The Bulls are in a bit of a weird spot, it is not a full rebuild, but you cannot really call them contenders either, they are somewhere in between. And as that identity crisis plays out, one thing seems to be taking shape: Nikola Vucevic might be on the outside looking in.
Nikola Vucevic, Bulls at a Crossroads: Could the Lakers Call?
Last summer, the Bulls made a clear move toward youth, trading defensive standout Alex Caruso to the Thunder for Josh Giddey. That deal said a lot about where the front office’s head is at. Giddey, still just 21, flashed serious upside late in the 2024–25 season. But even with those signs of growth, the Bulls have kept talks about a long-term deal on ice, perhaps waiting to see just how real his leap is.
It doesn’t stop there. Toward the end of the season, Matas Buzelis started showing real flashes of what he could become, and with the Bulls grabbing French big man Noa Essengue in the draft, it was pretty clear they’re leaning all the way into a youth movement. Put all of that together, and the writing is kind of on the wall: Nikola Vucevic, 33, solid as ever but clearly on a different timeline, may not be part of the Bulls’ next chapter.
Vucevic Playing the Waiting Game
Publicly, he’s been professional about it. In a recent interview with Basket USA, Vucevic said GM Marc Eversley reached out to shoot down rumors.
“The Bulls GM confirmed that none of it was true and that everything we said after the season was still relevant,” he said. He didn’t seem rattled, just realistic. “In the last year of a contract, there’s always speculation. Since I can’t control any of it, I try not to worry,” Vucevic added. That is the kind of calm you only get from a guy who’s seen enough seasons to know how quickly things shift.
And here is the thing: he’s not wrong. Expiring deals like his often become valuable chips around the trade deadline. Combine that with Vucevic’s steady production, solid floor spacing, veteran presence, double-doubles and suddenly he becomes pretty attractive to playoff hopefuls.
A Logical Fit in Los Angeles
No, not the Lakers of a year ago. This version does not feature Anthony Davis; he is in Dallas now, part of the February deal that brought Luka Dončić to L.A. Instead, the Lakers have Deandre Ayton anchoring the frontcourt. Talented? Sure. But behind him, the depth gets thin real fast.
That’s where Vucevic could come in. He wouldn’t need to carry the load, just offer a different flavor of big, more finesse, less rim protection. Someone who can knock down jumpers, crash the boards, and help organize the offense when the starters sit. It is not flashy, but it’s effective.
He might not move the needle in headlines, but in the locker rooms and rotations? He’d matter. A guy like Vucevic could ease the pressure on Ayton, bring maturity to a team that’s still feeling out its identity after a massive midseason shakeup, and stabilize second units that often spiral without structure.
For now, Vucevic is still in Chicago, saying all the right things. But with the Bulls clearly pivoting and his deal set to expire, it feels like a matter of when, and not if he is moved.
And if the Lakers are serious about making another postseason push, they’d be smart to at least pick up the phone.
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