NBA Twitter reacts to Dillon Brooks vs. DeMar DeRozan scuffle: ‘The most Compton week of the decade’

Bulls’ DeMar DeRozan and Rockets’ Dillon Brooks were ejected last night after an on-court scuffle during Houston’s seventh straight win (127-117). DeRozan and Brooks got into it after a hard foul from the Bulls star on Jalen Green: First Green gets …

Bulls’ DeMar DeRozan and Rockets’ Dillon Brooks were ejected last night after an on-court scuffle during Houston’s seventh straight win (127-117).

DeRozan and Brooks got into it after a hard foul from the Bulls star on Jalen Green:

Here’s how NBA Twitter reacted.

Lonzo Ball shows off video dunking amid quest to return from injury

Chicago Bulls point guard Lonzo Ball recently posted a video of him dunking.

For the past three seasons, the Chicago Bulls have been the same team. The same stars, the same core role players, and, for the most part, the same results. They’ve only won a single playoff game since forming their core, and ever since Lonzo Ball went down over two full calendar years ago, the Bulls haven’t been the same.

However, there have been some positive updates regarding Ball’s progress this year. Ball has supposedly been slowly improving, and while it’s still unclear as to when he could make it back out onto the court, there’s more optimism now than ever regarding when he could be back.

Ball recently posted a video of him dunking, and Julia Poe of the Chicago Tribune posted it to Twitter, noting the positives of him finally being able to move in the way he is.

Getting Ball back would be huge for the ceiling of the Bulls, even if he isn’t the same as he once was.

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The Chicago Bulls are very good in the clutch this season

When it comes to crunch time, the Bulls are very, very good.

When it comes to keeping their best players healthy, the Chicago Bulls are something of a disaster with not just guards Lonzo Ball and Zach LaVine out for the season, but also forward Patrick Williams. And when it comes to making moves at the NBA trade deadline, the Bulls are equally bad, having neglected to do so for three seasons running.

It remains to be seen how well the storied ball club will do for team building in the 2024 offseason, but they have not been so hot in that regard of late as well. But when it comes to crunch time, the Bulls are very, very good indeed.

Speaking on a recent episode of their “Bulls Central” podcast, the minds behind the show took some time to break down just how good Chicago has been of late in the waning moments of games.

Take a look at the clip embedded above to hear what they had to say.

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Is it time to start doubting the leap made by Chicago Bulls guard Coby White after his recent slump?

“What slump?”, you ask, thinking of the recent stat lines of White.

Is it time to start doubting the leap made by Chicago Bulls guard Coby White after his recent slump? “What slump?”, you ask, thinking of the recent stat lines of White in Bulls games. And it is true, his counting stats are still decent over the last few games.

At least until you look at his efficiency, which has had him averaging just 23.1% from the field overall over Chicago’s last three tilts, and a mere 14.8% from beyond the arc. As good as his 13.3 points, 6.7 rebounds, and 7.0 assists have been over that stretch, the possessions he’s needed to put them up has not been helping the Bulls.

The host of the “Chicago Bulls Central” podcast, Haize, took some time to share his thoughts on White’s recent slump on a recent episode.

Take a look at the clip embedded above to hear what he had to say about the Bulls guard’s play of late.

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Should the Chicago Bulls regret not trading away Andre Drummond at the NBA’s 2024 trade deadline?

It will be especially rough for Chicago’s execs if the UConn alum ends up leaving for nothing in free agency this summer.

Should the Chicago Bulls regret not trading away Andre Drummond at the NBA’s 2024 trade deadline? By now, it is clear that most of the team’s fans are thinking they should have, especially in light of recent injury news further dampening any possibility of a postseason for Chicago.

And if you ask Bleacher Report’s Zach Buckley, the Bulls should indeed feel regret for having passed on the draft assets Big Penguin could have garnered for Chicago. “The Chicago Bulls’ decision to stand pat for a third consecutive season arguably came as close to being shocking as anything else,” writes the B/R analyst. “Chicago has always seemed far less interested in overhauling this roster than everyone else thinks it should be.”

“As the Bulls stumble through whatever remains of their season—probably a play-in tournament appearance, almost certainly not any postseason success—they’ll come to regret their latest dormant deadline for a number of reasons,” he adds.

With word that the front office turned down three second round picks for Drummond’s services out there, it will be especially rough for Chicago’s execs if the UConn alum ends up leaving for nothing in free agency this summer.

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How to buy Chicago Bulls vs. Boston Celtics tickets

Want to watch Chicago Bulls vs. Boston Celtics in person on Thursday, Feb. 22? Tickets still remain for as little as $67.

After missing the playoffs last season, small forward DeMar DeRozan and the Chicago Bulls are trying to get back to the postseason, with the team in contention for one of the play-in tournament spots in the Eastern Conference.

The Boston Celtics and their impressive roster led by small forward Jayson Tatum and shooting guard Jaylen Brown are in a very different position, as Boston is currently threatening to run away with the No. 1 seed in the same conference.

