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Haugh: When Rose starts not as important as how he finishes

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(MCT) — CHICAGO — Shot after shot before Monday night’s Bulls-Lakers game at the United Center, Derrick Rose smoothly lofted high-arching attempts four feet beyond the 3-point line that fell softly through the net.

Five straight baskets represented Rose’s longest streak during a 15-minute shooting session that was as meaningful or memorable as anything that happened later on the same court. Nobody charted shots but, judging from the wide eyes and big smiles of fans courtside, suffice to say Rose made more than he missed.

Rose took jab steps with his surgically repaired left knee as Bulls assistant coach Adrian Griffin guarded him. He lifted off the floor the way the NBA is used to seeing his legs lift. As one league executive remarked, Rose displayed a shooting form that looked more fluid than before his injury almost nine months ago; suggesting Rose’s ACL might not have been the only thing that improved during rehabilitation.

After seeing Rose remind Chicago what we are missing minutes after hearing Tom Thibodeau open the door to Rose’s return to full-contact practice this week, suddenly watching Kobe Bryant try to save the Lakers’ season didn’t seem so compelling.

“He’s very close,” Thibodeau said of Rose. “He is showing great patience. Everybody else has to.”

From the Book of Thibs, that’s the best piece of advice since, “Do your job.”

Not even team doctors know the right answer to the only Bulls question that matters: When will Rose return? As Thibodeau advised, think caution over curiosity, later rather than sooner, after the Feb. 17 All-Star Game instead of before it. Think March 3 in Indianapolis against the Pacers, as logical a guess as any. Returning away from home in a calmer environment at a point in the schedule with 10 days before Rose’s first back-to-back challenge would make sense for an organization thinking conservatively.

Those close to Rose suggest he would prefer not to wait that long if it were up to him. It isn’t, thankfully. The calendar is the Bulls’ friend more than their enemy.

Stop comparing Rose’s recovery to Knicks guard Iman Shumpert, who tore his ACL on the same day Rose did last April 28 but returned to action last week. When the Knicks have identified Shumpert as the $95 million future of the franchise, those comparisons will be valid.

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