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Bulls end Pacers' perfection

By Associated Press in Chicago | China Daily | Updated: 2013-11-18 07:41

Derrick Rose came to work unsure if he'd be able to play.

He left with his confidence intact and his team's future looking very bright.

Luol Deng scored 23 points, Rose added 20 and the Chicago Bulls knocked off the NBA's last unbeaten team with a 110-94 win over the Indiana Pacers on Saturday night.

Taj Gibson had 15 points and eight rebounds for Chicago (5-3), which won its fourth straight game behind 11-of-19 shooting from 3-point range.

 Bulls end Pacers' perfection

Indiana Pacers forward Paul George tries to control the ball in front of Chicago Bulls guard Jimmy Butler during the second quarter in Chicago on Saturday. The Bulls won 110-94. Kamil Krzaczynski / Associated Press

"We got off to a good start," Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau said. "(The Pacers) missed some shots that they usually make. Overall, I thought it was a good win. We played very unselfishly."

Indiana (9-1) was the NBA's first 9-0 team since the 2002-03 Dallas Mavericks, who started 14-0. The nine wins to start a season matched a franchise record.

Nursing a sore right hamstring, Rose was effective in his 30 minutes on the court. He weaved around and penetrated the league's best defense, which hadn't allowed more than 91 points to any opponent this season.

Rose was injured on Monday against Cleveland, and did not play in Chicago's 96-80 win on Friday in Toronto.

"I was just being smart about the situation," he said about not playing against the Raptors. "This is my first time having a hamstring injury. I don't know how it would go if I had played last night. I don't think I'd be able to play tonight."

The 25-year-old former MVP shook off the rust after a pair of early off-balance misses. He sank a floater in the lane three minutes in, followed by a 3-pointer 30 seconds later to ignite a 12-2 first-quarter run for Chicago.

"They were giving me shots," Rose said. "I've got to take those shots. I saw some go in, so I kept shooting."

Rose cozied up at the 3-point arc in the second quarter, knocking down all three attempts as the Bulls took a 25-point advantage into the half. He finished 6-for-11 from beyond the arc.

"Most of Rose's threes were pretty well contested considering his speed," Pacers coach Frank Vogel contended. "You can't just jam him. You have to give up something. You have to give them credit."

Kirk Hinrich came off the bench to contribute 13 points, eight assists and four rebounds for the Bulls, who avenged a 97-80 loss at Indiana on Nov 6.

The Pacers lost despite having all five starters - and two reserves - score in double-digits.

Roy Hibbert led Indiana with 14 points a day after posting season-highs with 24 points and eight blocks.

The Pacers were coming off their most lopsided win of the season, a 104-77 drubbing of Milwaukee.

 

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