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Chicago Bulls GM lands brutal GPA in insider’s assessment

Chicago Bulls GM

If the NBA were a college course, the Chicago Bulls and GM Marc Eversley (as well as Arturas Karnisovas) would be in danger of failing. Though the grade is restricted to 2025, it is arguable that this front office has been on the brink of utter failure for the last few seasons at least. Regardless, the insider who graded the work is not terribly pleased.

Chicago Bulls’ offseason gets brutal grade​

NBA: Cleveland Cavaliers at Chicago Bulls

NBA: Cleveland Cavaliers at Chicago Bulls

A 2.2 GPA would not be ideal in a college setting, and it is far from ideal for the NBA. The Chicago Bulls, though, have done precious little to avoid such a grade from Bleacher Report analyst Andy Bailey. They’ve just not made many good moves.

They received a D grade for the new additions, which means just Isaac Okoro. “Despite hovering around the middle of the East for much of recent NBA history, the Chicago Bulls didn’t really do anything to drastically change their fortunes this summer. Their most notable veteran addition was Isaac Okoro, who came by way of a trade for the oft-injured Lonzo Ball,” Bailey wrote.

In the world of continuity, they did improve slightly and got a C+. “The 2024-25 Bulls remain largely intact, but to what end?” Bailey asked. “The team went 39-43 in each of the last two seasons. And unless Matas Buzelis or the recently re-signed Josh Giddey have massive breakouts (not out of the question, but maybe not likely either), they’re looking at another year of mediocrity.”

This team is virtually the same as it was last year, only without Lonzo Ball and with Isaac Okoro and maybe Noa Essengue. That’s not exactly a recipe to build and move forward after a 39-win season and a play-in exit.

Chicago Bulls head coach Billy Donovan yells at an official during the second half against the Charlotte Hornets at Spectrum Center.

Chicago Bulls head coach Billy Donovan yells at an official during the second half against the Charlotte Hornets at Spectrum Center. Mandatory Credit: Nell Redmond-Imagn Images

In the draft, though, the Bulls finally seemed to get it right, earning a B+ grade. “Noa Essengue brings an intriguing combination of length and athleticism to a team that already has that from Buzelis and Giddey (at least relative to his position). In a lot of ways, it feels like the Bulls are dragging their organizational feet, but there could be something coming together in the background,” Bailey wrote.

Essengue is at least a promising prospect, and picking those is the sort of thing good GMs do. The Bulls have been stuck for a while and haven’t had high draft picks to work with, but picking Buzelis and then Essengue might be the start of a semi-inspiring turnaround in Chicago.

Source: https://www.chicitysports.com/chica...&utm_campaign=chicago-bulls-brutal-assessment
 
Chicago Bulls reportedly interested in another RFA after Josh Giddey signing

NBA: Golden State Warriors at Chicago Bulls

The Chicago Bulls just came to an agreement with their own restricted free agent: Josh Giddey. Now, there are reports that they might turn their attention to another disgruntled RFA in Jonathan Kuminga. His stalemate has lasted even longer than Giddey’s, and the Bulls are emerging as a potential suitor. Just not this year.

Chicago Bulls could land Jonathan Kuminga in 2026​

NBA: Playoffs Minnesota Timberwolves at Golden State Warriors

NBA: Playoffs Minnesota Timberwolves at Golden State Warriors

The Chicago Bulls finally signed Josh Giddey to a four-year $100 million deal, putting an end to the stalemate that had lasted over 70 days. The Golden State Warriors have had no such success with Jonathan Kuminga, who reportedly declined a $75 million offer.

He is now reportedly considering taking the qualifying offer and playing one year before entering unrestricted free agency in 2026, which is where the Bulls might be able to step in. They project to have a lot of cap space, and they’ve been linked to Kuminga plenty.

But if that doesn’t happen, they might also get involved this year. The sense now is that something is finally going to happen soon, and there will be a breakthrough. The Bulls have been involved loosely from the beginning, so it’s possible a sign-and-trade of some kind happens, although it’s a little less likely following the Giddey deal.

Bleacher Report’s Scott Polacek wrote, “Kuminga has been anything but consistent throughout his career, but he has also flashed his talent and has a high ceiling.” Adding another 22-year-old to pair with the 22-year-old Giddey, 20-year-old Matas Buzelis, and 25-year-old Coby White instead of veteran players might be wise, too.

“Chicago would offer him an opportunity for more consistent playing time than a veteran-laden team with realistic championship aspirations in Golden State, and it could still be a possible destination depending on how things unfold,” Polacek wrote.

