Trends-CA

Is Arturas Karnisovas Setting Bulls’ Donovan Up For Failure?

In the cutthroat world of NBA front offices, where egos clash harder than elbows in the paint, the Chicago Bulls’ saga feels like a bad soap opera.

Arturas Karnisovas built an impressive international scouting resume with the Rockets and transferred those skills into impeccable roster-building acumen in Denver.

He hitched his wagon to Billy Donovan, who won everywhere from college to Oklahoma City. But five years in, with a middling 204-220 record under Donovan, you have to wonder: Is Karnisovas quietly sabotaging his own coach?

The Silent Extension: No Cheers for the Coach

Remember four years ago when Donovan got his first contract extension? Yeah, neither does anyone else, because the Reinsdorfs kept it quieter than a library during finals week. 

Nothing screams “I believe in you” like hiding your commitment from the fans, along with the local media.

Karnisovas, who couldn’t stop grinning when he landed Donovan in 2020, suddenly went radio silent on public endorsements.

Fast forward to 2025, and they’re at it again: quiet extensions for Karnisovas himself, GM Marc Eversley, and a more public Donovan extension after the Knicks made overtures in hiring him. But if you’re not shouting your coach’s praises from the rooftops, are you really backing him? Or just hedging your bets?

Drafting For Tomorrow, While Ignoring Today

Karnisovas talks a big game about building a winner, but his draft strategy? It’s like stocking a gourmet kitchen with fresh ingredients that won’t ripen for years. Since taking over, he’s gone all-in on high upside players: Patrick Williams in 2020, Matas Buzelis in 2024, and Noa Essengue in 2025.

No ready-now players here. Only recently have we seen Karnisovas invest fully into plug-and-play vets to elevate Donovan’s schemes. But mostly we’ve witnessed a youth movement that’s more potential than production. This is leaving a Hall of Fame coach with a roster that screams rebuild, rather than contend now.

Karnisovas hasn’t made any significant upgrades-no blockbuster trades for stars, just tinkering around the edges. The result? A team stuck in play-in purgatory, far from the championship blueprint that a coach of Donovan’s accomplishments should have.

Reinsdorf Backing and Behind-the Scenes Battles

Donovan is nobody’s fool. He’s publicly touted his desire to be “a part of building something” along with the support he’s had from owners Jerry and Michael Reinsdorf over the years. 

The elder Reinsdorf publicly congratulated Donovan on his Hall of Fame induction with a huge nod to his coaching prowess. But Karnisovas could view this as a threat, after-all, if Billy’s whispering in Jerry’s ear, who is really calling the shots?

Rumors have swirled of front office friction, with extensions feeling like cease-fires rather than celebrations.

Let’s not ignore the nepotism nugget, either. Donovan’s son, Billy III, snagged the head caching gig for the Windy City Bulls G-League squad. Promoted after a brief three-year stint as an assistant, it’s a clear sign of Donovan’s influence in the organization.

Donovan was Never Quite Ready to Elevate or Enforce

Donovan’s track record screams “college coach comfort zone.” 

Flash back to 2007. He signs with the Orlando Magic, then bolts back to Florida days later, citing family and second thoughts.

Reluctance?

More like cold feet on the pro stage. In OKC, he deferred to stars like Russell Westbrook and Kevin Durant, humbly admitting, “Durant knows more about guarding Kawhi than I could ever tell him.”

That sounds sweet, reflective, but also like a coach ready to babysit egos. It doesn’t sound like someone ready to build a culture of success. Donovan was quick to bench unheralded talent like Zach LaVine and young upside players like Matas Buzelis. 

But proven veterans with playoff experience like Nikola Vucevic presently and DeMar Derozan, previously had their turnovers and inconsistencies handled with kid gloves.

No real accountability across the board means no real elevation, just excuses in a losing streak. If Karnisovas was setting him up, Donovan was handing him the rope.

The Patton Firing: Axing Development and Angering the Locker Room

Adding insult to injury, Karnisovas fired Peter Patton, the beloved director of player development and shooting coach, right after the Bulls’ loss to the Heat in April 2025. Players were reportedly “pissed off,” with many crediting Patton for their improvements.

This unilateral move by Karnisovas spotlighted organizational dysfunction, leaving Donovan without a key ally in player growth.

In the end, Karnisovas isn’t overtly sabotaging Donovan, but his actions should raise some eyebrows. Donovan’s Reinsdorf ties and family entrenchment might save him, but if they keep spinning wheels, someone’s getting thrown under the bus.

And Karnisovas might be driving it. 

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button