Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

UNLV graduate Matt Maxson played an integral part in the docuseries “The Last Dance.”

Maxson’s talent integral to Jordan-focused ‘The Last Dance’

- By Sam Gordon

He was once a foil for UNLV graduate Matt Maxson. The man who denied his beloved Phoenix Suns the 1993 NBA championsh­ip by averaging 41 points, 8.5 rebounds and 6.3 assists in the Finals while introducin­g to him the agony sports sometimes begets.

But Michael Jordan is no longer a nemesis for Maxson and his boyhood rooting interests.

He’s the subject of his magnum opus, the pinnacle of his production career and the focal point of the masterpiec­e that’s captivated the country the last four Sunday nights amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Maxson, 33, worked as a producer on “The Last Dance,” the 10-part docuseries chroniclin­g Jordan’s Bulls and their reign atop the NBA. The series provides an unfiltered, intimate look at the man many consider the greatest basketball player — and athlete — of all-time, and concludes Sunday on ESPN with its ninth and 10th episodes.

“It’s humbling,” Maxson says. “We set out on a journey … and

we got there in the best way we can hope for when you set out to do this.”

The project, Maxson says, is without a doubt the most challengin­g and rewarding undertakin­g of a career he never thought he’d have while studying political science at UNLV. He reviewed more than 10,000 hours of footage and was instrument­al in the organizati­onal and editing processes.

“Without his contributi­ons to this thing, there is no documentar­y,” said the project’s director, Jason Hehir. “His value to this operation is immense and invaluable.”

Becoming a producer

The 1993 Suns ignited in Maxson a passion for sport that accompanie­d him throughout the curation of “The Last Dance” and drives him to this day. He lived first in Oregon and Los Angeles before moving to Phoenix, where he developed an interest in the NBA as the local team rolled to a 62-20 record and a berth in the Finals.

Jordan and the Bulls “tore my heart out,” he said. But Maxson pressed on as a sports fan while developing a reverence for Jordan and his greatness. He moved from Phoenix to Santa Cruz, California, and Santa Cruz to Las Vegas, graduating from Coronado High School and opting to attend nearby UNLV. To study political science. “Mostly, I really just liked the research aspect of things,” he said. “There was a point where I thought I was going to be in politics. But I really didn’t have the stomach for it.”

Fortunatel­y for Maxson, the school’s student newspaper hired him to cover football, and he began learning about sports media and developing valuable friendship­s in the business. Former Review-Journal boxing writer Kevin Iole emerged as a mentor for Maxson and brought him to local cards to teach him some tricks of the trade.

Maxson eventually parlayed his experience­s into a freelance production gig with HBO, for which he’d work in the production truck on fight nights — gaining invaluable experience about television production.

“He was a young guy, but he had the maturity of a 40-year-old,” said Iole, who now covers combat sports for Yahoo Sports. “What really impressed me about him when I’d talk with him at the fights was how much he’d want to learn about the business. … He was a guy who was trying to soak up knowledge and be as good as he could possibly be.”

Maxson graduated from UNLV in 2009 and worked for 18 months in Yuma, Arizona, as a sports writer. HBO in 2010 offered him a full-time role as a junior producer, and he moved to New York to continue his career working on boxing documentar­ies.

‘The Last Dance’

More than 100 people were interviewe­d for the project, and

Maxson was in charge of organizing the sound and footage in a way that Hehir and the editors could access efficientl­y. He was on set for some of the interviews, but mostly worked at the project’s headquarte­rs in New York because his technical expertise was paramount to a production expedited by the pandemic.

“To just kind of see people say ‘Hey, “The Last Dance.” We’ve all been watching it, we’ve all been loving it.’ People are calling me up to talk about it. It’s just very humbling and very gratifying,” Maxson said.

Maxson is watching the series from his New York apartment and laments only that he can not be with the rest of the production team because of the coronaviru­s.

He follows along with each episode on Twitter and said he was pleasantly surprised by the way the series is uniting the public.

“If you got to tell 22-year old Matt Maxson that, ‘Hey man, at some point, you’re going to do a 10-part Michael Jordan documentar­y for Netflix, and the whole world is going to be watching it.’ … I think I would say to myself, ‘That’s amazing,’ ” Maxson said. “But that’s the best part about this. I don’t know what the next 10 years will be. I’m going to be excited about what’s next.”

 ?? John Swart The Associated Press ?? Michael Jordan of the Bulls celebrates capturing the 1992 NBA Finals in six games over the Portland Trail Blazers with a clinching 97-93 victory in Chicago.
John Swart The Associated Press Michael Jordan of the Bulls celebrates capturing the 1992 NBA Finals in six games over the Portland Trail Blazers with a clinching 97-93 victory in Chicago.
 ?? Courtesy Matt Maxson ?? UNLV graduate Matt Maxson, 33, worked on the 10-part docuseries “The Last Dance,” which chronicles Michael Jordan and the NBA dynasty that was the Chicago Bulls.
Courtesy Matt Maxson UNLV graduate Matt Maxson, 33, worked on the 10-part docuseries “The Last Dance,” which chronicles Michael Jordan and the NBA dynasty that was the Chicago Bulls.

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