Chicago Bulls guard Josh Giddey (3) in the second half against the Indiana Pacers at Gainbridge Fieldhouse

Chicago Bulls guard Josh Giddey (3) in the second half against the Indiana Pacers at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images

Whether or not Kuminga will sign a deal, the qualifying offer, or be traded remains to be seen, but at every turn, the Bulls have been brought up, so the idea of him wearing black and red certainly can’t be ruled out, even if it’s next offseason.

Source: https://www.chicitysports.com/chica...rss&utm_campaign=chicago-bulls-interested-rfa
 
Chicago Bulls score rare praise for $100M Josh Giddey deal

Chicago Bulls

Josh Giddey and the Chicago Bulls finally agreed on a four-year deal for $100 million to avoid any major issues heading into camp. This is a win for both sides, as it is firmly in the middle of each’s initial desire. But more importantly, it’s a smart deal for the Bulls, and it got praise from one NBA insider.

Chicago Bulls’ Josh Giddey deal was ‘right move’​

Bulls

Apr 6, 2025; Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; Chicago Bulls guard Josh Giddey (3) brings the ball upcourt against the Charlotte Hornets during the second half at Spectrum Center. Mandatory Credit: Nell Redmond-Imagn Images

The Chicago Bulls knew they needed Josh Giddey, but they also knew there was virtually no other market for him. They ended up getting a mildly team-friendly deal that makes the Alex Caruso deal a little better and gives them a piece to work with as they continue trying to build.

“While I’m generally not a fan of much of what’s happened in Chicago lately, the Bulls’ four-year, $100 million contract with Josh Giddey is completely fine and sets up as a likely long-term win for the Bulls. I’m amazed more people don’t think this. It won’t get a draft pick back for Alex Caruso, but given Chicago’s situation, it was the right move,” The Athletic’s John Hollinger wrote.

Giddey certainly has “apparent weaknesses,” as evidenced by the end of his Oklahoma City Thunder tenure, but he’s still just 22 years old and is coming off his best season in the NBA. The second half in particular was quite good, and he shot almost 38% from three. Giddey had no place with the Thunder, but there’s no reason he can’t continue to evolve and improve, like he did, with the Bulls.

To make things even better, Hollinger wrote that this isn’t Patrick Williams 2.0. “While it’s true the Bulls had most of the leverage because Giddey was a restricted free agent in a market with no buyers, he also had the strongest résumé of any of the four key RFAs whose situations dragged (Giddey, Golden State’s Jonathan Kuminga, Philadelphia’s Quentin Grimes and Brooklyn’s Cam Thomas).”

Chicago Bulls guard Josh Giddey (3) gestures after making a three point basket against the Miami Heat during the second half at United Center.

Chicago Bulls guard Josh Giddey (3) gestures after making a three point basket against the Miami Heat during the second half at United Center. Mandatory Credit: David Banks-Imagn Images

At $25 million annually, Giddey doesn’t have to be a superstar to live up to the deal. That’s 14% of the salary cap, which could easily be the type of money for a talented sixth man or third option on a good team. The pressure is off now, and $25 million for the second-best player on a bad team is neither bad nor surprising.

Hollinger was quick to point out that Giddey would be “the sixth-highest paid player on the 2026-27 Cleveland Cavaliers or the fifth-highest paid on this year’s Miami Heat, Toronto Raptors, New York Knicks or Minnesota Timberwolves.” That’s great value for the Bulls, and it could only get better.

Source: https://www.chicitysports.com/chicago-bulls-rare-praise-giddey
 
Chicago Bulls’ future deemed utterly bleak by NBA insider

NBA: Play In Miami Heat at Chicago Bulls

The Chicago Bulls are a pretty middling team right now, going 164-164 over their last four seasons. What does the future hold? Not much, according to one NBA insider. The Bulls came in ranked 28th in the future Power Rankings, indicating that there’s little hope for improvement in the near future.

Chicago Bulls have no future, insider claims​

NBA: Chicago Bulls Media Day

NBA: Chicago Bulls Media Day

The days of Zach LaVine and DeMar DeRozan are over. The Chicago Bulls seem finally intent on not just loading up with veterans only to go .500 or somewhere near it. Unfortunately, the roster still hovers around that point, and the future doesn’t look too bright.

Right now, it’s unlikely that the Bulls are the 28th-best team as ESPN indicated. The core of Josh Giddey, Matas Buzelis, Coby White, and Nikola Vucevic is good enough to be better than a top-of-the-lottery squad, but not by a ton.

