Chicago Bulls

In the wake of Sunday’s devastating, humiliating beatdown to the Boston Celtics — stunning as the winds strongly howls through the Windy City — we’ve fathom the reason for the Chicago Bulls’ woes of late. When Carlos Boozer joined the Bulls, migrating feasibly to America’s most enthusiastic sports towns, he was expected to be the consolation prize, expected to act as a primary force in the interior, expected to be a benefactor, not a non-factor.

As it turns out, he was never the remedy to dismiss all the misery for this disoriented franchise ever since Michael Jordan had his bronze statue unveiled outside of the United Center, ever since he left town and ever since he retired. But, as of now, Boozer is largely the reason why the Bulls are struggling. It’s one thing to demand and imagine that a player comes into the scene and become the second scoring option behind point guard sensation Derrick Rose, entirely another to bring him in when, in fact, much is excepted of Boozer and instead has done nothing but disappoint and increasingly exposed his failures.

He’s not what people thought he would materialize into, and more than ever, he has yet to develop consistency – weight still heavy on Rose’s shoulder. The mere thought here is that he’s not productive without a pass-first point guard, and as long as Rose continues to shoot first and distribute the ball as an alternative, the criticism won’t subside and Boozer will struggle in the Bulls’ system. Ok, perhaps you can recall the moment he played with Deron Williams in Utah, getting 10 to 15 touches each quarter. The point here is, with frequently more touches, he had numerous shot opportunities and was a dynamic force in the paint, whereas he’s not such an instrumental piece in the Bulls offense, overshadowed and irrelevant by Rose’s craft and talent.

The dirty little secret is that Rose knows Boozer is merely limited, knows he can’t bring much to the offense – whether he lacks determination, character and will when, all considering, he is supposedly the best low-scoring presence in the league. But that’s not true. It can’t be the truth if Boozer is not aggressive enough, not demanding the ball and not driving strong to the basket. With the Bulls – a team considered to dominate the East — we haven’t seen his capabilities, let alone seen him perform at his best this season.

The thing is, while he spent two inept seasons in Chicago after signing an enormous five-year, $76 million deal, the Bulls wastefully invested in an overpaid bum. The sudden underachievement involving Boozer is lingering in Chicago — and let’s be real, given his porous season – he’s fallen in love with the jump shot, attempting more jumpers than usual and has the size and strength to drive the ball to the rim instead. For all the odd reasons, he’s now a shooter after the Bulls signed him to be a pesky scorer inside.

He’s not – not what the Bulls thought they were getting.

Boozer – particularly his awkward offensive style – doesn’t fit with the organization and, for most nights, he’s been missing in action. He looks dazed, helpless and confused, unsure of himself and his teammates. If they are in any trade talks to deal Boozer, it would be very difficult for someone who doesn’t have much trade value around the league, in which the Bulls would more less have to try using an amnesty clause on him over the next few seasons.

Watching an entirely inconsistent Boozer, albeit he possibly can turn it around by demanding touches and working in the paint as he has recently, is painful – offensively and defensively. It is like he’s a lost kid sitting in lost and found, then seeing him opponents blow by him in the paint for the basket is rampant. It just so turns out the Bulls have someone who can’t defend underneath the rim, playing atrociously on defense as well, just as Boozer does on offense. In other words, he’s being bullied instead of being the bully that he once was advertised.

You see, Boozer is more like Boo-Boozer!

What he is in the midst of his pathetic play on the court is a player who can’t exceed any expectations with limited talent, or maybe he just refuses to play assertively. But, on the inverse, he had a more efficient performance Sunday, despite the lost to the Celtics, finishing with 22 points and seven rebounds. Will he ever play this consistent all the time? No, because he’s not a consistent player. Talking about Boozer, one of the most underachieving players in the NBA, will always be a head-scratcher in a sense that he’s either good or average but never great. For what it seems now, he’s playing much better lately, pouring in 24 points in a win over the New Jersey Nets and double-digit points on the Celtics in a loss.

I’m still not sold on Boozer. Not just yet.

An aspiring sports journalist, a sports columnist for FootBasket, Gridiron Grit, Hardcourt Mayhem, and more. Sports Judge is all sports.

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Say what you want about Isiah Thomas, but he was one of the all time greats of the NBA. In my opinion, he gets overlooked during the “golden years” of the 80s. They always mention Magic, Bird, and Jordan, but fail to mention Thomas. He was one of the fiercest competitors that ever played. For a little guy, he had a lot of heart and was one of the toughest players in the league.

