Chicago Sports

Chicago Bulls bring back Derrick Jones Jr.

Derrick Jones Jr. returns to the Chicago Bulls, agreeing to a two-year deal

Free Agency is underway and the Chicago Bulls have been busy. Derrick Jones Jr. is the latest free-agent signing in Chicago. The Bulls brought him back for two years on a very team-friendly deal.

Shams Charania with the Athletic reported the news on Friday afternoon.

Free agent forward Derrick Jones Jr. has agreed to a two-year, $6.6 million deal to return to the Chicago Bulls, with player option in second season, sources tell @TheAthletic @Stadium.

Derrick Jones Jr. was a useful piece on the bench last season and made an impact in the disappointing playoff series against the Bucks. Jones provides hustle, length, energy, and some shooting, all on a very team-friendly deal. Jones has bounced around a bit in his young career and even reached the NBA Finals with Miami in 2020.

Derrick Jones Jr. is known for his high-flying dunks and had one of the few memorable highlights in last season’s short-lived playoff run.

DJJ OVER GIANNIS 🤯
Reminder: Derrick Jones Jr. won the 2020 NBA Dunk Contest…
🎥 @NBCSBulls
https://t.co/bdDWC6dz7U

The Bulls have already brought back Zach LaVine and have added Andre Drummond since free agency opened yesterday evening. Many expect the Bulls to add more shooting around their core players. Expect the Bulls to continue being active as free agency progresses.

For More Great Chicago Sports Content

Follow us on Twitter at @chicitysports23 for more great content. We appreciate you taking time to read our articles. To interact more with our community and keep up to date on the latest in Chicago sports news, JOIN OUR FREE FACEBOOK GROUP by CLICKING HERE

Read More

Chicago Bulls bring back Derrick Jones Jr. Read More »

White Sox’ Dylan Cease pitching, thinking like an All-Star

SAN FRANCISCO — Dylan Cease is not going to lie. The possibility of being an All-Star has more than crossed his mind.

“That would be unbelievably cool,” Cease said. “It would be a dream come true.”

Cease could make four starts before the American League pitching staff is named, but his credentials going into his start against the Giants Saturday are good: An ERA of 2.56 that ranks ninth in the majors, 13.44 strikeouts per nine innings that ranks first and 121 strikeouts ranking second behind Shane McClanahan.

“It’s not the No. 1 focus but it’s one of those where we’re close enough to the game where it’s definitely more on the mind,” said Cease, who would be a first-time All-Star.

“Try not to jinx it. We’re also trying to focus on what we’re doing here [as a team]. It really isn’t something I’m fixated on but I’d be lying if I said it was a small thought.”

Cease has progress from year to year since he was a rookie in 2019. His ERA from year to year: 5.79, 4.01, 3.91, 2.56. His strikeouts per nine innings: 10.9, 6.8, 12.3, 13.4.

“I’m happy I found a process for me that is very repeatable,” Cease said. “It’s made it easier for me to adjust on the go. Really just having experience now, it’s helping me build confidence every time I go out there and it builds on itself. More success, more results.

“When you fail you go back to the drawing board, you rebuild yourself again and so on and so forth. I’m at a point where I really am confident in rebuilding myself and my process.”

Cease always had the stuff – upper 90s velocity, hard slider, knuckle curveball and changeup — to be a Cy Young caliber pitcher. After not being trusted to start in the 2020 Wild Card due to late season command problems, he established career highs in numerous categories in 2021, including an AL best 12.9 strikeouts per nine innings. His slider is on point this season, and his command overall is more consistent than in years past.

“Best slider I’ve had in my career, for sure,” he said.

And the command, “yes, it’s all in a pretty good spot right now.”

Cease would like to cut down his walks – his 37 bases on balls leads the majors and he’s averaging 4.1 per nine innings, which hikes his pitch counts and can hinder his ability to pitch deeper into games – but his fielding independent pitching ERA is 2.51, third in the majors behind Kevin Gausman (1.71) and former teammate Carlos Rodon (2.31).

