Chicago Sports

Billy Packer, college sports broadcaster who covered 34 Final Fours, dies at 82

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Billy Packer, an Emmy award-winning college basketball broadcaster who covered 34 Final Fours for NBC and CBS, died Thursday. He was 82.

Packer’s son, Mark, told The Associated Press that his father had been hospitalized in Charlotte for the past three weeks and had several medical issues, and ultimately succumbed to kidney failure.

Packer’s broadcasting career coincided with the growth of college basketball. He worked as analyst or color commentator on every Final Four from 1975 to 2008. He received a Sports Emmy for Outstanding Sports Personality, Studio and Sports Analyst in 1993.

“He really enjoyed doing the Final Fours,” Mark Packer said. “He timed it right. Everything in life is about timing. The ability to get involved in something that, frankly, he was going to watch anyway, was a joy to him. And then college basketball just sort of took off with Magic Johnson and Larry Bird and that became, I think, the catalyst for college basketball fans to just go crazy with March Madness.”

Packer played three seasons at Wake Forest, and helped lead the Demon Deacons to the Final Four in 1962, but it was his work as an analyst that brought him the most acclaim.

He joined NBC in 1974 and called his first Final Four in 1975. UCLA beat Kentucky in the title game that year in what was John Wooden’s final game as coach.

Packer was also part of the broadcast in 1979 with Dick Enberg and Al McGuire when Magic Johnson’s Michigan State team beat Larry Bird’s Indiana State squad in the title game. That remains highest-rated game in basketball history with a 24.1 Nielsen rating, which is an estimated 35.1 million viewers.

Packer went to CBS in the fall of 1981, when the network acquired the rights to the NCAA Tournament. He remained the network’s main analyst until the 2008 Final Four.

In 1996 at CBS, Packer was involved in controversy when he used the term “tough monkey” to describe then-Georgetown star Allen Iverson during a game. Packer later said he “was not apologizing for what I said, because what I said has no implications in my mind whatsoever to do with Allen Iverson’s race.”

Sean McManus, the chairman of CBS Sports, said Packer was “synonymous with college basketball for more than three decades and set the standard of excellence as the voice of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament.”

“He had a tremendous impact on the growth and popularity of the sport.” McManus said. “In true Billy fashion, he analyzed the game with his own unique style, perspective and opinions, yet always kept the focus on the game. As passionate as he was about basketball, at his heart Billy was a family man. He leaves part of his legacy at CBS Sports, across college basketball and, most importantly, as a beloved husband, father and grandfather. He will be deeply missed by all.”

Packer was inducted into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame in 2008.

ESPN broadcaster Dick Vitale took to Twitter as word of Packer’s death spread. “So sad to learn of the passing of Billy Packer who had such a passion for college basketball,” Vitale tweeted. “My (prayers) go out to Billy’s son Mark & the entire Packer family. Always had great RESPECT for Billy & his partners Dick Enberg & Al McGuire-they were super. May Billy RIP.”

College basketball analyst Fran Fraschilla tweeted: “We fell in love (with) college basketball because of you. Your voice will remain in my head forever.”

Packer was viewed as a controversial figure during his broadcasting days, often drawing the ire of college basketball fans, particularly on North Carolina’s “Tobacco Road.”

“As a kid, I was a big NC State fan growing up, and I would watch a game and the next day I’d be like, ‘Boy you sure have it out for NC State, don’t you?’ And he would just laugh,” Mark Packer said.

The younger Packer, who is the host of ACC PM on the ACC Network, said it didn’t matter what school — most fans felt the same way about his father.

“He would cover North Carolina game and Tar Heels fans would be like, ‘you hate North Carolina,'” Mark Packer said. “Wake (Forest) fans would be like, ‘you hate us.’ And Billy just sort of got a kick out of that.”

Mark Packer said that while most fans will remember his father as a broadcaster, he’ll remember him even more for his business acumen. He said his father was a big real estate investor, and also owned a vape company, among other ventures.

“Billy was always a bit of a hustler — he was always looking for that next business deal,” Packer said.

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Stoking the fires of ‘wokeness’

When the talk turns to left-wing “woke” ideology on college campuses, I sometimes say I was there at the creation. I basically resigned my first academic job over it. Clearly it was quit or get fired — basically for having the wrong perceived identity and a congenital resistance to moralistic cant.

This was a New England university English department during the ’70s. Things started off uncomfortably, with a flamboyantly gay administrator making a show of telling people he’d hired me as a “hunk.” To object would be “homophobic,” so I kept quiet.

