Sports History - Daily

Jordan's Buzzer Beater Eliminates Cleveland in 1989


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# The Miracle Shot: Michael Jordan's "The Shot" - May 2, 1989
On May 2, 1989, Michael Jordan cemented his legacy as a clutch performer with one of the most iconic moments in NBA playoff history - a buzzer-beating jumper over Craig Ehlo that eliminated the Cleveland Cavaliers and sent the Chicago Bulls to the Eastern Conference Semifinals.
The scene was Cleveland's Richfield Coliseum, Game 5 of the first-round playoff series. The best-of-five series was tied 2-2, and the winner would advance while the loser went home. The Cavaliers had home-court advantage and confidence - they'd won 57 games that season and had beaten the Bulls in their previous playoff meeting.
With the game tied at 100-100 and just three seconds remaining, Bulls coach Doug Collins called timeout to draw up the final play. The play was simple: get the ball to Jordan and let greatness happen. But Cleveland knew it was coming too.
Jordan received the inbounds pass from Brad Sellers near the sideline, about 16 feet from the basket. Ehlo, a tenacious defender, was draped all over him. What happened next became known simply as "The Shot."
Jordan dribbled to his left, creating just enough space with a subtle hesitation move. As Ehlo leaped with his hand extended, trying desperately to contest, Jordan rose up and launched a jumper from the foul line extended. The ball seemed to hang in the air forever as 20,273 Cavaliers fans held their breath.
Swish.
The shot fell through with two seconds left, giving Chicago a 101-100 lead that would hold as the final score. Jordan's celebration was instant and iconic - he jumped repeatedly, pumping his fist in pure jubilation, a moment captured in thousands of photographs and replayed countless times since.
For Jordan, it was validation. Despite being the league's premier talent, he'd faced criticism about his ability to lead a team to playoff success. The Shot silenced doubters and launched the Bulls' dynasty-in-waiting.
For Cleveland, it was heartbreak of the cruelest variety. Ehlo, who had actually hit what appeared to be the game-winning layup just seconds before Jordan's heroics, was left lying on the court in devastation. The image of Jordan celebrating while Ehlo lay prone became symbolic of Cleveland's sports misfortunes.
The statistics from that game tell their own story: Jordan finished with 44 points, including nine in the final minute. But numbers can't capture the electricity of the moment or its historical significance. This wasn't just a game-winner; it was a changing of the guard in the NBA's Eastern Conference.
The Bulls would go on to lose in the next round, but The Shot marked the beginning of Chicago's ascension. Three years later, they'd win their first of six championships in the 1990s. Meanwhile, Cleveland fans would have to wait until 2016 for their basketball redemption when LeBron James delivered an NBA championship to the city.
"The Shot" remains one of basketball's most replayed moments, a perfect encapsulatio
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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