The Chicago Bulls may not have been expected to make much noise in free agency, but Norman Powell has emerged as a name worth watching - and one that could complicate summer plans for both Miami and Detroit.
According to Michael Scotto of HoopsHype, Powell is a high-priority target for the Heat and Pistons. That opens the door for Chicago, which has the cap space to make a real run at the veteran guard and the kind of roster need that makes the fit obvious.
Miami’s situation is especially messy after its league-shaking trade for Giannis Antetokounmpo from the Milwaukee Bucks. The Heat are now short on perimeter scoring and also short on available cash. Detroit’s picture looks different, but the result may be the same: the Pistons just added Isaiah Joe in a deal with the Oklahoma City Thunder, which cuts into how badly they need another shooter.
That leaves the Bulls as the sneaky team in the mix.
On the surface, it feels a little odd. Chicago is in the middle of a youth movement, with Caleb Wilson, Dailyn Swain and Matas Buzelis all part of the picture.
Why bring in a 33-year-old now? But the Bulls have already acknowledged a glaring issue.
Bulls executive VP of basketball operations Bryson Graham said after drafting Wilson and Swain in the 2026 NBA Draft that the team needed shooting. He wasn’t exaggerating. Jalen Smith, who shot 37.3 percent, was the best 3-point shooter left on the roster from last season.
Powell would change that immediately. He hit 38.0 percent from three on 7.1 attempts per game last season and made his first All-Star game. He would not only be Chicago’s best shooter right away, he’d also bring the most proven scoring punch on the roster.
Powell averaged 21.7 points with the Heat last season. Josh Giddey is the Bulls’ top returning scorer at 17.0 points per game.
Money is part of the appeal, too. Even after adding Nic Claxton, Chicago is projected to have $31 million in cap space, and the Bulls need to spend at least $16.5 million just to reach the salary floor, according to ESPN’s Bobby Marks.
That gives Graham room to chase Powell without blocking the future. By the time Wilson and Swain are due for extensions in two or three years, Powell could already be gone. His deal also wouldn’t be the thing that keeps Chicago from paying Matas Buzelis down the line.
The Bulls aren’t built to chase the East’s top spot anytime soon, while Miami, with Giannis in South Beach, will be expecting to and Detroit finished with the conference’s best record last season. Still, Powell makes sense in Chicago in a way he may not in those other spots.
If the Bulls can pull him away, it would be a sharp piece of business - and another sign that Graham’s first offseason in charge is going well.
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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 🡒]