However, in the future, insider Kevin Pelton doesn’t see any reason Chicago should be ranked higher than that. “In terms of wins, it’s unlikely Chicago will finish this low after posting 40, 39, and 39 wins, respectively, over the past three seasons,” Pelton wrote.

So right now, they’re not bad. They just don’t have a hope of actually becoming a good team. “Few teams have less hope of becoming a contender than the Bulls, who have prioritized competing for the play-in over grander ambitions,” Pelton went on to write.

He did credit the transition from aging vets to younger players, but it’s still not great. “Chicago has gotten younger, transitioning from a DeMar DeRozan-Zach LaVine core to one led by Coby White (25) and Josh Giddey (22). The Bulls will have cap flexibility next summer, but we don’t trust this organization to maximize that opportunity,” Pelton wrote.

Chicago Bulls head coach Billy Donovan reacts during a timeout in the first quarter against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Rocket Arena.

Chicago Bulls head coach Billy Donovan reacts during a timeout in the first quarter against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Rocket Arena. Mandatory Credit: David Richard-Imagn Images

The Bulls don’t have a promising young talent right now. We know what Giddey is, and he’s not a superstar in the making. Matas Buzelis is on an upward trajectory, but even he doesn’t project as a franchise-altering talent. Coby White is also good, but he’s 25 and probably has hit his ceiling.

There’s no major building block, nor are there the assets needed to find one. Chicago can be active in 2026 free agency, but it’s unlikely they sign the top players in that class: Trae Young, James Harden, LeBron James, Andrew Wiggins, or Kevin Durant. Only the New Orleans Pelicans and Phoenix Suns are in worse shape, according to ESPN.

Source: https://www.chicitysports.com/chicago-bulls-future-bleak-insider
 
Patrick Williams’ Bulls Journey: What Went Wrong with the No. 4 Pick?

Chicago Bulls Patrick Williams

The selection of Patrick Williams as the Bulls’ fourth overall pick in 2020 is now being heavily debated. A new analysis brings to light all the complexity behind his inconsistent development and asks important questions about player development and organizational expectations.

The Ideal Tempest of Developmental Problems​


There was giant potential when Williams joined the league after the Bulls front office likened him to the best, such as Kawhi Leonard and OG Anunoby. His physical characteristics could not be denied, length, athleticism and defensive versatility all made him a desirable candidate. Nevertheless, five years later, bookies would probably now provide longer odds that Williams could still hit the high projections he once commanded.

Even at the best offshore sportsbooks for US players, the Bulls are a far cry from their greatest teams as they currently sit at a whopping +100000 to win the championship. Players like Williams were meant to inject fresh optimism into the squad but this is yet to materialize.

Williams struggled in his early career for a few reasons. The 2020 shutdowns changed the traditional rookie experience and shifted the timelines, reducing adjustment periods and limited opportunities for development. The draft was pushed back to November 2020, which left rookies a month to adjust to their new environments, adding additional pressure on a 19-year-old Williams. Injuries didn’t help either, William missed time for a five-month wrist injury and an eight-month injury on his foot, preventing the consistent development young players need.

Development Continues to Suffer from the Confidence Crisis​


Williams has been inconsistent and passive at times during games, while also showing glimpses of defensive instincts and shooting feel. Of several stipulations from coaches, they want him to be more aggressive with his offensive game, yet his usage rate and decision-making remains low.

NBA advanced analytics shows Williams was stagnant in several aspects where similar profile peers tend to gain in five seasons. This shows that his biggest hindrance may be mental approach and confidence as opposed to physical limitations. The fact that professional athletes are likely to need a specific intervention and patient progress to get over such problems is supported by the research on sports psychology.

The Cost of Signing Patrick Williams​

Chicago Bulls forward Patrick Williams (44) dribbles defended by Detroit Pistons forward Ronald Holland II

Chicago Bulls forward Patrick Williams (44) dribbles defended by Detroit Pistons forward Ronald Holland II (00) in the first half at Little Caesars Arena. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images

Patrick Williams’ career with the Bulls has been a rollercoaster of potential and disappointment. Once viewed as a franchise building block, injuries and inconsistency have diminished his contributions. Some analysts have criticized the inflated contract given to Williams, noting that it takes up needed cap space.

For coaching staff and fans alike, there’s much frustration considering what they lost by signing Patrick Williams. The alternatives highlight how Williams’ struggles, despite his potential, have forced the team to make difficult decisions around rotations, player development, and future acquisitions.

