CHICAGO (AP) — The Chicago Bulls are enjoying their best season in more than a decade, and they're trying not to get too fixated on where all this success might lead.
Derrick Rose and Kyle Korver scored 18 points
apiece as the Bulls blasted the Sacramento Kings 132-92 on Monday night for
their ninth win in 10 games.
"It's fun," Rose said. "I can't
complain about anything right now. We're winning games, playing good basketball
and the city is going crazy."
The win gave the Bulls (50-19) their first 50-win
season since 1997-98 and allowed Chicago to remain tied with Boston atop the
Eastern Conference. The Celtics beat the New York Knicks on Monday.
"It was fun to watch tonight," Carlos
Boozer said. "It's fun to watch everybody play."
That 1997-98 edition of the Bulls won the NBA
championship, the last of six titles the franchise won in the 1990s. When that
was pointed out to Rose, he said the team is trying not to get too far ahead of
itself.
"We're trying to win one game at a time,"
Rose said. "Of course, we'd like to win (a title). We still have a lot of
things to work on before we get there."
Boozer scored 16 points in his return to the Bulls'
lineup after missing five games with a sprained left ankle.
"First game back, I thought (Boozer) was very
good," Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau said. "I thought he actually scored
a lot more efficiently than I thought he would.
"He missed a lot of time and he got basically
one practice. I thought it was very encouraging."
Boozer led a balanced Bulls attack that had eight
players scoring in double figures in a game that was not close after the first
period.
"It felt great," Boozer said of his
ankle. "I was happy with how strong it was through the course of the game.
I was also happy to get a lot of rest in the fourth quarter."
Luol Deng scored 17 points for the Bulls, Keith
Bogans added 15, Joakim Noah and Omer Asik each had 14, and C.J. Watson chipped
in with 11 points.
"I love the balance," Thibodeau said.
"We're inside-out, keeping the ball moving, making the extra pass."
With the game well in hand, Thibodeau had the
luxury of resting his top players. Rose played just 28 minutes, his lowest
total of the season. He didn't play in the fourth quarter.
"I know you guys are all concerned about the
minutes," Thibodeau said. "Getting the minutes down was good."
The Bulls shot 61.3 percent from the field. More
aggressive from the outset, Chicago forced 22 Sacramento turnovers and held a
36-7 edge in fastbreak points. The Bulls set a season high for points.
"The more we can get into the open floor, the
better," Thibodeau said. "Getting the easy baskets makes the game
easier."
Marcus Thornton led the Kings (17-52) with 25
points.
"We turn the ball over and they go get a
layup," Kings coach Paul Westphal said. "That's not a breakdown in
defense, but pretty soon they're shooting 61 percent for the game and they're
wearing us out. You can't keep turning the ball over the way we do it against a
great team like the Bulls.
"I think they have legitimate championship
aspirations. They're in the conversation with four or five other teams."
Kings rookie DeMarcus Cousins struggled, getting in
foul trouble early. He finished with 11 points and eight rebounds, but also
committed eight turnovers.
"DeMarcus' turnovers stand out tonight,"
Westphal said. "However, he is a young, gifted player who has a few things
to learn about decision-making."
The high-scoring Thornton has scored 20 or more
points in nine of Sacramento's last 12 games.
"We tried to chip away in the second half, but
they turned the defense up again on us and we kind of ran out of gas,"
Thornton said. "They're a great defensive team. Defense wins championships.
They're going to make a deep run in the playoffs."
The Bulls have won 13 straight at the United
Center, their longest home winning streak since 1997-98. At 31-4, the Bulls
have the NBA's second-best home record behind San Antonio (32-3).
Chicago led by as many as 25 in the third period,
reaching that advantage when Bogans lobbed a pass toward the rim on a fastbreak
and Rose flew in from the baseline and dunked it with both hands.
Sacramento, which entered averaging more turnovers
(16.1) than all but two NBA teams, had 12 miscues in the first 18 minutes,
leading to 19 Chicago points.
"We have to be stronger with the ball,"
said Kings point guard Beno Udrih, who had 13 points and five assists.
"Pass it when you see the man open right away instead of holding it too
long."
Copyright
2011 The Associated Press.
(AP
Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)






