Noa Essengue’s Summer League night took a sharp turn in the Bulls’ loss to the Utah Jazz, and it didn’t take long for Tiago Splitter to make his point.
The No. 12 pick did not come back out with Chicago’s starters for the second half Monday, and the move had nothing to do with his shoulder injury or any precautionary handling. Instead, Splitter wanted more from the rookie after what he saw in the opening half.
According to Bulls insider K.C. Johnson, Essengue said Splitter explained the decision by saying he wanted more energy from him on both ends and more leadership.
“Noa Essengue said Tiago Splitter told him that he didn’t start second half because Splitter wanted more energy from him offensively and defensively and more leadership," Johnson shared on X. “Splitter said he ‘wanted more’ from Essengue and also wanted an extra ball handler in lineup.”
Essengue finished with 18 minutes, six points, five rebounds, two assists, two steals and two blocks, shooting 1-for-4 from the field and 2-for-3 at the line. It was a quieter follow-up to his Summer League debut, when he put up 10 points, five rebounds, one assist, two steals and four blocks in 29 minutes while going 5-for-5 from the floor.
That makes the second outing a rough one for a player who already has plenty of ground to make up. Essengue is coming off most of his rookie season lost to injury, and he entered Summer League as a raw prospect trying to get as many reps as possible. Instead, he ran into a coach who clearly expects more right away.
There’s also the reality of where he stands in the organization. Essengue came from the previous regime, and the Bulls don’t have any built-in loyalty to him. With a crowded frontcourt and minutes already at a premium, every possession matters, especially for a young player trying to carve out a role.
Maybe Splitter is simply drawing a hard line early and showing that nobody gets handed anything. Maybe it’s a message meant to push Essengue, not bury him. Either way, the rookie’s second Summer League game made one thing obvious: he has work to do.
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