TORONTO -- Michael Jordan's most memorable moment came when he held his follow-through, his hand high, after a sneaky push-off of Utah's Bryon Russell,
The stakes were higher than on his shot against the Cleveland Cavaliers' Craig Ehlo in a 1989 first-round series. It came in the last seconds of the 1998 NBA Finals' sixth and last game and clinched Three-Peat II. It also made Jordan six-for-six in the NBA Finals for championship rings and Most Valuable Player awards.
It would have been the perfect goodbye wave to shot and career.
Except Jordan came back for his third iteration in Washington.