When he came off the field after striking out 13 Orioles in seven innings in his last start Sunday, Cease, as reserved as they come, raised his arms to the crowd, prompting them to get up and make some noise. Cease got the win that day, his team-best sixth against three losses.

“Good, good,” manager Tony La Russa said when told of Cease’s display of exuberance. “There is a lot to him. He’s got some depth personally and professionally. I didn’t know he did that but he knows he’s stepping up and he embraces it. And we’re lucky he does.”

The All-Star Game is July 19 in Los Angeles. All said and done, Cease is having an All-Star caliber first half, which he attributes to three things.

“Focus, practice and experience,” he said. “But a big part is honing in on what I have to do to feel certain things and learning myself, really.”

Read More

White Sox’ Dylan Cease pitching, thinking like an All-Star Read More »

Zach LaVine, Bulls agree to $215.2 million, five-year max contract

Zach LaVine was never going to another team.

The two-time All-Star made that very clear both publicly and behind the scenes, as did the Bulls’ front office time and time again throughout the 2021-22 season.

That’s why it took less than 24 hours for the two sides to reach a verbal agreement on a max contract that will pay LaVine $215.2 million over the next five years.

According to a source, the Bulls and LaVine did have a formal meeting on Thursday — the first day teams could negotiate with free agents — and the guard also met with several other suitors. But it was the Bulls the entire time in his mind, and what he told his core teammates.

One source said that LaVine was so adamant about re-signing with the Bulls going into the offseason that he at first didn’t even want to go through the formality of taking a meeting with them, choosing to just hear what other organizations were offering.

Klutch Sports, however, wanted the guard to get the full free-agent experience before making his intentions known on Friday.

Read More

Zach LaVine, Bulls agree to $215.2 million, five-year max contract Read More »

Zach LaVine gets $215.2 million. What do the Bulls get?

Can they win with him?

Can the Bulls win an NBA championship with Zach LaVine?

Can they win a championship because of him?

Those are the questions that were being asked before he agreed to a five-year, $215.2 max contract, and those are the questions being asked now that he’s gone from a very rich man to an insanely rich man.

And the answer, before and after, is that nobody, not even his biggest backers, has the foggiest. He’s a fine player, one with max-contract talent, but he has a game that doesn’t come with easy answers. I can look at Boston’s Marcus Smart and Milwaukee’s Jrue Holiday and know I can win with and because of them. Neither can touch LaVine’s athleticism.

I can look at LaVine and know that I can’t be sure what I know.

That’s the problem Bulls exec Arturas Karnisovas undoubtedly faced while deciding what to do with the eight-year pro. Here was a fan favorite who was going to get a lot of money wherever he went. Here was a player who could shoot the three and get to the basket whenever he wanted. But here, also, was a player whose game didn’t lend itself to easy translation. There’s playing well and then there’s winning.

It’s not just LaVine. There are plenty of players in the NBA who, while growing up, were led to believe that the game of basketball was about showcasing skills. They don’t play with teammates so much as take turns. It’s my turn to shoot. Next time down the court it will be yours.

So how does an NBA talent evaluator deal with that? Carefully. And that was the problem as it related to LaVine. There was no room for caution. Nothing less than a max deal was going to get this done for the Bulls. So they had a massive decision to make: Give him the money and hope he can win a title in Chicago or let him go and risk him winning a title with someone else.

You’d think that a five-year, $215.2 million max contract would come with definitive answers. I’m sure the Bulls wish they had more assurances, too. My guess is that, back to the wall, they did what they felt they had to do but aren’t sure if he can carry a team to an NBA title. Aren’t sure they can win because of him.

