Rerisen wrote:You can't gloss over this, its the key point. Bulls fans are the only people in the basketball world that might have complete faith Rose is just going to be the same player.
I'm not glossing over it but the fact is, even Rose at 60% is better than no Rose, and unless you expect Rose to be kidnapped or hit by a train in this off-season, you can't ignore his presence or think it a negative.
To everyone else looking at the team, and possibly players we don't know, his status is a huge question mark. He could be the next Brandon Roy or Arenas post injury, we just don't know.
Right, because a 100% healthy athlete will magically turn into a guy that has degenerative arthritis and another guy that has severe micro-fracture in his knees as well as deteriorated cartilage.
I'm not aware of a single case in which a player recovered 100% from their injury, had no risk factors, completed rehab and was unable to return to the court in a meaningful manner. (Excluding those that got fat and refused to stay in shape)
Technically speaking, Rose is probably the healthiest NBA player in the game today.
The Heat will still be an easy top Eastern team, and the comparison regarding them taking less money to form was referencing 2011, when Wade wasn't an old man. They were projected as automatic favorites and some were projecting historic things, like 70 wins.
I'm not sure what you're talking about here. The Heat are good but they have gotten clearly worse over the years and are showing significant signs of slowing down because of Wades decline. They will remain a top-3 team in the East.
That won't be how our team is looked at just because Melo joins it.
I'm not interested in how some slackjawed casual fan sees the Bulls. The fact is, Melo+current Bulls is more than enough to propel them to top-2 in the East, let alone top-3.