The date was June 11, 1997.
It was sport 5 of the NBA Finals, with Michael Jordan’s Chicago Bulls taking up the Utah Jazz in Salt Lake Metropolis. With the collection locked at 2-2, the Bulls took a decisive step in direction of one other league title as Jordan balled out with 38 factors within the 90-88 win on the street.
That is among the most talked about NBA video games in historical past. Jordan was unwell however nonetheless placed on a present when the Bulls wanted their star level guard to do exactly that, and that efficiency has since been labelled ‘The Flu Sport’.
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Two-time Olympic gold medallist Michaela Brake emulated Jordan’s heroics last weekend by putting on a show, while sick, in a finals match that New Zealand won 31-7 over Australia at Singapore’s National Stadium. Brake had also helped New Zealand secure the league title the day before.
Brake opened the scoring in a highly-anticipated Cup Final decider between New Zealand and Australia in just the second minute, with the try-scoring phenomenon showing agility and pace while racing more than 50 metres to the house.
Team vice-captain Risi Pouri-Lane scored shortly after, and while Maddison Levi hit back for the Aussies on the stroke of half-time, it was one-way traffic after the break. Brake scored the last try of the Final as the Black Ferns Sevens ran away with an utterly dominant win.
After lifting the Singapore trophy and then the SVNS Series league title, Brake stopped for about four minutes to talk about New Zealand’s history-making weekend. After apologising for her croaky voice, Brake opened up on the challenge of playing ill.
“It felt good in my head by physically I’m bloody struggling with my health,” Brake told reporters just after New Zealand lifted the SVNS Series league trophy.
“I had my team who had my back and they knew that the physical status that I’m in right now and they just kept reminding me to keep pushing through. It was just 14 minutes of rugby that I needed to push through and I just kept reminding myself of that.
“Whatever result came upon that, I’m proud that I pushed through a back-to-back tournament which I haven’t done in a long time.
“Whatever state that I’m in I’ll perform at the best of my ability on the field for the black jersey but I’m very excited to go home and to rest my body.”
Before the Final, it wasn’t clear from the stands that Brake was ill. Instead, you could see how much representing New Zealand means to the 29-year-old, who was visibly emotional as the national anthem echoed throughout the Singaporean venue.
Teammates like Jorja Miller and Sarah Hirini smiled as the entire team swayed from left to right in unison as they always do before a decider. The New Zealanders often talk about the proud ‘sisterhood’ that keeps this group so close, and here they were again, together as one.
About one hour later after the men’s title-decider, which saw Fiji beat Kenya in a tense clash, Brake was sked about the Black Ferns Sevens’ form this season before a question about the national anthem was raised. Brake’s response was heart-felt and genuine.
“The story behind that is that version of the anthem I sang for six years straight at my primary school and when I sang that national anthem I would vision myself wearing some sort of New Zealand uniform or being at the Olympic Games,” Brake reflected.
“It’s a reminder that that five-year-old kid had a massive dream and she didn’t let anyone get in her way. That version of the national anthem will always pull on my heartstrings, I can’t help it, it’s such a cool version of the anthem, it’s beautiful, the English and the Maori version of it.
“You don’t really get to sing your national anthem very often but when you do, I’ll sing it with pride and if it makes me cry, it makes me cry.”
New Zaland are the league winners but there’s still more work to be done in order to become overall SVNS Series champions in 2024/25. Next month, the circuit heads to Los Angeles’s Dignity Health Sports Park for the winner-takes-all World Championship on May 3-4.
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Men’s pools for SVNS Series World Championship
Pool A: Argentina, South Africa, France, Great Britain
Pool B: Fiji, Spain, Australia, New Zealand
Women’s pools for SVNS Series World Championship
Pool A: New Zealand, Canada, Japan, Great Britain
Pool B: Australia, France, USA, Fiji