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Post-game reactions to the Chicago Bulls preseason openerMichael Labellarteon October 5, 2022 at 12:06 pm

Chicago Bulls basketball is finally back. The Bulls opened up their preseason in a home matchup versus the pesky New Orleans Pelicans. While the Bulls did fall 129-125, there was a lot to dissect from this game beyond who won and who lost.

The Chicago Bulls showed a lot of grit today, especially the bench players

The Bulls were getting blown out for most of the game. The starters did not do anything spectacular, but Demar Derozan and Nikola Vucevic played up to par with what is expected from them. Demar finished with 21 points, 5/9 FG, and 11/12 FT. Vuc finished with a double-double, 15 points, 11 rebounds, and his defense was spectacular tonight, as shown by his three steals and four blocks. Vuc was a pleasant surprise tonight was a lot more confident than we saw last season.

The rest of the starting lineup did not do anything too noteworthy, but Ayo Dosunmu did have 10 points and flashed a new confidence in his jumper. What really stood out was Javonte Green’s energy off the bench. He scored 18 points off the bench and was all over the place chasing down rebounds and getting to the basket offensively. He is such a great player to have on your team because he just makes winning plays.

Another bright spot was Dalen Terry, who got 17 minutes in his first NBA game, all in the second half. Terry finished with 11 points, seven rebounds, and two assists, along with two steals. He showed the type of player he is right off the bat, as he was targeted in isolation by Davonte Graham. Terry was clamping Graham, but unfortunately reached just as Graham was about to hold his dribble. That energy though was there the whole night from Terry, especially after he flashed some offensive prowess that surprised me to say the least.

Andre Drummond and Goran Dragic made their Chicago Bull debuts today, and neither really was anything to write home about. Dragic showed that he still can lead an offense, but he has lost some of his craftiness that made him a star in the league. Drummond demonstrated his physicality in the paint and his tenacious rebounding, but he is a liability with the ball in his hands. Poor passing and bad footwork led to a plethora of Drummond turnovers.

Overall, the team seemed to lack some chemistry tonight, especially on offense. Things were a bit stagnant in the first half, with the starters showing a lot of the same weaknesses we saw at the end of last year. The defense also was porous tonight, as expected with preseason play.

Pay attention to the point guard rotation next game against the Nuggets, as well as how much playing time Dalen Terry gets compared to other wings on the team. After his performance against the Pelicans, Terry might get the Ayo treatment that we saw last year. Still lots to learn about who the Chicago Bulls will be this year.

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Post-game reactions to the Chicago Bulls preseason openerMichael Labellarteon October 5, 2022 at 12:06 pm Read More »

The Return(s): What our NBA insiders saw from Zion, Dame, Kawhi and more as preseason kicks offon October 5, 2022 at 12:55 pm

The NBA was without its full slate of stars for much of last season, as a number of the league’s best players missed extensive time. But the start of the 2022-23 season marks a fresh start and return to the court for those stars.

Marquee veterans such as Kawhi Leonard and John Wall, who are typically counted on to carry their respective teams, didn’t play in 2021-22 and their teams failed to make the playoffs as a result. Leonard’s return and the addition of a well-rested Wall automatically make the Clippers a title contender in the West.

Meanwhile, young stars Jamal Murray and Ben Simmons will slide into lineups in Denver and Brooklyn that made the playoffs last season. Neither will be leaned on to lead their respective squads, but their returns are expected to help push their contending teams even further when the postseason comes around.

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And all eyes will be on Zion Williamson this season. Williamson, who signed a five-year $193 million rookie max extension with the Pelicans this offseason, missed all of last season with a foot injury. The 22-year-old big man will be looking to shake the concerns over his durability and justify his selection as the first overall pick in the 2019 NBA draft, all while trying to lead New Orleans on a deep postseason run.

With the preseason underway, fans are getting their first look at a number of players stepping on the court for the first time in months. Our NBA insiders recap what they’ve observed this week.

Zion Williamson scored 13 points in 15 minutes on Tuesday night for the New Orleans Pelicans. Kamil Krzaczynski/USA TODAY Sports

Last time he played: May 4, 2021

What we saw: From the first play of the game, it was clear the Pelicans wanted to get Williamson involved. Off the opening tip, the Pelicans ran a play designed to get Williamson a touch and he was promptly swarmed by Chicago Bulls’ defenders. Williamson’s two biggest plays — perhaps the primary indicators that he was going to be the Williamson of old — came just a minute apart in the second quarter.

