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Dennis Rodman vital to Chicago Bulls' title triumphs, says BJ Armstrong

Watch episodes three and four of The Last Dance, a 10-part documentary series on Michael Jordan and the 1997-98 Chicago Bulls, on Netflix via your Sky Q box from 8am on April 27

Dennis Rodman and Michael Jordan in action for the Chicago Bulls
Image: Dennis Rodman and Michael Jordan in action for the Chicago Bulls

Former Chicago Bulls guard BJ Armstrong was it would have been "very difficult" for the team to win without the contributions of Dennis Rodman.

Rodman was one of the rivals Michael Jordan had to conquer on his way to his first run of three straight NBA titles. And Rodman then became one of the team-mates who helped Jordan pull off his second 'three-peat'.

Armstrong saw both sides.

Michael Jordan guards former Bulls team-mate BJ Armstrong
Image: Jordan guards former Bulls team-mate BJ Armstrong

Armstrong was there in the beginning, when Jordan and the Chicago Bulls needed time to figure out how to eventually beat Rodman and the Detroit Pistons for Eastern Conference supremacy and a trip to the NBA Finals in 1991 that started the title run.

And Armstrong was on the other side in 1997-98, playing for a Charlotte Hornets team that lost to Jordan, Rodman and the Bulls in the Eastern Conference semi-finals that season.

Jordan's Last Dance on Sky Q
Jordan's Last Dance on Sky Q

Watch The Last Dance, a 10-part documentary on the 1997-98 Bulls, on Netflix via your Sky Q box

For as good as the likes of Jordan and Scottie Pippen were, Armstrong - the longtime NBA guard and three-time NBA champion with the Bulls who is now a California-based sports agent - cautions against underestimating Rodman's role on those Chicago title teams in 1996, 1997 and 1998.

"The thing I always admired about Dennis was he was a very, very intelligent player, and after all of the hair colors and semantics and all those things, underneath that was a really, really good basketball player, very fundamentally sound," Armstrong told The Associated Press.

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After stepping up in Scottie Pippen's absence during the 1997-98 season, Dennis Rodman felt he needed a mid-season vacation!

"And I would argue that it would have been very difficult for the Bulls to win without him, because it's hard to win when you don't have bigs who can play with the physicality that is necessary to win at a championship level. And Dennis could meet the challenge."

Rodman's colorful tenure with the Bulls is one of the primary storylines covered when the third and fourth episodes of the Netflix documentary The Last Dance, a 10-part series built around Jordan's final season with the Bulls in 1997-98, premiered on April 27.

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Among the Rodman stories covered: his vacation to Las Vegas, one that went longer than the 48 hours that the Bulls were willing to allow him for a break.

"Dennis always brought energy and always brought effort," Armstrong said. "And the way he did it, it was contagious."

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Head coach Phil Jackson said Dennis Rodman held the Chicago Bulls together when Scottie Pippen was out injured in the 1997-98 season

The Pistons famously had 'The Jordan Rules' when they were atop the NBA and holding off the up-and-coming Bulls during Detroit's title runs in 1989 and 1990.

Armstrong said in 1998, Charlotte had its version of special rules as well - not for Jordan, but for Rodman.

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"I mean, the guy just understood how to rebound," Armstrong said. "We had an assistant coach on our staff at the time, Paul Silas. And Paul used to always tell us that what Dennis is doing, you cant prepare for. He was that good. You couldn't box him out. You had to face-guard him. The reason he was a great rebounder was he understood offensive schemes and he understood the timing of the shots.

The Rodman rules didn't work: He averaged 17.6 rebounds, by far the best in the series, and Chicago ousted Charlotte in five games.

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"All the other things that went on around him, that was just Dennis", Armstrong said. "But make no doubt about it, when he was between the lines, he was an excellent, excellent basketball player.

Watch episodes three and four of The Last Dance, a 10-part documentary series on Michael Jordan and the 1997-98 Chicago Bulls, on Netflix via your Sky Q box from 8am on April 27

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