Chicago Sun-Times

MORE FROM MARKKANEN

Rookie shows against Heat that he’s not just a three- point shooter

- JOE COWLEY Email: jcowley@suntimes.com

ORLANDO, Fla. — Lauri Markkanen’s full arsenal was on display Wednesday night in Miami.

Yes, he scored a career- high 25 points in the loss, but the Bulls 7- footer wasn’t just hitting from long range. He was putting the ball on the floor, getting easy baskets off of pin- downs and even hitting a little floater.

The seventh overall pick this season shot 9- for- 18 from the field and only hit two threes in his latest effort.

And really, no one around him was surprised.

“No, you keep asking me if he surprises me,’’ veteran Justin Holiday said on Thursday of Markkanen’s latest effort. “We practice with him.

“He hasn’t had a practice like he had last game. Practice is so different. But he has had practices where he’s knocking down shots for sure. To tell you the truth, [ Wednesday] night, most of his points came in the paint. Usually in practice, he’s shooting threes so that was obviously a good sign for him to do — get that ball and easy buckets in the paint.

“And then when the three- ball is falling, who knows what he can do? I don’t know if I’m a critic, but no, I’m not surprised. I expect him to play well.’’

Maybe, but very few could have expected this from Markkanen, especially just six games into his NBA career. The 20- year- old is averaging 17.2 points and 9.3 rebounds, and shooting just under 40 percent from threepoint range.

All of this coming from a guy who is basically the first option tion on offense.

Memo to both Bobby bby Portis and Nikola Mirotic: You’re not getting that starting spot back.

“He showed a little e bit of everything [ against the Heat], eat], and one thing we’ve been working ing on is trying to take advantage when n teams switch against us,’’ coach Fred d Hoiberg said of his prized rookie. “Even in transition when he ran to the e rim, we got a couple duck- ins to him before the defense got set. So really y good recognitio­n by our guys to get him the ball, get him opportunit­ies.’’

However, he wasn’t the only young Bulls player to stand out against the Heat.

Second- year point int guard Kris Dunn had a stellar first half off the bench, before getting loose with the ball and committing key turnovers late in the game.

While Dunn graded his own performanc­e a C-, many begged to difffer.

“What I always tell him to do is make sure he’s s aggressive,’’ Holiday said of Dunn. “That’s first and foremost what at you want to do. Eventually, you’ll figure gure out when to hit guys and when to get buckets. What he does is what t we need. We need to be able to get t downhill, put pressure on the rim, have guys collapse. That makes the job easier for our shooters.

“Right now, especially ly with it being his second game back, just be aggressive and see what you have. And after he gets a few games in, n, if I need to, maybe go talk to him. But I thought he played well [ Wednesday].’’ y].’’

Hoiberg said he would go with the same starters Friday night against the Magic, but there’s no doubt that Dunn is going after Jerian Grant’s starting job.

“We all know the more you play, the more comfortabl­e you get and the better you eventually start doing,’’ Holiday said. “Right now, we’ll just let [ Dunn] play and go from there.’’

Follow me on Twitter @ suntimes_ hoops.

“He showed a little bit of everything [ against the Heat], and one thing we’ve been working on is trying to take advantage when teams switch against us.’’ — Fred Hoiberg, Bulls coach, on Lauri Markkanen ( right)

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