The Niagara Falls Review

Bulls fire coach Hoiberg; assistant Boylen takes over

- ANDREW SELIGMAN

CHICAGO — The skidding Chicago Bulls fired coach Fred Hoiberg on Monday and promoted associate head coach Jim Boylen in hopes of lifting the team from the bottom of the standings.

Chicago is averaging 103.4 points — 28th in the National Basketball Associatio­n — and is getting outscored by 9.6 per game.

Hoiberg, who had to deal with a veteran roster that didn’t fit his style early on and then injuries to key players starting in training camp, never found his footing in Chicago. It added up to a 115-155 mark with one playoff appearance in three-plus seasons — 5-19 this year. The only teams with worse records were Cleveland and Phoenix. Even so, executive vice-president of basketball operations John Paxson insisted this decision went beyond wins and losses, citing a lack of “energy and spirit.”

“We were in a similar situation last year at this time,” Paxson said. “But the entire energy about this group was different back then. We felt that here, in the last several weeks, that something’s different. What we’re lacking ... is a spirit about our team.”

Paxson also said the Bulls are committed to Boylen as their long-term head coach and that general manager Gar Forman is “absolutely safe.”

“We can own ‘Bulls’ across our chest better,” said Boylen, who will be serving as an NBA head coach for the first time.

Hoiberg was in a tough position with four of the team’s top players getting injured, a run that started early in training camp.

Forward Lauri Markkanen, the centrepiec­e of their rebuilding plan, missed the first 23 games after spraining his left elbow at practice in late September. His first appearance this season — a loss at Houston — came in Hoiberg’s final game for Chicago.

Guard Denzel Valentine will miss the entire season because of a left ankle injury. Forward Bobby Portis (right knee) has played in four games and point guard Kris Dunn (left knee) has appeared in one, though both are expected back soon.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Bulls head coach Fred Hoiberg, left, and his assistant, Jim Boylen, watch from the sidelines against San Antonio on Oct. 21, 2017.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Bulls head coach Fred Hoiberg, left, and his assistant, Jim Boylen, watch from the sidelines against San Antonio on Oct. 21, 2017.

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