"Hell, probably some of them can't stand or don't like me. That's fine," Butler said, per the Chicago Sun-Times' Joe Cowley. "I'm still waking up fortunate and blessed every day, just like Dwyane is. He still has a fabulous family and a lot more important things to worry about than the opinions of others. But if they dislike him because the guy wants to win, well, then that team has some serious problems on the way."Needless to say, all signs pointed to an awkward exit via buyout for Wade-- and that's exactly what happened. Or so we thought... Now Bulls players and Wade himself have seemingly flipped the script on that narrative as Dwyane Wade himself told K.C. Johnson of the Chicago Tribune that he would reach out to some of his former teammates this season to offer "support and advice." Ummmmm, k? Come on Dwyane, you already wasted everyone's time wearing red. Just move on in wine and gold. Ride off into the sunset clutching LeBron's nutsack and be gone with you. Could it be Wade is just low-key trolling? Considering the Bulls are a division rival, I'm not sold this is an act of selflessness. I'm leaning more toward this being a downright mockery of his hometown team. Evidently, Wade lived on an island during his riveting lone year home; why care now? However, perhaps his intentions are good. I mean... not like the Bulls pose any sort of threat anyways, right? At any rate, the words of Bobby Portis don't seem all that convincing. So you be the judge. "We talked. Everything is cool," Bulls forward Bobby Portis told Johnson. "It wasn't like we didn't like him or anything. It was just we had our troubles during the season." Mhmmmmm... [caption id="" align="alignnone" width="800"]
Obviously satire. But in satire there is truth. (Photo credit: the Kicker)[/caption]Comments
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