

ESPN's 10-part documentary series"The Last Dance," which chronicles Michael Jordan and the 1997-98 Chicago Bulls, continued Sunday with Episodes 7 and 8.
Jordan and the Bulls allowed NBA Entertainment to follow them throughout the seasonand document their final championship. The series features never-before-seen footage, as well as interviews with more than 100 people close to the team.
Here's what you need to know from the seventh and eighth episodes, which covered Jordan's first retirement, the mid-'90s Bulls led by Scottie Pippen and the start of the 1998 postseason.
MORE: How to replay Episodes 7 and 8
Our team weighs in with their biggest takeaways from the seventh and eighth episodes of the series.This will be updatedthroughout the night.
Despite trailing 0-2, the Nets were still so confident heading into Game 3 that the team flew in legendary ringside announcer Michael Buffer to introduce the starting lineups.
Jordan dropped 38 points on 16-of-22 shooting from the field, and the Bulls swept the series in an uncompetitive Game 3.
My lasting memory from that game is the infamous stare-down Jordan gave Calipari. Coach Cal had a penchant for stomping his feet on the sideline and screaming at younger players, in this case Van Horn and Kittles. I can still see Jordan staring at Calipari. The wordless expression was aimed at telling Calipari to leave these two young players alone.
"We'd have to fall asleep," said Jordan, who did allow that the Nets could be dangerous with nothing to lose.
The Bulls opened the series sleepwalking, but they never did lose a game to the Nets. I'll never forget the death stare Jordan gave John Calipari, who just couldn't stop stomping up and down the court, screaming at Kerry Kittles. Dennis Rodman even referred to the Nets' coach as "Calamari."
Jordan had zero patience for Calipari. But the stare-down surely had something to do with a college coach making the leap to the pros and Bulls GM Jerry Krause's fixation with Tim Floyd, who replaced Phil Jackson.
Unfortunately for the Nets, Jordan gave them the kiss of death afterward, calling them "a team of the future." The year before, Jordan had called the Washington Bullets "truly one of the teams of the future" after they swept Chris Webber and Juwan Howard. The Bullets/Wizards missed the playoffs the next seven seasons.
The Nets? They fired Calipari in March 1999 after a 3-17 start, acquired Stephon Marbury from Minnesota and won only 16 of 50 games in the 1998-99 season. Jordan put the franchise to sleep until Rod Thorn, the man who drafted Jordan, traded Marbury for Jason Kidd in 2001.
Both absolutely dominated the season afterward. We don't know whether LeBron's Lakers would have won this season. But he clearly used his time on the set of "Space Jam" as effectively as Jordan did.
I always associate the fax, which J.A. Adande explored on its 20th anniversary in 2015, with the clip of Scottie Pippen sitting on the bench during a Bulls game and pointing to the Jumpman logo at the bottom of his Air Jordan X sneakers, beckoning Jordan to return. In this case, technological advancements in the sneaker world paid off. Rather than a basic rubber sole, Nike incorporated storytelling into the shoe, etching MJ's major career achievements into rivets added not just for traction but for aesthetic.
Fun fact: The fax informed the manner in which LeBron James announced his decision to play for the Los Angeles Lakers in the summer of 2018, according to sources. After the TV spectacle that backfired with "The Decision" in 2010, when James went to Miami, and the extreme course correction that followed with a first-person essay as told to Sports Illustrated in 2014, when he went back to Cleveland, James' camp wanted something clean and simple in 2018. They drafted a 36-word announcement (Jordan's was actually 42, including the preamble) and slapped the Klutch Sports logo in the upper-left corner of the page, in the same place that Jordan's agent, David Falk, had his F.A.M.E. agency's letterhead in '95. Below the logo but before the announcement began -- just as with the MJ fax -- were three words in a strikingly similar sans serif font to prompt the basketball world that major news was about to follow: "For immediate release."
Michael was released from baseball. LeBron was released from Cleveland.
MJ debuted the iconic Air Jordan 11 that series. Anderson actually wore a customized Air Jordan 10 -- in Magic colors, with No. 25 stitched into the collar, no less. The bottom of the shoes feature all of Jordan's prior career achievements.
When Jordan retired in 1993, Nike outfitted a handful of the top guards and wings around the league with Air Jordan 9s and 10s in custom colors, with their uniform numbers in place of No. 23. Knicks guard Hubert Davis and Magic guards Penny Hardaway and Anderson were some of those players. The Knicks and Magic being the two teams to knock out the Bulls in '94 and '95, while those pivotal players were wearing Jordans, is always a funny, ironic and subtle detail to look back on.
Nick Anderson's steal of Jordan in Game 1 remains one of the most important moments in Magic franchise history, but it's also a reminder that the Magic never took advantage of the opportunity they created after beating the Bulls. They got swept by the Houston Rockets in the 1995 NBA Finals.
Jordan, motivated by the loss to Grant and the Magic, spent the entire summer getting his body back into basketball shape after his baseball hiatus. He came back more motivated than ever to win another title and pay back the Magic. The Bulls went on to win a then-record 72 regular-season games and sweep the Magic in the 1996 Eastern Conference finals. Shaquille O'Neal left Orlando that summer for Los Angeles, ending one of the shortest lived but most entertaining rivalries in recent memory.
Isn't this the same guy who wouldn't restructure Scottie Pippen's contract, another guy underpaid his entire career in Chicago? Didn't he still have the shrewd Jerry Krause running his front office? You think Krause was comfortable with that monstrous cap hold for Jordan while he was trying to restructure the team on the fly? Even if there were no salary-cap implications and it was more like a generous parting gift from Reinsdorf, doesn't the payment kind of make you believe that Reinsdorf thought Jordan was coming back to the Bulls all along?
But to Jordan, none of that mattered. What mattered was the end result. And to him, there was only one acceptable result: winning.
The fact that Jordan got emotional while talking about the way he would drive his teammates and what he was trying to accomplish by doing so was just the latest moment -- in a documentary full of them -- that exemplified just how badly Jordan wanted to win.
Even now, 22 years later, the competitive fire within him hasn't dimmed at all. To him, it was the only way to operate.
Because as he said, winning has a price. Jordan was more than willing to make sure that not only he but also everyone around him paid whatever price it took to win.
His ability to turn it up a notch because of B.J. Armstrong in the playoffs was just as absurd. Most players aren't willing to dig that deep to be successful. Love him or hate him, that is true greatness. You really have to be an a--hole sometimes to reach feats that others never will.
But when Jordan got moving -- on the base paths or in the outfield -- it resembled MJ in the open court. He was entertaining, despite a career .202 batting average in 127 games. Each of his three home runs was a thrill, proving that he had some hand-eye coordination and ability. Double-A baseball isn't exactly a picnic, and there were plenty of times when the 31-year-old held his own.
But MJ wasn't accustomed to failure. And baseball is all about failure.
I've always been fascinated by the possibility of Jordan sticking with baseball in an era in which dual-sport athletes such as Bo Jackson and Deion Sanders were celebrated.
Knowing that baseball was a passion of his father's, I hoped MJ would address whether he had a timeline by which he'd move on if he didn't make it to the majors. Did the MLB strike end what was a longer-term plan, or was he simply ready to play basketball again?
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Sunday, May 17
Netflix (outside of the U.S.)
MORE: How to replay Episodes 7 and 8br/]