First, the play was called a defensive goaltending against Williamson but he showed off his athleticism as he chased down Patrick Williams on a layup attempt and swatted his shot. It showed Williamson’s bounce was back on that end of the floor. One minute later, Williamson caught the ball on the right wing, faced up, took one hard dribble with his right hand to blow by Williams and exploded for a two-handed slam. In 15 minutes, Williamson had 13 points and four rebounds. He was 4-of-6 from the field and 5-of-5 from the line. If his free throw percentage can climb this season (he’s shooting 68% for his career), Williamson can become even more dangerous this season.

— Andrew Lopez

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The Return(s): What our NBA insiders saw from Zion, Dame, Kawhi and more as preseason kicks offon October 5, 2022 at 12:55 pm Read More »

Comic art rapper Open Mike Eagle keeps on fighting

Chicago-born, Los Angeles-based rapper Open Mike Eagle is a seemingly inexhaustible font of laugh-out-loud one-liners, and he delivers as always on his latest album, Component System With the Auto Reverse (on his own Auto Reverse label). You need to be careful drinking anything while listening to it, lest uncomfortable snorking ensue when the rapper gets to the best lines in “Peak Lockdown Raps”: “I got a discount code for therapy / I hit go and got Rickrolled, apparently / It was a big blow.” But funny as he is, fans don’t just tune in for the laffs. Inspired by the likes De La Soul and They Might Be Giants, Mike writes loopy gags that float and bob and tie themselves together into surprisingly thoughtful reveries on aging, mental illness, disappointment, and hope. His flow feels laid-back even as he chews up syllables at a rapid clip—as if he’s a stoned nerd who almost apologetically has to get out everything on his mind. On “79th and Stony Island,” he starts musing on watching the Kanye West documentary Jeen-Yuhs, goes on to cheerfully explain he’s got “memories like flesh wounds,” and finishes up by listening to his son laughing. Throughout the album, Mike weaves his thoughts on COVID, racism, and our bleak political landscape in and out of pop-culture references and goofball nonsense—which he uses less as distractions than as ways to hold firm to his humanity under threat. “It’ll be endless, I will fight you every day,” Mike croons on the hook of “I’ll Fight You.” It’s a joke, but he also means it.

Open Mike Eagle’s A Tape Called Component System With the Auto Reverse is available through Bandcamp.

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3 Chicago Blackhawks to trade before the regular season startsVincent Pariseon October 5, 2022 at 11:00 am

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The regular season is fast approaching for the 2022-23 Chicago Blackhawks. There are a lot of storylines that will be following this team as they try to rebuild their organization back to the powerhouse that it once was. That is going to take a long time.

It seems as if the year is going to be very hard on a lot of people. As a result, it is smart that they have all of the young developing talent being shipped out to their junior teams and the AHL.

The guys that make the squad are the ones that are going to be able to handle the tough days as they won’t be trying to develop anymore. There are plenty of veterans that are looking to play well and possibly be moved to contenders before the trade deadline.

Speaking of being traded, there are a few stars on the team that need to be shipped out for a variety of reasons. These are three Blackhawks players to consider trading before the season starts if they can:

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Seth Jones

D, Chicago Blackhawks

Seth Jones would be a very hard contract for the Chicago Blackhawks to move.

Seth Jones is a very good defenseman. However, he makes a lot of money and it is going to be hard to build around that contract for the next eight years. It is going to be hard to trade him because he has all eight years left on the deal.

A team would have to be crazy to take on that kind of money. Jones, as mentioned before, is very good but over nine million dollars against the cap per year for the next eight is very hard to pay anyone not named Cale Makar.

Retaining on his contract is possible but it might be hard to do that for a contract that has eight more years on it. If anyone, and that means literally anyone, is willing to take on this contract in hopes that Jones can help them win, the Hawks should make that move right away.