Critical Season Ahead for Both Player and Organization​


Williams, still at the age of 24, still has time to grow, but there is less time to make a dramatic change with the Bulls looking to familiar faces like Josh Giddey among new signings. The organization will require observing the improvement in shot selection, consistency in defense, and aggressiveness in general.

His case also demonstrates the general problems of contemporary NBA player development where outside pressures, injuries, and lack of confidence collide to form a cumbersome barrier. Sports psychology research has shown that confidence as a problem in professional athletics usually needs special intervention and development strategy of the patient..

Defining Moments Lie Ahead​


The Bulls’ investment is indicative of their optimism in Williams’ potential. Despite his length, athleticism, and shooting are all impressive, now is the time to start being consistent with that athleticism and shooting. For its fans, Williams represents hope and frustration–flashes of elite play show what is possible while also making it clear what is missing in Williams’ game. Next season will probably be the deciding factor as to whether Williams lives up to his promise or is restrained as one of the franchise’s most fascinating “what if?” stories.

Source: https://www.chicitysports.com/patrick-williams-bulls-what-went-wrong
 
Chicago Bulls star Josh Giddey named big winner of NBA offseason

NBA: Chicago Bulls at Los Angeles Lakers

Though it’s not quite as lucrative as he wanted, Josh Giddey has officially re-signed with the Chicago Bulls for $100 million. After a months-long stalemate, the two sides finally agreed to a deal, and it seemingly indicates that Giddey won the negotiation, and, according to one analyst, the offseason.

Josh Giddey named big winner after standoff with Chicago Bulls​

Chicago Bulls guard Josh Giddey (3) drives to the basket against Miami Heat guard Tyler Herro

NBA: Chicago Bulls at Miami Heat Mar 8, 2025; Miami, Florida, USA;Chicago Bulls guard Josh Giddey (3) drives to the basket against Miami Heat guard Tyler Herro (14) during the second quarter at Kaseya Center. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Josh Giddey wanted $30 million per year. The Chicago Bulls wanted to sign him for $20 million. In the end, they settled at $25, which is a win for Giddey for negotiating the Bulls up to a better salary for himself and keeping the four-year length.

According to Bleacher Report insider Grant Hughes, Giddey is one of five big winners of the offseason. Ironically, all other RFAs, like Jonathan Kuminga and Quentin Grimes, were named among the losers this year.

“Giddey had no leverage. The Brooklyn Nets were the only team with significant cap space this past offseason, and they didn’t even come sniffing around. In fact, their own restricted free agent, Cam Thomas, had to settle for the qualifying offer,” Hughes wrote.

“The total dearth of suitors should have put Giddey at the Bulls’ mercy. It’s a borderline miracle that he came out of the offseason with a nine-figure deal,” the insider continued. Giddey had very little in the way of options, but he still managed to come out in decent shape.

He could’ve taken the qualifying offer and hit unrestricted free agency next year, but that’s a huge risk due to the “lack of interest in him this year, coupled with broad skepticism about his ability to contribute on a winning team.” That would have been risky, but Giddey and his agents got everything out of the Bulls they possibly could here.

Chicago Bulls guard Josh Giddey (3) looks to pass against Los Angeles Lakers guard Gabe Vincent

NBA: Chicago Bulls at Los Angeles Lakers Mar 22, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Chicago Bulls guard Josh Giddey (3) looks to pass against Los Angeles Lakers guard Gabe Vincent (7) during the second half at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jonathan Hui-Imagn Images

The Bulls seemed to be the only team willing and able to sign Giddey. There was virtually no chatter about a sign-and-trade, and while he would’ve had more interest in 2026, he wasn’t willing to bank on another stellar season to improve his value, so he got the best deal he could from the Bulls.

Source: https://www.chicitysports.com/chicago-bulls-josh-giddey-big-winner
 
Chicago Bulls earn more high praise for NBA jerseys

NBA: Chicago Bulls at Philadelphia 76ers

The Chicago Bulls have one of the best and most iconic jerseys in the entire NBA, and it’s been that way for a long time. They recently got named the best jersey in the entire sport, and a new list has just surfaced. This one disagrees, but only slightly.

Chicago Bulls’ jerseys named top-tier in entire NBA​

NBA: Los Angeles Lakers at Chicago Bulls

NBA: Los Angeles Lakers at Chicago Bulls

The Chicago Bulls have not been a good basketball team in about a decade. They’ve been mired in mediocrity for a long time, but the one thing they do have going for them is a clean uniform selection, and that continues in 2025-26 with the newest uniforms.