The Chicago Bulls will host the Boston Celtics on Thursday, Feb. 22, with tip-off set for 8:00 p.m. EST.

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With the Celtics vying for an NBA title, locking up the No. 1 seed and home-court advantage throughout the playoffs would go a long way toward helping their cause. Meanwhile, the Bulls’ margin for error is razor thin and every game could be the difference between a play-in spot or not.

At the time of publication, the cheapest available tickets for Chicago Bulls vs. Boston Celtics are $67.

If you’re looking for a more luxurious experience, the most expensive ticket would cost you $16,838.

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The biggest questions facing the Chicago Bulls post All-Star break

The NBA’s 2024 All-Star week has come and gone, with the league’s 2023-24 regular season now roughly two-thirds over.

The NBA’s 2024 All-Star week has come and gone, with the league’s 2023-24 regular season now roughly two-thirds over. Before it, the 2024 trade deadline passed with the Bulls making a move at it for the third straight season. With word that internal growth, buyout guys and the draft will be the primary team building tools used by the front office.

What are the biggest questions facing the Chicago Bulls post All-Star break? There is no shortage of questions about the directions this team will take between now and the start of the next NBA season, but which are the most critical in need of a resolution before then?

With the storied ball club in danger of becoming a fixture on the dreaded treadmill of mediocrity, the moves the team takes carry added weight.

The hosts of the “Locked On Bulls” podcast Haize and Pat The Designer weighed in on all of this on a recent episode. Check it out above!

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Has the Chicago Bulls’ front office masked their complacency behind competitive team play?

The Chicago Bulls have been something of a roller coaster so far this season,.

The Chicago Bulls have been something of a roller coaster so far this season, with periods of good play interrupted by multiple disasters and long stretches of mediocre play. The biggest storyline of the season, however, has been the injuries to star guard Zach LaVine and how it has opened up time for backup guards Coby White and Ayo Dosunmu.

That bit of a silver lining, however, may have given some cover to the Bulls’ front office, who have been able to use that unexpected bench success to distract from their lack of moves at the 2024 NBA trade deadline. Has the Bulls’ front office masked their complacency behind competitive team play?

The host of the “Chicago Bulls Central” podcast Haize weighed in on this potentially unfolding dynamic on a recent episode, and what it could mean for Chicago’s future in the 2024 NBA offseason.

Check it out above to hear it in full!

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NBA Intel: A near trade deadline deal and buyout market updates

Reporting on 76ers and Bulls trade talks for Andre Drummond fell through, more potential buyout candidates, a Nerlens Noel update, and more from HoopsHype Senior NBA Insider Michael Scotto.

Following the NBA trade deadline, HoopsHype has gathered new intel on trade talks that fell through between the 76ers and Bulls, reporting on how the buyout market took shape behind the scenes for Danilo Gallinari and Thaddeus Young, whether more buyout candidates could hit the market and a Nerlens Noel update.

Blood on the Horns: The long strange ride of Michael Jordan’s Chicago Bulls

Blood on the Horns: The Long Strange Ride of Michael Jordan’s Chicago Bulls by Roland Lazenby © Copyright 2014 Diversion Book. THE REAL LAST DANCE Looking back 25 years after Jordan’s final Championship In 2020, my wife digitized the many cassette …

Blood on the Horns: The Long Strange Ride of Michael Jordan’s Chicago Bulls by Roland Lazenby © Copyright 2014 Diversion Book.

THE REAL LAST DANCE
Looking back 25 years after Jordan’s final Championship

In 2020, my wife digitized the many cassette tapes of my interviews from 35 years of writing about pro basketball. In there was a gem I had never listened to, from an April 1991 game between the Washington Bullets and the Lakers. Jerry Krause, the Bulls GM at the time, had worked for both organizations as a scout and now some years later had come to the game in Washington in a moment of immense pride, to quietly show off a bit and perhaps even gloat.

His Bulls were playing very well that spring and seemed on the brink doing great things.

A short, odd little fat guy—Michael Jordan had famously nicknamed him ‘Crumbs’ for the evidence of his snacks often found on his shirts—Krause had spent years suffering ridicule while knocking around as a scout in pro basketball, a business of very large men.

In the 1970s, Krause had finally reached what seemed like the pinnacle when he was named GM of the Bulls, only to be fired after a few weeks on the job.

Like that, he had gone from a crowning achievement to immense public ridicule. If it seemed everybody in his hometown Chicago was laughing at him, that’s only because they were.

Yet by 1985, the Bulls were something of a laughingstock themselves, and financial whiz Jerry Reinsdorf was able to buy them for a pittance, about $14 million.

Reinsdorf promptly stunned fans by hiring Krause to be his GM, and the short, little fat guy set about rebuilding the team.

This time Krause had a vision, albeit an odd one. He wanted to hire a retired college coach, Tex Winter, who had long been the proponent of a quirky offense, the triangle, or triple-post.

JEFF HAYNES/AFP via Getty Images

More important, Krause wanted to hire a young goofball named Phil Jackson as his head coach with the idea that Winter would mentor him to greatness.

