The Chicago Bulls are expected to make another front-office change this week at the NBA Draft Combine, with Michael Scotto of HoopsHype reporting that the team is adding Acie Law. Law is expected to take on the title of vice president of player personnel.
The move would give the Bulls another new name in a front office that has been changing quickly under Bryson Graham, who recently took over and this week cut ties with the team’s NBA G League general manager, Josh Malone. For Chicago, the timing lands in the middle of one of the league’s busiest personnel gatherings, where teams spend the week talking trades, prospects and the shape of their next roster.
Law’s path to the Bulls is longer than most. He played at Texas A&M from 2003 to 2007, was selected 11th overall by the Atlanta Hawks and spent two seasons in Atlanta before moving through the league. He played five games for the Golden State Warriors in the 2009-2010 season, then a 12-game stretch with the Bulls before the 2010-2011 season became his final year as a player. That season started with the Memphis Grizzlies, and after he was released, he signed with Golden State for a second stint and added 40 more games there.
After his NBA playing career ended, Law went overseas and became a two-time EuroLeague champion and one-time Greek League champion. When he returned to the United States, he moved into scouting and front-office work, taking a scout role with the Sacramento Kings before becoming director of amateur scouting for the Oklahoma City Thunder. He now serves as director of player personnel for the Brooklyn Nets during the 2025-2026 NBA season.
For the Bulls, the hiring fits the kind of rebuild that usually comes with a front-office reset: new voices, new evaluations and less patience for the old structure. Graham has already started clearing space. Adding Law gives Chicago another experienced evaluator as it tries to move faster than the market around it.
The next question is how deep the reshaping goes. Chicago is not acting like a team that wants minor tweaks. It is acting like a club still deciding which parts of its old operation it wants to keep.
