Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

ARTURAS: CORE MORE YEARS

Karnisovas believes in continuity, but is it right plan for Bulls?

- JOE COWLEY jcowley@suntimes.com | @JCowleyHoo­ps

Coach Billy Donovan knows little is promised in the NBA from season to season.

That’s especially true when a team goes from afterthoug­ht to sitting atop the Eastern Conference like the Bulls did for weeks in the middle of the 2021-22 season.

But with the season ending poorly after a first-round exit against the Bucks in five games, Donovan wasn’t assuming anything.

“We’ll actually have to work harder going into this offseason and next year to get back to [the postseason],’’ Donovan said. “I think a lot of people were uncertain of what our team would look like, and I think as [they] started to go through the year, they earned and gained more respect around the league. I think it will be a lot harder next year.

“Because we got to this point, there’s nothing guaranteed next year. What our approach and mentality will be next year going into training camp will be critically important for us to build off some of the positive things that happened this year.’’

And continuity is the strategy the Bulls believe will enable a return to the postseason.

Continuity was the buzzword tossed around for days during the exit-meeting interviews, and it sounds like the formula executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas is banking on.

“Not the way we wanted to finish, but we got back to the postseason, and we have time now to figure it out, what we’re going to do this

summer,’’ Karnisovas said. “I hope for continuity because we’re constantly competing against teams that have been together for three, four, five years. Results come obviously when you keep the same group longer. We’ll figure out what additions we need. Is that shooting, is that defense, is that size, athleticis­m? We’re going to sit down and figure it out with the group.’’ Is it the right plan, though? The Heat finished atop the Eastern Conference standings, and their core will return. The Celtics have their “Big Three’’ of Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown and Marcus Smart locked in, along with Robert Williams and Al Horford. And the Bucks aren’t moving off Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, Khris Middleton and Jrue Holiday anytime soon.

The 76ers will be intriguing with James Harden’s player option, but as long as they have Bulls killer Joel Embiid, they should be a threat.

Those four teams finished in front of the Bulls and went a combined 14-1 against them.

And all four have elite two-way players, which the Bulls lack.

Zach LaVine, DeMar DeRozan and Nikola Vucevic are all great scorers, but they aren’t defensive stalwarts by any means, and Patrick Williams has a long way to go offensivel­y and defensivel­y. Lonzo Ball is the best two-way player in the starting lineup but is a fourth option offensivel­y and remains an injury concern.

So while continuity sounds good, Karnisovas was asked if the makeup of the team was flawed and if the core was worth bringing back.

“The small sample we had at the beginning of the season was pretty good,’’ Karnisovas said. “We understand our roster and any shortcomin­gs. I think it’s also a long season, lots of lineups, so it’s very hard to find your identity defensivel­y when your lineup is constantly changing.

“There’s definitely a lot of room to improve. For us to compete, we have to be top 10 in offense and defense. We’ll try to figure out how to get there. I think another year under the belt will serve them well.’’

 ?? AP ?? Coach Billy Donovan, talking with forward DeMar DeRozan, says the Bulls will have to work even harder to return to the playoffs next season.
AP Coach Billy Donovan, talking with forward DeMar DeRozan, says the Bulls will have to work even harder to return to the playoffs next season.
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 ?? ?? Arturas Karnisovas
Arturas Karnisovas

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