“Though they might frustrate fans by chasing mediocrity on the floor, the Chicago Bulls are anything but ordinary when it comes to their attire,” Bleacher Report’s Grant Hughes wrote in ranking Chicago the fourth-best in the league.

They only trailed:

  • Memphis Grizzlies
  • Portland Trail Blazers
  • Minnesota Timberwolves

Hughes went on to note that the simple white and red is, like the Boston Celtics, a masterclass in “understated excellence.” He wrote, “Chicago’s style is a testament to the idea that you don’t have to redesign uniforms and tweak color schemes every five years to sell more merch. There’s greater value in establishing an identity and sticking with it.” For years, the Bulls have looked like this, and it’s paid off beautifully.

Normally, going back to the basics for the Statement and City Edition uniforms would get them docked, but the Bulls get an exception here since they’re just that good. “Chicago will again go with the pinstriped black look that Michael Jordan wore back in the mid and late-90s as its Statement jersey, and it’ll add light blue accents with a script ‘Chicago’ on the chest in its City Edition,” Hughes noted.

NBA: Chicago Bulls at Orlando Magic

NBA: Chicago Bulls at Orlando Magic

The insider also added that there’s nothing really to nitpick here, except maybe the size of the font, but even that is a nice contract when compared to the other uniforms the Bulls run. There’s virtually nothing wrong with any of it, giving Chicago one of the best uniform rotations in the sport of basketball.

Source: https://www.chicitysports.com/chicago-bulls-praise-jerseys
 
Insider: Now’s time to buy Chicago Bulls stock for the future

Chicago Bulls guard Coby White (0) reacts with center Nikola Vucevic (9) during the first half against the Memphis Grizzlies at FedExForum. Sports

The Chicago Bulls have been accused, fairly so, of being aimless for the last few seasons. But at least slightly, things have changed a little bit. The future is a little brighter than it has been, and the front office seems a little more focused on it than usual. It has one insider believing this could be the shift this franchise has desperately needed.

One insider is all-in on Chicago Bulls’ growth​

Chicago Bulls forward Patrick Williams (44) and center Nikola Vucevic (9) battle for the ball with Denver Nuggets forward Zeke Nnaji (22) during the first half at United Center.

Chicago Bulls forward Patrick Williams (44) and center Nikola Vucevic (9) battle for the ball with Denver Nuggets forward Zeke Nnaji (22) during the first half at United Center. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

James Herbert of CBS Sports broke down everything that’s impacting the Chicago Bulls this season. There are reasons (Matas Buzelis, Noa Essengue, Josh Giddey) to be optimistic, but this is also the Bulls we’re talking about. They usually don’t pay off optimism.

Herbert, taking the optimist’s route, wrote, “This is by far the best I’ve felt about the Bulls since the first half of the 2021-22 season, which turned out to be nothing more than a (beautiful, memorable) blip. I loved the way they played at the end of last season, and I must have watched Josh Giddey’s full-court buzzer-beater against the Lakers 200 times.”

He admitted that it’s “cool” to hate the Bulls right now, but he envisions a world where NBA media start talking about how fun the Bulls are just a few weeks into the season. They have the pieces to be a fun, if not solid, team this year. He called them a “League Pass” team, meaning everyone will want to tune in even if they’re not amazing.

NBA: Detroit Pistons at Chicago Bulls

NBA: Detroit Pistons at Chicago Bulls

“Giddey’s going to continue to push the pace and throw outrageous passes. It’s impossible not to like Matas Buzelis. All the stat nerds have been hyping up Noa Essengue, too. Now’s the time to buy Bulls stock!” he concluded.

There are absolutely reasons to be hesitant, such as the Isaac Okoro trade, Josh Giddey’s playoff performance in the past, and the front office/ownership. But there are some things that provide optimism, like Giddey’s growth, Essengue’s potential, and Buzelis’ development. Things could lean positive for the Bulls this year and finally give them something to build on and actually move into the future.

Source: https://www.chicitysports.com/buy-chicago-bulls-stock-future
 
NBA insider criticizes Chicago Bulls’ worst contract

Chicago Bulls

The Chicago Bulls made a huge mistake when they drafted Patrick Williams in the 2020 draft, and then they compounded it with a bad extension. That extension is hampering them now and appears poised to hamper them well into the future, despite it not being a massive salary. It was just labeled as one of the contracts that’s going to age the absolute worst.