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3 Chicago Blackhawks to trade before the regular season startsVincent Pariseon October 5, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

NBA GMs favor Bucks to win title, Luka for MVPon October 5, 2022 at 7:47 am

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Stephen A. calls out Kawhi: ‘Can we see you play please?’ (1:48)Stephen A. Smith wants to see Kawhi Leonard play more after the All-Star has missed plenty of games the last few seasons. (1:48)

The Milwaukee Bucks are slight favorites to win the 2023 NBA championship, and Luka Doncic was tapped as most likely to win the 2023 Most Valuable Player award in NBA.com’s annual survey of all 30 of the league’s general managers.

The 21st edition of the survey was released Tuesday and saw Milwaukee receive 43% of the vote. The other teams to receive votes were the defending champion Golden State Warriors with 25%, the LA Clippers with 21% and the Boston Celtics with 11%.

Not surprisingly, the Bucks were the clear favorites to win the East. They were followed by the defending Eastern Conference champion Celtics, the Philadelphia 76ers, Brooklyn Nets, Miami Heat and Cleveland Cavaliers. Those six teams were the only ones to receive votes to finish among the top four seeds in the East this season.

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Out West, meanwhile, nine teams received votes. The Clippers finished slightly ahead of the Warriors for first in the West, followed by the Phoenix Suns, Denver Nuggets, Memphis Grizzlies, the Dallas Mavericks and Minnesota Timberwolves (tied for sixth), the Los Angeles Lakers and New Orleans Pelicans.

Doncic was a narrow, but clear, favorite at MVP, as the Slovenian superstar collected 48% of the vote, compared to 34% for Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo, 14% for 76ers star Joel Embiid and a single vote for Warriors star Stephen Curry. It was Antetokounmpo, however, who finished ahead of Doncic in the category of player a GM would most want to build their team around, with Antetokounmpo getting 55% of the vote and Doncic 45%. No other player received a single vote.

Curry, Suns star Devin Booker, Nets star Kevin Durant, Antetokounmpo and Nuggets star Nikola Jokic were selected as the top player at each position. The only change from last year was that Booker surpassed James Harden as the league’s top shooting guard.

Speaking of shooting guards, Cleveland’s acquisition of Donovan Mitchell led the Cavaliers to the top spot among teams in terms of who had the best offseason, coming in with 41% of the vote. The Timberwolves, 76ers and Jazz finished in a three-way tie for second with 17%, while the Celtics and Sacramento Kings also received votes. The two former Jazz co-stars, Mitchell and Rudy Gobert, finished first and second, respectively, in the category of which player will make the biggest impact in their new home, while New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson was third.

The Gobert trade to Minnesota ranked as the most surprising move of the offseason with 47% of the vote — just ahead of Mitchell going to Cleveland, which received 43%. Malcolm Brogdon being traded to the Celtics, meanwhile, was seen as the most underrated move of the summer.

Luka Doncic, right, is the favorite to be named this year’s MVP, according to an NBA.com survey of all 30 general managers. Two-time MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo was the second in the survey. Gary Dineen/NBAE via Getty Images

The top overall pick in June’s NBA draft, Paolo Banchero, was the runaway selection Rookie of the Year, collecting 79% of the vote, with Kings forward Keegan Murray finishing second. Banchero was also the pick to be the best player in the class in five years, finishing with 31% of the vote, while Oklahoma City Thunder big man Chet Holmgren was just behind him with 28%. Detroit Pistons guard Jaden Ivey and Houston Rockets forward Jabari Smith were tied for third with 14%. Pistons center Jalen Duren and Rockets forward Tari Eason also tied for the biggest steals in this year’s draft.

Antetokounmpo was tapped as the best defensive player in the NBA, followed by Draymond Green and Gobert. Reigning Defensive Player of the Year Marcus Smart was picked as the best perimeter defender, Gobert was selected as the best interior defender and Antetokounmpo was selected as most versatile. The Celtics — last year’s top-ranked defensive team — were the runaway selection as the league’s best defensive team.

On the coaching front, Heat coach Erik Spoelstra was picked as the top coach in the league by 52% of voters, followed by Steve Kerr, Gregg Popovich, Monty Williams and Tyronn Lue. Kerr was tapped as the best manager/motivator, as well as running the best offensive schemes, while Lue was credited with being the best at in-game adjustments and Spoelstra was seen as having the best defensive schemes.

Warriors assistant Kenny Atkinson and Bucks assistant Charles Lee were tied for being the best assistant coaches in the NBA, while Chris Paul received 32% of the vote to lead the way as to who would be the best future coach among current NBA players.

