There is a finesse to Andre Drummond’s game … when called for.
The when called for part being the key for the Bulls big man.
At 6-foot-10, 280 pounds, Drummond knows what the true foundation of his game is built on. He knows what pays the bills.
On most nights, that involves physically moving other grown men, reminding them that rebounds are his for the taking, and anything that happens to fall in the hands of someone else is simply on loan.
Brute force exemplified, except when it comes to making waves.
The Bulls are Drummond’s sixth team since the end of the 2020 season, so the veteran understands that complaining about playing time or his role was something a younger Drummond may have done.
That doesn’t mean he’s thrilled with the current situation over his last six games. Since getting just seven minutes in the loss to Oklahoma City, Drummond has been handed single-digit minutes in three of the last five contests. That included eight minutes in the Wednesday win over the Wizards.
This for a guy that was averaging just under 17 minutes per night in the first month of the season.
Coach Billy Donovan has admittedly leaned on a smaller second unit lately, which has severely cut into Drummond’s playing time.
“I have a lot of confidence in Andre, he’s been a really good guy,’’ Donovan said. “Like any of these players, they want to be out there on the floor. But you’re not going to be able to play everybody all the time.’’
But not everybody has a per 36 like Drummond.
If the center was to get 36 minutes a game, his rebounding numbers would be a career-best 19.4 per game, to go along with 16.6 points.
Rebounding numbers that would lead the NBA.
“For me it’s just a position I have to accept for the time being,’’ Drummond said. “My job is to do whatever it takes to help this team win, whether it’s playing 15 or playing 30 minutes. I said this before, earlier in the year — anyone who knows basketball and has seen me play, knows what I’m capable of doing in 30-plus minutes, but that’s not what this team is asking of me right now.
“It’s to come out off the bench, be a spark anyway I can, and try and help them win games. That’s what I have to accept.’’
There are two truths going on.
More playing time for Drummond has been better for the Bulls this season in the win-loss column, but just not lately. Drummond and the second unit were dominant in the plus-minus category the first six weeks of the season, but Drummond’s plus-minus has plummeted lately.
As of Thursday, his minus-27 was the fourth-worst on the team with only Zach LaVine (minus-36), Patrick Williams (minus-95) and Ayo Dosunmu (minus-120) trailing.
The problem is that second unit has also undergone different looks the last few weeks, as Donovan continues searching for groupings that work. One of those looks was making Alex Caruso a permanent starter.
The heart of that “Bench Mob ’22 version’’ was Caruso, Drummond and Goran Dragic. There was a chemistry with the three that’s now changed.
“Goran and I played together before, so we had that chemistry,’’ Drummond said. “You put our three heads together, the three vets, Goran, myself and Alex, and it can be incredible for us. We were going out there and taking it personal. Whoever was with us, we knew that we we’re better than the next five that were coming in for the opposing team.’’
Now, Drummond isn’t sure who he’s going in with, and for how long. His hope is that as rotations settle in that will change.
“I’ve learned to control what I can control,’’ Drummond said. “Like I said, you just have to accept it.’’