There were many similar embarrassments, such as a colleague at a department function inquiring after my “pretty little wife” in a sneering tone, as if being a Southern girl made her a trivial person unworthy of serious attention. Having been raised in Little Rock, she was also presumed to be racist by definition. People patronized her to her face. Mostly, she kept such incidents to herself for fear I’d do something crazy.

These weren’t ordinary New Englanders, I hasten to add. Only academics. Elsewhere, people asked her questions just to hear her accent. And while she won’t like me bragging on her, Diane was always near the top of any class she enrolled in and earned graduate fellowships despite being seriously cute. We’d been introduced by the dean of the graduate school.

OK, enough. It soon became clear that the personal was indeed the political, as the left-wing jargon of the era had it, and that I was the wrong kind of person. A self-styled “radical” colleague once commiserated that it must be hard for an “aristocratic Southerner” like me to deal with the university’s enlightened racial climate.

I am an Irish Catholic from Elizabeth, New Jersey. But I was also under formal investigation for failing a Black student who’d submitted no term paper and failed to show up for the final exam. I had failed her partly as a means of determining if she was still alive; I never wanted to break a bereaved parent’s heart by awarding a passing grade to somebody who’d died.

I was grudgingly exonerated, but the handwriting was on the wall.

After we moved to Diane’s hometown, I taught more Black students in one semester than during three years in New England. I played pickup basketball in the gym, and half of the school’s varsity team ended up in my class.

But that’s another story. I ultimately decided I’d chosen the wrong profession and got into journalism, where skepticism works better than dogmatism.

So now comes the reaction. Weary of moralizing professors, Republican politicians are promising to use government power to shut them up. In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis hopes to establish himself as a white nationalist alternative to Donald Trump by picking fights with teachers and professors at Florida’s public universities about race and gender.

He has openly boasted that under his leadership, “Florida is where ‘woke’ goes to die.” Recently he banned an Advanced Placement course on African American studies from being taught in the state’s schools because it is “inexplicably contrary to Florida law and significantly lacks educational value.”

Whoever wrote that has no idea what “inexplicably” means.

However, it’s clear that DeSantis thinks it’s legitimate to use government power to muzzle people he disagrees with. He’s a culture warrior of uncommon zeal.

The federal judge who issued an injunction blocking the enforcement of DeSantis’ ballyhooed “Stop WOKE Act” for violating the First and 14th Amendments quoted George Orwell: “If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.”

Evidently, DeSantis aspires to win the electoral votes of the same Deep South states that supported George Wallace in 1968, plus Florida.

Nationally, however, it’s a dead-bang loser.

Closer to home, there’s the newly elected Arkansas governor and former Trump administration head prevaricator Sarah Huckabee Sanders. She’s another right-wing politician invoking the word “freedom” to mean that people who disagree with her need to shut up, or else.

Sanders has issued executive orders banning critical race theory from being taught in Arkansas schools, although there’s zero evidence of it happening. She’s promised to rid the state of classes that make students feel guilty for being white.

Some wonder what Sanders has planned for the museum near her alma mater, Little Rock Central High, commemorating the signal event in the state’s history — when President Dwight Eisenhower dispatched the 101st Airborne to stop a white racist mob from preventing nine Black students from enrolling. There’s even a sculpture commemorating the bravery of the Little Rock Nine on the state capitol grounds.

As a Catholic schoolgirl at the time, my wife wasn’t involved in the racist protests. But she has always felt embarrassed about those events, and we sent our sons to Central High.

Gene Lyons is a National Magazine Award winner and co-author of “The Hunting of the President.”

The Sun-Times welcomes letters to the editor and op-eds. See our guidelines.

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This past season, the Chicago Bears finished as the NFL’s number one rushing attack, led by a trio of Justin Fields, David Montgomery and Khalil Herbert.

Despite not having much of a passing offense, the Bears were downright lethal on the ground. Going into next season, however, the back field could look much different.

For four seasons now, Montgomery has become a fan favorite and the primary workhorse for the Bears’ run game. This spring, however, his contract is up and Montgomery enters free agency for the first time as a pro.

Many fans would love to see Montgomery back in Chicago, but running backs are rarely paid substantial money anymore. It’s a position that’s become replaceable, and that’s exactly what the Bears could do with Herbert waiting in the wing — replace Montgomery.

What could David Montgomery ask for in free agency from the Chicago Bears?

