Augustin, Noah lead Bulls past Pistons 105-94

0

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — The Chicago Bulls didn’t get a great night from their starters Wednesday. Their
backups made sure they didn’t need one.
Reserves D.J. Augustin and Taj Gibson combined for 48 points on 18-of-30 shooting as the Bulls beat the
Detroit Pistons 105-94 for their fifth win in six games. The Bulls only led by one point going into the
fourth, but Augustin and Gibson had 20 of Chicago’s 34 in the fourth.
“A lot of guys are stepping up on this team right now,” Gibson said. “Everyone is working hard and
helping in whatever way we need. The guys are just focused on the team right now.”
Both coaches went with seven-man rotations for most of the game, but Chicago’s duo completely outmatched
Rodney Stuckey and Will Bynum. They finished with 12 points on 5-of-20 shooting, including a 1-for-11
night from Bynum.
“Will played his heart out, just like he always does,” Pistons coach John Loyer said. “He gives us
everything he’s got every night, but there are going to be some games where the ball just rolls off the
rim. They’ve got two very good players coming off the bench — Gibson has done that all year for them and
Augustin has been like that since he got to Chicago.”
Joakim Noah finished with 10 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists for his sixth career triple-double,
including two in the last three games and three in the last month, while Jimmy Butler had 18 points and
12 rebounds.
“Jo’s our leader, and a triple-double is nothing to him,” Butler said. “We are starting to expect that
from him. He does so many things well that it makes it easier for the rest of us.”
Greg Monroe led Detroit with 27 points, but the Pistons struggled all night to get anything going from
the outside. They took 34 shots from outside the paint, and only hit nine (26.5 percent), including
2-of-11 on 3-pointers. In contrast, the Bulls hit 46.7 percent from outside.
“They hit shots, especially in the fourth quarter, and they picked up their intensity on defense,” Loyer
said. “We didn’t match that, and when you do that against a playoff team, you aren’t going to win many
games.”
Detroit led for most of the second quarter, but appeared to get rattled by an official’s decision. Smith
was driving for a layup that would have made it 43-34, but the shot was blocked by Mike Dunleavy. Smith
didn’t get back on defense, staying near the basket to argue the call, and Jimmy Butler got an easy
alley-oop dunk at the other end.
Smith was then called for a technical, and Augustin hit the free throw to make it a four-point game.
Chicago scored the next four points to tie the game, and a technical called on Loyer with 3.7 seconds
left in the half helped the Bulls take a 52-47 lead at the intermission.
The Pistons narrowed the gap to 71-70 in the third quarter, but Augustin and Gibson kept scoring off the
bench to help Chicago stay in front. Augustin’s three-point play early in the fourth keyed an 11-2 run
to start the period, putting the Bulls up by 10.
“We talk about how we want to finish games, and we were real strong coming out for the fourth,” Chicago
coach Tom Thibodeau said. “Our defense was strong, and our ball movement was good. Hitting the open guy
makes a big difference.”
Augustin wasn’t finished, either. His 3-pointer gave the Bulls a 15-point lead with six minutes to go,
and the Pistons never threatened down the stretch.
“They just outplayed us in the fourth quarter,” Andre Drummond said. “They are a very disciplined team
that prides itself on defense. We hung with them for three quarters, but they ran their offense in the
fourth quarter and outexecuted us.”
NOTES: Loyer’s technical at the end of the first was called in a highly unusual manner. Loyer was
discussing a call with official Olandis Poole, who showed no indication of calling anything, but John
Goble rang him up from 30 feet away. … Gibson and Brandon Jennings picked up technicals arguing calls
in the second half. Gibson left the game with 3:39 to play after rolling his right ankle, but returned
moments later. … IndyCar champion Scott Dixon was honored during the first half as part of a promotion
for the Detroit Grand Prix.

No posts to display