Chicago Sun-Times

LAVINE LETS LOOSE

Questions coaching on both ends of floor after latest loss

- JOE COWLEY BULLS BEAT jcowley@suntimes.com | @suntimes_hoops

DALLAS — Bulls guard Zach LaVine wants better results. He’s all but demanding better results.

After the Bulls’ 115-109 loss Monday to the Mavericks, LaVine was holding himself and everyone else accountabl­e.

LaVine, who scored 34 points, was asked about coach Fred Hoiberg’s assessment that the players lost their composure in the second half. Not only did he initially disagree with that, but he said he didn’t think the right sets were being called.

‘‘We gotta run the right sets out there,’’ LaVine said. ‘‘That was the main thing. If we would have run the right plays, got the ball to the right people, I think we would have been all right.’’

Asked whether he had a good enough relationsh­ip with Hoiberg to tell him he didn’t like what was being called, LaVine said: ‘‘I let him coach. I let him coach. I may say, ‘Hey, let me get the ball here,’ or talk to [point guard Kris Dunn] . . . . I let him coach, and I expect the same thing [from them]. They let us play.

‘‘That’s our job — to go out there and play. Their job is to coach. Regardless of whatever the play-call is, we’ve got to be able to do it. We’ve got the right personnel out there, we’ve got good enough players, so we should be able to do it.

‘‘I’m not putting it on Fred. We have to figure it out. You can tell I’m upset. We lost, and I think we could’ve won. We have to figure out how to win.’’

LaVine also seemed confused by the change of defense from the first half to the second, saying: ‘‘We were playing free [in the first half]. We weren’t coming down and being stagnant. We weren’t calling a lot of plays. We were just coming down and being free and being aggressive. And then . . . we went to the blitz on their pickand-rolls, and that mucked up a lot of things. We changed in the second half, so that hurt us. We just can’t keep making the same mistakes, especially on defense.’’

LaVine doesn’t have the reputation as a player who rocks the boat, so the emotion of an 0-3 start has to be factored in.

He did look in the mirror, though, eventually circling back to Hoiberg’s assessment about composure and pointing the finger at himself. Yes, he should have been given more than three shots in the fourth quarter, especially with the hot hand, but he also pointed to his three turnovers.

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 ?? AP ?? Bulls guard Zach LaVine drives around Mavericks forward Dorian Finney-Smith during the first half Monday in Dallas. LaVine scored 34 points on 11-for-15 shooting.
AP Bulls guard Zach LaVine drives around Mavericks forward Dorian Finney-Smith during the first half Monday in Dallas. LaVine scored 34 points on 11-for-15 shooting.
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