The Bulls' hopes about contending for a championship this season
took a serious hit. Their long-term plans appear to be up in the
air, too.
The team said Rose will miss the remainder of the season after
having surgery Monday morning in Chicago to repair a torn medial
meniscus in his right knee. For the Bulls and their point guard,
it's an all-too-familiar spot.
"I felt for him. He is a great person, first and foremost," coach
Tom Thibodeau said before Chicago played at Utah.
Rose was injured Friday night at Portland, a huge setback for him
and the organization.
The 2011 NBA MVP missed all of last season after tearing the
anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee in Chicago's 2012
playoff opener against Philadelphia.
He has played in just 50 NBA games — 49 in the regular season and
that lone playoff game — since the Bulls' run to the Eastern
Conference finals during his MVP season.
The latest injury occurred in the third quarter against the Trail
Blazers.
He lost his footing while trying to change direction to get back on
defense when Nicolas Batum stole a pass from Joakim Noah and started
the other way. Rose limped across the court and couldn't put any
weight on his knee. After the Blazers scored, he came out of the
game during a timeout.
It didn't appear there was any contact on the play. Rose was unable
to return and was on crutches afterward.
With Rose back, the Bulls were expected to challenge LeBron James
and the Miami Heat for supremacy in the Eastern Conference and
contend for their first championship since the Michael
Jordan-Scottie Pippen era.
Instead, they're in a familiar spot — trying to get by without their
cornerstone player.
Chairman Jerry Reinsdorf said in a statement he was "heartbroken"
when he heard about Rose's injury.
"Everyone at the Bulls knows firsthand how extremely hard Derrick
worked to return to the court this year, and I have no doubt he will
do the same with regards to his recovery from this injury,"
Reinsdorf added. "Despite Derrick's absence, this is still a good
team. I know from last year, this team and coaching staff will
continue to make our fans proud."
He added that doctors expect Rose to make a full recovery. But the
latest injury raises big questions about whether they should
continue to build around him as their cornerstone player and how
this will impact the rest of the roster.
"It's obviously too soon to go down that road," general manager Gar
Forman told the team's website. "Derrick had surgery this morning.
Look, we are always evaluating our team, just like everyone else
does.
"We felt good about this season, but we were hardly perfect. So we
always are looking to get better. Everything we do is geared toward
winning a championship and we will continue to evaluate any moves
that will help us in attaining that goal."
[to top of second column] |
Asked if the Bulls can trust Rose after two
season-ending knee injuries, Forman said. "We see no reason not
to. That's what the best doctors in the world tell us."
Rose had insisted he could regain the form that made him the
league's youngest MVP, that he was coming back as good as ever,
but he was off to a shaky start.
Rose was averaging 15.9 points and was shooting just over 35
percent, although he looked a little better in his final two
games with 19 points in a loss at Denver and 20 against
Portland.
The Bulls were built to win this season with Rose. He's their
lone superstar, the only player who can consistently create his
own shot, and it's hard to envision them hanging with the Heat
or Indiana without him.
"You feel for him," the Pacers' Paul George said. "No matter
what our rivalry is or the dislike in teams in being in the same
division, you never want to see guys go down. Especially a
season-ending injury."
Rose's injury could send ripples through the roster.
Luol Deng has an expiring contract. Do the Bulls try to trade
him with the idea that the championship window for this team is
shut or risk letting him leave at the end of the season without
getting anything in return?
Then, there's Carlos Boozer. A candidate to be amnestied, the
Bulls might try to trade him. For now, he's their No. 1 scoring
option.
Without Rose, the Bulls figure to be a middle-of-the-road team.
His torn ACL in 2012 sent top-seeded Chicago to a first-round
exit against Philadelphia, capping a season in which he was in
and out of the lineup due to injuries.
Last season, while Rose's recovery became a running soap opera,
the Bulls clawed their way to 45 wins and the second round of
the playoffs even though players kept going down because they
were hurt or sick. But several key contributors are gone.
The Bulls let Nate Robinson leave because they had Rose coming
back, meaning that veteran Kirk Hinrich is now the starter with
third-year pro Marquis Teague backing him up.
They also decided not to re-sign swingman Marco Belinelli and
brought in Mike Dunleavy Jr., instead.
"It's tough for everybody," Dunleavy said. "I certainly feel for
(Rose). Ironically, one of the reasons I came here is because of
the way this team performed under adversity. Now, here we are
again in the same boat."
[Associated
Press; ANDREW SELIGMAN, AP Sports Writer]
AP freelancer Matthew
Coles in Salt Lake City contributed to this report.
Copyright 2013 The Associated
Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |