The Bulls left the NBA Draft with Caleb Wilson, Dailyn Swain and plenty of questions about what they did with the rest of their second-round capital.
Chicago’s top two selections went smoothly enough. Wilson arrived from North Carolina, and Swain came off the board at No. 15 from Texas. But the moves that followed drew the most attention, starting with the decision to send the No. 38 pick, Braden Smith, to the Indiana Pacers for guard Kam Jones.
Smith, the NCAA’s all-time assists leader out of Purdue, was the name many Bulls fans expected to hear tied to Chicago’s draft night haul. Instead, the Bulls brought in Jones, whose rookie year was derailed by injury. He appeared in 37 games last season and averaged 4.4 points before being waived and then landing with the Milwaukee Bucks.
Chicago’s second-round handling didn’t stop there. The Bulls also passed on using the No. 56 pick, sending it to the Los Angeles Lakers for cash considerations.
That sequence has put VP of Basketball Operations Bryson Graham in the middle of the backlash, and he’s owning it. Speaking to ESPN’s Jamal Collier, Graham said, “If you feel good about the guys that you're going to be looking at postdraft for two-ways and you don't feel good about rostering guys that are in the earlier part of the second round, then you need to find a way to move off, maybe move a pick,” Graham told ESPN.
“Maybe add value in other ways. Yeah, that's completely on me.”
There’s also a broader organizational layer to the criticism. An NBA source told ESPN’s Brian Windhorst on “The Hoop Collective” podcast that this is simply how the Bulls tend to do business.
“I just think that there's a certain way that they operate,” one league source told ESPN, “and I don't see the fundamental core of that changing.”
Graham had already defended his second-round approach before taking the blame publicly.
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