Chicago Bulls The Bulls won their first NBA championship the previous season and finished the 1991–92 season with a 67–15 record, surpassing last season's record by six games. Jordan won his second consecutive MVP award with a 30.1 points/6.4 assists/6.1 rebounds season. After sweeping the
Miami Heat in the opening round, they played the
New York Knicks, who were now coached by
Pat Riley and won in seven games. Then they played the
Cleveland Cavaliers, whom they had beaten in two prior postseason meetings, in the conference finals. The Bulls won in six games.
Portland Trail Blazers The previous season, Portland was coming off a Finals loss to the Detroit Pistons. The 1990–91 Trail Blazers won a franchise record 63 games and, as the top seed in the Western Conference, appeared destined to meet the Bulls for the championship. However, the
Los Angeles Lakers upended the narrative, defeating Portland in six games of the conference final. However, the Lakers would lose to the Chicago Bulls in the Finals. Of note, the upset marked a final hurrah for the "Showtime"-era Lakers, as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar had retired two years prior, and Magic Johnson would retire unexpectedly in the first week of the 1991–92 season, after learning he had tested positive for HIV. For the 1991–92 season, the Blazers retained the same core from the previous two seasons; the team won the Pacific Division title with a 57–25 record. In the first round of the playoffs, they avenged the previous year's loss, dispatching a weakened
Lakers team, 3–1. Portland followed that up with a five-game defeat of the
Phoenix Suns in the second round, before booking another trip to the Finals with a six-game elimination of the
Utah Jazz in the conference Finals.
Road to the Finals Regular season series The
Chicago Bulls won both games in the regular season series: Nationally televised on
NBC, the two teams met on March 1st at
Chicago Stadium in a highly anticipated matchup. The Bulls blew out the Trail Blazers, 111–91, but pre-game comments made by
Phil Jackson was the most important story of the game. Jackson stated in an interview with NBC that Portland had a reputation of self-destructing down the stretch in close games. Before the start of the Finals,
Buck Williams called the comments by Jackson in March "sort of derogatory" and Portland's head coach
Rick Adelman stated the only way for the narrative around his team would go away was to win the championship. In the opening montage before the Game 1, NBC's pre-game host
Bob Costas highlighted this point. Jackson's comments would prove to be prophetic for the 1992 Finals, as the Blazers blew a 79–64 lead at the start of the fourth quarter in clinching Game 6 for the Bulls. ==Team rosters==