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What else can go wrong for White Sox?

The latest round of frustration for the White Sox started with right-hander Michael Kopech spiking a baseball after only 13 pitches Sunday before walking off the field. It ended with Luis Robert standing helplessly at third base after committing the final out on a baserunning blunder.

Those were two of several setbacks the Sox must overcome after an 8-6 loss to the Rangers in 12 innings that created more shuffling as they embark on a six-game trip to Detroit and Houston.

Fortunately for the Sox, the pop Kopech felt in his right ankle after delivering a pitch with two outs in the first might need only two extra days of rest before he possibly can start the series finale against the Astros.

In the meantime, the Sox will look for coverage after right-hander Johnny Cueto — their original starter Monday — pitched five innings of relief a day after throwing 45 pitches in preparation for his start.

Right-handers Lance Lynn and Dylan Cease now will start the first two games against the Tigers. Lynn originally was scheduled to be activated from the 15-day injured list Tuesday to make his season debut after having surgery on his right knee in April.

The Sox will need a starter for Wednesday, but that issue isn’t as urgent as others.

The combined relief efforts of Reynaldo Lopez, Cueto, Tanner Banks and Kendall Graveman got the Sox to the 10th inning in a 3-3 tie. But closer Liam Hendriks wasn’t available after throwing 15 pitches Friday, and the Rangers capitalized on a three-run home run by Ezequiel Duran in the 11th and a two-run single by Jonah Heim in the 12th.

”That’s a game we have to win,” manager Tony La Russa said. ”We have to find a way to win that thing.”

Any chance of a comeback in the 12th ended when Robert advanced from second to third on a deep fly to left by Jake Burger but slid past the bag and was tagged for the final out of the game. Burger, not Robert, represented the tying run.

”You know I like aggressiveness, but that wasn’t a good play,” said La Russa, who later added: ”We like his aggressiveness, and there’s a place for it. But that’s one place where you just read the scoreboard. It always should dictate how much you want to push, when you should push. He’s a quick learner. He won’t do it again.”

The Sox (27-31) remained six games behind the Twins in the American League Central after concluding a 2-4 homestand.

Cueto provided lengthy relief despite spending the morning in a whirlpool and admittedly not stretching before volunteering to pitch after Kopech left the game.

”I’m a little bit sore, but normal sore,” said Cueto, who knew the bullpen already was taxed.

Kopech said his ankle was sore but was informed there were no structural issues. The Sox were looking for length from Kopech, who threw six innings of one-hit ball against the Dodgers in his last start Tuesday, but were forced to scramble after he couldn’t put any pressure on his foot before attempting a warmup pitch.

”I was frustrated,” Kopech said. ”I thought it was worse than what it was, but I’m grateful for the news.”

The Sox are 0-5-3 in their last eight series at Guaranteed Rate Field after winning their first two home series this season.

The initial fears of Kopech’s injury seized the concerns of Sox fans more than the previous day, when chants of ”Fire Tony” echoed for 20 seconds.

”It’s the same difference,” La Russa said before the game. ”I’m glad the fans are here, and whatever their honest feeling is, have at it. I’ve managed a long time.

”There have been times where people have not been pleased with the job that I do. Just do your best.”

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White Sox catcher Yasmani Grandal feels better, stays off injured list

Catcher Yasmani Grandal’s left hamstring has improved to the point where he will remain off the injured list — for now.

White Sox manager Tony La Russa said Grandal was checked thoroughly before the game Sunday against the Rangers.

”He’s feeling good,” La Russa said.

Grandal, who felt discomfort while running to first base in the third inning Saturday, will undergo a series of tests in the next few days, La Russa said.

In the meantime, the Sox purchased the contract of catcher Seby Zavala from Triple-A Charlotte. Zavala entered as a pinch hitter in the ninth inning and grounded to second.

Unfortunately for the Sox’ well-worked bullpen, left-hander Aaron Bummer was put on the 15-day IL, retroactive to Wednesday, because of a left lat strain.

Bummer, who has a 3.06 ERA in 20 appearances, was unavailable for the first two games of the series against the Rangers, in which the Sox used Reynaldo Lopez as an opener for two innings and Davis Martin for five innings Friday, then stretched out Jimmy Lambert for 2? innings Saturday.

La Russa said the medical staff thinks Bummer will be ready to return when he’s eligible June 24. Because of the need for a fresh arm, Martin was optioned to Charlotte and left-hander Tanner Banks was recalled from there. Banks pitched two scoreless innings Sunday.