It would take a while to get Jackson in place, in part because he had written a memoir about playing for the Knicks in which he talked about taking LSD on the beach in California after New York defeated the Lakers for the 1973 NBA title.

Nobody wanted to hire a coach who took LSD, but Krause paid the matter no mind. He had known Jackson for a decade and saw his odd genius.

Krause would also become excited about several players including a relatively obscure prospect out of Central Arkansas named Scottie Pippen.

The Bulls struggled for some time to overcome the Bad Boy Pistons, but in that late April 1991 Chicago finally seemed on the way to doing that.

Thus, Krause stood alone outside the Bullets locker room that night, seemingly waiting for reporters to notice him and interview him. I recall almost feeling sorry for him standing there and recorded about five minutes with him that night as Krause spoke grandly of his own work in assembling a team around the young superstar Jordan.

It was a conversation I had frankly forgotten until a quarter century later when it literally leapt out from that newly digitized archive.

Sure enough, Krause’s instincts had been spot on. It had all fallen in place for Jordan, Pippen, Jackson, Winter and their Bulls. They would win the ’91 championship, then five more over the next seven seasons.

Listening to that tape of Krause at the brink of their greatness and knowing how it would all go from that early moment of his eager pride to a bad end, how all the happy days would evaporate in 1998 in a very public and dramatic ugliness, I was struck with an overwhelming sadness.

I later did an extensive interview with Krause on the tenth anniversary in 2008 when he told me he had videotape of every game played in the championship years.

He had not viewed them even once, he told me with great bitterness.

AP Photo/Beth A. Keiser

THAT LAST DANCE

By that 1998 season, after so much success, the Bulls were caught in the throes of a non-sensical struggle for control of the team, with Jackson, Jordan and Pippen pitted against Krause, who announced before the season began that Jackson would not be allowed to return as coach in the fall of 1998.

“This is it,” Krause had said. “Phil and I know it. We all know it.”

In announcing his move, Krause did not identify exactly what had led to Jackson’s scheduled departure, but the relationship between the coach and GM had obviously turned from love and respect to hatred.

The son of two fundamentalist preachers, Phil Jackson had been heavily influenced by the “rapture” or the idea of the end times. Thus, he always seemed to think in terms of the “last” this or that. He had dubbed the showdown with Krause “the Last Dance.” Later, as coach of the Lakers he would write a book about his battles with Kobe Bryant and call it the “Last Season.”

It was a good name for the events in Chicago in 1998.

No matter where he played, the buildings virtually sparkled for Jordan that season. Each game, as he stepped onto the floor for introductions, he was greeted by the flashes of a thousand small cameras. The phenomenon was most brilliant at the United Center in Chicago, where the introductions would build to a crescendo of noise and light until Jordan’s name was called as the fifth starter, and the arena became a pulsating strobe. Later, at the opening tip, these same lights would again flicker furiously. But they were most maddening during free throws, when Jordan went to the line, and the rows of fans behind the basket would break into a dizzying twinkle, bringing to mind a mirror ball at a junior prom.

In one of our several one-on-one interviews that season, I asked Jordan how he could possibly shoot free throws under the conditions, he smiled and replied, “I got used to that a long time ago.”

He had always been a superstar who understood and accommodated his fans. That was particularly true that spring, as indications grew that it could well be his last. The camera lights were by far the warmest measure of his popularity. Each time he made a spectacular play, Michael Jordan’s world glittered, a twinkling firmament of adulation that served as a backdrop for his every move.

Despite all the trappings of the moment, my numerous conversations with Krause revealed that the GM was eager to end the Jordan era so that he could prove that he could rebuild the team without Jordan. I thought he was crazy.

I in turn went to Jordan to ask why they all couldn’t just sit down and talk out their differences. He replied that wouldn’t be possible because Krause had gotten in the way of winning too often.

I realized then that Jordan was confident he would defeat Krause just as he had overcome the entire NBA.

Jordan was wrong, of course. He did not understand just how badly Jackson wanted to get away from Krause, that the coach would “ride off into the sunset” at the end of the season.

Jordan also couldn’t fathom that Jerry Reinsdorf—who had realized hundreds of millions in wealth with the growth of the Bulls by then—didn’t want to give Pippen a large contract, even though the forward had been underpaid for years and had been a magnificent player for the team.

As it sadly unfolded, Jackson would leave, Pippen would be traded, Jordan would retire, and Krause would fail miserably in his attempts to rebuild the team and eventually be fired.

It would indeed prove to be the Last Dance for both Krause and Jordan.

I interviewed Krause extensively again in 2012. By then he had grown to accept everything that had come to pass.

“It’s past history,” he said. “It’s done. Phil is a great coach. For a long time, he was very easy to work with. Then he was not so easy. That’s life. Things change. Phil is Phil. I’m proud I hired him.”

Blood on the Horns: The Long Strange Ride of Michael Jordan’s Chicago Bulls by Roland Lazenby © Copyright 2014 Diversion Book.