
Last night marked an emotional chapter for Coby White, who returned to Chicago for the first time since being traded exactly 21 days ago. For a franchise in transition and a fan base still processing a seven-trade, chaos-filled deadline week, White's return was more than a simple reunion — it was a symbolic turning of the page. The former longest-tenured Bull faced his old team inside the United Center, now wearing the colors of his hometown Charlotte Hornets, and as Chicago Sun-Times reporter Joe Cowley joked, things could have gone far worse for the ex-Tar Heel than landing back home in Charlotte.
But while emotions swirled around White's return, the Chicago Bulls had more pressing concerns: snapping a brutal nine-game losing streak and desperately hunting for their first win in February. Despite that urgency — and despite a spectacular 32-point breakout night from rookie Matas Buzelis — the Bulls once again fell short, dropping to 0–10 on the month in a loss defined not by the final score, but by what it revealed about Chicago's direction.
The deeper meaning behind this game went far beyond the scoreboard. In fact, it may prove to be a best-case scenario for a franchise that has finally embraced a full rebuild after years of mediocrity.
Let Matas Buzelis Cook — And Don't Look Back
This game will be replayed and referenced repeatedly as the night Matas Buzelis arrived. The highly anticipated rookie posted a career-best 32 points on 13-of-19 shooting, including 6-of-11 from deep — the kind of performance that franchises build around.
It wasn't just the scoring.
It was the freedom.
It was the opportunity.
It was the Bulls finally stepping out of their own way and giving Buzelis the runway he deserves.
This was the second time Buzelis has crossed the 30-point mark, and both games share the same pattern: extremely high efficiency, strong perimeter shooting, and undeniable confidence. It marked his 21st career game scoring 20+, with 16 of those performances coming this season alone.
The Bulls' top priority for the remainder of the year is crystal clear:
Develop Matas Buzelis.
Feature him.
Test him.
Let him fail.
Let him shine.
Let him learn.
This franchise already knows exactly what they have in Josh Giddey, a near triple-double player when fully healthy. They have glimpses from Tre Jones and Zach Collins, both of whom have shown flashes as long-term pieces. But Buzelis? He is the true variable — the unknown ceiling-raiser who could shape whether the Bulls return to championship contention in the next several years.
And for perhaps the first time all season, Chicago treated him like that guy.
He played 33 minutes.
He attempted 19 shots.
He operated with genuine on-ball responsibility and zero expectations of winning.
This — not wins — is what the Bulls must prioritize.
This is the blueprint.
The Rebuild Has Begun — and Losses Are Fuel, Not Failure
If Chicago fans wanted clarity about the franchise's direction, they received it in full this month. After a decade of being stuck in NBA purgatory — not good enough to contend, not bad enough to draft elite talent — executive Artūras Karnišovas finally did the unthinkable:
He tore it all down.
The return packages may have disappointed some fans, especially compared to what Chicago could've received had they moved their stars years earlier at peak value. But that no longer matters. The reset button has been pushed — decisively and unapologetically.
The result?
Chicago is sliding toward the bottom of the standings exactly as intended.
The Bulls have lost 13 of their last 14.
They are 0–10 in February.
They were 23–22 a month ago;
now they sit at 24–35.
And yet, in the logic of a rebuild, this is progress.
According to Tankathon projections, Chicago now has a 20.3% chance at a top-four pick in the 2026 NBA Draft, a position that could dramatically shape their future if paired with the development of Buzelis and an upcoming offseason loaded with cap space and draft capital.
This is what Bulls fans have begged for over the last decade.
A plan.
A direction.
A chance at real upside — not treadmill seasons.
The tank is not subtle.
The tank is not accidental.
The tank is a feature, not a bug.
Why Coby White's Return Was the Perfect Backdrop
Amid all the chaos, White's return served as a symbolic reminder of how dramatically the Bulls have changed in just three weeks. Once the longest-tenured Bull, he represented an era of half-measures, soft resets, and hopeful mediocrity.
Now? Chicago has fully pivoted into a new era — one defined by youth, long-term planning, and the willingness to lose games today for meaningful wins tomorrow.
White's journey has already begun with the Hornets.
Chicago's journey has just restarted.
Where the Bulls Go From Here
The final 23 games of the season will not be about wins.
They may not even be about competitiveness.
They will be about three pillars:
1. Let Buzelis experiment freely on offense.
Give him reps as a scorer, creator, and late-game option.
2. Continue sliding down the standings.
The lower Chicago goes, the better the odds of securing a transformative draft pick.
3. Prepare for an offseason of flexibility.
With cap space, draft picks, and a clean developmental slate, the Bulls can finally begin shaping a roster with a real ceiling.
And if all goes right?
Chicago could enter 2026–27 with:
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A top-ten draft pick
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A rapidly developing Buzelis
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Giddey as a high-IQ anchor
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Significant cap space
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And a clearer blueprint than they've had in a decade
The Bulls aren't just rebuilding.
They're finally building correctly.