Bulls Fans Just Got One More Reminder Why That Draft Era Had To End

The Chicago Bulls are moving past the era of speculative draft picks, marking a new direction in their team-building strategy.

The Bulls may be moving on from Julian Phillips, but his exit says plenty about where Chicago has been - and where it seems headed now.

On Monday, Michael Scotto of Hoops Hype reported that the Minnesota Timberwolves declined Phillips’ $2.41 million club option, a move that sends the former Bulls forward into 2026 NBA unrestricted free agency. Phillips had been attached to Minnesota in the 2026 NBA Trade Deadline deal that sent guard Ayo Dosunmu to the Timberwolves.

The Minnesota Timberwolves will decline their $2.41 million team option on Julian Phillips and will not extend him a qualifying offer, thus making him an unrestricted free agent, league sources told @hoopshype.

  • Michael Scotto (@MikeAScotto) June 29, 2026

Phillips’ departure also serves as a reminder of how often Chicago under former executive of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas leaned into raw, long-term projects instead of players ready to make an immediate impact. His time with the Bulls never amounted to much more than a line on the roster sheet.

In the 2024-25 season, which was his second in the league, Phillips finished eighth on the team in total minutes played with 1123. He never topped 1000 game minutes again after that season, and his overall production in Chicago stayed modest: 3.2 points per game on 42.4% shooting across 154 regular-season games.

For Bulls fans, Phillips fits into a broader run of draft swings that never really connected. The list includes Patrick Williams, Marko Simonovic and Dalen Terry, with Phillips potentially the last name in that stretch.

There have been hits, too. Karnisovas did land Ayo Dosunmu, and the 2024 pick of Matas Buzelis stands out as another win. Still, the hope now is that forward Noa Essengue can break what the piece describes as the AK generational curse of drafting ineffective wings.

What feels different now is the process itself. Bryson Graham’s first Bulls draft has given fans a reason to believe the team is finally targeting rookies who can actually contribute right away. That shift became even more apparent through comments from Dailyn Swain’s college coach, Sean Miller, who said on 104.3 The Score’s Rahimi, Harris, and Grote Show that Graham began scouting Swain during his freshman season at Xavier University (Ohio).

Swain eventually played three seasons of NCAA men’s basketball, splitting time between Xavier and the University of Texas.

After six seasons of surprise picks that mostly missed, the Bulls’ current draft approach looks a lot more deliberate - and a lot more encouraging.

In Other News...

Bulls Just Made Their First Truly Unsettling Rebuild Decision

Bryson Grahams first draft with the Bulls had a clear front-end plan. Chicago used its first-round picks on Caleb Wilson and Dailyn Swain, giving the new lead executive two young pieces to shape into part of the next core while the franchise continues sorting out what the rebuild is supposed to become.

The part that lingers is how the Bulls handled the rest of the board, especially with shooting still sitting near the top of the rosters needs. Around the league, teams were able to turn useful rotation players like Isaiah Joe and Isaiah Stewart into draft capital, the kind of moves that at least hint at value extraction during a reset. Chicago, though, is still facing the bigger question of whether it is collecting enough assets to accelerate this process or simply leaving opportunities on the table while the roster waits for help through free agency or trade. [Read more 🡒]

Bulls Fans Are Split Over One Patrick Williams Trade Idea

With the Bucks sliding into a rebuild phase, trade chatter is already circling around the kind of movable contracts that can help a reshaped roster take form. One of the speculative ideas floating around links Chicago to a larger Milwaukee-centered shuffle, with the Bulls framed as a team trying to find a cleaner fit and a more flexible path forward while other teams sort through salary, draft capital and future roster plans.

For Bulls fans, the debate comes down to whether moving on from Patrick Williams in that kind of scenario would be worth the cost. The logic is straightforward enough: Chicago would be trying to clear a contract it has struggled to slot into place while adding a player who might be easier to move later and better suited to what the team wants to look like. Still, the proposal is only one piece of a wider set of hypothetical deals, and the real question is whether the Bulls would actually be willing to take that swing. [Read more 🡒]

Bulls May Be Closing In On A Move Fans Will Debate

Chicagos offseason flexibility has put the Bulls in position to poke around on a move that would make immediate sense on paper, especially with a roster that still needs more shooting. League chatter has pointed to a veteran guard who can help fill that gap, and the fit is easy enough to see for a team with cap room and a clear need for reliable scoring on the perimeter.

The wrinkle is that Chicago is not alone in the pursuit, with Miami and Detroit also in the mix as the Bulls weigh how aggressively to use what remains of their spending power. If the front office does decide to make a push, it would be the kind of signing that says plenty about how the Bulls want to use the rest of their cap space, and why this one could split the fan base before any paperwork is even signed. [Read more 🡒]