Chicago Bulls
Founded in 1966, the Chicago Bulls were able to fill their initial roster via the expansion draft the same year. In the franchise’s first year, the Bulls not only had the best record of any expansion team in NBA history but also qualified for the playoffs.
Chicago’s legacy before and after the ’90s pales in comparison to its time as the NBA’s greatest dynasty. With coach Phil Jackson and Hall of Famers Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen, the Bulls won six championships via two three-peats. During this time, the franchise grew the NBA’s fandom significantly and created lasting rivalries with the Detroit Pistons, Miami Heat, and New York Knicks.
Among many accolades, the Chicago Bulls are the only NBA team in history to win multiple championships while never losing an NBA Finals series. The franchise also became the first in history to win 70 games or more in a single season (1995–96). Since Jordan’s final exit from basketball, the Bulls have struggled to experience much success. Key players who have revitalized the team’s fandom include Derrick Rose and Joakim Noah.
- Founded: 1966
- Championships: six NBA championships (1991, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998)
- Additional achievements: six conference titles (1991, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998) and nine division titles (1975, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2011, 2012)
- Arena: United Center
Visit the Chicago Bulls at NBA.com.
Read the latest articles about the Chicago Bulls:
Former Chicago Bulls star Toni Kukoc doesn’t seem overly excited about how “The Last Dance” documentary is playing out thus far.
Michael Jordan once skipped a trip to the White House with the Chicago Bulls to gamble with a drug dealer.
Kobe Bryant had numerous cameras following him during his final season and now there are discussions a documentary similar to The Last Dance might be coming.
“The Last Dance” director Jason Hehir recently told an incredible Michael Jordan story that didn’t make the final cut of the documentary.
During his time in professional wrestling, Dennis Rodman made more money than most of the actual wrestlers in WCW.
Michael Jordan rarely goes out in public. In 1995, he made an exception on Thanksgiving Day to secretly see a movie with teammates. Things didn’t go as planned.
A look back at the historically bad performance by Michael Jordan in the NBA All-Star Three-Point Shootout in 1990.
A look back at a potential trade in 1994 involving Scottie Pippen that likely would have kept Michael Jordan from returning to the Chicago Bulls.
The story of how Derrick Rose’s three brothers helped keep him out of trouble on Chicago’s South Side and made his NBA dreams come true.
Despite being a skinny 6-foot-7 forward in the NBA, Dennis Rodman was one of the league’s biggest rebounders and had a unique reason why.