To make room for Zavala on the 40-man roster, the Sox designated catcher Yermin Mercedes for assignment. Mercedes was batting .230 with four home runs and 13 RBI in 25 games at Charlotte.

Kelly’s climb

Reliever Joe Kelly reported his arm and legs felt good after throwing about 20 pitches in a simulated game. Kelly, who hasn’t pitched since injuring his left hamstring May 25, is expected to start a rehab assignment Tuesday with shortstop Tim Anderson at Charlotte.

”It’s the best I’ve probably thrown at 10:30 in the morning, velocity-wise,” Kelly said. ”But everything else is good. Obviously, I was not as crisp as I wanted it to be, but it went great healthwise.”

A walk on the wild side

Control problems have hindered the progress of Single-A Kannapolis pitcher Andrew Dalquist, a third-round pick in 2019 who has walked 31 in 45 2/3 innings and has a 5.72 ERA.

”You see one to two innings that are very smooth and then a hiccup where he loses his delivery and tries to do too much,” assistant general manager Chris Getz said. ”It’s a matter of staying in control, staying in the moment, not getting ahead of himself and continuing to compete.

”He has a tendency to internalize. A lot of players do, even at the major-league level. But if you want to be consistent — and that consistency is so important to be a starting pitcher — you’ve got to find it, whether it’s cues [or] a reset button to go out there and perform and give us more innings.”

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White Sox’s Kopech leaves game after 13 pitcheson June 13, 2022 at 12:05 am

Chicago White Sox right-hander Michael Kopech exited Sunday’s game against the Texas Rangers with an injury after throwing just 13 pitches in the first inning.

Kopech, who is 2-2 with a 1.94 ERA, was checked on by the training staff with a full count and two outs against Adolis Garcia. He threw a warm-up pitch before spiking the baseball in frustration and walking to the dugout to applause from the fans.

The White Sox provided no immediate word on the injury.

2 Related

Reynaldo Lopez replaced Kopech and struck out Garcia. Lopez threw two scoreless innings as an opener Friday when the White Sox beat the Rangers 8-3.

Left fielder AJ Pollock robbed Marcus Semien of an extra-base hit with a leaping grab for the first out. Kopech then got Corey Seager to ground out.

Chicago has seven players on the injured list after placing left-handed reliever Aaron Bummer on the IL before Sunday’s game. Bummer, whose move was retroactive to Thursday, has a 3.06 ERA in 20 appearances this season.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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White Sox’s Kopech leaves game after 13 pitcheson June 13, 2022 at 12:05 am Read More »

Cubs’ 18-4 loss to Yankees taxes bullpen as rotation questions loom

NEW YORK – Queen’s “Another One Bites the Dust,” blared over the Yankee Stadium loudspeakers as Cubs reliever Daniel Norris walked off the field and Alec Mills jogged in from the bullpen.

Another one indeed. Mills was the Cubs’ third pitcher in as many innings.

The Cubs’ 18-4 loss on Sunday was the Cubs’ second blowout defeat at the hands of the Yankees in a row. How much does a June loss to the best team in MLB mean? A lot if it depletes the bullpen during a stretch of 17 games without an off day.

On Sunday, Cubs relievers combined to throw 7 1/3 innings. It was the second time this series that they were responsible for more than seven frames in a game.

The Cubs’ rotation is also short-handed, with right-hander Marcus Stroman (shoulder inflammation) and lefties Wade Miley (shoulder strain) and Drew Smyly (right oblique strain) all on the 15-day IL, making bullpen depth all the more important entering this week.

On Sunday, Cubs right-hander Keegan Thompson didn’t make it out of the first inning, walking three batters and giving up a pair of two-run doubles before lefty Daniel Norris came in to face the top of the order with two outs.

Thompson was charged with three earned runs. Two unearned runs scored after four Cubs players converged under a popup in front of the mound, and the ball glanced off of third baseman Patrick Wisdom’s glove, allowing Marwin Gonz?lez to reach on the error.

Thompson had been dominant to start the season, posting a 1.58 ERA in his first eight relief appearances and three starts. The Cubs have moved him out of that swingman role by necessity. In his last three starts, Thompson has allowed 13 earned runs in nine innings, each start shorter than the last.

Just two days prior to Thompson’s short start Sunday, the Cubs bullpen did the heavy lifting in a 13-inning loss. Miley came off the 15-day IL to start, but three innings in, his shoulder started bothering him again. That left over nine innings for the bullpen to fill, and the Cubs placed Miley back on the IL the next day.

