During the 1984 NBA draft, the Portland Trail Blazers had a
tough decision on their hands. They held the rights to the #2
pick and Hakeem Olajuwon had just been drafted first overall.
They needed a big man but Michael Jordan was also available after
a successful season at UNC. The Blazers took their time and eventually
decided on center Sam Bowie. The Chicago Bulls took Jordan with
the third pick and the rest is history. The Bulls had only won
one division championship before Jordan (1975) but their fortunes
changed soon after. Jordan put up amazing individual stats in
the late 1980s but the team didn’t advance to the NBA Finals
until 1991. The Bulls won championships from 1991-1993 and 1996-1998
with a two year hiatus in between that many will contribute to
Jordan’s “retirement” to pursue a baseball career
that never materialized. After the last championship, the team
was essentially disbanded by ownership and the last six years
have resulted in zero playoff appearances and five last place
finishes in the division. The Bulls are full of youth and potential
and are coming off another successful draft in the hopes of rebuilding
for the future and making a playoff run in the depleted Eastern
Conference.
The Bulls will play in the newly realigned Central division with
Indiana, Detroit, Cleveland, and Milwaukee in what can be considered
the toughest of the three eastern divisions. Detroit is coming
off a championship season where they might have gotten even better
and Indiana is always a favorite in the conference. Cleveland
has LeBron James and a batch of youngsters who could compete for
a playoff spot again this season and Milwaukee is the best potential
playoff three seed no one knows about. The Bulls finished last
season at 23-59 to end another disappointing season under Bill
Cartwright and Scott Skiles. Skiles took over before the all-star
break and showed that he’s capable of leading a team from
the bench much like he did as a guard in the league for many years.
Jamal Crawford led the team in points, steals, and minutes played
last year but he was traded to the New York Knicks in the off-season.
That deal was the only one that the team made to prepare for this
season after what would have to be considered a successful draft.
The Bulls finished with one of the worst records in the league
last season which entitled them to one of the first draft picks
in the 2004 NBA draft. During the lottery, the world watched as
the Bulls ended up with the third overall pick. The consensus
among many scouts and coaches before the draft was that the top
two players chosen would be high schooler Dwight Howard and UConn
big man Emeka Okefor, but no one knew which would go where. After
some massive pre-draft trading, the Bulls acquired the #7 pick
from Phoenix and Charlotte moved from #4 to #2 behind Orlando.
The Magic took Dwight Howard and left the expansion Bobcats with
Emeka Okefor who they were pleased to take. The Bulls, in their
familiar spot at #3, took UConn guard Ben Gordon who excelled
in the final four en route to a national title alongside Okefor.
At #7, the Suns were delighted to see Duke swingman Luol Deng
slide all the way to them and the Bulls acquired him in a deal
that had already been determined prior to the draft. Deng is strong
enough to handle himself down low as a power forward and quick
enough to step back and hit the deep shot or blow by his man on
the perimeter. The Bulls followed that up by drafting Duke point
guard Chris Duhon in the second round. Duhon will likely be a
backup in the league but he can will a team to a victory and he’s
a proven winner, something the Bulls needed desperately. Duhon
will backup Kirk Hinrich at the point who will likely team up
with Gordon and Deng at the two and three. Tyson Chandler and
Eddy Curry are the probable PF and C for the team this year for
a team that could be one of the youngest and most explosive groups
in the league.
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