For most of LaVine’s career, the problem has been the talent around him. He didn’t have much help until last season, when the Bulls, boosted by the arrival of DeMar DeRozan, played well before going quickly in the postseason. The idea around the max contract has to be that, with the right players around him, he can take the Bulls to the next level. That’s the belief, anyway. It’s about faith. But it’s also about economics. With so much of their money tied to one player, the Bulls don’t have a lot of wiggle room. In other words, a trade bringing Kevin Durant to the Bulls isn’t going to happen. The Bulls have agreed to a two-year contract with Andre Drummond, giving them more toughness on the boards. No, the cavalry isn’t on the way, but that’s OK. The Bulls do have some horses.

But everything is on LaVine. He has to stay healthy, something that hasn’t been easy for him. He has to make DeRozan, Nikola Vucevic and Lonzo Ball better. He’s part of a very nice team, which sounds almost patronizing. But more. The Bulls need something more. That contract means LaVine has to make his team hell for opponents.

At a minimum, this will be interesting. If everyone stays healthy, the Bulls will win games. Winning big games — now there’s the challenge. They didn’t do well against good teams last season. It was no surprise when the Bucks manhandled them in the first round of the playoffs.

For a two-time All-Star who averaged 24.4 points last season, LaVine sure has a lot to prove. The truckload of money that was just dumped at his feet means that people will want even more proof of his worth. The tricky part is the winning part. The Bulls have to win. There’s no nuance involved. They’re paying LaVine a ton of money to take them where Michael Jordan used to take them regularly. No pressure, kid.

The Bulls were a fun story last season. They were likable. They played well together. But now there has to be more. And all that money means there has to be more from their best player.

Talent has never been the issue with LaVine. Can that talent translate into a title? It’s the only question there is. Even after giving him a max deal, the Bulls surely have to be asking themselves the same thing.

Read More

Zach LaVine gets $215.2 million. What do the Bulls get? Read More »

3 reasons to be excited for the Chicago Bears secondary this season

1. The rookies in the Chicago Bears secondary should be really good

The Chicago Bears secondary was awful last season. Opposing quarterbacks torched the Bears unit as they forfeited 27 passing touchdowns in 2021. General manager Ryan Poles attempted to cure that ill in this year’s draft. Washington Huskies cornerback Kyler Gordon and Penn State Safety Jaquan Brisker were added to the Bears secondary in the 2nd round of the 2022 draft.

Gordon and Brisker were extremely competent in college. The pair only allowed one touchdown in college.

Jaquan Brisker and Kyler Gordon combined for 1,678 coverage snaps in their college careers.
They also combined to give up ONE touchdown.
#Bears https://t.co/nAVYOlRXEh

That’s a lot of snaps to only give up one six-point conversion.

Chicago Bears head coach Matt Eberflus is happy with their transition to the NFL game so far. Eberflus said Gordon was “lighting it up” and Brisker’s development was going well. Brisker is projected by NFL writer Chad Reuter to make the “All-Rookie” team. The pair have excited other NFL insiders as well. PFF called the Bears’ secondary the most improved divisional rival unit.

Here’s some of Brisker’s highlights:

2. Jaylon Johnson and Eddie Jackson can focus on their role in the Chicago Bears secondary

The addition of Brisker and Gordon will let veterans cornerback Jaylon Johnson and safety Eddie Jackson focus on their role in the Chicago Bears secondary. When the Bears played with more mediocre talent in the Bears’ secondary last season, mistakes were made by both players as they tried to overcompensate.

This season with a new coaching staff is a “complete reset”, Johnson told reporters in May. After getting reps with the second team in the Bears OTA, Johnson said he needed to show the Bears what he can do in person.

Jackson wasn’t happy with his play in 2021. The sixth-year veteran called 2021 one of his worst seasons as he gave up too many deep balls. Eberflus told the media Jackson has a clean slate with the team coming into 2022. With Brisker focusing on the box, Jackson should be better at safety this season. And he can be a turnover machine.