Current Chicago Bulls star Derrick Rose wants to win. He wants to win some championships and wants to be one of the greatest to play the game. He just doesn’t go around beating his chest saying it.

After losing to the Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference finals last summer, Rose sought out Chicago legend Thomas for some counsel and advice.

Isiah Thomas said he met Rose last year after a game in Detroit and that Rose contacted him after the Bulls’ season had ended.


“He was pretty down,” Thomas told ESPNChicago.com by phone on Wednesday. “He asked me ‘How did you do it? How did you win back-to-back championships at this size?’ And my response to him was that once you understand your opponent and know your opponent better than you know yourself, you’ll win.”

Translation: Study film like your life depends on it.

Rose looks up to Thomas and despite his front office troubles, he knows that Thomas knows what it takes to win.

“… He’s somebody where in Chicago, you definitely got to look up to, especially being a guard, winning championships in this league,” Rose said. “[I] try to take things out of his game and put them into mine. But [he's] a cool dude. I played against his son in AAU. And he’s from Chicago so I got to look up to him.”


“It’s hard to pattern your game after somebody that’s great like that,” Rose said. “If anything, he was a winner. His will to win, no matter how big he was on the floor, he was a small guy, but his passion for the game and how dedicated he was to playing the game.”

Rose, like Thomas, is enduring his share of bumps and bruises in pursuit of an NBA championship. But like Thomas he is more than willing to pay the price. Growing up in a tough Chicago environment will give you that kind of attitude. That means being tough and doing whatever it takes to win.
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Written by Chris Edwards, Reporter (Archive/RSS)

I love to talk sports.Just a fan that blogs about what goes on in the world of sports. Everyone feel free to discuss their take on what’s going on.
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I love to talk sports.Just a fan that blogs about what goes on in the world of sports. Everyone feel free to discuss their take on what’s going on.

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Dwight Howard is clearly not a happy man in Orlando now. The Magic are on a losing-streak, coming off some losses that can piss any superstar off. It starts in Boston when the Magic blew a 27-point lead to lose 91-83 to the Celtics. Then came the whooping by the Hornets, in which Howard lashed out on his teammates. And then there was last night, where the Magic got destroyed by Danny Granger and the Pacers.

It doesn’t look like he will be staying in Orlando now, even if they try to bring a superstar, which doesn’t really seem likely. As of now, Howard’ wish list includes the Lakers, Mavericks, Clippers and Nets. However, there’s a new team that has been added, as Howard could head to the Windy City.

“If I could play with Derrick right now and God wanted that to happen, it will happen,” Howard told the Chicago Tribune. “It has nothing to do with me not wanting to play with Derrick Rose. I love him. That’s my brother.”

Howard and Rose both are sponsored by adidas, and rumors came up that if these two were on the same team, the company wouldn’t like that. Howard let the rumors die down in his other statement, saying: “It has nothing to do with adidas. In fact, adidas would love that because me and Derrick have the same guy.”

Howard is playing solid so far, with 20.6 points and 15.5 rebounds averaging per game. Orlando stands at 12-8, as they are on a three-game losing-streak.

Can Howard head to the Bulls? We’ll see. Chicago will be a very dominant team with a tandem of Rose and Howard. The question is, what do the Magic prefer in return from each of the teams on Howard’ wish list: Blake/Jordan, Pau/Bynum, Lopez/draft picks, or Boozer/Noah and/or Deng.

We’ll see what happens, but it’s for sure that Howard is going to be traded. They just can’t let him walk this off-season.

Looking forward to where your new home. Right now, it looks like it will be Chicago. The Lakers look fine with Bynum and Pau, and I just don’t think those two are as appealing. I just can’t see Clippers giving up Blake Griffin for that. The Nets deal would be the worst, especially with Lopez and that injury. Chicago looks like they have the best deal in place.

Make it happen Chi-Town.
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Written by Josh Dhani, Founder (Archive/RSS)

Josh has been writing since 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the website, Hardcourt Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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During today’s Heat-Bulls game in the fourth quarter, Carlos Boozer’s son was chanting “Let’s go Heat.” This obviously does not look good for Boozer, as his son his cheering for the opposing team as he sees him play.

I wonder what Boozer is gonna say to him after the game.

Anyways, here’s the video:

Come on Boozer, even your son ain’t cheering for you!
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Written by Josh Dhani, Founder (Archive/RSS)

Josh has been writing since 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the website, Hardcourt Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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The Indiana Pacers became the first time to knock off Derrick Rose and the Chicago Bulls on the road this season, bouncing back from an Orlando loss the other night in a 95-90 win in Chi-Town.

