Advertisement

The Celtics beat the Bulls so badly they performed the wave on the bench

The Celtics' starters join fans in performing the wave during a blowout win against the Bulls. (Getty Images)
The Celtics’ starters join fans in performing the wave during a blowout win against the Bulls. (Getty Images)

The Chicago Bulls began Sunday afternoon’s game against the Boston Celtics with their worst shooting quarter since 1999, their lowest first-quarter output since 2004 and their worst quarter of the season.

In other words, not good. Not good at all.

[Fill out your NCAA tournament bracket here | Printable version]

The Bulls missed their first 12 shots of the game and didn’t get onto the board until Dwyane Wade’s 21-foot jumper ended their scoreless drought 5:55 into the game. All in all, Chicago finished 3-for-22 from the field in the first quarter (a stunningly bad 13.6 percent from the field) and narrowly avoided the worst scoring quarter in franchise history — rolling out more players (10) than they scored points (9).

Lest we need reminding this was an early Sunday game, Wade fell asleep on defense to start the day:

Not a minute later, Jimmy Butler drove into a sea of red and just plain ran into Robin Lopez:

The nationally televised disaster only got worse from there, until Cristiano Felicio capped the 100-80 loss with a fitting finish, missing a wide-open transition dunk even after Boston parted that red sea:

Things got so bad C’s fans entertained themselves with the wave, and Boston players joined the fray:

It was an embarrassing outing for a Bulls team that’s now lost five straight and failed to capitalize on an opportunity to leapfrog the Miami Heat for ninth place in the Eastern Conference. They’re now two games in the loss column behind the Milwaukee Bucks for the East’s final playoff seed with 16 to play.

With seven of their nine remaining games in March scheduled against playoff teams, it won’t be easy for Chicago to salvage a season that looked promising after a 10-6 start to the first month, and nobody who watched Sunday’s game could be confident the Bulls care all that much about playing past April.

The “three alphas” were a failed experiment from the start, and they’ve been fighting with each other, their younger teammates and their coaches ever since. Sunday’s loss was just the latest reminder the Bulls are in need of a major shakeup this summer, whether it’s a rebuild around whatever youth and draft picks they can land in a Jimmy Butler trade, another new coach and/or a revamped front office.

[Follow Ball Don’t Lie on social media: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook | Tumblr]

Meanwhile, the Celtics looked sharp, bouncing back from losing three of their final four games on their West Coast road trip to move into a virtual tie with the Washington Wizards for the second seed in the East. Avery Bradley had his minutes restriction lifted, and Boston is at full strength for the stretch run, with rookie Jaylen Brown playing his best ball and exemplifying the C’s depth of talent:

They’re looking more and more like a team that’s one piece away from championship contention, so maybe that wave by the Celtics was just a greeting to let Butler know he’d be welcome in Boston.

– – – – – – –

Ben Rohrbach is a contributor for Ball Don’t Lie and Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at rohrbach_ben@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!