The Chicago Bulls are not the defensive team they once were. They’re also not the offensive team they once were. The Bulls can shoot now.
Chicago downed the defensive-minded Milwaukee Bucks
103-91 in Game 1 of the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs,
in what was a surprisingly potent offensive affair. The Bulls, who
ranked second in defensive efficiency last season, managed 60 first half
points while this year’s No. 2 defensive outfit from Milwaukee added 51
of its own. The Bulls prevailed in the second half, however, behind a
surprisingly potent three-point touch from Derrick Rose, who finished with 23 points and seven assists despite playing just 27 minutes.
Those minutes weren’t just a
result of an ongoing minutes restriction. Rose was limited to shorter
minutes during the regular season after undergoing his third knee
surgery in three years in late February, and he made all of his hometown
crowd gasp by falling awkwardly early in the first quarter. After a
couple of uneasy possessions Rose left the contest, and though Chicago
thrived in his absence, all of the United Center seemed to be staring at
the Chicago bench – where Rose waived off all medical assistance.
Returning four minutes into the
second quarter to rapturous applause, Rose managed to assuage all fears
with a killer performance. Playing his first postseason game since
tearing his left ACL in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference’s opening round
in 2012, Rose nailed all five of his shots in just six and a half
second quarter minutes, scoring 10 points as Chicago pulled away to
enter the half with an eight-point lead.
Returning seemingly without
hesitancy in the second half, Rose took to the three-point line –
hitting three of four three-pointers in nine minutes (three of seven on
the game), dropping 21 points in two quarters as Chicago built its lead.
Asked about his first quarter
stumble and bench stint following the contest, Rose laughed and chalked
up his sitdown to his need for a rest. “I was just tired, that was it.
And Joakim Noah was telling me to take a break.”
Growing serious as he described his return to postseason action, Rose
called the return “an honor,” crediting his teammates for support and
the Bucks for “not double-teaming me” as he surveyed a Milwaukee defense
that fell short in the face of a finally-healthy Bulls lineup.
Sitting next to backcourt mate
at the Chicago podium, guard Jimmy Butler reminded everyone that Rose
“makes everything better for everybody,” a sentiment that was supported
with Butler’s white hot inside/outside scoring barrage from Saturday.
The Most Improved Player candidate managed 25 points on only 14 shots
with six assists in the win, leaking out in transition and showing the
needed sort of confidence that apparently has sustained over from a
superb regular season.
The killer here is building upon this outburst.
Milwaukee coach Jason Kidd may
well have been speaking for the opposing team when he pointed out that
his Bucks’ “first quarter was fool’s gold for us” and that his squad is
“not an offensive team.” The Bucks ranked 25th in offensive efficiency
on the season, and they seemed to get caught up in Chicago’s both sides
now-attack as the game moved along. Young swingmen Giannis Antetokounmpo
and Khris Middleton combined to shoot 11-31 while attempting several
long-range two-point attempts, and point man Michael Carter-Williams
could not utilize his length in keeping Derrick Rose in check both on
the perimeter, in transition, and in the half-court. After shooting 29
percent in the second quarter, the Bucks failed to string together
consistent stops and scores as Chicago held them at arm’s length all
game.
Chicago is not without its
mitigating worries. Forward/center Taj Gibson was clearly pained by the
same left ankle that caused him to miss nine games in March, and he had
to leave the game early – though Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau told media
that Gibson was cleared to play late by the medical staff. Chicago
managed 30 assists but they also turned the ball over 19 times total.
Eight of those came in the first quarter, and Thibodeau credited
Chicago’s ability to clean things up in the miscue department for his
squad’s ability to hold Milwaukee to 62 points over the final three
quarters.
Circumspect as always, and
mindful of the long series ahead and frustrating impermanence of a
former MVP that hasn’t played a full and healthy season since winning
the MVP in 2010-11, Thibodeau was cautious in his assessment of Rose.
“He’s still working his way back,” was all Thibodeau offered, before
getting back to more important things like his team’s propensity to
overpass and the matchup issues Nikola Mirotic creates.
That’s the Bulls way, thus far.
And so far in the 2015 postseason, it’s been a healthy way. The bloom
may come off of Chicago’s particular Rose as he continues to line up for
the same sort of three-pointers he hit just 28 percent of in the
regular season, but for one night in Chicago things seemed as they
should.
Took them long enough.
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