Skip to content

Rose, Bulls rise to second round

Sitting on the bench with four fouls and his team struggling, Derrick Rose pleaded with his coach to put him back in the game.
Joakim Noah, Jeff Foster, Josh McRoberts
Chicago Bull Joakim Noah

Chicago 116 Indiana 89

CHICAGO — Sitting on the bench with four fouls and his team struggling, Derrick Rose pleaded with his coach to put him back in the game.

Chicago coach Tom Thibodeau took the risk and his All-Star guard responded, lifting the Bulls to the second round.

Rose scored 25 points, Luol Deng added 24 and Chicago finally played like a top seed, knocking off the Indiana Pacers 116-89 in Game 5 to wrap up their first-round playoff series Tuesday night.

The top-seeded Bulls can breathe a little easier after getting a dominant performance by their MVP candidate and an emphatic win that came on the heels of four dramatic games.

They can also turn their attention to the Eastern Conference semifinals, where they’ll meet Atlanta or Orlando.

“Speechless right now,” Rose said.

“I really can’t believe it. It’s a great accomplishment. I’m happy for my teammates, happy for my coaching staff. They did a really great job.”

Rose seemed just fine after spraining his left ankle in Game 4.

He had it taped and acknowledged he was a bit apprehensive at first, but he wound up hitting 8 of 17 shots.

He dominated in the early going and came up big in the third after the Pacers pulled within four.

He scored 10 points over the final six minutes after returning with four fouls, and Chicago ended the quarter on a 23-8 run to blow the game open.

Joakim Noah added 14 points and eight rebounds, and the Bulls won a playoff series for the first time since they swept Miami in the first round in 2007 and only the second time since the championship era. It was clearly their most impressive performance of the post-season even though Carlos Boozer scored just two points.

“All year long, we’ve focused in on going step by step,” Thibodeau said.

“I think once you start skipping steps and looking at all the other stuff, that’s when you get lost. So we knew we were capable of playing better, although when you look at the series, to be up 3-1, you’ve got to do a lot of things well, too.”

Orlando 101 Atlanta76

ORLANDO, Fla. — The Orlando Magic aren’t ready for their season to end just yet.

Facing their first opening round post-season exit since 2007, the Magic blew out the Atlanta Hawks 101-76 on Tuesday night.

Jason Richardson scored 17 points and J.J. Redick added 14 off the bench to lead the Magic.

The win trims Atlanta’s series’ lead to 3-2 and keeps alive the Magic’s hopes of becoming the ninth team in NBA history to win a playoff series after trailing 3-1.

If they can win Game 6 Thursday in Atlanta, they would host a decisive Game 7 on Saturday.

Magic centre Dwight Howard battled foul trouble throughout the night and had just one field goal, finishing with eight points and eight rebounds.

Orlando didn’t need his offence, though, as it broke out of a series-long shooting funk with 11 three-pointers.

“We’re a good shooting team,” Magic coach Stan Van Gundy said. “This is more of us than what we showed in the first four games...This isn’t an aberration. We’ve been doing this for four years. The first four games were the aberration.”