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Bulls forward Matas Buzelis dunks over Pistons forward Isaiah Stewart during the fourth quarter of the home opener Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2025, at the United Center. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)
Bulls forward Matas Buzelis dunks over Pistons forward Isaiah Stewart during the fourth quarter of the home opener Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2025, at the United Center. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)
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Matas Buzelis isn’t afraid to dunk on anyone — seriously, anyone — in the NBA.

On Wednesday night, that simple fact buoyed the Chicago Bulls twice in a desperate sprint to finish a 115-111 season-opening win over the Detroit Pistons.

The Bulls spent three quarters piling up a 23-point lead and fewer than 15 minutes squandering it. The Pistons cut the lead to nine with just under 10 minutes to play. The air in the United Center rippled with the slow exhale of a crowd that became accustomed to this pattern of implosions and collapses last season.

But here’s the thing about desperation — it takes very little to be dispelled. For the Bulls, all it took was a half-second of flight from their youngest star.

The next play stalled out. Ayo Dosunmu balked under the basket. Isaac Okoro nearly let a pass knock him backward out of bounds. But once Okoro put the ball on the court, Buzelis spotted a narrow crack up the gut of the Pistons defense and took off running.

And, no, it didn’t matter that Isaiah Stewart — a notably gnarly defender who weighs 40 pounds more than Buzelis — waited eagerly under the basket. Buzelis planted both feet and soared, one arm cocked back with ill intent. When Stewart raised a hand to block his shot, he simply pushed — hard — and the man with momentum won out to put the Bulls ahead by 11.

“I’m not really worried he was there,” Buzelis said. “I’m athletic enough to finish over anybody, so I don’t really care about that.”

Photos: Chicago Bulls open season at home with a 115-111 win over the Detroit Pistons

Before the game, coach Billy Donovan preached temperance.

He understands the high hopes pinned to Buzelis’ shoulders in his second season. The fans want Buzelis to be an All-Star, an antidote to the irrelevance that has plagued this team for most of the last decade.

But Donovan wants Buzelis to understand this season is only a single step toward the player he hopes to become.

“He has not arrived,” Donovan said. “He just hasn’t. And that’s the truth. I love Matas and I think he’s got an unbelievable runway to be an outstanding player in this league if he keeps his drive and his motivation and doesn’t think he’s arrived.

“As long as he can keep his drive there, I don’t really worry about it. He’s just becoming a really, really good basketball player.”

Even after a statement win, Donovan’s words still rang true.

Bulls forward Matas Buzelis misses a pass for a dunk during the second quarter of the season opener against the Pistons on Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2025, at the United Center. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)
Bulls forward Matas Buzelis misses a pass for a dunk during the second quarter of the season opener against the Pistons on Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2025, at the United Center. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

Buzelis struggled plenty in Wednesday’s win. He failed to make stops as the secondary defender in the final three minutes, missing rotations as the Pistons punched back to tie the score seven times. He missed all three of his 3-point attempts. At times, he still sank into spectator mode on defense.

Donovan hardly could contain his frustration when Buzelis missed a boxout to allow a Pistons offensive rebound in the first half. Buzelis joked with his coach after the game: “That’s the loudest I think I’ve ever heard you yell.”

But for every error, Buzelis found a way to balance his game, sneaking behind shooters to block a shot in recovery and forcing his way to the free-throw line. He finished with 21 points, six rebounds and three blocks.

And when the Bulls found themselves on their back foot once again with 2:05 on the clock, Buzelis was there, already airborne, arcing toward the basket to crush an alley-oop through the rim and give his team a two-point lead.

Winning was a nervous, skittish affair. The Bulls nearly turned the ball over with 12.7 seconds left while leading by one before a successful challenge by Donovan. They needed three free throws from Josh Giddey in the final 13.8 seconds to cling to the lead after leading by 23 early in the second half.

But the victory was a good first step toward breaking a cycle of slow starts that defined the last two seasons. And it also proved that Buzelis — for all his growing up left to do — is ready to ball.

The second-year forward might not have arrived. Not yet. But he announced his intent to ascend to the upper echelon of the league.

Here are four other takeaways from the win.

1. The Bulls were short-handed for the opener.

Wednesday’s game was the first of at least six the Bulls will have to play without starting guard Coby White, who led the team in scoring last season after Zach LaVine was traded to the Sacramento Kings. And the defense also sorely missed backup center Zach Collins, who will be out at least 16 games after undergoing wrist surgery last weekend.

Dosunmu (thumb) and Patrick Williams (ankle) were cleared to play without a minutes restriction, which gave the Bulls a deeper bench.

2. Nikola Vučević’s scoring overcame defensive weaknesses.

Bulls center Nikola Vučević goes up for a shot during the second half of the season opener against the Pistons on Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2025, at the United Center. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)
Bulls center Nikola Vučević goes up for a shot during the second half of the season opener against the Pistons on Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2025, at the United Center. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

It wasn’t an easy defensive assignment for Vučević, who struggled with familiar weaknesses as the Pistons attacked the big man through the pick-and-roll.

Early in the game, the Pistons established a clear point of offensive leverage — get the ball over Vučević’s head and the rest will work itself out. Detroit made two dunks in the first 90 seconds off lobs created by this tactic, taking advantage of Vučević’s tendency to rotate early while providing help on Cade Cunningham.

The defensive woes were a lone detractor to the impact Vučević made on offense while leading the Bulls with 28 points and 14 rebounds. The center gobbled up floaters when the Pistons gave him space in the midrange and torched the perimeter, shooting 4-for-6 from 3-point range.

3. Hot and cold for Josh Giddey.

Pistons guard Cade Cunningham locks arms with Bulls guard Josh Giddey while he passes the ball during the first quarter of the season opener Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2025, at the United Center. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)
Pistons guard Cade Cunningham locks arms with Bulls guard Josh Giddey while he passes the ball during the first quarter of the season opener Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2025, at the United Center. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

It’s hard to deny the statistical impact Giddey made — but those 19 points and 11 assists came after a shaky start.

Giddey didn’t score for nearly five minutes to start the game. He whiffed the entire basket on his first shot. And Ausar Thompson battered his third shot with a thumping block from behind, sending Giddey sprawling forward onto his stomach.

Then — as he often does — Giddey found his footing. He floated running shots over the outstretched arms of defenders and slung half-blind skip passes to set up teammates for open baseline drives. He still struggled with ball control, coughing up six turnovers. But Giddey also clinched the win for the Bulls, scoring the last three points at the line and grabbing the final defensive rebound.

4. No time for Noa Essengue.

First-round draft pick Noa Essengue didn’t get to make his NBA debut despite multiple injury absences opening space in the rotation.

This wasn’t a complete surprise. The Bulls always planned to take a slow approach toward the 18-year-old’s development. Essengue underwent an extensive pregame workout with assistant coach John Bryant, focusing mainly on cuts and single-dribble drives to the basket off the catch.

The pressing question for the rookie is when he will make his debut — and how long it will take for Donovan to trust him with substantial minutes.