In the team categories, the Warriors were the runaway winner as most fun to watch, as well as to have the league’s most efficient offense this season. The Toronto Raptors were selected as having the best home-court advantage in the NBA, while the Nets were seen as the team that was the most difficult to predict how it would do and the Cavaliers — fresh off getting Mitchell — finished just ahead of the Grizzlies (41% to 38%) in terms of who has the NBA’s best young core.

Speaking of the Grizzlies, star Ja Morant was picked as both the league’s most athletic player and the fastest player with the ball, while Curry was — no surprise — tabbed as its best shooter, the best at moving without the ball and the player you’d most want to take a shot with the game on the line. Jokic was selected as the league’s best passer, Paul as its best leader and Antetokounmpo as its most versatile player.

LeBron James was at the top of one category: the player with the highest basketball IQ, where he got 45% of the vote ahead of Jokic’s 23%.

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Zion returns for Pels: ‘Getting a feel for it again’on October 5, 2022 at 7:47 am

CHICAGO — The Zion Williamson show is officially back. Even if it was just for a preseason viewing.

The New Orleans Pelicans forward returned to the court Tuesday night, scoring 13 points in a 15-minute performance at the United Center in a 129-125 win over the Chicago Bulls.

Earlier on Tuesday, Williamson told ESPN his mindset was to treat this like just another preseason game, but he admitted it was hard to ignore the messages blowing up his phone and appearing on social media about the year-plus he missed.

Williamson showed flashes of his old self during the contest. He drove baseline on Bulls forward Patrick Williams for a slam. He had what some on the Pelicans bench thought should have been a chase-down block just a minute earlier in the first quarter on Williams that was ruled goaltending. Still, he was flashing the skills that made him a household name.

After Tuesday’s game, he said he was most excited about playing the game he loves. That didn’t mean fans got to see all the things the Pelicans have been working on with Williamson back in the fold.

“Couldn’t show them everything,” Williamson said following the victory. “But just kind of getting a feel for it again. Find spots. Picking and choosing where I want to attack. But, I got a new team since the last time I played. I’m still learning some of the guys. Today we were able to click. I feel like if we can do that for the rest of these preseason games, I feel we’ll be in pretty good shape.”

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The Pelicans have only five players remaining from when Williamson last suited up on May 4, 2021, and two of those players — Brandon Ingram and Kira Lewis Jr. — missed Tuesday’s preseason game with injuries.

New Orleans has reshaped its roster around Williamson, Ingram and guard CJ McCollum, whom the Pelicans dealt for at last year’s trade deadline.

The Pelicans brought in guard Devonte’ Graham to play alongside Williamson’s “Point Zion” iteration but instead Graham has settled into a bench role with this edition of the Pelicans, something he did well against the Bulls with a team-high 21 points and five assists off the bench.

He said he noticed a difference when Williamson is on the floor as teams pack the paint to try to stop him.

“I thought he looked good too,” Graham said. “I know he was excited to be out there. I know it felt good for him to hear his name in the starting lineup and stuff like that again. It’s just the beginning.”

This was also Willie Green’s first chance to coach Williamson after Green was brought in prior to last season. It’s Green’s task to try to fit Williamson, who averaged 27.0 points and 7.2 rebounds per game with 61.1% shooting in 2020-21, back into an offense that has a lot of firepower with Ingram, McCollum and Jonas Valanciunas.

“He looked good and he’s just going to continue to get better,” Green said. “That’s what we know about Z. He works at it. He’s a competitor. And you know it doesn’t look like it but he had 13 points, four rebounds in 15 minutes. That’s the type of work he puts in on the floor.”

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Projected No. 1 Wembanyama wows in U.S. debuton October 5, 2022 at 7:47 am

HENDERSON, Nevada — With Chris Paul and A’ja Wilson watching courtside, French basketball star Victor Wembanyama, the uncanny 7-foot-5 center and projected No. 1 NBA draft pick, put on a showcase in a 37-point performance Tuesday night at the Dollar Loan Center against the G League Ignite and Scoot Henderson, the projected No. 2 pick.

Henderson scored 28 points and led his team to a 122-115 victory.

At halftime, Wembanyama’s Metropolitans 92 team, a pro squad from France, was down 71-52 before his second-half burst helped his team take the lead and battle the Ignite down the stretch.

