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Haugh: Bulls will hang tough until Derrick Rose returns

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Try telling Richard Hamilton the Bulls still can’t be the dangerous team Smart predicted.

Hamilton seldom has looked sharper as a Bull, dropping patented mid-range jumpers for 19 points. Noah did what Noah does, outwork everybody for 23 points and 10 rebounds. Deng typically spent nearly as much time on the floor as the officials, playing the first 17:30, and struggled but still grabbed 12 rebounds. Boozer appeared thinner and more willing to take big shots than play help defense in scoring 18. Hinrich shot a miserable 1-for-7 and missed a wide-open jumper in the final minute but contributed seven assists.

Super sub Taj Gibson endured a forgettable opener on the stat sheet, shooting 2 of 6, but will remember the night forever after wisely agreeing to a contract extension after the game that provided security — and produced tears.

“It’s a relief,” an emotional Gibson said. “I feel much better we got a win too.”

One down, how many more to go? Work remains. The Bulls won’t play the Kings every game. The competition will improve. Thibodeau’s coaching history suggests the Bulls will too.

The Kings penetrated too easily. Bulls bench players will mesh easier than they did in a sloppy debut. Timing will come, chemistry will evolve. It won’t be perfect and, on nights like Wednesday, it won’t even be pretty. But anybody who thinks it won’t be enough for the Bulls to remain among the East’s top five or six teams underestimates the power of the professionalism in the NBA.

They overlook the value of consistent defense and effort, even if Smart called the perception the Bulls work harder than any team in the league “a cliche.” They focus more on the player who isn’t there than the players who still are.

The pall around Chicago many have cast over this Bulls season makes little sense. The notion that nothing over 82 games matters if the Bulls can’t compete for an NBA title defies logic. Not that Thibodeau cares about anything but maximizing every opportunity to improve.

“I don’t get caught up in that,” Thibodeau said. “Whether someone is picking us to be the top seed or the bottom seed, it doesn’t matter. The things that are important are coming in every day, being ready, putting everything you have into practicing, staying disciplined and having the ability to do it day after day.”

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