Scottie Pippen Inspired List Of Underappreciated Pro Athletes
May 18, 2020, 3:25 PM | Updated: Jun 3, 2020, 1:29 pm
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah – One of the early things that stood out during the 10-part Last Dance documentary about Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls quest for its six titles in eight years was the contract of Scottie Pippen.
The deal Pippen signed early in his career was a five-year, $18 million deal heading into the 1991-92 season, but by the end of that deal he was the sixth-highest paid player on the Bulls despite being the clear second-best player behind Michael Jordan and during that time he was a six-time All-Star, seven-time first-team all-defensive team, member of the 1992 Dream Team and was named to the NBA’s 50 greatest players of all time.
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Despite those accolades and more, including being a Hall of Famer, Pippen was viewed as Jordan’s sidekick as seen in the Last Dance.
Pippen wanted to help support his family and wanted security in case he was injured. The contract was never amended to reflect Pippen’s first time around with the Bulls but he ended up doing fine for himself by making just over $87 million in his final seven years in the league.
“It’s gotta be hard,” Mitchell said. “Jordan leaves and you can’t win a championship without him but then he comes back again and wins again.”
Pippen ended up being fine for himself but happened to be playing alongside the greatest ever – combine that with an ownership group that was dead set against renegotiating a deal that was signed, it put Pippen in the group as one of the most underpaid and underappreciated superstars in all of sports.
Other Underappreciated Stars
KSL Unrivaled went through a list of players whose fanbases should have not taken them for granted across all sports. Jim Kelley was one of the first names brought up.
“He is in the Hall of Fame,” Mitchell said. “They lost four Super Bowls in a row but it didn’t make him any less appreciated.”
Kelly is in the Hall of Fame and being able to go to four consecutive Super Bowls is a feat not many other quarterbacks have achieved in NFL history, including future Hall of Famer Tom Brady.
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The next NFL player is former Indianapolis Colts wide receiver Marvin Harrison. Harrison is in the Hall of Fame but there is a debate about how good he really was because he was on the receiving end of passes from Peyton Manning. Mitchell said the former Colt is not underappreciated.
However, when the question is posed to Mitchell from co-host Alex Kirry about what if Trent Dilfer was Harrison’s quarterback? That changed his answer.
“No, he wouldn’t be in the Hall of Fame, and neither would Trent Dilfer,” Mitchell said. “If Trent Dilfer was in that offense would he have been a better player? I don’t know.”
It all depends on one’s interpretation of what underappreciated means to them. Being in the city or a fan of the team that gets so close but never wins it all has a lot of upset fans whereas fans of the sport across the country realize how good that star player is.
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