“Everything has to come to an end, sometime.”
-L. Frank Baum, The Marvelous Land of Oz
There some situations bound by the laws of nature. That is to say, a New York Yankees/Boston Red Sox matchup will have a profound gradient of tension comparative to a minor league exhibition. That is to say, a Chicago Bulls/Indiana Pacers matchup will feel more struggle and sweat than a youth league pickup. -And just as a child staring directly into the sun would lead you to believe, tempting fate is one of humanity’s most prominent errors bound by those laws.
At a certain point when your team: is gauged higher in just about every statistical category listed, particularly on defense where they hold the top spot in ‘points allowed per game’ with 86.3; has arguably the best 23-year-old in the sport, who’s off to the best start to a season – in nearly everything – of his career; and has the best record in the NBA through 3 weeks, including trouncing the team you’re about to play by 17 points just ten days ago, it’s going to be expected of you to continue that torrential pace – and sometimes your knees just have to buckle.
Overwhelming the Pacers in all but two categories (fast break points, blocks) the Bulls (5-3) dealt Indiana their first loss of the early season (9-1), garnished with an efficient and improbable performance from Derrick Rose – who was returning from a hamstring injury that kept him out of the Friday night matchup with Toronto.
It would be too easy to catalog analysis on the fact that every single Indiana starter played to a plus/minus of less than -10, so game grades it is!
Chicago Bulls 110 | Indiana Pacers 94
Carlos Boozer, PF
26 MIN | 6-11 FG | 1-2 FT | 6 REB | 1 AST | 1 BLK | 3 TO | 4 PF | 13 PTS
While Carlos’s numbers didn’t dazzle to the tune of his season average (16.9 PPG/8.0 RPG), his ejection alongside Indiana’s Chris Copeland with 21 seconds left was arguably one of the worst calls this season and weakest technical foul since…well, the one that was called a quarter prior on Kirk.
Grade: B
Luol Deng, SF
32 Min | 8-14 FG | 6-7 FT | 7 REB | 2 AST | 2 STL | 3 TO | 3 PF | 23 PTS
Luol appears to be using the ‘one-night-on, one-night-off’ approach which is a tad disconcerning for contract enthusiasts but Deng did lead Chicago in scoring for the fourth time this year on a night that, thankfully, kept him inside the arc. Can’t complain there.
Grade: A-
Joakim Noah, C
32 MIN | 1-6 FG | 2-4 FT | 7 REB | 6 AST | 2 STL | 3 TO | 6 PF | 4 PTS
After a dazzling Friday night against Toronto, Joakim didn’t bring his best Saturday, a commonly growing occurrence against larger frontcourts – particularly Hibbert or as he’s being called this year ‘a fucking monster.’ Maybe he was tired, maybe he was simply dominated by Hibbert’s tangible improvement defensively this offseason (4.6BLKPG), but Noah will need to perform better when these matchups are actually tight late in the fourth.
Grade: C
Derrick Rose, PG
31 MIN | 7-16 FGM | 3 REB | 4 AST | 1 STL | 0 TO | 1 PF | 20 PTS
As Kelly Scaletta pointed out, this is the second straight game for Rose without a TO or FTA, a first in his career. That’s pretty incredible considering his living if often made driving to the basket, but Rose found himself a blanket and laid down around the arc Saturday. Derrick Rose played as he had throughout a majority of preseason – oftentimes around the perimeter, showcasing an improved three-point shot (6-11). His attack to the rim looked tentative, hence the 2 points coming inside of 23-feet, but critics of Rose’s tenacity towards the rim Saturday are also proponents of the ideology: if it ain’t broke, fix it immediately. Rose’s defense again appeared dynamic as he was able to keep George Hill in check most of the game and rotate cleanly to his assignment on the pick-n-roll.
Grade: A-
Jimmy Butler, SG
25 MIN | 2-3 FG | 5-6 FT | 2 REB | 1 AST | 1 STL | 1 BLK | 1 TO | 1 PF | 10 PTS
Jimmy played arguably the most efficient of the Bulls starters, and even cracked the highlights with an amazing four-point play, and this block on Solomon Hill leading to a fastbreak basket from Deng:
Grade: A
Taj Gibson, PF
27 MIN | 7-13 FG | 1-1 FT | 8 REB | 2 BLK | 1 TO | 3 PF | 15 PTS
If he can average 15/8 a game, the Bulls will win the rebounding battle most nights (Bulls won battle 42-37) and that allows the offensive scheme a chance to compete regardless of whether or not the shooting is there (which has been spotty for the Bulls thus far, to say the least). Taj also played some great defensive minutes on David West late in the game, showing his improvement on both sides.
Grade: B+
Mike Dunleavy, SF
23 MIN | 4-5 FG | 4 REB | 2 AST | 1 TO | 2 PF | 10 PTS
Dunleavy hit both three-point attempts and played tactile offensively down the stretch for Chicago. It’s also worth noting that Dunleavy has played his best ball against Division opponents, averaging 10.3 per game on 58% shooting. While the Bulls have only played 3 Division games, 2 have come against Indiana – the top defense in the league and viable Miami-Heat-surrogate. While his consistency has a ways to go, particularly his defensive rotational work, it’s comforting knowing that Dunleavy is making plays against teams that actually play well together.
Grade: B
Nazr Mohammed, C
11 MIN | 1-1 FG | 1 REB | 1 AST | 1 BLK | 0 TO | 1 PF | 2 PTS
This is what I want Nazr’s stat line to look like always: low minutes, few shot attempts, and 1 foul just so his newfound reputation isn’t blemished post-Lebron:
Grade: B
Kirk Hinrich, SG
33 MIN | 4-10 FG | 4-4 FT | 4 REB | 8 AST | 1 BLK | 3 TO | 3 PF | 13 PTS
Some nights Kirk seems to be the bane of Chicago existence, sometimes he’s adequate – tonight was another adequate night. YAY FOR KIRK! While he was tortured defensively and had his share of ‘NO, KIRK!’ moments particularly shooting in the 3rd, Hinrich gave the Bulls valuable minutes off the bench and kept the offense running without Rose and was even flashed in perhaps a rare Thibodeua lineup model: Rose, Hinrich, Deng, Gibson, Noah.
Grade: B-
The Bulls next play Monday night against the Charlotte Bobcats (5-5) in the United Center where they will attempt to win their fifth straight since losing to Indiana earlier this month. Indiana didn’t like losing that game, Chicago relished winning it in dominant fashion, and Tony Snell…well, Tony Snell continued to do whatever Tony Snell does.
Josh Planos
| Contributor @ Sportswunderkin | Contractor @ Tomorrow’s Online Marketing |
| Intern @ Rivals.com |
| Email: jplanos1@gmail.com |
| Follow me on Twitter: @jplanos |
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