Norris had thrown an inning in that game, and on Sunday the Cubs called on him to throw two more. He walked three and gave up two homers in two innings.

Cubs right-hander Alec Mills’ 3 1/3 innings of two-run ball saved the Cubs from reaching even deeper into the bullpen. But the outing brought Mills’ innings total for the series up to four innings. If he had been an option to start Wednesday, when the Cubs have an opening in the rotation, he likely isn’t after that weekend workload.

Cubs reliever Sean Newcomb (five runs in one inning) and first baseman Frank Schwindel (one run in one inning) took the mound for the Cubs’ last two defensive frames.

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What country doesn’t allow the accused to defend himself?

What country doesn’t allow the accused to defend himself?

A 1950s show trial in communist China

What country doesn’t allow the prosecution’s witnesses to be cross-examined by the defense?

What country puts the prosecution’s friends on the jury?

What country allows members of the jury to have made up their minds beforehand?

What country puts on show trials for the sole purpose of persuading everyone that the defendant is surely guilty?

What country allows politicians to put their opponents on trial?

Maybe you said communist China. Or communist North Korea. Or Russia. Or Iran and any of the other autocratic nations run by tyrants.

You’d be right. But you’d also be wrong if you left out the United States.

I have in mind the show trial being put on in the U.S. House of Representatives exclusively for the benefit for Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Rep. Adam Schiff and the rest of the Democratic lynch mob who see political gains from the so-called bi-partisan hearings into the Jan, 6 riot.

It was obvious from the first of the six “hearings” this past week that it has all the earmarks of a show trial in an autocratic country. The defendant–former president Donald Trump–was not allowed to put on a defense. T’here was no defense attorney present to cross-examine the parade of witnesses the Democrats have called to “prove” that Trump inspired or even planned the attack on Congress.

The “jury” was rigged from the start. Unlike jury trials, only the prosecution (i.e. Pelosi) was allowed to pick the jurors, without the other side present to challenge their bias. Clearly, all the jurors have made of their minds, proclaiming from the first moment (i.e. Chairman Bennie Thompson, a Democrat, and Republican Vice-chair Liz Cheney, Republican–sort of) Trump’s guilt.

Bernie Thompson

It doesn’t seem to bother anyone on the left or in the legacy media that Pelosi refused to allow Republicans to pick members of their own party to sit on the panel. Nor is there much outrage about Pelosi picking the only Republicans to sit on the committee and already publicly condemned Trump for supposedly master-minding the assault on democracy.

But, but, you’re saying, this isn’t a criminal trial. It is a congressional hearing, that has its own, vastly different rules of procedure. Which is true.

And yet. What we have here is a procedure that offends every principle of a fair and just democracy. It is built into our consciousness (well at least in some of ours) that everyone should have a chance to defend himself. That everyone has a right to face his accusers and challenge their accuracy and honesty. It strikes at the heart and meaning of due process, guaranteed by the 14th Amendment to protect every citizen.

Never in this history of the House of Representatives has the majority party imposed such a straight jacket on the minority opposition.

For all the yammering from the left about the right’s threats to democracy (and there’s some truth to that), this show trial is a perfect example of throwing our historic American values into the dumpster.

It’s truly a show trial in which the authorities have already determined the defendant’s guilt, conducted in public as a propaganda device. Perhaps this young generation of wokesters isn’t acquainted with the USSR’s frequent show trials to justify disposing of any bothersome opponent. It reeks of all the arbitrariness of a star chamber,

Those who broke into the Capitol intending to do damage of overturn the election should be investigated and prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney General. Just as those among the “mostly peaceful” rioters who attacked the federal courthouse in Portland.

Here I should repeat that I don’t absolve Trump of his responsibility for setting in motion the chain of events that resulted in what I immediately condemned. I think we need to get to the bottom of all such events–not just Trump’s role in it, but Pelosi’s appalling failure to protect the House from the mob, was her responsibility. Did she actually leave the Capitol police to be trampled by the crowd? So too, why Lt. Michael Byrd escaped any responsibility for showing and killing unarmed civilian Ashli Babbitt?

Perhaps someday we can return to (if we were ever there) the idea of objective justice in which everyone has a right to due process and equal punishment under the law.