3. Kindle Vildor won’t be in the Bears’ secondary as much on Sundays

Kindle Vildor starting in the Bears’ secondary last year was a nightmare to watch. Vildor gave up too many passes in critical situations in 2021. The final drive against the Baltimore Ravens was especially atrocious. It was so bad that Vildor was benched for Artie Burns.

Vildor reminds me of a former wide receiver turned cornerback. His Achilles Heel is that he attempts to cover a crappy route he would have run instead of the opponent’s wide receiver.

PFF rates the third-year cornerback at 50.2 overall. The two-time All-Sun Belt athlete is tied at 53rd with 40 receptions allowed. Vildor has defended 5 passes in his two seasons in the Bears’ secondary. To put that in perspective, Johnson has defended 24 passes in the same amount of time.

The Bears added depth at cornerback will net the Bears’ secondary another starter with Gordon alongside Johnson. With the addition of Tavon Young this offseason, it’s possible Vildor will be cut before the start of the season.

For More Great Chicago Sports Content

Follow us on Twitter at @chicitysports23 for more great content. We appreciate you taking time to read our articles. To interact more with our community and keep up to date on the latest in Chicago sports news, JOIN OUR FREE FACEBOOK GROUP by CLICKING HERE

Read More

3 reasons to be excited for the Chicago Bears secondary this season Read More »

Agent: Bulls, LaVine agree to 5-year, $215M dealon July 1, 2022 at 5:58 pm

The Chicago Bulls and Zach LaVine have agreed to a five-year, $215M max contract extension, Klutch Sports announced Friday.

LaVine, 27, has blossomed into a two-time All-Star in Chicago, where he arrived in the trade that sent Jimmy Butler to the Minnesota Timberwolves in 2017, and — along with DeMar DeRozan — was the cornerstone of Chicago’s return to the Eastern Conference playoffs for the first time in five years this past season.

That also marked the first time in LaVine’s career that he’d reached the postseason.

2 Related

Now, he and the Bulls will look to continue that success moving forward, thanks to the two sides sitting down and hammering out a maximum contract extension to keep LaVine in Chicago through his prime.

Since coming to the Bulls in the Butler trade in 2017, LaVine has become a terrific offensive threat at every level. He’s averaged at least 23.7 points per game each of the past four seasons while being both a high volume and quality percentage 3-point shooter, in addition to his explosiveness attacking the rim, steadiness at the free throw line (at least five attempts and over 80 percent shooting the past four seasons) and ability to create for others (at least four assists per game).

This past season — coming off winning a gold medal with Team USA in Tokyo last summer — LaVine averaged 24.4 points, 4.5 assists and 4.6 rebounds per game, all while shooting 47.6 percent from the field and 38.9 percent from 3-point range despite being hampered by a left knee injury that required surgery shortly after the season ended.

LaVine suffered a torn ACL in that same left knee in 2017, before being traded to Chicago later that same year alongside the 7th pick in that year’s draft, which became Lauri Markkanen and guard Kris Dunn.

Still, LaVine’s growth since arriving with the Bulls led to him making an All-Star appearance in each of the last two seasons.

And LaVine’s signature on a new deal is the culmination of a year-plus effort by Arturas Karnisovas, the team’s executive vice president of basketball operations, to construct a team around LaVine good enough to make Chicago a factor in the East again — and to convince the star to remain with Chicago.

As a result, the Bulls were busy last spring and summer. They acquired DeRozan, Nikola Vucevic and Lonzo Ball via trades, Alex Caruso in free agency and hired former Oklahoma City Thunder head coach Billy Donovan to coach the team.

The sum total of those moves pushed Chicago to the top of the Eastern Conference for much of last season before a series of injuries — notably to Ball, Caruso and second-year forward Patrick Williams — saw the Bulls fall down the standings. They eventually entered the playoffs as a sixth seed, losing in five games to the Milwaukee Bucks in the first round of the East playoffs.

ESPN’s Jamal Collier contributed to this report.

