Chicago Sun-Times

TWO WAYS OF THINKING

LOSS TO HEAT ASIDE, BULLS MAKING IT HARD FOR brass to chart course at deadline

- BY JOE COWLEY jcowley@suntimes.com @JCowleyHoo­ps

Bulls coach Billy Donovan swears a path hasn’t been chosen yet. He’s admittedly not in every frontoffic­e meeting or conference­d in on every phone call by his boss, Arturas Karnisovas, the Bulls’ executive vice president of basketball operations, but he’s in the loop. And with the NBA trade deadline less than two weeks away, Donovan knows Karnisovas is busy but also patient.

“Obviously they’re meeting quite a bit, and I’ve been able to be a part of some of that as well,” Donovan said. “I think they’re evaluating everything as it relates to what’s best for the Bulls organizati­on.

“I would say we’ve really been committed to these guys in trying to help them continue to grow. I know Arturas has said this, and I’ve said this: We like our guys. And they’ve done a good job, worked hard. But I think as an organizati­on, you always have to field phone calls and take phone calls and evaluate everything. But I don’t know if those decisions have been made to that point to where it’s, ‘OK, this is exactly what we’re doing.’ ”

Fair enough. But a 101-90 loss to the visiting Heat on Friday night might have been a nudge — or a shove for anyone studying the fourth quarter alone. What had been a back-and-forth game through the first three quarters turned into the Goran Dragic show as the veteran guard torched second-year guard Coby White and the Bulls for 20 of his 25 points in the final quarter. The Heat outscored the Bulls 31-22 in the fourth.

“We just had a hard time guarding him,” Donovan said of Dragic. “He made some really, really difficult shots over outstretch­ed hands. We just really didn’t have anybody that could really, really handle him, to be quite honest with you, and he made them from three and he made them from in the mid-range.”

As the front office chews on what to do in the next two weeks, thank the roster for the continued uncertaint­y. The last two games have been the healthiest the Bulls (16-20) have been all season, and there are still unknowns regarding how well the young core can play Donovan’s style of basketball together.

Injuries have also stunted developmen­t, putting the front office in a position of trying to decide whether a player has hit his ceiling or if he’s potentiall­y a breakout talent after being traded to another team.

The good news for the Bulls is that as inconsiste­nt as they’ve been this season, they’re still in the mix for a postseason play-in game, with an opportunit­y to jump up to the No. 5 seed in the Eastern Conference with a few victories. But would moving a player such as forward Thad Young jeopardize their chances? They may be weighing the acquisitio­n of a future asset against the idea of getting their young core into a playoff situation and allowing them to play a meaningful game.

“I think our coaching staff has invested a lot,” Donovan said. “When you’re making those kinds of investment­s, you want to be able to see guys grow and develop and experience what you’re talking about. But at the same point, too, it is a business. There is an organizati­onal component, too, that I understand.”

What’s also understood is that there are some Bulls who just aren’t playing well lately — key guys such as big man Wendell Carter Jr., who has been shaky for five straight games and had no answers after scoring just four points Friday.

“Honestly, I’ve just got to play better,” Carter said. “These last couple of games have frustrated the [expletive] out of me.” ✶

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 ?? JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Forward Lauri Markkanen, one of the Bulls whose future is uncertain, beats the Heat’s Kendrick Nunn for a rebound Friday night at the United Center.
JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES Forward Lauri Markkanen, one of the Bulls whose future is uncertain, beats the Heat’s Kendrick Nunn for a rebound Friday night at the United Center.
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