The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

ESPN to show film about Game 6 of 1998 NBA Finals

- By Joe Reedy

The final episodes of “The Last Dance” have aired, yet ESPN has one more program to show about the Chicago Bulls’ sixth championsh­ip.

ESPN will show “Game 6: The Movie” on Wednesday night at 9 p.m. EDT, following a rebroadcas­t of episodes nine and 10 of “The Last Dance.” The episode will feature game footage captured by five NBA Entertainm­ent cameras and marks the first time that the game has been available to watch in high-definition.

The Bulls defeated the Utah Jazz 87—86 as Michael Jordan hit the gamewinnin­g basket with 5.2 seconds remaining to cap their sixth championsh­ip in eight seasons.

Executive Producer Gregg Winik — who was a cameraman for NBA Entertainm­ent during that Bulls championsh­ip season — said the brainstorm­ing about Game 6 started by compiling the last 40 seconds of the game for the final episode of “The Last Dance”. After they were able to do that, it started to expand into a project of its own. Winik and his team then took the NBC telecast and started to lay in footage to get the complete product.

“If you would have told me six months ago if we could have done this, I would have said it was impossible,” Winik said. “It features a lot of dramatic imagery and the pictures jump off the screen.”

High definition was still in its infancy in 1998. In fact, the first major sports event to be broadcast in high definition didn’t happen until Super Bowl 34 in January 2000.

Connor Schell, ESPN’s executive vice president for content, said there were conversati­ons about showing the original NBC broadcast, until discussion­s revolved around an enhanced presentati­on.

“It was timed out beautifull­y and how quick we were able to get it on the air,” Schell said. “To top off this project with this never-seen-before version of Game 6 is an incredible ending.”

The film will feature the original NBC commentary by Bob Costas, Isiah Thomas, Doug Collins,

Ahmad Rashad and Jim Gray.

According to Nielsen and ESPN, the first six episodes of “The Last Dance” has averaged 12.2 million viewers. That includes all airings, as well as video on demand and DVR recordings.

 ?? ROBERT DEUTCH — USA TODAY VIA AP, FILE ?? This June 14, 1998 file photo shows Chicago Bulls guard Michael Jordan shooting the game-winning shot in the closing seconds of Game 6 of an NBA Finals basketball game against the Utah Jazz in Salt Lake City to give Chicago their sixth NBA Championsh­ip. Craig Ehlo still believes he played great defense. He shared an ultimate moment with Michael Jordan, and Jordan came out on top each time. He’ll be on highlight reels forever and “The Last Dance” — the ESPN and Netflix 10-part documentar­y series about Jordan’s Chicago Bulls that ends on Sunday, May 17, 2020only freshened the familiarit­y fans have with two of the most-replayed shots in NBA history.
ROBERT DEUTCH — USA TODAY VIA AP, FILE This June 14, 1998 file photo shows Chicago Bulls guard Michael Jordan shooting the game-winning shot in the closing seconds of Game 6 of an NBA Finals basketball game against the Utah Jazz in Salt Lake City to give Chicago their sixth NBA Championsh­ip. Craig Ehlo still believes he played great defense. He shared an ultimate moment with Michael Jordan, and Jordan came out on top each time. He’ll be on highlight reels forever and “The Last Dance” — the ESPN and Netflix 10-part documentar­y series about Jordan’s Chicago Bulls that ends on Sunday, May 17, 2020only freshened the familiarit­y fans have with two of the most-replayed shots in NBA history.

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