Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Chicago Tribune
Chicago Tribune
Sport
K.C. Johnson

Bulls adjusting nicely to Rajon Rondo's strong leading ways

When Rajon Rondo fielded a question on why he attended a Bulls exhibition in Milwaukee despite being scheduled for a rest day, he answered with a question of his own.

"Why not?" he said.

When the point guard was asked how he has cajoled his teammates to run the floor and push the ball ahead, he replied in the same manner.

"Who doesn't want the ball?" he said.

Rondo doesn't only answer questions with questions of his own, however. He also offers simple, declarative assessments of why the Bulls offense hummed with such efficiency in impressive victories over the Celtics and Pacers.

"Everybody wants to score (and) I love passing," he said. "It goes hand in hand."

Obviously, the way the Bulls are playing with pace, purpose and unselfishness is much more complex than that. Last season was Exhibit A of the opposite, a mostly joyless slog through isolation plays and coach Fred Hoiberg challenging Derrick Rose to get the ball into the frontcourt in three seconds.

Now the Bulls are pushing the ball ahead, making quick decisions in half-court sets, cutting with purpose and throwing the extra pass. And beyond the fact he has 22 assists in just 58 minutes, it's Rondo who is setting that tone.

"It's been an absolute pleasure," Robin Lopez said of playing with Rondo. "He sees the floor so well. Greedily, I get a lot of easy buckets.

"He's constantly in attack mode and very generous with the ball. The ball movement has been pretty fantastic."

That it has. The Bulls have recorded 59 assists on 81 field goals.

In many ways, this is what Hoiberg meant when he revealed that Mavericks coach Rick Carlisle told Hoiberg he had the right personality to mesh with Rondo. Hoiberg wants a point guard who pushes the ball, gets the offense organized, calls plays and makes instinctive reads.

In short, Hoiberg wants his point guard to be a coach on the floor. That has always been Rondo's reputation.

"The minute he stepped in that gym in August, he's been committed to talking and setting the tone in practice," Hoiberg said. "It's fun to play with a guy who gets the ball up the floor and gets you open shots. He's done it his whole career."

Rondo shrugged.

"It's a trickle-down effect _ it's contagious," he said of the Bulls' unselfishness. "It starts with the point guard. I'm passing the ball, Michael (Carter-Williams) is doing the same. D-Wade is an unselfish player. Jimmy (Butler) wants to make plays for the next guy.

"Everyone wants to play for (one) another. It's been a thing of emphasis for our team. Guys are finding the next man. It's the right play to make."

Taj Gibson said Rondo's communication skills are so prevalent that he hears Rondo's voice in his ear even when the game ends.

"He's feisty," Gibson said. "You see the pace of the game _ we're pushing it. We're getting out. We're running.

"I'm always hearing his voice (saying), 'Taj, Taj.' He's calling the plays. He's getting guys in the right spots. He's looking for everybody. My hands are ready for whatever comes my way."

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.