In a recent column, Bears insider Chris Emma gave us some insight as to what Montgomery might ask for in free agency.

“Montgomery might seek $12 million annually, which is what running backs Aaron Jones (Packers) and Joe Mixon (Bengals) receive from their teams. That figure is tied for the seventh-highest annual salary for a running back.

“It would be a reasonable request from Montgomery, though the Bears might be more inclined to want to pay something like the $7 million annually that Leonard Fournette (Buccaneers) and James Conner (Cardinals) make. Those two running backs pull in the ninth-highest salaries at their position,” Emma wrote.

A salary of $12 million definitely seems steep, and it is by comparison. As Emma pointed out, Montgomery would be making the same as Jones and Mixon.

On the other hand, the Bears enter this offseason with the most cap space of any team in the league and could easily give Montgomery that kind of money. Maybe, the Bears front load his new deal and guarantee a good chunk over his first two years of the contract.

That way, the Bears can still afford plenty of other free agent talent and also not necessarily be tied down to Montgomery’s contract longer than two years at the very least.

Regardless, Montgomery just seems like a player you hang onto, keeping the best part of this team intact and the chemistry there. Hopefully for both sides’ sake, the Bears and Montgomery can get a deal done.

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Since the moment the Chicago Bears secured the number one overall pick in the 2023 NFL Draft, the takes have been wild.

Sure, on one hand you have the sensible thoughts from fans and media who truly get it. Those opinions mostly include general manager Ryan Poles trading the pick and securing a haul of draft capital in return. With that haul of draft capital, Poles can then continue building around franchise quarterback Justin Fields, getting him the necessary protection and weapons he deserves.

That would only make sense, right?

Yet, on another end of the spectrum, you have some media and fans who think the Bears should stay at number one, trade Fields, only to draft another quarterback like Alabama’s Bryce Young and, in essence, start over again.

Say what you will about sports media, as everyone has their favorite outlet and trusted “expert” these days. But, the idea of the Bears starting over seems quite hilarious, especially after the exciting breakout we saw from Fields last season.

ESPN’s Mel Kiper Jr. is in on the Chicago Bears building around Justin Fields and skipping on the quarterback position in the 2023 NFL Draft class

In the same radio segment Kiper said a double-trade-down scenario is possible for the Bears in this year’s draft, he also gave some high praise to Fields.

“To me, there is no quarterback in this draft better than Justin Fields,” Kiper said on Waddle and Silvy.

Wow, that is extremely high praise for a polarizing quarterback such as Fields.

After last season, some people believe Fields is going to be great. Some, on the other hand, believe he’s just a running quarterback with limited passing potential.

Kiper, one of the most well-known draft experts of the last two decades, believes Fields is better than any quarterback in this class — and that includes Bryce Young.

There are a lot of people who believe Young is the real deal, and that he’s as surefire a pick as we’ve seen in quite some time. And that might be true, but the Bears sticking with Fields makes far more sense than drafting another rookie.

Kiper is right, too. Fields has hardly scratched the surface of what he can do as a pro, and once the Bears put the talent around him, the world will see a completely different side of him.

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Blackhawks’ shuffled lines all contribute in win over Flames

CALGARY, Alberta — With Jonathan Toews a late scratch due to illness Thursday against the Flames, Blackhawks coach Luke Richardson shuffled all four forward lines in warmups.

And then all four lines scored in a 5-1 Hawks win.

Jason Dickinson moved up to first-line center and deposited a beautiful goal on a nearly-between-his-legs shot. Max Domi moved down to Toews’ second-line center role and earned an assist on Taylor Raddysh’s goal.

Third-line wing Sam Lafferty extended his red-hot stretch with a two-on-one tap-in. And Boris Katchouk, making his first appearance since Jan. 3, scored for the fourth line — a goal on which recent call-up Luke Philp earned his first NHL point. Defenseman Connor Murphy also hit an empty net.

The Hawks’ January winning surge, written off for dead after the past two losses, apparently might not be quite done yet.

Chasing Kane

Patrick Kane tallied one assist and two shots on goalThursday.

That latter category has been scrutinized lately because he went consecutive games last weekend (against the Blues and Kings) with zero shots for just the second time in his career.

“[We’ve been] chasing the puck a lot and not [having] much puck possession,” Kane said Thursday. “When we do get it, we can do a better job of hanging onto it.”

The only other instance was in December 2010, but it really shouldn’t count. He was injured 23 seconds into the first game, and the second game came three weeks later.

