Williams is averaging career lows in his fifth year with Chicago — somewhat unexpected after he signed a five-year, $90 million extension.
Chicago Bulls head coach Billy Donovan's blunt take on Patrick Williams isn't sitting well with frustrated fans.
After years of bad draft lottery luck, the Chicago Bulls finally got a top-five pick in the 2020 NBA Draft. The fourth pick is the highest selection the Bulls have had since 2008, when they chose Derrick Rose first overall.
In another dud of a performance in a season full of underwhelming play, Chicago forward Patrick Williams scored just two points and shot 1-of-9 in the Bulls’ 109-97 loss to the 76ers on Saturday evening at the United Center.
Patrick Williams knows he isn’t living up to expectations. But the former No. 4 pick still can’t tell what’s gone wrong — or how to fix it. Went long with Patrick on the missed dunks, ball handling and shaky confidence that have defined Year 5.
The New Orleans Pelicans have been named among the favorites to land Patrick Williams from the Chicago Bulls ahead of the trade deadline.
A source told the Sun-Times the Bulls' front office is more than open to trading Williams if the situation presents itself. The issue, however, is the organization signed him to a five-year, $90 million extension last summer.
Even amid another losing season for the Chicago Bulls, the wing often fades out of focus by the final buzzer. Williams often struggles to score in double digits, gets outrebounded by guards, never leads the team in any meaningful statistic. Night in and night out, his minutes on the court only stir up increasingly frantic questions.
The Oklahoma City Thunder have been named as one of the favorites to land Patrick Williams from the Chicago Bulls via trade.
A source Saturday told the Sun-Times that Karnisovas finally has bought in to the idea that 23-year-old forward Patrick Williams needs a change of scenery, opening the door for him to be on the ...
The Chicago Bulls are ready to part ways with Patrick Williams.Arturas Karnisovas, the Bulls' executive vice president of basketball operations, is open to trading the former fourth overall pick amid the forward's fifth season in Chicago,
Even as the game slows down for him, Williams is struggling to see the floor as a proactive attacker. For a player like LaVine, it’s almost second nature to see those half-second openings when ...