by Sham Smith
With a second consecutive 60 win season in the books, the Chicago Bulls second round exit to the Atlanta Hawks was--to many--a disappointing end to a season with very high potential. With the Bulls wanting to step back from paying the tax, they lost Andrew Wiggins to a higher bidder, and getting under that tax apron was supposed to translate to lower postseason expectations. However, an improving core of Leroy Haugh, Patrick Edmunds, and Wanderlei Silva kept them just as strong.
The reason for stepping back from the tax, though, had to do a lot with the contract status of that very core. Haugh and Silva were expiring, and Patrick Edmunds had a player option many speculated he might turn down because his play would almost guarantee him a much larger contract (and he got it). This would put the Bulls in a position to load up on contracts before heading into Unrestricted Free Agency, giving them the depth and experience that could have been very helpful in the playoffs.
The Bulls front office was able to turn two late 1st round draft picks, cash considerations, and athletic rookie contract player Brian Spano into Logan Alpert, Karl-Anthony Towns, Nassir Little, and Harland Ellinger (bolstering both their passing game and their rebounding ability). Then, while lighting their cigars with burning hundred dollar bills, no doubt, they signed Haugh to a max contract and Silva and Edmunds to 5 year supermax contracts. The Bulls also brought back Van Grimaldi and promising young PG Epifanio Merino on team friendly one-and-one contracts, and while they lost out on signing Alton Hill, they were able to grab Daniel Bowens and Victor Eldred on much friendlier veteran minimum contracts to field an incredibly deep team.
Furthermore, the Bulls managed to put together a roster without sacrificing any future draft picks, including that 2030 Pistons 1st, so there's still the possibility of improving an already strong roster. After a pretty standard training camp, the Bulls looked strong in the preseason (sure, it's just the preseason), but expectations are very high. This is a $200 million dollar team, and while the Bulls are in the toughest division in the league, sights are set on adding some more banners to the United Center rafters at any cost. The only challenge heading forward is finding out how to split 240 minutes between so many versatile players who can't all get the time on the floor they want.
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