Tiago Splitter Just Sent A Clear Message About The Bulls Identity

Tiago Splitter unveils his strategy to revolutionize the Chicago Bulls' game by focusing on possession and pace for the 2026-27 NBA season.

Tiago Splitter didn’t waste time hiding the shape of what he wants the Bulls to become.

Speaking Monday during team practice, Chicago’s head coach fielded a range of questions, but the clearest peek into his thinking came when Bulls.com’s Sam Smith asked whether the first few summer league games would offer a glimpse of the style the team plans to play all season. Splitter’s answer was blunt: “win the possession game”.

That phrase is doing a lot of work. Splitter made it clear he wants Chicago to come out ahead in the nightly math of shot attempts, not just run fast for the sake of running fast. The goal is simple in theory: make sure the Bulls get more chances to score than their opponent.

That matters because pace and efficiency are not the same thing. The Bulls were already near the top of the league in pace last season, finishing second in the NBA in that category according to Basketball Reference. But that speed didn’t translate into a productive offense, as Chicago ranked 23rd in offensive rating at 113.0 points per 100 possessions.

So the summer league won’t be about fixing everything at once. Splitter isn’t going to solve the Bulls’ offensive issues in Las Vegas. What he can do is start building the habits that lead to more possessions and better ones.

The first place that starts is on defense. Splitter’s version of winning the possession battle begins with pressure on the ball and turnovers that turn defense into offense.

Chicago ranked 23rd in steals per game last season at 7.6, so there’s real room for growth there. For a summer league group, that makes the work especially valuable: learning how to get stops together is part of laying the groundwork for whatever Splitter-ball is supposed to look like.

Once the Bulls force turnovers, the next step is turning them into pace. That means pushing after live-ball steals and also getting the ball up quickly after made baskets, with an eye toward early shot-clock looks in the first eight seconds. Those are the kinds of possessions that can tilt a game before the defense is set.

But there’s a catch, and Splitter will have to keep it in front of his team: fast pace only helps if the Bulls don’t give the ball right back. That puts extra attention on turnover control, especially with Josh Giddey, who led the team in turnovers per game during the 2025-26 regular season.

Rebounding is the other piece of the possession puzzle. Defensive boards let the Bulls ignite the break, while offensive rebounds give them a second chance to extend possessions and squeeze out extra shots.

For Splitter, that’s the foundation. If Chicago wants to play the way he’s hinting at, it starts with winning those little battles every night.

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