![]() ![]() Amusing because, while some Bulls (including LaRue) had no objection with their real names being printed next to their hotel room assignment, most on the team opted for aliases on the written record of their whereabouts - a marker of how widespread the team’s fame was at the time. On May 2, LaRue tweeted out a page of an old itinerary packet from an undisclosed road trip during the Bulls’ 1997-98 season. One post in particular, though, piqued our curiosity. She arrived just before game to give me the □ /iIRcfomYig- Rusty LaRue May 3, 2020 Was waiting on the phone call but had to go to 1st ever game for So I left at home waiting on the call with a “To do list if it’s a go”. #TheLastDance /WnarVmcy7Q- Rusty LaRue April 26, 2020ĭuring #TheLastDance I was called up 2 weeks into the season. ![]() Pretty cool I kept The Last Dance team manual and the letter that came with my contract for the season. Pulled some of the old memorabilia out! Been forever since I looked through this stuff. LaRue played just 140 total minutes that season (none in the playoffs) and hasn’t gotten a mention in the docuseries, but he’s spent the past few weeks sharing relics from the era on social media: That includes Rusty LaRue, a reserve guard on the 1997-98 team. “The Last Dance” has sent any and everyone in the gravitational pull of the Bulls’ dynasty on simultaneous strolls down memory lane.
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