The news early Tuesday revolved around Dwyane Wade indicating the rest of the Bulls' season would determine whether he'll stick around for the second year of his contract or opt out. There was still a game against the Orlando Magic to be played though. Regardless of if Wade has been thinking about this for awhile and just needed to get it off his chest, he didn't let it affect his play. In fact, the Bulls put the comments behind them long enough to earn a 100-92 win.
The Bulls came out shooting poorly, but remedied that before the Magic could pull away. From there, the teams went back and forth until the Bulls slowly extended their lead. Though they never put it out of reach, they got to a point where they kept Orlando on the precipice between threatening the lead and completely dropping off. Helping was the Magic missing three players due to injury, including ex-Bull D.J. Augustin.
Wade scored a game-high 21 points and recorded seven steals (tied for the most in the NBA this season), picking up right where he left off in Saturday's win over Sacramento. Jimmy Butler was just behind with 20 points and a team-high four assists. Cristiano Felicio continued his ascent with a double-double of 12 points and 10 rebounds. Doug McDermott scored all 12 of his points from 3-point range.
The Bulls will take a win however they can, even with the distraction of Wade making his departure after this year a possibility. They created opportunities for themselves and converted on just enough of them. They also showed the defense that allows them to get the better of inferior teams, at least on certain nights. In this case, they forced Elfrid Payton into eight of Orlando's 19 turnovers.
This and pretty much every game for the rest of the season will be critical in determining what the 35-year-old Wade does next year. True, his mere presence has gone against the younger and more athletic route that Gar Forman pledged, but he's also provided the good basketball he has left to the city. What would it say about a future Hall of Famer in the twilight of his career bolting from his hometown team after just one season of a two-year deal? Whatever the answer is, Forman and John Paxson might soon learn they've been going about the way they do business all wrong.
A Wednesday meeting at the United Center with the Atlanta Hawks means a quick turnaround. The way the Bulls start has no place to go but up after Friday's clunker. At least the bench was ready to put the Hawks on their heels toward the end. If the Bulls are going to play like that though, they need to do it for a full 48 minutes instead of 12.
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