Read More

Agent: Bulls, LaVine agree to 5-year, $215M dealon July 1, 2022 at 5:58 pm Read More »

Zach LaVine signs five-year maximum contract with Chicago Bulls

Guard Zach LaVine is staying in Chicago as he’s agreed to a max deal with the Bulls on Friday morning

The 2022 NBA free agency period is still just under 24 hours old and while it’s been a quiet one for the Chicago Bulls outside of the Andre Drummond signing, the team made their ‘big splash’ on Friday.

According to multiple reports, the Bulls and Zach LaVine have agreed to a five-year deal worth $215.2M on a maximum contract. The All-Star will remain in Chicago as part of the team’s core for the future, pairing him with DeMar DeRozan.

NBA All-Star Zach LaVine has agreed to a five-year, $215.2 million maximum contract to return to the Chicago Bulls, with a player option in Year 5, Klutch Sports CEO Rich Paul told @TheAthletic @Stadium.

There was talk earlier in the offseason that LaVine could be on the way out of Chicago due to his knee injury and a team like the Los Angeles Lakers were connected to the guard. But in the end, it made the most sense for him to stay with the Bulls as they were the only franchise able to offer him a maximum contract.

LaVine is coming off a 2021-22 campaign in which he averaged 24.4 points, 4.6 rebounds, and 4.5 assists per game while making the NBA All-Star Game. It was his second-straight NBA All-Star Game nod with the Bulls.

For More Great Chicago Sports Content

Follow us on Twitter at @chicitysports23 for more great content. We appreciate you taking time to read our articles. To interact more with our community and keep up to date on the latest in Chicago sports news, JOIN OUR FREE FACEBOOK GROUP by CLICKING HERE

Read More

Zach LaVine signs five-year maximum contract with Chicago Bulls Read More »

Bulls, Zach LaVine agree to $215.2 million, five-year contract

Zach LaVine was never going to another team.

The two-time All-Star made that very clear both publicly and behind the scenes, as did the Bulls’ front office time and time again throughout the 2021-22 season.

That’s why it took less than 24 hours for the two sides to reach a verbal agreement on a max contract that will pay LaVine $215.2 million over the next five years.

According to a source, the Bulls and LaVine did have a formal meeting on Thursday — the first day teams could negotiate with free agents — and the guard also met with several other suitors. But it was the Bulls the entire time in his mind, and what he told his core teammates.

One source said that LaVine was so adamant about re-signing with the Bulls going into the offseason that he at first didn’t even want to go through the formality of taking a meeting with them, choosing to just hear what other organizations were offering.

Klutch Sports, however, wanted the guard to get the full free-agent experience before making his intentions known on Friday.

Read More

Bulls, Zach LaVine agree to $215.2 million, five-year contract Read More »

Dennis Cahill, Irish traditional music great from Chicago, dead at 68

Dennis Cahill started out playing guitar in rock groups and wedding bands. But he achieved worldwide fame as a master of traditional Irish music, headlining at festivals and concert halls around the world.

He performed for President Barack Obama at the White House and Ireland President Michael D. Higgins.

The Northwest Side resident died June 20 at a rehab facility after a long illness, according to his wife Mary Joyce-Cahill. He was 68.

He grew up on the South Side at 80th Street and Marshfield Avenue in Gresham and graduated from Little Flower High School. His parents Anna and Dennis Cahill were from an Irish-language stronghold –the fishing village of Ballydavid on the Dingle peninsula in County Kerry. In Chicago, his father worked as a stationary engineer.

Young Dennis studied music at DePaul University before switching to Roosevelt University to focus on classical guitar.

“One classical music professor, who knew Dennis was gigging in a variety of styles of music during his time at school, asked: ‘What do you expect to do with that music?’ ” accordionist Jimmy Keane said. “Dennis responded: ‘Make a f—in’ living!’ “

He started playing sets at the Earl of Old Town with Steve Goodman, John Prine, Bonnie Koloc and Ed Holstein and Fred Holstein. And he performed at the R.R. Ranch, a country-and-Western bar at 56 W. Randolph St.