NBA insider believes Patrick Williams’ contract will age so poorly​

Chicago Bulls forward Patrick Williams (44) dribbles defended by Detroit Pistons forward Ronald Holland II

Chicago Bulls forward Patrick Williams (44) dribbles defended by Detroit Pistons forward Ronald Holland II (00) in the first half at Little Caesars Arena. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images

The Patrick Williams $90 million deal is almost halfway over, but it’s still going to hurt even when the Chicago Bulls are about to get out from under it. There are two years and $36 million left with a player option after that, and Williams would never get $18 million a year anywhere else, so he’s going to opt in.

It’s such a bad contract that it’s listed on Bleacher Report’s Dan Favale’s list of bad contracts that will age poorly in two seasons. “Patrick Williams’ deal just keeps going and going, doesn’t it?” he wrote. He acknowledged that Williams only makes under 10% of the cap, which isn’t really that much.

But in order for that to matter, Williams actually has to be a rotation combo forward, but he’s been anything but so far. He’s almost unplayable. “While he’s young enough to keep getting better, he’s shown few signs of being a serviceable offensive weapon,” Favale wrote.

“Ultra-low volume offsets the 39.2 percent clip he’s shooting from deep. Since entering the NBA, he has never ranked higher than the 22nd percentile of BBall Index’s O-LEBRON metric. His usage rate, meanwhile, has topped out inside the 17th percentile,” Favale continued.

He estimated that it would be like Zeke Nnaji’s bad deal with the Denver Nuggets. “The price is low enough it won’t seem detrimental, but ebbing playing time and the inability to trade Williams without attaching assets will speak for itself,” he wrote in conclusion.

Chicago Bulls Patrick Williams

Jan 27, 2025; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Chicago Bulls forward Patrick Williams (44) greets fans after a game against the Denver Nuggets at the United Center. Mandatory Credit: Matt Marton-Imagn Images

The Williams deal is just bad enough to prevent the Bulls from doing much during its duration, and it’s bad enough that they’d have a really hard time getting anyone to trade for it. For reference, Williams makes $18 million, and he was listed with Joel Embiid ($62.5 million), Jayson Tatum ($62.8 million), DeAaron Fox ($53.6 million), and Jakob Poeltl ($27.3 million) in terms of 2027-28 salaries.

So while Williams does not make all that much, it’s bad enough to be compared to albatross contracts, which is a scathing indictment.

Source: https://www.chicitysports.com/insider-criticizes-chicago-bulls-contract
 
How the Chicago Bulls can return to contender status: roster, draft and possible trades

Chicago Bulls

The Chicago Bulls’ front office has already nudged the franchise toward a younger, more modern core, and the path back to contention is now about sequencing: develop the right players, spend picks wisely, and time a consolidation trade when value peaks. For readers who handicap across multiple leagues, cross-sport data can help frame risk; sharp bettors often scan the NFL page on FIRST.com for pricing patterns that translate to basketball markets as well.

Roster architecture: What the Chicago Bulls already have


The Chicago Bulls reshaped their identity across the last two seasons. DeMar DeRozan departed in a 2024 sign-and-trade, Zach LaVine moved at the 2025 deadline in a three-team deal, and Josh Giddey arrived (and was just extended). That activity brought back rotation pieces (Kevin Huerter, Zach Collins, Tre Jones), returned control of a 2025 first, and clarified the pecking order around Coby White, 2024 lottery pick Matas Buzelis, and 2025 lottery pick Noa Essengue. Giddey’s four-year, $100M extension signals he’s a long-term hub; LaVine’s exit netted Huerter, Collins, Jones, and that reclaimed 2025 first which became Essengue. Buzelis remains a wing-size scorer with shooting touch.

Core snapshot (2025-26)

PlayerAgeContract/controlPrimary fit
Josh Giddey22New 4-year deal through 2029Jumbo initiator; rebounding guard; improved 3-pt accuracy
Coby White25Final year of 3-yr dealLead scorer/shot-maker; off-ball spacer next to Giddey
Matas Buzelis20Rookie-scale6-10 wing scorer; secondary rim pressure and shooting
Patrick Williams24Multi-yearTwo-way forward; low-usage efficiency; switch tool
Nikola Vučević34–35Through 2026High-IQ center; post scoring, DHO hub; drop coverage
Kevin Huerter27$17.99M expiringMovement shooting; handoff threat; salary ballast
Zach Collins28On-ball screens, short-roll passingPhysical 5/4; depth at center
Tre Jones25Value guard dealLow-turnover table-setter; point-of-attack try-hard
Ayo Dosunmu25Team controlCombo defense; catch-and-shoot
Noa Essengue (R)18Rookie-scaleLong forward; motor, tools, developmental upside

Giddey’s extension is fresh; Huerter’s 2025-26 number is a tidy expiring; Vučević is in the final season of his 3-year pact. Those contract shapes matter for trade construction and future cap flexibility. White has surged from prospect to reliable scorer, and Buzelis gives the offense a tall release valve on the wing.

