchased both NBA Dynasty Series DVD sets of the Lakers and Bulls. I watched one game from each set; Game 1 of Lakers vs. Sixers, and Game 6 of Bulls vs. Jazz. I was in awe of watching Lakers vs. Sixers from 1982. Just nonstop action, fast breaking and great fundamental plays from both teams. There was no constant one on one play or numerous isolations from one player or launching three pointers from 30 feet. These two teams stayed within themselves, took the open shot when they needed to. It amazes me that they could hit the perimeter shot with ease, whereas today’s players have a very difficult time doing. That was a great game, the best the NBA could offer at that particular time.
I wish I could’ve said the same of Bulls vs. Jazz game 6. WAtching these two teams going long stretches of struggling to score, or make passes, or take clean shots, was painful to watch. Too much attention to fancy play and dunks has hurt the fundamentals of the players. This game was a perfect example. A lot of people want to compare the Bulls to the great teams of the 80’s. Gimme a break. They couldn’t compete with the Lakers of the 80’s. Heck, they would have a very difficult time getting out of their own conference. The eastern conference was loaded in the early to mid 80’s, with Boston, Philadelphia, Milwaukee, New York, Atlanta, etc. The bulls were perfect for the 90’s, the era where the game began to decline.
I guess we can thank Pat Riley and the Knicks for that!!!
Rating: 5 / 5
Karol Kardach says:
April 29th, 2010 at 3:41 pm
I want this for my birthday – which is today !
UnBULLievable – as always The BULLS Michael AIR Jordan Scottie Pippen Dennis Rodman Phil Jackson are !!!!!!
)
I personally call those four guys The Golden Four
( For those who don’t get it: gold in olympics means absolute undeniable indisputable etc… “numero uno”
(and all the rest of The Band: do not be a sinner and do not forget about Horace Grant, John Paxon, B.J. Armstrong,
Bill Wellington, Ron Harper, Steve Kerr, Luc Longley, Toni Kukoc, )
Face it – no one gets any better then The BULLS !!!!!!
(P.S. and so no one moves over The BULLS)
Simply – words are not enough, no wonder, it’s The BULLS !!!!!!
By the way:
Creators of Amazon.com site seriously forgot about The BULLS when creating this “write a review” page
– hello, 5 stars ? – that’s good for the Lakers (the Lakers I mean which is Karim’s & Magic’s Lakers)
Get a grip, at least 6 * * * * * * here !!!!!!
Anyone needs any explanation ? – I don’t think so
OK, gotta go lace my AIR Jordans
Rating: 5 / 5
Daniel Strayer says:
April 29th, 2010 at 3:59 pm
No one should debate MJ’s stature as the game’s greatest, and his ability to suppress “God” (re: David Stern). And if you don’t like Bill Walton’s take on NBA hoops, join me at the back of the line.
But the competition MJ was up against being better than Larry or MJ’s day? Join yourself at the front of the line.
Where you should have just stayed with your argument, JF, is “MJ lifted an otherwise weak team” (i.e. Randy Brown running the point in 1999), and stayed away from the Boston never faced the same competition fluff that this page’s editors clearly should have removed themselves, if they were so allowed. You just can’t get away with that.
Call MJ better than Bird or Magic, and you’ll get no beef from me. Call the competition against MJ better than Bird’s or Magic’s (the fact they had to face each other so often on the grand stage should have tipped you off that you were heading down Bull Spit Alley), and you get reamed out here like Zell Miller on Chris Matthews.
Magic, at one time or another, had the following supporting cast during that 1980s run: Kareem, McAdoo, Cooper, Wilkes, Norm Nixon and B-Scott, plus Swen Nater (a former All-Star) off the bench, and the only forward that could have been better than Bird in the 1980s, one James Worthy.
Bird had the likes of the following to help: Parish, D-J, McHale, Scott Wedman, M.L. Carr (both former All-Stars), the immortal Cornbread Maxwell, Walton (Sixth Man of the Year in 1986) and Ainge (don’t tell me you’d rather have B.J. Armstrong…you know better than that).
These guys went head-to-head three times in the Finals. And you dare hint that they never had the same level of competition.
Boston had to come out of a difficult Eastern Conference every year, staving off the likes of Phily (Mo Cheeks, Malone, the Jones brothers not related, Chocolate Thunder, Andrew “The Boston Strangler” Toney, and a little legend nicknamed the Doctor) and Milwaukee (Sid Moncrief, Junior Bridgeman, Marques Johnson, Bob Lanier, plus Dave Cowens, Brian Winters, Phil Ford, Alton Lister, and Paul Pressey off the bench at some point).
L.A., meanwhile, had to navigate past Phoenix (Walter Davis, Paul Westphal, Truck Robinson, Larry Nance, Mo Lucas, D-J until 1983, Alvan Adams, Kyle Macy, James Edwards) and San Antonio (Iceman, James Silas, Artis Gilmore, Mike Mitchell, Gene Banks and Johnny Moore).
Look up the names and numbers on basketball-reference.com: These aren’t run of the mill contributors like the Jazz’ Adam Keefe, Greg Foter, Chris Morris, Shandon Anderson, Howard Eisley or the immortal Greg Ostertag. Or a Suns’ contributing cast of Richard Dumas, Oliver Miller, Tom Chambers and Ced “The Night Yachtsman” Ceballos. Those guys shunned the spotlight like Howard Hughes on the red carpet.
You’re going to tell me that this is the best the league had to offer in competition, and they still needed six games to close out most of these series? You’re going to say K.C. Jones, Pat Riley and Billy Cunningham wouldn’t have run a bench-deprived squad like that off the damn floor? That’s the better competition the Bulls had to face?
All respect to six titles in eight years, but the Celtics, Lakers and 76ers had a hell of a tough time back then, because the competition was pretty damned good. Stuff your argument in the Bulls trash bin in your room.
Rating: 4 / 5