“At some point, it was just about taking over because our team needed players to step up because we were down [21 points], I think,” said Wembanyama, who admitted playing longer quarters for the first time (games in Europe are 40 minutes versus 44 minutes in the NBA and G League) affected his stamina. “Coming back from such a lead, it’s a tough task. … There are times, you gotta do what you gotta do.”

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Henderson finished 11-for-21 and led his team to the win with his own display of impressive shots, drives and dunks, including a 3-pointer and reverse layup over Wembanyama in the first half.

He said he never thought about the game as a matchup between himself and Wembanyama, though.

“It’s just playing basketball on a stage,” he said after the game. “That’s what I took away from this night.”

Tuesday night’s game was the first of two showcases between the teams this week in Henderson, Nevada, about 20 minutes from the Las Vegas Strip. The teams will play again Thursday at noon.

It was Wembanyama’s first game in the United States. He finished 11-for-20 (7-for-11 from the 3-point line) with five blocks — and with a number of noteworthy players and NBA reps on hand to see him up close.

Chelsea Gray and Wilson, the Las Vegas Aces stars who have captured both a WNBA title and FIBA World Cup championship in recent weeks, sat on the baseline. Phoenix Suns stars Devin Booker and Paul and free agent DeMarcus Cousins all had front-row seats, too.

“He’s good,” Gray said about Wembanyama. “To be that big and that tall with guard skills is nice.”

Paul said he came to the game to watch the top prospects battle and because of his passion for basketball.

“I’m a big fan of the game,” Paul said. “All of these guys are trying to get to the league.”

The NBA teams hoping to get lucky in the draft lottery on May 16 were also in the building. Los Angeles Lakers general manager Rob Pelinka was one of nearly 200 NBA representatives who had been issued credentials for the game, Ignite public relations director Mara Rudolph said.

Reporters from France and Brazil also attended the matchup.

Both Wembanyama and Henderson lived up to the hype.

Wembanyama, who is gifted with a set of skills perhaps no player his size has ever possessed, began the game playing point guard on one of his team’s early possessions before spinning off a defender and double-pumping a layup off the backboard, which dazzled the crowd. After a couple of big blocks, however, his offense mostly stalled against the Ignite’s pressure.

“He was amazing,” Metropolitans 92 coach Vincent Collet said after the game. “What he can do with his size, his agility, mobility, not only his ability to shoot the 3, moving very well. He even made a couple of very good passes. I think he [had] a real good game but he also will learn from the first half. He has to fight more because he knows to expect that kind of aggressive defense.”

After halftime, Wembanyama showed off some of the other moves that made one Eastern Conference NBA scout tell ESPN “we’ve never seen anyone like him.” Wembanyama hit multiple 3-pointers that helped his team get back into the game and take the lead entering the fourth quarter, including a late block on Henderson’s layup attempt.

“Some players come along and they’re special,” Ignite coach Jason Hart said. “He’s just a special talent.”

One thing seemed clear after Tuesday’s game, however, per conversations with some of the NBA folks who watched the game: Wembanyama might be in his own category for the 2023 NBA draft.

Asked whether he’d ever seen anyone like Wembanyama, Cousin, the former NBA All-Star, said, “Nah, man.”

“These kids are just getting rarer and rarer,” he added. “They’re growing fast. They’re bigger than ever. … I just wanted to be a fan and see it firsthand.”

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White Sox must atone for Jerry’s mistake

One of the harshest realities of fandom is that someone else owns something that you love. In October 2020, White Sox fans were slapped in the face with that reality when chairman Jerry Reinsdorf hired Tony La Russa.

The disdain for La Russa’s second tenure as Sox manager will be dismissed as hindsight or Monday morning quarterbacking, but that’s false. The immediate and overwhelming response to the hire was anger. Even the people who were willing to give it a chance had questions: Why him? Why now? The cronyism of the hire was easy to identify for most Chicagoans, and it left an awful taste.

Reinsdorf’s unilateral decision strained the credibility for his front office, whose power he had effectively usurped. It was a breach of the public trust with the fan base. Sox fans have every right to exact their revenge by keeping their money in their pocket for a while. The Sox are now on a “prove it” deal with the South Side.