What that means right now: with Giddey orchestrating and White spacing/attacking, Chicago can play five-out looks featuring Buzelis and Williams on the wings. The swing items are rim protection and defensive rebounding at a playoff standard, plus sustained shooting volume. Huerter’s expiring and Collins’ mid-tier money create trade flexibility; Essengue’s growth arc can raise the team’s athletic ceiling.

Draft capital & trade pathways


Chicago’s pick chest is healthier than it appears on the surface. The LaVine deal returned the 2025 first that became Essengue; the team also holds its own firsts going forward and still has access to Portland-related draft considerations (with protections). Under the Stepien Rule, a club must control at least one first in every other future draft; in practice, the Bulls can still put together packages with two movable firsts while preserving year-to-year compliance.

Actionable paths for the next 12–18 months

  • Rim-protection upgrade via consolidation. Package Huerter’s expiring ($17.99M) with a mid-sized deal (Collins) plus a lightly protected future first to chase a switch-capable rim protector who runs, screens, and finishes. Salary matching is clean and preserves White/Buzelis/Williams minutes, while raising the defensive floor right away.
  • Big wing acquisition around Vučević’s number. Use Vučević’s contract as matching salary with a pick sweetener or swap to acquire a 6-7/6-8 two-way wing who guards 2–4 and shoots volume threes. The idea is to rebalance usage toward wings and reduce reliance on drop coverage late in games.
  • Draft-first route with surgical trades up/down. If the market doesn’t yield the right frontcourt target, keep Huerter through the deadline, re-shop in June, and use multiple picks to move on the board for a rim-runner or a movement shooter with size. RealGM’s ledger shows Chicago still controls its own firsts across the late-20s, which supports a trade-up play on draft night.
  • Bet on internal growth while protecting flexibility. Re-sign White next summer at market, let Essengue grow behind Williams/Buzelis, and use Tre Jones as a stabilizer for second units. This keeps the window open for a larger star trade if one becomes available without stripping the pipeline.

Why this sequencing works: recent moves already trimmed redundancy. LaVine’s exit reset usage balance; Giddey’s improved 3-point clip (37.8%) widened lineup options; Huerter recovered his shooting in Chicago’s system. With two or so true firsts to play with, Chicago can target one needle-mover archetype (rim protector or big wing) rather than chasing a third high-usage guard.

What a contender version of the Chicago Bulls looks like

NBA: Chicago Bulls at Philadelphia 76ers

NBA: Chicago Bulls at Philadelphia 76ers

Picture a rotation where Giddey quarterbacks a top-7 assist rate, White punishes weak-side tags, and the frontcourt features a vertical threat who blocks shots and sprints the floor. Buzelis slots as a 6-10 shooter who can attack closeouts; Williams guards star forwards without fouling; Jones caps lineups with low-mistake minutes. If Essengue hits as a high-motor defender and the front office lands that rim protector or big wing, Chicago projects as a home-court-advantage team within two seasons—without emptying the asset cupboard.

Key benchmarks to watch (and bet against): sustained team 3PA rate in the top half, defensive rebounding percentage above 74%, and half-court offensive rating near league average or better when Giddey sits. Hit those marks while adding one frontcourt piece, and the climb from play-in noise to real playoff teeth stops feeling hypothetical.

Source: https://www.chicitysports.com/chicago-bulls-can-return-to-contender-status
 
Insider proposes blockbuster Chicago Bulls trade for Warriors stars

Chicago Bulls guard Coby White (0) drives to the basket against the Charlotte Hornets during the second half at Spectrum Center.

The Chicago Bulls have been linked to Jonathan Kuminga a lot. There are also swirling rumors about Coby White’s future with the team. In one fell swoop, one insider proposed a blockbuster trade that answers both of those questions and arguably sets the Bulls on the right path for the future.

