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UTAH JAZZ - CHICAGO BULLS: NBA Finals Game 2
Chicago 97, Utah 85 (June 4, 1997)

CHICAGO -- The Chicago Bulls did indeed disassemble something: their once formidable opponent.

Michael Jordan was at his unstoppable best, nearly getting a triple double, the Bulls played team defense at the highest level and Chicago humbled the Utah Jazz 97-85 Wednesday night in Game 2 of the NBA Finals.

"We came out on the heels of what we did in the first game," Jordan said. "We basically stayed in the same focus as last game. Right from the beginning of the game through the end we maintained our defensive pressure."

The victory came amid considerable handwringing in Chicago over the future of the Bulls, whose coach, best player and leading rebounder will be free agents at season's end.

But if Game 2 proved anything, it's that Chicago management would have to be crazy to break up this bunch. This was the Bulls at their best in every facet of the game.

Jordan, who had 38 points, 13 rebounds and nine assists to barely miss the first NBA Finals triple double of his career, simply toyed with everything the Jazz threw at him.

As the crowd once again chanted "M-V-P, M-V-P" for Jordan, he burned Jeff Hornacek for 11 first-quarter points, scored nine in the second, primarily against rookie Shandon Anderson, when the Bulls pulled away for good, and added 10 more in the third as Bryon Russell tried to guard him.

By the time the fourth quarter arrived, the Bulls didn't even need him. But Jordan stayed in and went for the triple-double, barely missing it when Scottie Pippen blew a wide-open layup with 3« minutes left, a 3-pointer with 2:15 to go and a jumper in the lane a minute later, all of which would have given Jordan his 10th assist.

"Pippen made me aware of it when he missed that layup. ... That's OK," Jordan said.

"I should have made the layup," Pippen admitted.

The series resumes Friday night at Salt Lake City, where the Jazz have a 21-game winning streak. Utah will be trying to become the first team in 20 years and the third overall to come back from an 0-2 deficit in the finals.

They'll need something out of Karl Malone, who couldn't have looked less like an MVP. Malone actually gave a huge indication of the way this game would go when he stepped to the foul line 93 seconds into the game and missed two free throws.

It was a repeat of his failure at the end of Game 1, and a roaring United Center crowd couldn't have been more pleased as it laughed at Malone while he ran downcourt.

Before long, the Bulls were doing some laughing of their own, with those oh-so-familiar smiles on their faces. And well they should be smiling.

Having won four of the last six titles, the Bulls seem to have an overwhelming edge in confidence. The Jazz, meanwhile, were passing up open shots on the outside, failing to penetrate inside and relying too much on Malone to carry the load.

He finished with 20 points on 6-for-20 shooting, and had 12 rebounds. Hornacek added 19 and John Stockton 14 for the Jazz, who never led and didn't cut their second-half deficit below double digits until 1:34 remained.

It wasn't enough to undo the damage inflicted primarily by Jordan, the four-time finals MVP who made the winning shot at the buzzer in Game 1 and seems to be on his way to a fifth award.

He shot 11-for-20 from the field and 15-for-21 at the line, and it got to a point in the second half where Jordan was looking down at his defender, giving him a grin and then making his moves with his tongue hanging out of his mouth.

Nobody else on Chicago did anything spectacular numbers-wise, but that didn't mean the rest of the team didn't contribute. Ron Harper scored 13 points and became the first player in a long time to contain Stockton.

Pippen scored only 10 points, with six rebounds and four assists, but he set the tone defensively for the Bulls by blocking the first shot of the game, a layup attempt by Russell.

It gave Chicago a rush of adrenalin that helped contribute to a game-opening 8-1 run, and the Bulls used their defense to overcome their one drought in the second quarter, when they missed nine straight shots.

Chicago took control of the game with a 12-0 run in the second quarter that made the score 43-29. The Bulls held the Jazz to just 31 points in the first half, one above the record-low for the finals.

The rest of the game was almost a formality, the Bulls keeping Utah behind by double digits until Hornacek hit a 3-pointer to make it 93-85 with 1:34 left.

The Jazz, who led the league in field goal shooting at a shade above 50 percent, finished at 40 percent for their worst performance since Game 3 of the second round.

They also made only 25 of 35 free throws, a trend begun by Malone's back-to-back bricks, and committed 15 turnovers.

"I thought we were intimidated right from the beginning of the game," Jazz coach Jerry Sloan said. "If you allow them to destroy your will to win, it's hard to compete. ...I didn't think we put all our energy into competing tonight."

Notes: Utah's 11 points in the second quarter tied the record-low last reached by the Bulls in Game 4 of last year's finals against Seattle. --- Utah's 31 points at the half barely missed the record of 30 set by the Houston Rockets in 1981 against Boston. --- Jazz owner Larry Miller attended the game and sat courtside. Miller, a devout Mormon, missed Game 1 because he does not attend, or even watch, games played on Sundays. The last team to come back from an 0-2 deficit was the 1976-77 Portland Trail Blazers.


BOX SCORE

UTAH (85)

Russell 4-10 1-2 11, Malone 6-20 8-12 20, Ostertag 0-1 1-2 1, Stockton 4-12 5-6 14, Hornacek 5-9 8-9 19, Eisley 2-3 1-2 5, Foster 0-1 0-0 0, Anderson 2-4 0-0 5, Morris 1-1 0-0 3, Carr 2-4 0-0 4, Keefe 1-2 1-2 3. Totals 27-67 25-35 85.

CHICAGO (97)

Pippen 4-13 2-2 10, Rodman 2-3 2-2 7, Longley 4-5 0-0 8, Harper 5-10 2-2 13, Jordan 11-20 15-21 38, Williams 2-5 0-0 4, Kerr 2-6 2-2 8, Caffey 0-0 0-0 0, Brown 0-0 0-0 0, Kukoc 1-5 4-4 7, Buechler 1-2 0-0 2, Totals 32-69 27-33 97.

Utah     20 11 28 26: 85 
Chicago  25 22 31 19: 97
3-Point goals: Utah 6-13, (Russell 2-6, Morris 1-1, Stockton 1-2, Hornacek 1-2, Anderson 1-2), Chicago 6-16, (Kerr 2-5, Rodman 1-1, Harper 1-2, Jordan 1-2, Kukoc 1-2, Buechler 0-1, Pippen 0-3). Fouled out: Hornacek. Rebounds: Utah 45 (Malone 13), Chicago 48 (Jordan 13). Assists: Utah 18 (Stockton 7), Chicago 26 (Jordan 9). Total fouls: Utah 26, Chicago 26. Technicals: Ostertag, Chicago illegal defense 2. A: 24,544 (23,854).

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