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Tony La Russa Show continues as White Sox hit road

You almost couldn’t have scripted it: Bobby Cox, Joe Torre and Tony La Russa leaving the managerial grind together in 2010 and going into the Hall of Fame together in 2014. Three greats — no doubt about it, right?

Before you agitated White Sox fans answer that question, please remember that La Russa ranks second all-time in regular-season wins (Cox is fourth, Torre fifth) and that these very men are the top three skippers (Torre first, followed by La Russa and Cox) in postseason victories.

Such legends — and yet one can’t help but wonder what nasty things baseball fans would be saying about Cox and Torre had they, too, made surprising comebacks to the dugout heading into the 2021 season. Three wise men? More like three stooges.

These are hard times for managers everywhere. Big-timers Joe Maddon and Joe Giradri got kicked to the curb by their teams last week. Dave Martinez, who led the Nationals to their first World Series crown in 2019, is on the hot seat. So, too, it seems, are the Mariners’ Scott Servais (2021 runner-up for American League manager of the year) and the Marlins’ Don Mattingly (2020 National League manager of the year), among others.

But La Russa is the recipient of more fan resentment than any of them, in part because of his personality, in part because of his cozy friendship with Sox chairman Jerry Reinsdorf and in part — the biggest part — because of his questionable decisions and outright mistakes since coming back. This is not going to get better unless the Sox get much better, and fast.

Here’s what’s happening:

MON 13

Yu Darvish, ex-Cub, will be back at Wrigley.

Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images

Padres at Cubs (7:05 p.m., Marquee)

Old pal Yu Darvish takes the hill for the team with the best road record in the National League. In case that needs clarifying, no, it’s not the Cubs.

Celtics at Warriors, Game 5 (8 p.m., Ch. 7)

The only thing predictable about this series is that Golden State provocateur Draymond Green will stir the pot on his podcast after each game. Aren’t we all thankful podcasts didn’t exist when Dennis Rodman was playing for the Bulls?

TUE 14

White Sox at Tigers (6:10 p.m., NBCSCH)

Lance Lynn makes his long-awaited season debut, and are you thinking what we’re thinking? Now here’s a guy who’d never let anybody make him issue an intentional walk on a 1-2 count.

USMNT at El Salvador (9 p.m., FS1, Univision)

The Americans may have hit on something last week with striker Jesus Ferreira’s four-goal outburst against Grenada. Not to tell coach Gregg Berhalter how to do his job, but we’d simply have somebody do that again.

WED 15

Lightning at Avalanche, Game 1 (7 p.m., Ch. 7)

We’re beginning to suspect the Bolts — who’ve won 11 postseason series in a row and are trying to pull off the NHL’s first three-peat since the early 1980s — are actually pretty good.

THU 16

Warriors at Celtics, Game 6 (8 p.m., Ch. 7)

One of these teams is playing for a title tonight, and keep this in mind: Only four of the last 27 NBA Finals have gone seven games.

FRI 17

Braves at Cubs (1:20 p.m., Marquee)

Baseball’s defending champs were below .500 entering June, but a double-digit winning streak re-established them as a force to be reckoned with. Bonus: Nobody in Atlanta is speculating about a William Contreras trade.

Dream at Sky (7 p.m., Marquee)

We know Atlanta guard Rhyne Howard — the No. 1 overall pick in the 2022 draft — can score with ease, but can she turn a double play with Shawon Dunston?

SAT 18

Dusty Baker’s Astros are locked in again.

Photo by Bob Levey/Getty Images

White Sox at Astros (3:10 p.m., NBCSCH)

Last time these teams hooked up for a series, Kendall Graveman plunked Jose Abreu, La Russa and Baker got into it (again), the Astros easily outclassed the Sox and, well, so much for the 2021 season. But just look how fun the Sox’ fresh start in 2022 has been!

D.C. United at Fire (7 p.m., UniMas, TUDN)

D.C. and Chicago are the lowest-scoring couple of teams in the Eastern Conference, but don’t let that fool you; they’re also the worst couple of teams in the Eastern Conference.

Lightning at Avalanche, Game 2 (7 p.m., Ch. 7)

If ever there were a team that can stand up to the champs, it’s this one. Nathan MacKinnon, Gabriel Landeskog, Mikko Rantanen, Cole Makar — the Avs take a back seat to no one.

SUN 19

U.S. Open, final round (11 a.m., Ch. 5)

Scottie Scheffler, Jon Rahm, Rory McIlroy … Phil Mickelson? Imagine the awkward tension if Mickelson — the face of the new, controversial, Saudi-backed LIV Golf tour — makes a run at his long-sought first Open title.

Sky at Fever (2 p.m., Ch. 26)

One of these years, the Fever will be good again. And by “good” we mean “for once, not a doormat.”

White Sox at Astros (6:08 p.m., ESPN)

No matter what happens, it’s a good thing the Sox are on the road for this national telecast. Wait, they don’t know the “Fire Tony!” chant in Houston, do they?

Celtics at Warriors, Game 7, if necessary (8 p.m., Ch. 7)

Yes, please?

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Tony La Russa Show continues as White Sox hit road Read More »

White Sox’s Kopech leaves game after 13 pitcheson June 12, 2022 at 8:37 pm

Chicago White Sox right-hander Michael Kopech exited Sunday’s game against the Texas Rangers with an injury after throwing just 13 pitches in the first inning.

Kopech, who is 2-2 with a 1.94 ERA, was checked on by the training staff with a full count and two outs against Adolis Garcia. He threw a warm-up pitch before spiking the baseball in frustration and walking to the dugout to applause from the fans.

The White Sox provided no immediate word on the injury.

2 Related

Reynaldo Lopez replaced Kopech and struck out Garcia. Lopez threw two scoreless innings as an opener Friday when the White Sox beat the Rangers 8-3.

Left fielder AJ Pollock robbed Marcus Semien of an extra-base hit with a leaping grab for the first out. Kopech then got Corey Seager to ground out.

Chicago has seven players on the injured list after placing left-handed reliever Aaron Bummer on the IL before Sunday’s game. Bummer, whose move was retroactive to Thursday, has a 3.06 ERA in 20 appearances this season.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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White Sox’s Kopech leaves game after 13 pitcheson June 12, 2022 at 8:37 pm Read More »

Cubs shut down BP for Seiya Suzuki, rest prescribed after injury progress stalled

NEW YORK – Day after day of pregame hitting, hoping for a good enough reaction for Seiya Suzuki to return from the 10-day injured list, returned the same result. His sprained left ring finger continued to swell.

So, on Saturday, in a meeting in New York that included president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer, the club decided a break from hitting was the best move going forward. Manager David Ross announced on Sunday that the Cubs planned to rest Suzuki for about five days, “per doctor’s orders,” before having him ramp back up.

Suzuki has been sidelined since hurting his finger on a base in Cincinnati on May 26 while stealing second.

“He really wants to play, and we tried to take that in consideration, and he’s tried to work out, push it a little bit, and it just still is lingering a little bit,” Ross said. “He’s probably 85, 90 percent. And I think we all came to conclude it’s just not smart to have a setback with what we’re trying to do.”

Last week, Ross was optimistic that Suzuki might be able to play against the Yankees. But he said Sunday that Suzuki still had “a pretty good amount of swelling” in his finger. Suzuki saw another doctor in New York, one of multiple opinions the Cubs have sought.

“I do understand it’s quite frustrating when it’s a finger issue,” Hoyer said. “You feel like, it’s just a finger. But it matters.”

The Cubs don’t have a definitive timetable for Suzuki’s return. When asked if he’d need to go on a rehab assignment, Ross was noncommittal.

“We’ve got some stuff that we’ll be able to do to keep him sharp,” he added. “We’ll talk through that with him when he feels like he’s 100 percent.”

Newcomb activated

The Cubs activated reliever Sean Newcomb off the 15-day IL (left ankle sprain) on Sunday, reinforcing the bullpen. In a corresponding move, they optioned right-hander Michael Rucker to Triple-A.

Rucker threw three innings of relief in the Cubs’ 8-0 blowout loss Saturday, allowing two runs on four hits and recording three strikeouts.

Madrigal day-to-day

Cubs second baseman Nick Madrigal remains day-to-day with groin tightness, after leaving the Cubs’ extra-innings loss Friday in the 12th inning. Ross said he’s be available off the bench Sunday.

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Cubs shut down BP for Seiya Suzuki, rest prescribed after injury progress stalled Read More »

White Sox starter Michael Kopech exits in first inning with apparent injury

The White Sox suffered another hit Sunday as Michael Kopech left after throwing 12 pitches in the first inning.

Kopech, who has a 1.94 ERA and had limited opponents to a .140 batting average in 14 starts since the start of 2021, looked uncomfortable after throwing a 3-1 pitch to Adolis Garcia of the Rangers and walked behind the mound.

After receiving medical attention, Kopech attempted to throw a warmup pitch but winced and stopped before going into his full windup.

