Bulls May Have Seen Something In Caleb Wilson Everyone Else Missed

Could Caleb Wilson's underestimated shooting talent end up being the Chicago Bulls' latest stroke of genius?

The Chicago Bulls went into Caleb Wilson’s pre-draft meeting trying to confirm what they already believed about the North Carolina forward. What they got instead was a much clearer picture of a player who came in sounding older, sharper and more confident than a typical 19-year-old.

According to new footage released by the team, Wilson immediately stood out for the way he carried himself. Bulls VP Bryson Graham and new director of player personnel Brian Hagen were struck by his intensity and maturity, and the message came through fast: this wasn’t just a gifted prospect with the usual first-round questions attached.

That matters because Wilson had already been viewed as one of the four blue-chip talents in the 2026 NBA Draft. For any team, especially one trying to avoid a mistake at the top of the board, the interview is part of the real evaluation. The Bulls needed to know what kind of person they were getting, not just what kind of athlete.

What makes Wilson so intriguing is that the biggest knock on him may have been built on a false premise. The draft chatter centered on his jumper, or the supposed lack of one. But Wilson’s own path tells a different story.

He started two years at Holy Innocents Episcopal in Atlanta, Georgia, and the production was there long before college. As a junior, he shot 55%.

As a senior, that number climbed to 57%, and that season helped Holy Innocents win its first-ever Private School State Championship. In other words, the touch was never some hidden mystery.

At North Carolina, though, Wilson was used in a different way. The Tar Heels pushed the pace and asked him to run the floor, attack the rim and operate mostly as a power forward.

He did what the coaches asked. He just didn’t get the freedom to show the full offensive package.

That’s why the Bulls may have ended up with a better read on him than the rest of the league. Wilson admitted he’s almost glad things played out this way, because if teams had known he could really shoot, he probably would’ve gone earlier and Chicago might not have had the chance to draft him.

The proof showed up quickly in Summer League. Wilson scored 35 points and hit 7-of-11 from deep in his debut, a performance that cut against the pre-draft narrative in a big way. It also fit the idea that he used the time he missed with a broken thumb to keep building his game.

There was also the frustration that came with his season ending at North Carolina and the Tar Heels getting bounced in the first round. Add in the criticism he heard during the draft process, and the result was a player with plenty of fuel.

Not because he couldn’t handle being questioned. Because he knew the criticism was off base.

The source material points to the numbers as well. Wilson’s progression across high school and college shows a player who kept expanding his game while working through different roles.

His listed production includes 16.2 points, 7.3 rebounds, 3.3 assists, 2.4 blocks and 1.1 steals as a high school freshman, then 14.5 points, 12.6 rebounds, 3.9 assists, 5.2 blocks and 1.2 steals as a sophomore. As a junior, he posted 20.8 points, 14.6 rebounds, 4.7 assists, 4.4 blocks and 1.8 steals, and as a senior he finished with 21.6 points, 11.1 rebounds, 5.0 assists, 3.5 blocks and 2.1 steals.

At North Carolina, his freshman line was 19.8 points, 9.4 rebounds, 2.7 assists, 1.4 blocks and 1.5 steals.

For the Bulls, the takeaway is simple: if Wilson really is a player who can hit 50% of his field goals and 37% of his threes, the offensive ceiling gets a lot scarier. And if the defensive tools translate the way teams believe they can, Chicago may have landed a much more complete prospect than the pre-draft noise suggested.

The article’s larger point is hard to miss. Sometimes smart scouting gets you there.

Sometimes luck does too. The Bulls have had both before, from Portland passing on Michael Jordan in 1984 to winning the Derrick Rose lottery.

If this Wilson read holds, they may have caught another break.

In Other News...

Caleb Wilson Just Changed How Bulls Fans See That Draft Pick

Caleb Wilson arrived in Chicago with the usual top-pick expectations, but the early read on him was shaped as much by projection as production. The Bulls took him fourth overall in the 2026 NBA Draft after he was viewed as a project wing with shooting questions, and that made his work this summer worth watching closely from the start.

In NBA Summer League, Wilson has done more than hold his own. He has been one of the standouts, and the part that has turned heads most is the three-point shooting that once looked like the obstacle in his profile. Working with shooting coach Chris Matthews, Wilson has been trying to sharpen that part of his game, and the early returns are giving Bulls fans a very different lens on the pick than they had on draft night. [Read more 🡒]

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There is also a layer of flexibility built into Powells deal, which gives Chicago some room to manage the partnership beyond the first season. That matters for a Bulls team trying to balance immediate competitiveness with longer-term planning, and it gives Powell a chance to show he can be more than a short-term addition. He arrives in Chicago with something to prove, and the early tone suggests he is embracing both the opportunity and the uncertainty that come with it. [Read more 🡒]