In the 1980s, he met Martin Hayes, a fiddler from County Clare and six-time all-Ireland music champion by the time he was 19. Their first partnership was in the rock fusion group Midnight Court.

They shifted to traditional Irish music and played together for decades, performing in the United States, Ireland and England as well as Mexico, Australia, China, France, Germany, Holland, Hong Kong, Italy and Poland. They performed with stars including country-bluegrass legend Ricky Skaggs, Paul Simon and Sting.

Dennis Cahill (right) and fiddler Martin Hayes were lauded for their mastery of the Celtic music that links the Irish diaspora.

Jordan Koepke

The New York Times praised their “subtle invention,” with critic Ann Powers once writing: “Stripping old reels and jigs to their essence, leaving space between the notes for harmonics and whispered blue notes, Mr. Hayes and Mr. Cahill created a Celtic complement to Steve Reich’s quartets or Miles Davis’ ‘Sketches of Spain.’ “

He and Hayes recorded three LPs as a duo and several more with The Gloaming, a traditional Irish supergroup they helped form a decade ago.

Dennis Cahill (right) and fiddler Martin Hayes together recorded “Welcome Here Again.”

Mr. Cahill would watch Hayes closely, picking up the Celtic melodies that link the Irish diaspora but helping them sound unscripted as birdsong.

Hayes called him “the first minimalist in traditional Irish music.

“The fewer notes you play, the more meaningful each must be. And Dennis was a master at that. He also loved classical music and great jazz musicians such as Bill Evans and Bill Frisell. He looked at the Irish melodies less through an Irish music lens and more through the fact that melody is a universal musical idea. So universal harmonic principles from the wider world of music could be applied to this music.”

Higgins was a fan. The Gloaming played at London’s Royal Albert Hall in 2014 when Higgins made history as the first Irish president to make a state visit to the United Kingdom.

After Mr. Cahill’s death, Higgins said he and Hayes “explored new musical territory and helped create a phenomenal interest in traditional music among a whole new generation of people both within Ireland and across the world.”

“He really created this whole different style of guitar backing of traditional tunes,” said Chicago musician Kathleen Keane, who said the understated technique “allowed the melody to shine.”

Mr. Cahill’s spare playing style “not only lifted the melody of Martin’s fiddle but extracted all these hidden sounds and hidden spaces within the notes,” Keane said.

She described him as having evolved from a rocker producing “a million notes” on an electric guitar “to a sublime acoustic trad’ musician with an unstrapped classical guitar resting gently upon his knee like a baby and creating more beauty with less then he ever had previously.”

“Coming into the music late,” Mr. Cahill once said, “there’s no nostalgia to it….It kind of floats on its own merits for me. “

“After world tours, back at home, he played with all of us here in Chicago –beginners and road warriors alike,” Chicago-born fiddler Liz Carroll, the first American composer to be honored with Ireland’s top award for traditional music, wrote on Facebook.

Mr. Cahill’s wife said that when they were out and about, “People didn’t have a clue” about his fame in the trad’ world.

“He’d tell you he was a musician, and that’s all he ever said,” she said. “He’d rather talk about the beer they were drinking.”

He also liked talking politics.

Joyce-Cahill said she and her husband “loved our home. Dennis would come home from wherever he was, and the next day, we’d be out gardening or cooking. He made the most incredible omelets. I wanted to grow vegetables, and he built all the beds in the backyar. We grew tomatoes, kale, potatoes, sage, cilantro, rosemary, basil, parsley.

“He wrote a tune for me, ‘Mary’s Waltzing,’ ” she said. “I loved to dance, and I used to make him dance in the kitchen.”

A chocolate and coffee connoisseur, he ground beans for himself each day to make a perfect cup of coffee.

