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| The Bulls better let Rip wear his headband. I'm serious. |
When Detroit amnestied Rip Hamilton though, he became an inexpensive option that didn't require the Bulls to trade anyone. Sure, there are reasons Rip comes at a discount: at 33, he's on the wrong side of his peak years, and due to his age he doesn't have the same explosiveness and athleticism he had in his championship season with the Pistons in 2004. As Rip's quickness has waned, so has his shooting accuracy in recent years. But Bulls fans who point at these truths as the primary reason the Bulls can't catch up to the Miami Heat this year are using flawed logic; Hamilton's impact at the SG position shouldn't be graded against the stud shooting guards in the NBA, but rather against the Bulls' SG situation last year. No disrespect to Keith Bogans, who is a solid veteran defender, but the way Hamilton compliments the rest of the Bulls starting 5 really opens up a lot of possibilities on both ends of the floor for the Bulls. Here's how I see Rip impacting the Bulls:
1) Rip's presence will allow the Bulls to be one of the best fast-break teams in the league. Chicago's best offense has been their solid defense under Thibodeau; they force turnovers, then get easy buckets in transition. They were great at this last year, but Rip can take this to another level. Bogans isn't nearly as quick or as conditioned as Rip, and he's not nearly as good of a finisher in the open floor as Hamilton is. This is not a knock on Bogans, this just happens to be one of Hamilton's strengths. Now Derrick has someone who can almost keep up with him on the break. Don't forget the Bulls can also run with Deng, someone who can finish at the rim or spot up at the 3 point line in transition, and Noah, who is without a doubt the best center in the NBA on the fast break. The LA Clippers might be Lob City, but if everything breaks right (pun intended), the Bulls could become Layup City.
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| "A competent coach? This is weird..." |
3) Matchups. Many teams tried to guard Derrick Rose with someone bigger than their point guard, and they'd hide their small PG defender on Bogans. This won't work with Hamilton, because he can dominate smaller defenders with his above average post game. Hopefully Rip can teach Derrick some of his post moves as well, so Bulls fans can hear Stacy King exclaiming "mouse in the house!" in their sleep.
4) Conditioning. I realize that the players in the NBA are world class athletes, but Rip Hamilton has always been known for his insane conditioning, ala Ray Allen. The benefits of Hamilton's work ethic are two-fold: obviously he doesn't tire out when running around picks all game, but more importantly, he's tiring out the poor opposition who's trying to chase him all around the court. Compare this to last year when players like Dwayne Wade would take a break on the defensive end of the floor standing near Keith Bogans, now players like Wade will have to try to be productive on the offensive end while relentlessly chasing Hamilton around picks on the other end of the floor.
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| "Here's my ring, show 'em yours Scal" |
Other than Rip Hamilton's impact there are a couple of other things that I think will work in the Bulls' favor this year. The first is Carlos Boozer. Last year was an absolute worst case scenario for Booze; literally everything went wrong, and yet the Bulls still got to the conference finals. I like how Bill Simmons' summed up the difference between Boozer last year compared to this year when he wrote:
"There were real reasons why [Boozer] stunk last year (new team, new situation, injured in training camp, not in the best shape, just never got it going, lost confidence) and real reasons why he'll shine this season (motivated and hungry, a 20/10 guy when healthy, better chemistry with Rose). He's too good to stink twice."
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| "King James ain't got sh#t on the White Mamba!" |
Sure I'm probably riding optimistically high since the season is finally about to start, but it's fun and exciting to root for a team with great chemistry that's hellbent on winning, and I'm going to continue to expect big things from this group until they finally give me reason not to.




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