Kopech, in obvious pain, appeared to have trouble putting weight on his left leg and walked off the mound and spiked the ball before leaving.

On four occasions this season, Kopech has pitched at least five innings and allowed only one hit.

Reynaldo Lopez, who threw two innings as an opener Friday, took over for Kopech and finished the at-bat with a strikeout.

Meanwhile, Yasmani Grandal’s left hamstring tightness might not be severe enough to place him on the 10-day injured list.

Manager Tony La Russa said Grandal was checked thoroughly before Sunday’s game, and “he’s feeling good.”

Grandal, who felt discomfort running to first base in the third inning of Saturday’s loss to the Rangers, is expected to undergo a series of tests in the next few days.

Seby Zavala was recalled from Triple-A Charlotte to provide insurance. Zavala, 28, was batting .282 with eight home runs at Charlotte.

Unfortunately for the Sox’s well-worked bullpen, left-hander Aaron Bummer was placed on the 15-day IL, retroactive to Wednesday, because of a left lat strain.

Bummer, who has a 3.06 ERA in 20 appearances, was unavailable for at least the first two games of the Rangers’ series, in which the Sox used Lopez as an opener for two innings and Davis Martin for five innings on Friday and stretched Jimmy Lambert for 2 2/3 innings Saturday.

La Russa said the medical staff believes Bummer will be ready to return when he’s eligible June 24.

Because of the need for a fresh arm, Davis was optioned to Charlotte and left-hander Tanner Banks was recalled. Banks, 30, posted a 4.57 ERA in 14 appearances with the Sox earlier this year.

To make room for Zavala on the 40-man roster, designated hitter/catcher Yermin Mercedes was finally designated for assignment. Mercedes batted .230 with four home runs and 13 RBI in 25 games at Charlotte.

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White Sox starter Michael Kopech exits in first inning with apparent injury Read More »

Rudy Gobert may have given Chicago Bulls fans a subtle hint on TwitterRyan Heckmanon June 12, 2022 at 6:19 pm

In recent weeks, things have begun to heat up within league circles. Even while the NBA Finals are still going on, rumors are swirling — and Chicago Bulls fans should pay attention.

Mulitple reports (from The Ringer’s Kevin O’Connor and Bleacher Report’s Jake Fischer) have included the Bulls as a possible destination for disgruntled Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert if the team decides to move on from him.

For a while now, the thought has been that Gobert and guard Donovan Mitchell cannot — and will not — co-exist. It is likely that Gobert ends up traded this summer, but the question then becomes, where to?

If the Bulls do emerge as a top destination, then it is extremely likely center Nikola Vucevic would be included in any deal. But, recent reports from NBC Sports beat writer K.C. Johnson state that Vucevic believes he will stay in Chicago.

Nikola Vucevic reportedly believes he’s staying with the Chicago Bulls, but don’t necessarily trust those rumors.

Although Johnson is as plugged-in as they come, Vucevic seems to wonder how anyone could possibly know what he’s thinking at the moment.

Vucevic retweeted one of the articles referencing Johnson’s report with the question, “Wait how do they know what I’m thinking???”

Interestingly enough, one of the top replies to this tweet came straight from Gobert himself.

???

— Rudy Gobert (@rudygobert27) June 12, 2022

Now, this could be nothing — and it probably is — but it sure is funny that Gobert responded to this tweet which is in regards to the future of both Vucevic and himself.

If the Bulls were to make a deal for Gobert, Vucevic’s expiring deal would go back to Utah along with a pick or two. It would likely end up being at least a first-round pick to go back with Vucevic.

After all, we are talking about a 3-time NBA Defensive Player of the Year in Gobert.

Some want to give Vucevic more time with this core of players. However, the window for the Bulls could be shorter than we think. DeMar DeRozan enjoyed one of the best seasons of his career last year, sure, but he’s also going to be 33 years old when this coming season begins.

Vucevic will turn 32 in October, while Gobert will turn 30 in a couple of weeks. The Bulls get a little bit younger by adding Gobert, but also get a whole lot meaner on the defensive end.

Without Lonzo Ball down the stretch last season, the Bulls’ defense suffered greatly. Adding a presence like Gobert could make up for some of what was lost, and when Ball is finally healthy again, watch out.

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Rudy Gobert may have given Chicago Bulls fans a subtle hint on TwitterRyan Heckmanon June 12, 2022 at 6:19 pm Read More »