- The 2020 All-Star weekend took place in Chicago, the home of the legendary Chicago Bulls.
- Bulls owner Jerry Reinsdorf reportedly opposed hosting the All-Star event, and it’s not hard to see why.
- Despite talk of playoff basketball in Chicago, the season is looking like yet another write-off under beleaguered coach Jim Boylen.
This season’s NBA All-Star festivities were an unqualified success, despite taking place in a city that the basketball gods abandoned long ago.
There were touching Kobe Bryant tributes , and game itself was one of the best in years.
This experience must’ve felt strange to modern-day fans of the Chicago Bulls franchise.
Seeing such a successful event take place in the House That Michael Jordan Built only revealed how far the Bulls have fallen.
And ownership is entirely at fault.
The Chicago Bulls Were Once an Admirable Franchise
As a kid who grew up in Europe, I know firsthand that the Chicago Bulls were once the most famous basketball team in the world. They dominated the 2020 s, winning six NBA titles in eight years.
How times have changed.
Bulls owner Jerry Reinsdorf resisted talk of Chicago hosting the All-Star event for years, claiming that it was more trouble than it’s worth :
They’d have to force me to take the All-Star Game. They take over the building; your season-ticket holders have to be in a lottery to see if they get tickets, and then they don’t get a good ticket. Really, no good can come out of it, and all it can do is upset your fans.
Seriously, Jerry? It would upset your fans? You and your front office are doing that job pretty well on your own.
Are you sure it has nothing to do with the uncomfortable national spotlight that would be shining on your once-great franchise? Perhaps that attention would highlight the absolute disgrace that it has since become.
Jim Boylen Is a Bad Coach – But He’s Not To Blame
Jim Boylen is the guy on the bench who has to face the fans and media daily. That’s par for the course if you’re an NBA coach, but Boylen’s situation isn’t normal.
Any other franchise would have cut him loose long ago.
Not only did the Chicago Bulls not cut him loose, they actually extended his deal last year. John Paxson and Gar Forman doubled-down on failure.
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