He has been talking about needing to get more possession since November, but he hasn’t been able to resolve the problem. That has been reflected in his production: he entered Thursday on pace to finish with 56 points in 77 games this season, down from 92 points last year.

It might actually be unresolvable, considering the way this Hawks team is constructed. He has no choice but to keep trying to do so, though, and he did play well Thursday — he easily could’ve had two or three points.

‘It has been not a great year, production-wise. It’s disappointing, for sure,” he said. “You get used to playing with certain guys [in] a certain style for two, three, four years. All of a sudden, it’s different. It’s not like it’s any worse or better; it’s just different.

“You have to learn…how to go to the right areas, be in the right spot for your teammates. I know it has been over half the season, but some games it clicks, some games it’s been a little bit different.”

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Can Hendrickson Guide Fire to MLS Playoffs?

After taking over at Soldier Field in 2021, Ezra Hendrickson had a tough first year as Chicago Fire head coach. However, the 2022 season is done and dusted, and Fire is looking ahead to an exciting 2023 MLS campaign.

Big Season Ahead for Fire

Most clubs have the same ambition in America’s top tier, with the playoffs being the priority for many. The 2023 season promises to be as thrilling as ever and will undoubtedly be worth tuning in for.

The sports streaming market is in demand these days, with soccer being one of the standout sports. According to ExpressVPN’s data on sports streaming in the US over the past five years, only NFL and NBA are more popular than soccer. Soccer streaming has become even more favored than baseball.

When a new manager arrives, it can take time for things to click into gear. Hendrickson took over for the start of the 2022 season after leaving the Columbus Crew assistant manager role in November 2021.

After a mediocre 2022 campaign, Hendrickson and his Chicago side are looking to kick on this year and secure a playoff berth. It will undoubtedly be challenging, but the Illinois outfit can find form and seal a top-seven finish.

Looking Back on 2022

Chicago made a solid start to their 2022 season, as they were unbeaten in their opening five games. Before a 1-0 loss at Orlando City in April, Fire beat DC United and Sporting Kansas City and drew with Inter Miami, Orlando, and Dallas.

However, things went rapidly downhill after the 3-1 home success over Kansas, as Hendrickson’s side failed to win any of the next ten MLS matches and claimed just one win in 12. A flurry of wins from July to August revived their slim playoff hopes, but inconsistency cost them dearly in the end. 

There’s no other route…. pic.twitter.com/ctdEJc7hAI

— EZRA (@EzraHendrickson) August 23, 2022

 

Chicago finished 12th place in the Eastern Conference table, collecting 39 points from 34 matches. They were nine points behind Orlando, who took the final playoff spot in the Eastern section. Overall, Fire picked up ten wins, drew nine times, and suffered 15 defeats.

Can Fire Sneak into Playoffs?

A new season brings plenty of optimism, and Chicago is looking for a top-seven finish in the East in 2023. They have added a few new additions to the squad, with Jonathan Dean and Arnaud Souquet arriving. They also have some talented players, including former Liverpool man Xherdan Shaqiri. However, as covered by the official MLS website, a few star faces have left the club this winter, leaving a massive gap in the team.

𝗗𝗢𝗡𝗘 𝗗𝗘𝗔𝗟

Aston Villa have reached an agreement to sign Chicago Fire forward Jhon Durán for a potential fee of €20.4m 😳 pic.twitter.com/2PipL1Dg30

— Transfermarkt.co.uk (@TMuk_news) January 16, 2023

Chicago is undoubtedly an outsider going into the new season. Los Angeles is the favorite to retain their MLS Cup crown at 11/2, while Philadelphia Union and LA Galaxy are being tipped to have strong seasons. As for Fire, the bookies are offering around 75/1 for them to win the 2023 MLS Cup. Their one and only MLS Cup success came way back in 1998.

Chicago has a tough start to their 2023 season. Looking on Chicago Fire’s webpage, Hendrickson’s side welcomed New York City to Soldier Field on the opening weekend before traveling to Philadelphia in game two. Can they get off to a good start and make 2023 a year to remember?

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Bulls continue falling to lesser teams as trade deadline nears

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Maybe it will happen in Orlando. Maybe it will have to wait until next week during a four-game home stand.

Heck, maybe it happens at lunch on Friday afternoon.

DeMar DeRozan wasn’t quite sure when it will happen, only that it will. It has to.