The couple, married for a decade, met at the Feakle Irish Music Festival in County Clare.

“It was just like we knew each other our whole lives,” his wife said.

Mr. Cahill’s first wife Gwen died in a car accident five years after they married.

He is also survived by his sister Mair?ad and stepdaughter Cl?odhna. A funeral Mass is planned for 11 a.m. July 8 at St. Priscilla Church, 6949 W. Addison St.

“I’m just so sad he’s gone,” Joyce-Cahill said. “I yell at him every morning, ‘What the hell, Dennis, you better come back and haunt me, or I’ll go find you.’

“He was kind to everyone. If he saw someone with special needs, he’d be kind to them. If he saw an older person, he was so kind. ‘Mary,’ he told me, ‘the most important thing in life is get up in the morning and not piss anyone off and do the best you can.’ “

In 2019, he brought home a Labradoodle dog with curly red hair. He named her Little Orphan Annie.

“She’s so sad,” his wife said. “She’s been laying around looking at me.”

Read More

Dennis Cahill, Irish traditional music great from Chicago, dead at 68 Read More »

Agent: Bulls, LaVine agree to 5-year, $215M dealon July 1, 2022 at 5:34 pm

The Chicago Bulls and Zach LaVine have agreed to a five-year, $215M max contract extension, Klutch Sports announced Friday.

LaVine, 27, has blossomed into a two-time All-Star in Chicago, where he arrived in the trade that sent Jimmy Butler to the Minnesota Timberwolves in 2017, and — along with DeMar DeRozan — was the cornerstone of Chicago’s return to the Eastern Conference playoffs for the first time in five years this past season.

That also marked the first time in LaVine’s career that he’d reached the postseason.

2 Related

Now, he and the Bulls will look to continue that success moving forward, thanks to the two sides sitting down and hammering out a maximum contract extension to keep LaVine in Chicago through his prime.

Since coming to the Bulls in the Butler trade in 2017, LaVine has become a terrific offensive threat at every level. He’s averaged at least 23.7 points per game each of the past four seasons while being both a high volume and quality percentage 3-point shooter, in addition to his explosiveness attacking the rim, steadiness at the free throw line (at least five attempts and over 80 percent shooting the past four seasons) and ability to create for others (at least four assists per game).

This past season — coming off winning a gold medal with Team USA in Tokyo last summer — LaVine averaged 24.4 points, 4.5 assists and 4.6 rebounds per game, all while shooting 47.6 percent from the field and 38.9 percent from 3-point range despite being hampered by a left knee injury that required surgery shortly after the season ended.

LaVine suffered a torn ACL in that same left knee in 2017, before being traded to Chicago later that same year alongside the 7th pick in that year’s draft, which became Lauri Markkanen and guard Kris Dunn.

Still, LaVine’s growth since arriving with the Bulls led to him making an All-Star appearance in each of the last two seasons.

And LaVine’s signature on a new deal is the culmination of a year-plus effort by Arturas Karnisovas, the team’s executive vice president of basketball operations, to construct a team around LaVine good enough to make Chicago a factor in the East again — and to convince the star to remain with Chicago.

As a result, the Bulls were busy last spring and summer. They acquired DeRozan, Nikola Vucevic and Lonzo Ball via trades, Alex Caruso in free agency and hired former Oklahoma City Thunder head coach Billy Donovan to coach the team.

The sum total of those moves pushed Chicago to the top of the Eastern Conference for much of last season before a series of injuries — notably to Ball, Caruso and second-year forward Patrick Williams — saw the Bulls fall down the standings. They eventually entered the playoffs as a sixth seed, losing in five games to the Milwaukee Bucks in the first round of the East playoffs.

ESPN’s Jamal Collier contributed to this report.

Read More

Agent: Bulls, LaVine agree to 5-year, $215M dealon July 1, 2022 at 5:34 pm Read More »