Bulls' recent free-agent signing continues baffling offseason

Utah Jazz v Chicago Bulls
Utah Jazz v Chicago Bulls / Michael Reaves/GettyImages
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The Chicago Bulls’ offseason has been a confusing mess.

They hinted at a rebuild by trading Alex Caruso and DeMar DeRozan, but have so far held onto Zach LaVine and Nikola Vucevic, which puts that in jeopardy. 

They also signed Jalen Smith to a value contract, but he too is good enough to thwart their efforts to bottom out and keep their top-10 protected pick in 2025. 

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The Bulls still had some of their mid-level exception left after the Jalen Smith signing and have made another confusing addition. 

Shams Charania of The Athletic first reported that the Bulls had signed free agent Talen Horton-Tucker to a partially guaranteed deal. 

Horton-Tucker continues an offseason when you have to ask what exactly the Bulls are doing. 

Chicago Bulls free agency: Talen Horton-Tucker doesn’t make sense 

Talen Horton-Tucker has been a role player for the Lakers and most recently with the Jazz, where he averaged just over 10 points per game over the last two seasons. 

He’s a tough player who can be slotted into several positions, but he doesn’t make a whole lot of sense for the Bulls. 

The first reason is that he can’t shoot. He is under 30 percent from three-point range for his career and the Bulls need shooters. 

There were still a few available, and it would have made more sense for Chicago to grab one instead of a guy who is inefficient from all three levels offensively. 

The Bulls also have a logjam at guard already with Josh Giddey, Coby White, Zach LaVine and Ayo Dosunmu all likely to play big minutes. 

Horton-Tucker will have a difficult time cracking the rotation. 

Even though it seems like he’s been in the league forever (probably because he was overhyped by Lakers’ fans), THT is only 23-years-old, so he does fit into the Bulls’ timeline for a rebuild, but does his game have another level? 

It’s hard to be a wing player who can’t shoot, especially when you have a high turnover rate and are far from a lockdown defender. 

Every team needs deep-bench role players, but the Bulls would have been better suited with a developmental project with more upside or at least someone who can shoot the 3-ball. 

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