"I literally have nothing to offer" - Kukoc admits he told the Bulls not to re-sign him before they even offered a new contract
After their sixth NBA title, the Chicago Bulls dissolved into dust, their dynasty no more.
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The 1998–99 season, shortened by a lockout, opened with Michael Jordan officially retiring for the second time, Phil Jackson gone, and Scottie Pippen off to chase another ring with the Houston Rockets. It was a full-blown reset in Chicago.
One player who still stood tall in a Bulls jersey was Toni Kukoc. The smooth-shooting Croatian forward, once a luxury on a team of stars, had quietly become the centerpiece of a franchise suddenly stripped of its core. However, as the Bulls looked to retool and Kukoc kept grinding through injuries and transition, he knew something the front office didn't.
Toni wasn't coming back
Kukoc was never built for hollow stats or empty leadership roles. By the time the Bulls asked him about returning for another season, his mind was already elsewhere.
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"Chicago wanted to bring me back for another year," Kukoc recalled. "But I was honest with them. I just said, 'As much as I would love to be here and play another season for you guys, I don't think it's right, because I literally have nothing to offer.'"
Even with legends gone, Kukoc had kept the machine moving in that chaotic lockout year. He led the Bulls in scoring (18.8), rebounding (7.0) and assists (5.3) in 1998–99, an all-around effort that showed he could still carry weight when called upon. But those numbers, as sturdy as they were, didn't tell the full story. Toni had always been a team-first player.
The rebuild was already underway. On Feb. 16, 2000, after another solid season in which he averaged 15.7 points across 24 games, the Bulls dealt their championship forward to the Philadelphia 76ers as part of a three-team trade. It was a clear sign that the franchise had moved into its next phase and that Kukoc's chapter was closing fast.
The Croatian's short stint in Philadelphia didn't offer much room to re-establish himself, and the following year, he was sent again, this time to the Atlanta Hawks. The rotations shrank, the minutes got shorter, and behind it all, something deeper was shifting.
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Related: "After much consideration, I am now prepared to rule" - When Utah judge ruled Michael Jordan pushed off in his final shot in '98
Kukoc's goodbye
It wasn't that Toni didn't want to play competitive basketball. However, the Croatian's body had been fighting its own war. The graceful movements that once made him a EuroLeague legend and a matchup nightmare in the NBA were becoming harder to summon. The issue was a physical breakdown.
"The doctors, a year or two prior, told me that my hips are running out of cartilage," Kukoc said. "And I'm probably going to have to have a hip replacement in the near future. And with some lower back problems, I really knew that there was not much that I could give to anybody."
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The injuries weren't publicized in the way they might be today, and it was just a slow, painful fade from relevance. After Atlanta, Toni was moved once more, landing with the Bucks. In Milwaukee, Kukoc found a quieter role as a veteran mentor on a team searching for its own identity.
He played sparingly, conserving his body, understanding where the limits were. Between 2002 and 2006, Kukoc played only 197 games total, averaging under eight points per night. The numbers weren't the story anymore.
In the 2006 offseason, Kukoc faced a crossroads. He made it clear that it was either Milwaukee or Chicago, or nothing. And so it ended. After 13 seasons in the NBA and a decade spent adapting, sacrificing and outsmarting defenders, the three-time champion officially closed the door.
However, the respect never faded. In 2021, Kukoc was finally inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame, an overdue nod to a player who bridged eras, languages and basketball philosophies with rare grace.
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Related: "Four to five hours, I talked about the Bulls' offense" - When two coaches locked Toni Kukoc in a train cabin to discuss the triangle offense
This story was originally reported by Basketball Network on Jul 4, 2025, where it first appeared.

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