Chicago Sun-Times

CARTER SHOULD BE A FOUR, FOR SURE

Carter has been doing his best as an undersized center, but he would prefer to play at the 4 spot

- JOE COWLEY jcowley@suntimes.com | @JCowleyHoo­ps

Bulls big man Wendell Carter Jr. is a power forward. Unfortunat­ely, he’s asked to dwell in a residency occupied by centers. But Carter is hoping it’s only a rental. “Absolutely,’’ he said when asked last month if he would talk to his bosses about a possible position change whenever the regular season eventually ends. “Coach [Jim Boylen] understand­s that I’m a great defender no matter who I’m guarding, but he also understand­s that one of the reasons we’re in the black is because of my size, because I’m not as tall. I mean, I’m more mobile than most fives, so I’m able to be up, slide, all that.

“I mean, I’ve been playing the four all of my life . . . . It’s definitely a conversati­on I’m going to bring up, for sure, but as of right now, I’m just trying to make it work with where I’m at.’’

It wasn’t the first time Carter brought up his plight to the media, but it was the first time he openly said it bothered him enough to discuss it with the organizati­on.

When that conversati­on happens, especially with the league in a complete shutdown because of the coronaviru­s, is anyone’s guess. It will happen, though.

On most nights, the 6-9 Carter can get away with life in the paint because of his solid 280-pound build, his 7-5 wingspan and his ability to block shots and rebound.

But he is handicappe­d against bigger, stronger centers and, more important, on the offensive end. The center in the Bulls’ offense went from a post threat last season, with Boylen running a lot of four-out, one-in motion sets in which he wanted the five to get touches, to being an afterthoug­ht.

Being a rim-runner and screener is huge in the offense Boylen, his coaching staff and the analytics department came up with this season, but there are few opportunit­ies for Carter to score unless he plays garbage man — grabbing offensive rebounds and doing it himself — especially when Zach LaVine or Coby White gets hot. Then again, when those two get rolling, everyone is an afterthoug­ht.

Carter’s smooth midrange jumper — as well as a growing ability to shoot the long ball — is what initially caught the Bulls’ eye in his private workouts before the 2018 draft. And there were glimpses of those skills last season. But that seed barely has been watered.

Boylen often talks about being able to have “difficult conversati­ons’’ with his players. Expect Carter to find out if it’s a two-way street.

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 ?? JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Wendell Carter Jr. was kind of a forgotten man in coach Jim Boylen’s offense this season.
JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES Wendell Carter Jr. was kind of a forgotten man in coach Jim Boylen’s offense this season.
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