
About this season
Discipline, dedication and desire were the hallmarks of the Chicago Bulls of the 1990s. Capturing six (6) NBA titles between 1991and 1998, the Bulls were the most dominant and arguably the greatest basketball team ever assembled.
Episodes (6)

1. LEARNING TO FLY - 1991 NBA Championship
Aired 1 June 2004
The 1990–91 Chicago Bulls season was the franchise's 25th in the NBA and marked a historic turning point. Led by head coach Phil Jackson, the Bulls finished the regular season with a then-franchise-record 61–21 record, securing the top seed in the Eastern Conference before going on to win the first of their 6 titles in the 1990's

2. UNTOUCHABULLS - 1992 NBA Championship
Aired 8 June 2004
The Chicago Bulls 1991–92 season is widely regarded as one of the greatest in NBA history, culminating in the franchise's second consecutive NBA championship. Led by head coach Phil Jackson, the Bulls finished the regular season with a league-best 67–15 record, a franchise record at the time.

3. THREE-PEAT - 1993 NBA Championship
Aired 15 June 2004
The Chicago Bulls' 1992–93 season was a historic campaign. The Bulls finished the regular season with a 57–25 record that culminated in the team's third consecutive NBA championship, making them the first franchise to achieve a "three-peat" since the 1960s Boston Celtics.

4. UNSTOP-A-BULLS - 1996 NBA Championship
Aired 22 June 2004
The 1995–96 Chicago Bulls season is widely considered one of the greatest in NBA history. Led by the Hall of Fame trio of Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen, and newly acquired rebound specialist Dennis Rodman, the Bulls became the first team to win 70 or more games in a single season

5. 1997 NBA Championship
Aired 29 June 2004
The 1997 Chicago Bulls (1996–97 season) won their fifth NBA championship in seven years, finishing the regular season with a dominant 69–13 record.

6. UNFORGETABULLS - 1998 NBA Championship
Aired 6 July 2004
The 1997–98 Chicago Bulls season, famously known as "The Last Dance," culminated in the team's sixth NBA championship of the 1990s and their second "three-peat". Coached by Phil Jackson, the Bulls finished the regular season with a 62–20 record.