Proposed blockbuster sees Chicago Bulls send Coby White west​

Chicago Bulls

Apr 6, 2025; Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; Chicago Bulls guard Coby White (0) drives to the basket against Charlotte Hornets center Mark Williams (5) during the second half at Spectrum Center. Mandatory Credit: Nell Redmond-Imagn Images

With a contract decision coming up, Coby White’s future with the Chicago Bulls is anything but set in stone. He has been included in trade rumors all offseason. On the other hand, Jonathan Kuminga, who’s in the same boat that Josh Giddey just was, has been linked to Chicago amid the standoff with the Golden State Warriors.

What if those two just switched places? That’s the idea Bleacher Report insider Zach Buckley came up with. He proposed the Bulls send Coby White and Jalen Smith to the Warriors for Kuminga (sign-and-trade), Moses Moody, and a 2028 first-round pick.

“Stephen Curry, Jimmy Butler and Draymond Green all have two years left on their contracts, so the organization should feel much more urgency than the sticky situation with Kuminga otherwise reflects,” Buckley wrote, explaining why the Warriors might want to forego the future of Kuminga and look at win-now players.

“Regardless of one’s opinion of Kuminga and his impact on winning, losing an unprotected first always carries risk, and Moody is a proven, generally reliable contributor,” the insider continued, but that should be good news for the Bulls.

He views Smith and White as crucial pieces for the Warriors to maximize the final years of Steph Curry, with White in particular being just what they could use. As for Chicago, this is a bold move, but it’s one that the front office should be interested in.

NBA: Playoffs Minnesota Timberwolves at Golden State Warriors

NBA: Playoffs Minnesota Timberwolves at Golden State Warriors

“They should be distancing themselves from their prosaic present and pushing toward a brighter future. Betting on Kuminga’s ability to thrive in a larger, more consistent role than he’s handled in Golden State would be a big part of that plan,” Buckley wrote. “Adding the unprotected first might be an even bigger piece of the puzzle. And Moody is someone who can support a winning team whenever the Bulls are able to assemble one.”

All in all, this gives the Bulls a very valuable pick, another potential cornerstone that’s younger than White and will probably be cheaper, and a vet that can help everyone in the building. Losing White would sting, but in this case, it may be for the best.

Source: https://www.chicitysports.com/insider-chicago-bulls-warriors-stars
 
Chicago Bulls reveal pessimistic goal for upcoming season

Chicago Bulls executive Arturas Karnisovas is not overly optimistic about the team this year.

Any momentum the Chicago Bulls had on their run at the end of the regular season ended with a 109-90 blowout by the Miami Heat in the Play-In Tournament at the United Center. On Monday, executive vice president of basketball operations Artūras Karnišovas told the media that he hoped a mostly unchanged roster from the one that lost in the Play-In Tournament would continue to develop this season.

“The last 20 games of the season gave us a glimpse of our future, and we established offensive identity, baseball movement, threes,” Karnisovas said while reading from a pre-written script. “Most importantly, we showed cohesion, and we got better. We were 14th on offense and ninth on defense. Those numbers are encouraging this year. Excited for the season with an established and young core, we are building a strong foundation that will continue to develop while learning to win together.”

Karnisovas believes Coby White and Josh Giddey can develop into stars in the NBA while Matas Buzelis shows progress in Year 2. Karnisovas was cautious not to call the Bulls a playoff contender. Chicago apparently isn’t in the championship business for the upcoming season.

The Chicago Bulls have modest goals​

Chicago Bulls

Chicago Bulls guard Josh Giddey (3) brings the ball upcourt against the Charlotte Hornets during the second half at Spectrum Center. Mandatory Credit: Nell Redmond-Imagn Images

The Bulls have more modest goals, which feel at this point to be pessimistic for a team that hasn’t won a playoff series in a decade.

“We have to get more defensive-minded. Versatility and creativity to be essential to our defense. Focus will be on establishing encore toughness and physicality. Karnisovas said. “We are confident in this group and excited to show our fans the team that plays with consistency, toughness, and pride every night.

“Building while competing is a goal. Every decision tied to that.”

The Bulls aren’t trying to win this season. They’re going to try and develop a future winner with their core. The team expects to be about as lifeless against true competitors s Karnisovas was in stumbling over his pre-written bullet points about the questionable “key factors” the Bulls have to look forward to when the real games begin a few weeks.

Chicago Bulls GM

Chicago Bulls vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas speaks during Chicago Bulls Media Day. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

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Source: https://www.chicitysports.com/pessimistic-goal-season-chicago-bulls
 
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