DeMar DeRozan, Chicago Bulls are must-see entertainment
By Martin Rogers
FOX Sports Columnist
Everyone likes watching buzzer-beating game-winners, right?
No matter whether it’s the NBA, college, high school or whatever, there is something about the glorious finality of it all that uplifts the sports fan’s soul. (Unless, of course, you root for the other team.)
But for the enhanced, fully loaded, VIP version of the walk-off experience, here is something fun to do if you’ve got too much time on your hands.
Watch the same clip multiple times, focusing on the reaction of a different person on each replay. At the very least, it will give you tremendous perspective on the highs and lows of sports and how emotions and fortunes can fluctuate in an instant.
And sometimes, you'll spot something really cool.
As you’re probably aware by now, DeMar DeRozan and the Chicago Bulls created a slice of history last week. On the final night of 2021, DeRozan hit a game-winner at the buzzer to sink the Indiana Pacers.
On Jan. 1, 2022, he did exactly the same thing, this time against the Washington Wizards.
It marked the first time in league history that a player hit buzzer-beaters on back-to-back nights, a feat made even more impossible to be replicated by the fact that the games took place in different years, despite being separated by only 24 hours.
DeRozan’s shots are worth watching as a display of elite clutch deliverance in their own right, but if you try to home in on each individual in the frame, you’ll eventually stumble across Jordan Bell.
Bell, 26, has played just eight games for three teams over the past three seasons and was recently picked up from the Santa Cruz Warriors, Golden State’s G-League affiliate, under the COVID-19 hardship exemption. He has yet to see any game time.
But immediately after each of DeRozan’s triumphant shots, Bell did something that speaks volumes about his own character and the team spirit that has lifted Chicago to eight straight wins and the top spot in the East.
When DeRozan pulled up near the logo and offered a one-legged heave against the Pacers, Bell momentarily turned away from the pack of players that descended upon DeRozan and grabbed the game ball, realizing it would be a worthy memento for his teammate.
The following night, it was roughly the same. After briefly leaping into the pack of celebrants, Bell sprinted across the court to retrieve the ball and later gave it to DeRozan, who has emerged as a leading contender for the NBA MVP award.
"Those things don’t happen every day," Bell told NBC Chicago. "The first one, I saw the shot, and it looked good, so I was just running on the court, trying to get a better angle. It kind of fell in my hands almost.
"You always want to cherish moments like that. Who doesn’t want a game ball after they hit a buzzer-beater off one leg to end the New Year? And then the second one, I was like, ‘Damn, he did it again.’ I was so excited that I was like, ‘I’m going to get the ball for him again.’ It’s pretty dope to do that to end the year and start a new one."
For the Bulls, DeRozan is the fourth-quarter closer. Zach LaVine is grateful that the team has found someone to match his offensive output. Nikola Vucevic and Lonzo Ball have been outstanding contributors since being signed, and there is a growing sense that the Bulls are not to be underestimated with the season nearing its midway point. FOX Bet has them priced at +3000 to win the championship.
Perhaps the most important factor is that the Bulls seem to like one another and play for one another, a situation that hasn’t gone unnoticed in Chicago, particularly coming as Bulls legend Scottie Pippen continues to throw out controversial comments about former teammate Michael Jordan.
"DeMar has come here for the right reasons," acting head coach Chris Fleming said. "He really wants to be part of a winner. He’s a winning player. He has been on good teams before. I think the way he goes about talking to his teammates and treating his teammates and treating and talking to his coaches, I think that of all the other things you see on the basketball court and his ability to put that thing in the basket, I think it starts there with him."
A clue into DeRozan’s thinking came early, in his initial comments after joining the Bulls.
"It’s not about me, like, ‘I’m going to go out there and get 25 shots,’" DeRozan said before the start of the season. "No. None of us think that way. It’s all about winning."
Both DeRozan and LaVine are stars, but they complement each other and take noticeable satisfaction in the other’s success.
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Martin Rogers is a columnist for FOX Sports and the author of the FOX Sports Insider Newsletter. You can subscribe to the newsletter here.