Rose never really talks, as he is a soft-spoken man, but came out with some intimidating words after the Bulls’ loss.

“I’ll never forget how they celebrated just from winning this game,” Rose told reporters. “I can’t wait to play them again.”

The Pacers were able to get revenge after a first-round playoff loss in five games to Chicago last season. With the win, Indiana is now two-and-a-half games back from the Central Division behind Chicago, as they stand with a 12-5 record, while the Bulls are 16-4.

The Pacers had a bit of an over-celebration in the United Center, but it is a big win for such a young team over one of the NBA’s elites.

“They are just thrilled to get the win here,” Indiana coach Frank Vogel said. “They were crushed that we didn’t beat them last year in the playoffs.”

Ronnie Brewer said he could hear the Pacers celebrate still as they went on into their locker room.

“When you’re walking off the court, you’re in the same corridor,” Brewer said on “The Waddle & Silvy Show” on ESPN 1000. “And we were walking into our locker room, and you could hear those guys celebrating, cheering, screaming, and that kind of hit home with a lot of guys on our team.

“We’re all competitors. They’re in our division. Every time we play them it’s a tough matchup. And especially in front of our fans, you don’t want to have a letdown and lose at home. To hear them do like that adds a little fuel to the fire. We talked about it after the game.”

We’ll see what happens next time, but Rose is going to have to wait a while to get revenge as the next time these two play will be on March 5th!
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Written by Josh Dhani, Founder (Archive/RSS)

Josh has been writing since 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also writes at Hardcourt Mayhem and contributes to TrueHoop’s Eight Points Nine Seconds. He also owns his own Pacers blog at StaringDownSpike.com. Check him out on JoshDhani.com and follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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After a tough loss against the Orlando Magic, questions were surrounding if the Indiana Pacers can even bounce back or make it a contest against the returning-Derrick-Rose and the 16-3 Chicago Bulls, who have not lost at home. Just like what the Magic did to Indy, the Pacers gave the Bulls their first home loss, defeating Chi-Town 95-90.

Since their first round loss in five games in the playoffs, it’s been a while since we have seen these two rivals play. Looking to get revenge, they did just that.

“They are just thrilled to get the win here,” coach Frank Vogel said. “They were crushed that we didn’t beat them last year in the playoffs.”

Danny Granger played a solid game with 22 points and nine rebounds. Roy Hibbert also performed well in match-up, with 20 points and eight rebounds. David West also contributed, adding 14 points. 

“The difference between this year’s team and last year’s team, we have confidence that we’ll score at crunch time,” Vogel said. “We’ll score in the fourth quarter. We didn’t have that last year.”

Indiana trailed 54-44 at halftime, but quickly bounced back in the second half, cruising towards the intense victory late in the game. Danny Granger took advantage of Deng not being there due to injury, as he has always struggled against him, as he made some key shots and big rebounds in the game.

Down by two points with less than two minutes to go, Derrick Rose drove down the lane but was halted. Rose then made a pass that probably blew Twitter up: he found Brian Scalabrine wide open in the corner. Sadly, Scal missed the open shot as it bounced off the back of the rim.

“Trusting my teammate,” Rose said. “I think it was a good shot. At the time I thought I didn’t have the shot and I think I made the right play. … That’s usually his shot. I’d give it to him again.”

After Scal’s miss, the ball almost went out of bounds before Joakim Noah saved it. However it, ended in Darren Collision’s hands. It just got weird here, as Collision tried wasting the time but the ball went away. Granger ended up getting it, and got a huge assist on a pass to a wide-open Hibbert that led to game-winning dunk.

“This was a big win for us,” Granger said. “Right now we expect to win. We gave them a lot of easy buckets and they kind of blew the led open in the last two minute of the first half. In the third quarter we knew we were going to make a run and we did. We turned up the defense.”

Indiana now improves to 12-5 and make the Bulls fall to 16-4, making both pretty neck-and-neck in the Central Division.

The Pacers will face the Boston Celtics next tomorrow night. Indiana has had a strong advantage over the Celtics lately, beating them pretty nicely in their past few meetings. However, Boston looks stronger now after destroying Orlando 87-56, and it doesn’t look good when the next day the Magic beat Indiana 102-83.

We’ll see what happens, but I’m hoping for another as Indiana faces off with the C’s in the Garden tomorrow.