It makes what happened Monday at 35th and Shields particularly interesting. Beyond La Russa’s retirement news conference, Sox brass had what it deemed as “end-of-the-season media availability.” The only problem was the season hadn’t ended. It offered a convenient out for general manager Rick Hahn to not be pressed on specific players. It’s an out that he took several times throughout the question-and-answer session.

While discussing the upcoming managerial search, Hahn explained that the right candidate would have recent experience in the dugout on a championship level. If that sounds familiar, it’s because it’s almost exactly what he said in 2020 after the team fired Rick Renteria:

“Ultimately, I think the best candidate or the ideal candidate is going to be someone who has experience with a championship organization in recent years,” Hahn said. “Recent October experience with a championship organization would be ideal. But we’re going to keep an open mind.”

I can’t figure out if Sox fans are being gaslit or if Hahn is trying to retcon the franchise. It feels like he wants you to believe that the “new Aunt Viv” is the same as the “old Aunt Viv.” That felt harsh . . . Daphne Maxwell Reid did a great job as “new Aunt Viv,” but you get what I’m saying.

Sox vice president Ken Williams and Hahn seemed ready to hire current Tigers manager A.J. Hinch. There were even renderings of a press release that had Hinch’s signature on a La Russa picture. Some of those renderings leaked into the public square and allowed for speculation that this was some sort of internal rebellion on an owner gone mad.

The problem continues to be trust — trust that the process isn’t going to be hijacked by Reinsdorf again. Who knows? Maybe Reinsdorf has more friends to whom he feels he owes a debt. Maybe he feels guilty about Ribbie and Roobarb. Don’t get too comfortable, Southpaw!

For the most part, I think Williams and Hahn have good intentions, but the road to hell is paved with good intentions. The last two years happened and are filled with consequences. Bloated salaries, positional redundancies and unfulfilled expectations will leave the Sox’ brain trust backed up against a Reinsdorf-imposed budget. It’s an excuse Sox fans have heard before. Hahn and Williams will have to get creative if they want to succeed, but, to be honest, their creativity has left a lot to be desired lately.

Hahn spent a good amount of time Monday laying out a sensible approach to this next managerial hire, but until we know that Reinsdorf’s thumb is off the scale, none of the words matters. Fans are tired of it. Sox fans were loyal during a rebuild with promises of brighter days.

Reinsdorf owes Sox fans. His handpicked manager failed. Pull out Agent K’s “neuralyzer” if you want, but they won’t soon forget these two squandered years of a championship window. Nor should they. Trust goes both ways, and Reinsdorf is past due.

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Bulls go with Ayo Dosunmu as starting point guard in loss to Pelicans

Every NBA coach has an -ism.

The on-going Billy Donovan-ism?

The Bulls coach doesn’t like to reveal his starting lineups before a game.

On Tuesday, Donovan finally colored outside those lines, even if it was for just one night.

Getting peppered with questions about a starting point guard now that Lonzo Ball (left knee surgery) is on the shelf for at least the next month – likely longer – Donovan finally gave in.

“So should I give you guys one since it’s preseason?” Donovan said. “Then you’re not going to ask me again rest of the year?”

And just like that Donovan announced that hometown kid Ayo Dosunmu got the start in the eventual 129-125 loss to the Pelicans in the preseason opener at the United Center.

“I gave you guys one,” he proudly declared after.

Now, if Dosunmu has staying power in that starting lineup moving forward? Don’t you dare ask Donovan.

“I think we’ve got a lot of guys that can handle the basketball, and bring it up for us, and play, but a lot of times the point guard on a made basket is the guy bringing it up, but we’re pretty comfortable out-letting the ball to anybody one-through-three on the perimeter and playing from there,” Donovan said, when asked about Dosunmu having that job full-time, or at least until Ball can return.

Translation: It’s a need-to-know basis, and just one game into the exhibition season, the media didn’t need to know.

Donovan did say that he could experiment with the likes of Goran Dragic, Coby White and even Alex Caruso in the remaining three preseason games, but wouldn’t go much further than that.

He didn’t need to.

While the third-year coach wanted to keep it a mystery, it’s really not. Dosunmu had been getting the most run with the starters in camp the last few days, and just made the most sense. Donovan made that clear without trying to, saying that Dragic needed shortened minutes because of his age, while White and Caruso were better off the ball.

That left Dosunmu, who finished the game with 10 points and three assists.

And as it turned out, was the least of the problems for the Bulls.

