CHICAGO Bulls retire Scottie Pippen's number
His number is the fourth to hang from the rafters.
CHICAGO (AP) -- Scottie Pippen did his best to check his emotions. It didn't work.
Surrounded by Michael Jordan and other former teammates and coaches, an emotional Pippen fought back tears as the Chicago Bulls retired his number 33 during halftime of Friday's game against the Los Angeles Lakers.
"I want to let you know that you all have been a part of it," Pippen said during the ceremony.
His number is the fourth to hang from the rafters, joining Jordan's 23, Bob Love's 10 and Jerry Sloan's 4. Phil Jackson and Jerry Krause, the coach and general manager during the championship years, also have banners hanging from the rafters.
No coincidence
It was no coincidence the Bulls chose this night to honor Pippen, with Jackson and the Lakers in town.
"He was a great student and a really fine leader on the basketball court," Jackson said before the game. "He directed a lot of what happened, he was very much one of the reasons why we were successful over those six championships."
Teammates such as Horace Grant, Dennis Rodman and Toni Kukoc sat in a semicircle near midcourt, as did Jackson, former Bulls assistants and Pippen's high school and college coaches. One notable absentee was former teammate and current Bulls general manager John Paxson, who was on a scouting trip.
A highlights package aired during the ceremony, as did taped messages from Paxson, commissioner David Stern, former Bulls coach Doug Collins and Charles Barkley. Pippen received replicas of the championship trophy and a framed replica of his banner.
Jackson jokingly recalled "memories of Scottie having migraines against Detroit" during his halftime speech.
Jordan said of Pippen: "I knew I had someone watching my back."
Pippen and Jordan led the Bulls to six NBA championships during the 1990s. Pippen was named one of the NBA's 50 greatest players in 1996, was on two teams that won Olympic gold medals and was a seven-time All-Star.
Career numbers
He spent 12 of his 17 seasons with the Bulls and scored 18,940 points during a career that included stints with the Houston Rockets and Portland Trail Blazers. He ranks fifth on the NBA's all-time steals list with 2,307.
He holds the Bulls' record for 3-pointers made (664) and attempted (2,031), and ranks second in points (15,123), field goals (5,991), field goal attempts (12,444), free throw attempts (3,576), offensive rebounds (1,687), defensive rebounds (4,039), assists (4,494), steals (1,792), seasons (12), games (856) and minutes (30,269).
Not bad for a guy who left high school without a scholarship and who was a team manager at Central Arkansas, an NAIA school.
Before the game, Jackson thought back to Pippen's rookie season -- specifically, the first practice.
"I walked into training camp, and he was sitting on the side of the court," said Jackson, then an assistant coach. "He wasn't participating in training camp, and Jerry Krause was totally enamored with the prospect of having Scottie on this team. He thought Scottie had an unlimited potential -- as much as an old favorite of his Earl Monroe, who he helped draft for the Baltimore Bullets. ... And Scottie Pippen more than surpassed that career."
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