Good win overall by the Pacers!

While you’re at it, check this insane video out with Paul George from last night’s victory.

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Written by Josh Dhani, Founder (Archive/RSS)

Josh has been writing since 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also writes at Hardcourt Mayhem and contributes to TrueHoop’s Eight Points Nine Seconds. He also owns his own Pacers blog at StaringDownSpike.com. Check him out on JoshDhani.com and follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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Pacers vs. Bulls Preview

by Josh Dhani on January 25, 2012

The Indiana Pacers are recently coming off a terrible loss to the Orlando Magic, getting bullied with a 102-83 loss, bringing the team’s first loss at home in Conseco Fieldhouse. Tonight, they are in for a tough one as they head over to Chicago to face Derrick Rose and the Bulls.

As we all know, the Bulls will be in fact without Luol Deng after he suffered an injury in the ligament of his right wrist.

After missing four games, Rose is back with a vengeance, and he showed it off in his first game back on Monday night when he tallied 22 points and eight assists in a 110-95 victory over the New Jersey Nets.

“All the games I missed I wanted to play,” Rose said. “I hate to sit out. I wanted to play knowing we’re winning and playing against all these great guards. I missed that.”

The Pacers need to watch out for Rose, as obvious. They couldn’t contain the Magic, and Howard wasn’t a huge factor as he only put up 14 points and nine rebounds, including getting blocked by Indy’s very own Lou Amundson (however, D12 did become the Magic’s all-time leading scorer that night).

The Bulls have been playing strong as a team, and they showed that off quite well when Rose was out, going 3-1 without him. With D-Rose back in the line-up, what can Indy do? Can they stop him? They are getting some help, without Deng, as mentioned, who was averaging around 20 points during Rose’s absence.

“I know it’s a bad injury and it sounds terrible, but really, I think it will fine. We’ve got a good team, and I think I’m going to be fine,” said Deng, who is hoping to avoid surgery.

“I’m just trying to get it down to a certain level where I can play again. I’m really confident in the fact that I’ll be out there, hopefully soon.”

Rip Hamilton will also be another tough guy to stop, who dished ten assists on Monday. It’s going to be a tough one, but let’s hope Indiana gets the win.

“We just have to take this loss and move on,” Paul George said after the Magic loss. “It’s a long season. We must continue to grow and help each other.”

We’ll see what happens tonight. Looks to be a good one.

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Written by Josh Dhani, Founder (Archive/RSS)

Josh has been writing since 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also writes at Hardcourt Mayhem and contributes to TrueHoop’s Eight Points Nine Seconds. He also owns his own Pacers blog at StaringDownSpike.com. Check him out on JoshDhani.com and follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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After tearing a ligament in his right wrist, Chicago Bulls’ forward Luol Deng will be reportedly “out for a while.” Head coach Tom Thibodeau said his status is currently “week-to-week” and that surgery isn’t planned, but it could happen.

“That’s always a possibility,” Thibodeau said. “The fact is it’s his left wrist. After consulting with the doctors, he feels this is the best course of action. So obviously we’re pleased that he doesn’t have to have the surgery.”

However, it’s not as bad as it seems. At least, according to Deng himself.

“I know it’s a bad injury, and it sounds terrible, but I’ll be fine,” Deng said.

Deng doesn’t want surgery as he does want the 16-3 Bulls to get in as a title-contenders.

“I really feel like we have a very good chance of doing something special,” Deng said. “And I feel like without the surgery I’ll be fine. I just know what I can do with it and what I can’t do. And I really think I’m going to be very effective out there. There’s going to be days when it’s sore.”

Deng was injured during the fourth quarter in a game against the Bobcats on Saturday.

“It could always be worse. Injuries happen,” Deng said. “And this happened in the fourth quarter of a game. But it is what is. It’s just, ‘What do we do from here.’ I’m very confident that I’ll be fine. It’s sore, but the soreness is going down a lot in two days. So every day [I'll] keep treating it and see if I can get rid of the soreness and just try to be back there as soon as possible.”

Deng has been a strong contributor to the Bulls this season, especially since Rose was gone for a period of time, as he is currently averaging about 16 points and 7.5 rebounds per game.

