MozTheBoz wrote:Fuck...
And yeh they will re-sign Gasol next year rejoice!
We value Pau. We value him on the floor and the leadership he brings. We see him as a part of our core."
We're also hopeful Joakim Noah will remain a Bull."
KC: Do you still think you're a championship-caliber team?
Gar: I never said that and correct me if I'm wrong.
KC: You were asked that question at the news conference announcing Thibodeau's dismissal and you answered yes.
Eventually it came that Kobe told the Lakers not only that he wanted to be traded, he wanted to be traded to the Bulls.
We don’t hear that much in Chicago, especially from the top players. And for all their other reasons, they don’t like playing against the Jordan legacy. Kevin Garnett couldn’t get farther and faster from it, manufacturing excuses about a disloyal organization. Grant Hill wanted no part. Even LeBron. Was LeBron going to have a better chance to win with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh or Wade, Joakim Noah and a healthy Derrick Rose? And maybe even Bosh as well as the Bulls had a way to get all three. James did fine in Miami, but he also wanted no part of, “Yeah, but Jordan won six titles.’ Free agents won’t say it; but they’re scared of the past.
Bring it on, Kobe demanded.
The Chicago Bulls are currently the eight seed in the Eastern Conference and Fred Hoiberg believes that there is one surefire way that they can climb in the standings and, hopefully, guarantee themselves a more favorable match up once the postseason rolls around.
According to a report from Joe Cowley of the Chicago Sun-Times, the first-year head coach wants to see his roster get tougher and he made this message quite clear on Tuesday.
“It’s got to come to a point where it bothers you,’’ said Hoiberg. “That’s the first thing is when you get outhustled and outworked and knocked out of bounds, that’s where it starts."
Hoiberg made sure that his players practiced what he was preaching as he put the Bulls through a drill during Tuesday's practice where the players were forced to be the one's initiating contact rather than reacting to it.
“We did a drill [Tuesday] where you have to go hit, have to go make first contact. A lot of times we’re reacting. We get hit in the back first. Now we’re pushed underneath in the basket and you’re in terrible rebounding position. They don’t call that a lot. It’s physical. It’s a man’s game. If it doesn’t bother you, it’s going to continue to happen."
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