The Chicago Bulls honored hometown hero Derrick Rose by retiring his No. 1 jersey during a ceremony at the United Center on Saturday night, following a 114-111 victory over the Boston Celtics. Rose, a three-time All-Star and the youngest MVP in NBA history, received tributes from legends like Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen. The event celebrated Rose's impact on the city despite never winning a championship.
Derrick Rose's jersey retirement ceremony took place after the Bulls' narrow win against the Celtics, marking a poignant moment for the franchise. Rose, a native of Chicago's Englewood neighborhood, played seven seasons with the Bulls from 2008 to 2016, never missing the playoffs and reaching the Eastern Conference finals once. Drafted No. 1 overall in 2008, he earned Rookie of the Year honors in 2009 and became the league's youngest MVP at age 22 in 2011.
The ceremony featured video messages from Bulls icons Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen. Jordan said, "Looking forward to coming to the United Center and seeing your jersey hanging up there with my jersey." Former teammates Joakim Noah, Luol Deng, and Taj Gibson attended and delivered speeches, as did ex-coach Tom Thibodeau, who declared, "The next stop is the Hall of Fame, and there is no doubt about that."
In his speech, Rose emphasized community over personal achievement: "This journey was never about me. Right from the jump, it was never about me. It was about creating a synergy that somehow people from the city could pull from." He credited his mother Brenda, teammates, family, and fans, while reflecting on his 2012 ACL injury. Defending Thibodeau, Rose stated, "Thibs is the first coach that made me feel special... I showed you physics."
Luol Deng, emotional in his tribute, remarked, "To accomplish this, it took minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, years, but this [banner] this is forever... that's our trophy, man."
Rose's 15-year career included stints with New York, Minnesota, Detroit, Cleveland, and Memphis, but his Bulls tenure defined his legacy. The event highlighted the contrast with the current Bulls, who sit at 23-22 and have made the playoffs only twice in the decade since his departure, underscoring a period of mediocrity.