He’ll only miss a couple games, ten at tops, without surgery as it looks like. I think Chicago will do fine without him. But once he returns, Chicago will be back to rollin’ with D-Rose and company.
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Written by Josh Dhani, Founder (Archive/RSS)

Josh has been writing since 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also writes at Hardcourt Mayhem and contributes to TrueHoop’s Eight Points Nine Seconds. Check him out on JoshDhani.com and follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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Miami has 2 superstars that characterize a generation of basketball. Orlando has Superman. New York has STAT and Melo. Chicago doesn’t have a player, they have a team. Obviously Derrick Rose stands as the team leader (and League MVP). But night-in and night-out the Bulls play as a group. They are not a group of individuals. There is not the feeling that one player is more important than the other.

The Bulls have role players, hungry players, go to players, secret weapons, versatility, reliability. It just depends on what they need on a given night.

It’s not the type of team that you make a movie about. They aren’t a group of rogue misfits who have something to prove. They aren’t a mediocre underdog bunch who are disrespected and so go about earning everyone’s admiration with a great championship run. No, the Bulls could probably care less about story lines and subplots. They just care about winning.

Top down. Rose to Thibs, Noah to Lucas. The Bulls have all the pieces and more importantly all the pieces fit the same puzzle. But let’s break it down further and show you what I mean.

D-Rose: The MVP. All this kid has ever done is win. He sprinted into the Association, and has only gotten faster since. Hardware means nothing to him but he’s sure got a lot of it.

Luol Deng-erous: Versatility and a skill set that most players only have one or two tools from. Can shoot, pass, run the break, play-D and get open. As a veteran he plays smarter and uses his strengths to his advantages.

Richard “Rip” Hamilton: After earlier career success Rip is once again hungry enough to go through whomever it takes to win. His old team is a memory, his new team is winning.

Joakim Noah: Outward Displays of Emotion (from Dan Roan). Joakim brings the fire and intensity. We’ve missed him so far this year but perhaps he is just hibernating. It was a long off season.

Carlos Boozer: Jump shooter, post player. When this guy gets confident he spells trouble for defenders. His speed creates mismatches and his smarts make him valuable on all sides of the ball.

JL3: This little guy is a fighter. He won’t win you a championship but he can win you some games. A good weapon to have, a veteran who knows what it’s like to battle til the end.

CJ Watson: Following Derrick Rose is never easy but Watson knows what’s expected of him and more often than not he delivers. Long defender for his position and can create his own shot.

Omer Asik: The Defender. One of the best defensive big men in the league. Great footwork and body position. Great vision on defense. Maybe doesn’t have the minutes but when he’s in there are no easy layups.

Ex-Scal-iber: better known as Brian Scalabrine AKA the White Mamba. Perhaps the most prolific 4th quarter scorer the league has ever seen. Over the last year no player has scored more percentage of their points in the final frame than Scal. A true legend.

(Some players were left off due to length constraints)

All this and more is what the Bulls have to work with on a given night. Other teams have 2 or 3 role players who become a significant part of each game. The Bulls have ten. All ten have the same role, winning. The way they do it is different but the outcome is always (okay 85% of the time) the same.

By JP Perkins via FeedCrossing
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Written by FeedCrossing, Content News Source (Archive/RSS)

We are the internet’s premiere content exchange for great sports articles and blog posts. We bring together publishers looking for a great source for sports-related content with writers and websites looking to promote their websites and blogs.

We are the internet’s premiere content exchange for great sports articles and blog posts. We bring together publishers looking for a great source for sports-related content with writers and websites looking to promote their websites and blogs.

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The Chicago Bulls already know their top priority before the NBA season tips off on Christmas Day: get a new deal for star player, Derrick Rose. Rose’s rookie contract will be up this year and he has done a lot after a few years, as the number one overall pick has won an MVP award and led the Bulls to an Eastern Conference best 62 wins, along with a conference finals appearance.

Rose is expected to get a huge contract soon, but will have to wait until December 9th as that is when players can be signed by teams. Thanks to Rose, the NBA has created “The Derrick Rose Rule,” which rewards a player of Rose’s caliber to make 30 percent of the team’s salary cap, up 25 percent. But the player has to be voted to the All-Star game twice, two All-NBA teams, or an MVP award.

“It’s unbelievable,” Rose says of the rule. “But the rule, I guess, it fits me for what I’ve achieved at a young age and hopefully there will be a couple more people like me.”

Reports have surfaced that Rose will likely get a five-year, $100 million deal. But the Bulls aren’t done yet. Chicago has yet to sign a shooting guard, a player at that position that they badly need. With the new amnesty clause, Brandon Roy could be available to sign for the Bulls to pick up.

If they get Roy, it’s going to be a scary team to watch with Chi-Town.

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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