Michael Reinsdorf sits at the center of the Bulls’ latest reset, and ESPN’s Jamal Collier made clear that the story of this franchise still runs through ownership more than any one front-office hire.
Collier’s wide-ranging profile looked back at the underwhelming Arturas Karnisovas-led Bulls front office, revisited the franchise’s long stretch of ineptitude since 1998, and offered early impressions of the current group now led by executive vice president of basketball operations Bryson Graham. The through line, though, was the Reinsdorf family’s control of the organization, with Michael Reinsdorf serving as the daily face of that power structure.
That theme shows up in how much room Graham will actually have to operate. Collier’s reporting suggests the Bulls’ success or failure under this front office will hinge on how much influence Reinsdorf chooses to exert over decisions and processes.
As one rival executive told ESPN, "Everyone thinks you're handcuffed and have bad ownership," an executive with a rival team told ESPN. "
Collier also drew a clear parallel between the start of the Karnisovas era in 2020 and the beginning of the Graham era in 2026. In both cases, the Bulls brought in a front office executive with a strong league reputation, paired that move with an acclaimed head coach hire, and held the fourth pick in the NBA Draft.
But the Karnisovas chapter is now the cautionary tale. Collier detailed the internal tension that developed between Karnisovas, Marc Eversley, and the rest of the staff over who the Bulls should take with the No. 4 pick in the 2020 draft. Karnisovas and Eversley overruled staff support for Tyrese Haliburton and instead chose Patrick Williams, a pick that has since aged poorly, especially after Williams received a five-year $90 million second Bulls contract.
For Reinsdorf, Collier’s reporting points to a few lessons. If the goal is to change the Bulls’ on-court direction through Graham’s arrival, ownership has to adjust to how the modern NBA works. The idea of tanking is no longer available anyway, with anti-taking policies set to begin in the 2026-27 NBA season.
Still, Collier framed Reinsdorf’s reluctance to embrace a rebuild over the past six seasons as a damaging choice that hurt the Bulls’ standing around the league. He also flagged a more immediate misstep: the Bulls sold their entire stash of 2026 NBA second-round picks for cash at the start of the rebuild. Second-round picks are not everything, but that move already looks worse with the Bulls’ summer league roster appearing shaky in terms of ball-handling.
And then there’s the old Bulls habit that keeps hanging around. Collier’s final point was that Reinsdorf needs to reduce John Paxson’s influence over the future of the team, because the franchise’s biggest obstacle may be its tendency to keep looking backward instead of adapting to the current NBA landscape.
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A Summer League game between the Jazz and Bulls turned unsettling in a hurry when Trey Alexander went down after contact with Caleb Wilson on a drive to the basket. Alexander collapsed in visible pain and had to be helped by Jazz medical staff before being taken off the court on a stretcher, leaving the scene far more memorable than the final score.
The immediate concern now is simply getting a clear update on Alexander, because the injury looked serious enough to stop the games momentum cold. Even with the Jazz finishing off an 80-63 win, the night quickly shifted from box score talk to the kind of wait-and-see situation no one around the Bulls wanted to see. [Read more 🡒]
Bulls Draft Backlash Just Put Their Front Office On The Spot
The Bulls draft haul already has become a talking point around the league, and not in the way the front office would have wanted. Chicago came away with Caleb Wilson and Dailyn Swain, then moved through the rest of its second-round business by dealing the No. 56 pick to the Lakers for cash considerations, a choice that fit a broader pattern of treating those selections as flexible assets rather than must-keep picks.
Bryson Graham, the teams vice president of basketball operations, has been the public face of that approach as fans questioned how the Bulls handled the night. An NBA source said the strategy is consistent with how the organization operates, which is part of why the backlash has landed so sharply, but the larger issue now is whether Chicago can convince anyone that this was a deliberate plan rather than a draft night that left the front office exposed. [Read more 🡒]
Bulls Frustration Over Patrick Williams Just Took Another Brutal Turn
Patrick Williams has spent most of his Bulls tenure under a spotlight that never really dimmed, and the latest criticism only sharpens the frustration around how his development was framed from the start. The No. 4 pick in 2020 was supposed to grow into a cornerstone, but the expectations placed on him were always tied to a comparison that now looks more like a burden than a blueprint, especially as his production has trended the wrong way and the contract he is on keeps him very much in the conversation.
What makes the situation sting for Chicago is that the old regimes thinking went beyond Williams himself. The report suggests the front office was also wary of taking a long view on the roster, leaning on Detroit as a cautionary tale against tanking even as the Pistons have since shown how quickly that path can turn. For Bulls fans, it is another reminder that the debate around Williams was never just about one player, but about how the franchise chose to build around him and what it was willing to accept along the way. [Read more 🡒]
