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Chicago Bulls veterans preach continuity as they hope to ‘run it back’ in 2022-23 after their 1st season together

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Despite a quick exit in the first round of the playoffs, the veterans on the Chicago Bulls roster feel this season was a marker for the potential of the franchise. As they enter the offseason, the Bulls crave consistency.

Only three players who opened the 2020-21 season on the Bulls roster remained on the team this season: Zach LaVine, Coby White and Patrick Williams. Nikola Vučević — who arrived at last year’s trade deadline — said he didn’t feel comfortable in the Bulls system until halfway through this season. Even then, the veteran center said he still was finding his rhythm at the end of the season.

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After his exit interview with the front office Thursday, Vučević said he feels confident the Bulls are committed to retaining the core group from this season. Despite the inconsistency caused by injuries and COVID-19 cases throughout the season, Vučević feels it was an important year of chemistry building for a young team that barely knew each other at the start of the season.

[ [Don’t miss] Bulls eliminated from the playoffs after DeMar DeRozan is held to 11 points in the Game 5 loss ]

“Almost all the great teams, they’ve been built over time. Nothing happens overnight,” Vučević said. “To have the continuity, you need to get a team to go through the ups and downs of a season, playoffs, tough moments, good moments, getting to build that chemistry.

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“It doesn’t happen just like that. You have to work out, you have to go through the grind of the season. You have to do all that to get there, and I think they know that.”

It’s easy for the disappointing finish to obscure the fact that, for most of this season, the Bulls were fun.

Nikola Vučević departs after discussing the end of the Bulls season Thursday, April 28, 2022, at the Advocate Center. (Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune)

DeMar DeRozan’s teammates lavished him with superlatives — “amazing,” “crazy,” “no words” — after a record-setting season. His partnership with LaVine, which drew skepticism around the league when the Bulls acquired DeRozan, quickly became one of the NBA’s better one-two punches. Secondary additions such as Lonzo Ball and Alex Caruso grew into fan favorites, sparking winning streaks and at one point lifting the Bulls to the top of the Eastern Conference.

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The problem is all of those players rarely got the chance to play together. Williams was injured in the fifth game of the season. By the time he came back, Ball was sidelined for the season while Caruso and LaVine dipped in and out of availability.

Nevertheless, those glimpses of the team at full strength made players such as Ball eager to see the full roster return for a chance to live up to this season’s potential.

“I would love to run it back,” Ball said. “If everybody can get healthy and come back, I don’t see why we couldn’t run it back.”

[ [Don’t miss] Column: Bulls coach Billy Donovan had to deal with adversity all season, and Game 5 was no different ]

Most of this season’s core is set to return. Vučević, White, Javonte Green and Ayo Dosunmu are signed through next season, DeRozan and Williams through 2024 and Ball and Caruso through 2025. LaVine is the only outlier as he enters free agency this summer.

Next season comes with plenty of “ifs” for the Bulls — if Williams and Dosunmu continue to grow into their roles, if Ball can stay healthy, if LaVine comes back. And coach Billy Donovan cautioned the path only will get harder after the Bulls went from doubted underdog to Eastern Conference contender in a matter of months.

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But as they begin early preparations for next season, the veteran core feels confident in the foundation laid in their first season together.

“That’s where it starts,” DeRozan said. “All the great teams that play for something, that play deep, that compete for championships, what’s got to be there first and foremost is that continuity.”

Image 1 of 27

Bulls forward DeMar DeRozan, center left, congratulates Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo after the Bucks’ 116-100 win in Game 5 on April 27, 2022, at Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee. (John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune)

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