“We haven’t been as consistent as we’ve wanted to be, but it could take what we eat at lunch to change everything,” DeRozan said. “That’s just how I view it, and I try and give that same mindset and energy to everyone on the team.”

Seemingly no one is hearing it.

In a season of rock-bottom loss after rock-bottom loss, the Bulls followed up blowing a 21-point lead to Indiana and losing, by going into Charlotte on Thursday, and blowing a 10-point third-quarter lead in the eventual 111-96 loss to a Hornets team that had just five home wins.

“We come out good, looking like we have the right mentality the first half, and then second half everything goes to sh-t, so as leaders we’ve got to do better, I’ve got to do better,” guard Zach LaVine said. “It’s not going to change until each one of us individually comes together and says, ‘Enough.’ It’s not like we’re not trying, but it’s obviously not enough.”

No, it’s not.

And the reasons why are simple as far as Billy Donovan was concerned, with the coach pointing towards too much fouling, rebounds and turnovers. The latest culprit was the turnovers, and more specifically, untimely ones.

The changing of the momentum came in the third quarter, and of course seemed very familiar for the Bulls (22-26). Like they have in many of their meltdowns, it was the third quarter that did the Bulls in, or at least erased what was a very solid two-and-a-half quarters of work.

After an Ayo Dosunmu pull-up jumper with 5:52 left in the third stanza, the lead was 10. Not for long. A Dosunmu turnover, a missed shot by DeRozan, and an errant pass by Nikola Vucevic, and just like that the game was tied.

Then it was a dog fight the rest of the way out, and only one dog was biting, as Charlotte (14-36) outscored the visiting team 34-17 in the fourth.

Not that either team shot the lights out, but the Bulls going 4-for-26 from three-point range just wasn’t going to get it done.

Bigger picture was the Bulls have just six more games left before the NBA trade deadline, and with executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas setting the bar at a second-round playoff series back in the fall, it would seem this roster as constructed is not headed in that direction.

That’s why Donovan was asked if he felt a move needed to be made to shake up this roster.

“I believe it’s in there, and we have to figure out as coaches and players how to pull it out of each other,” Donovan said. “I’m not at a point where I can say this just can’t work. There’s too much substance of good guys that want to do the right things and care.

“We just have to be desperate. I don’t know of any other way to say it. We can’t just line-up and play, and everything is going to work itself out, and we’re going to wait for the fourth quarter and close this thing out.”

Not this season. And not when Nikola Vucevic, DeRozan, and LaVine combine to go a minus-72 in plus/minus.

What say you on the trade topic, Zach?

“Whoever is on the team, I ride with ’em,” LaVine said. “I’m not the person in the front office making the decision.

“I believe in myself and I believe in the team, whoever is on the team.”

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Blackhawks’ shuffled lines all contribute in win over Flames

CALGARY, Alberta — With Jonathan Toews a late scratch due to illness Thursday against the Flames, Blackhawks coach Luke Richardson shuffled all four forward lines in warmups.

And then all four lines scored in a 5-1 Hawks win.

Jason Dickinson moved up to first-line center and deposited a beautiful goal on a nearly-between-his-legs shot. Max Domi moved down to Toews’ second-line center role and earned an assist on Taylor Raddysh’s goal.

Third-line wing Sam Lafferty extended his red-hot stretch with a two-on-one tap-in. And Boris Katchouk, making his first appearance since Jan. 3, scored for the fourth line — a goal on which recent call-up Luke Philp earned his first NHL point. Defenseman Connor Murphy also hit an empty net.

The Hawks’ January winning surge, written off for dead after the past two losses, apparently might not be quite done yet.

Chasing Kane

Patrick Kane tallied one assist and two shots on goalThursday.

That latter category has been scrutinized lately because he went consecutive games last weekend (against the Blues and Kings) with zero shots for just the second time in his career.

“[We’ve been] chasing the puck a lot and not [having] much puck possession,” Kane said Thursday. “When we do get it, we can do a better job of hanging onto it.”

The only other instance was in December 2010, but it really shouldn’t count. He was injured 23 seconds into the first game, and the second game came three weeks later.

He has been talking about needing to get more possession since November, but he hasn’t been able to resolve the problem. That has been reflected in his production: he entered Thursday on pace to finish with 56 points in 77 games this season, down from 92 points last year.

It might actually be unresolvable, considering the way this Hawks team is constructed. He has no choice but to keep trying to do so, though, and he did play well Thursday — he easily could’ve had two or three points.

‘It has been not a great year, production-wise. It’s disappointing, for sure,” he said. “You get used to playing with certain guys [in] a certain style for two, three, four years. All of a sudden, it’s different. It’s not like it’s any worse or better; it’s just different.

“You have to learn…how to go to the right areas, be in the right spot for your teammates. I know it has been over half the season, but some games it clicks, some games it’s been a little bit different.”

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Chicago State University announces committee to explore adding football program

Chicago State University announced Thursday that an exploratory committee will study the impact of potentially adding a Division 1 football program to the school.

The committee is a combination of advisory and working group members, business leaders and includes former Chicago Bears Otis Wilson and Tom Thayer as well as current NBA official James Capers, CSU said in a statement.

Findings are expected to be shared with CSU President Zaldwaynaka Scott by the end of the 2023 spring semester. If the recommendation is approved, football and other programs could start as soon as the fall of 2025, the school said.

The committee will also look at adding more women’s sports teams to the existing roster.

“The potential to bring a Division I football program here to CSU and increase the number of women’s sports offerings is not only an exciting step forward for the current and future student body, but for the entire surrounding community,” said Monique Carroll, CSU’s Director of Intercollegiate Athletics. “The time is now to usher in the next era of Chicago State Athletics, and we could not be more grateful for the exploratory committee to help us take these critical steps forward in evolving our programming.”

Chicago State teams currently compete in basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, tennis, indoor and outdoor track and volleyball.

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Bulls veteran DeMar DeRozan focused on teammates currently available

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – DeMar DeRozan would enjoy seeing the No. 2 jersey walk through the door and for teammate Lonzo Ball (left knee) to declare he’s ready to return.

DeRozan’s just not counting on it or even waiting for it.

The same can be said about Javonte Green (right knee), Goran Dragic (illness), and any player that could possibly be added by the Feb. 9 trade deadline.

In DeRozan’s world it’s out of sight, out of mind.

“That’s exactly been my mindset my entire career, before I was in the NBA, everything,” DeRozan said on Thursday. “That’s been my whole approach to life. That’s what makes things so much more difficult, when you carry that type of weight on you. Whatever cards you’re dealt with, let’s figure it out. I’m going to figure it out the best way I can.

“With limited resources, I’ve seen the greatest things created. That’s just my mindset when it comes to everything, so I don’t really get caught up in waiting on Shaq (Shaquille O’Neal) to walk through that door to help us. I don’t even think like that. You can be waiting forever for something like that.”

That also explains why DeRozan doesn’t get caught up in deadline talk or trade rumors. The veteran forward believes in riding with the guys that are available to play that given night.

That’s another reason why DeRozan isn’t the type to go to his front office and ask about trade possibilities or even what executive vice president of basketball Arturas Karnisovas might be thinking about roster changes.

According to DeRozan, he’s never done that since arriving in the NBA.

He’s also sold on the idea that the “Big Three” of himself, Zach LaVine and Nikola Vucevic have been finding a groove the last month, and didn’t see any reason to break that up.

“We still feel like we can get a lot better,” DeRozan said. “Just getting more comfortable at both ends and leading these guys. Coach [Billy Donovan] always said it, always challenged us every single day that it starts with us [three]. We’ve been taking on that challenge every single day whether it’s practice or film. And we try to carry that over to the game.”

Stars aligning

DeRozan and LaVine will have to wait until Feb. 2 to see if they are once again All-Star Game bound, because that’s when the reserves will be announced.

The starters were named before the Bulls played the Hornets, and there were very few surprises.

Giannis Antetokounmpo headlined the Eastern Conference and was named captain, joined by Kevin Durant, Jayson Tatum, Kyrie Irving and Donovan Mitchell.

LeBron James will once again captain the Western Conference, joined by Stephen Curry, Luka Doncic, Zion Williamson and Nikola Jokic.

The starters were chosen by fans, active players, and a panel of select media members, while the reserves will be selected by the 30 NBA head coaches.

LaVine and DeRozan both made the All-Star Game last season, when it was played in Cleveland.

Speaking of …

The Bulls were still short-handed, but help was on the way.

According to Donovan, back-up point guard Goran Dragic (illness) was able to practice in Chicago on Thursday, and was expected to fly to Orlando to meet the team.

As far as Green, he was on this trip and even passing the ball to teammates in shooting drills during the shootaround. However, he was still a week or two away from getting on a bike and testing the mobility of the knee.

Donovan said they would have a better feel of his return once Green can clear that obstacle.

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