Yes, it was the preseason, but there were still some serious issues lingering from last season, and that started with the defense, especially against athletic play-off caliber teams.

The Pelicans starters got almost every shot they wanted in that opening quarter, putting a 40-spot on the Bulls and doing so with very little resistance.

“We got a long way to go defensively,” Donovan said of that showing. “There’s no question about that.”

The other concerns?

Patrick Williams was still “Passive Pat,” taking just seven shots and scoring five points, while the second unit brought very little to the floor collectively.

There was some good, as Nikola Vucevic had four blocked shots to go along with his 15 points and 10 rebounds. DeMar DeRozan was in midseason form with 21 points and 12 trips to the free throw line. And Dalen Terry showed some fire.

The rest?

Good thing it was preseason.

As for Dosunmu, he made it clear that while he wanted to try and do some of the things Ball did, he also wanted to play his own game.

Whether he stayed the starter or not.

“Last year helped me a lot,” Dosunmu said. “There’s a balance of understanding when to shoot and when to play-make, and that comes down to experience, understanding the moment. I have a better ability to assess that now, just with me going through the wars, going through some battles last season, watching a lot of film. That’s the best thing about experience, the best thing about learning.”

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Bulls go with Ayo Dosunmu as starting point guard in loss to Pelicans

Every NBA coach has an -ism.

The on-going Billy Donovan-ism?

The Bulls coach doesn’t like to reveal his starting lineups before a game.

On Tuesday, Donovan finally colored outside those lines, even if it was for just one night.

Getting peppered with questions about a starting point guard now that Lonzo Ball (left knee surgery) is on the shelf for at least the next month – likely longer – Donovan finally gave in.

“So should I give you guys one since it’s preseason?” Donovan said. “Then you’re not going to ask me again rest of the year?”

And just like that Donovan announced that hometown kid Ayo Dosunmu got the start in the eventual 129-125 loss to the Pelicans in the preseason opener at the United Center.

“I gave you guys one,” he proudly declared after.

Now, if Dosunmu has staying power in that starting lineup moving forward? Don’t you dare ask Donovan.

“I think we’ve got a lot of guys that can handle the basketball, and bring it up for us, and play, but a lot of times the point guard on a made basket is the guy bringing it up, but we’re pretty comfortable out-letting the ball to anybody one-through-three on the perimeter and playing from there,” Donovan said, when asked about Dosunmu having that job full-time, or at least until Ball can return.

Translation: It’s a need-to-know basis, and just one game into the exhibition season, the media didn’t need to know.

Donovan did say that he could experiment with the likes of Goran Dragic, Coby White and even Alex Caruso in the remaining three preseason games, but wouldn’t go much further than that.

He didn’t need to.

While the third-year coach wanted to keep it a mystery, it’s really not. Dosunmu had been getting the most run with the starters in camp the last few days, and just made the most sense. Donovan made that clear without trying to, saying that Dragic needed shortened minutes because of his age, while White and Caruso were better off the ball.

That left Dosunmu, who finished the game with 10 points and three assists.

And as it turned out, was the least of the problems for the Bulls.

Yes, it was the preseason, but there were still some serious issues lingering from last season, and that started with the defense, especially against athletic play-off caliber teams.

The Pelicans starters got almost every shot they wanted in that opening quarter, putting a 40-spot on the Bulls and doing so with very little resistance.

“We got a long way to go defensively,” Donovan said of that showing. “There’s no question about that.”

The other concerns?

Patrick Williams was still “Passive Pat,” taking just seven shots and scoring five points, while the second unit brought very little to the floor collectively.

There was some good, as Nikola Vucevic had four blocked shots to go along with his 15 points and 10 rebounds. DeMar DeRozan was in midseason form with 21 points and 12 trips to the free throw line. And Dalen Terry showed some fire.

The rest?

Good thing it was preseason.

As for Dosunmu, he made it clear that while he wanted to try and do some of the things Ball did, he also wanted to play his own game.

Whether he stayed the starter or not.

“Last year helped me a lot,” Dosunmu said. “There’s a balance of understanding when to shoot and when to play-make, and that comes down to experience, understanding the moment. I have a better ability to assess that now, just with me going through the wars, going through some battles last season, watching a lot of film. That’s the best thing about experience, the best thing about learning.”

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