Vain1 totally writes his post in Word and then uses the thesaurus function for half of the words in it. Here comes a rant full of unnecessary words and first grade grammar skills.
I've never personally been a fan of Rose's game, but expecting him to look like this all season, assuming he's healthy, is a silly assumption. He'll work his way back to the inefficient player with supreme athleticism who can put points up in a hurry that we've seen in the past. The difference with him this season is that he will supposedly have a wider array of offensive talent around him than he's had before.
Outside of Carlos Boozer, the assumed offensive skills of this Bulls roster actually make a lot of sense. Joakim Noah (because of Rose's absence, IMO), has blossomed into an all-star big man who can impact the game in a variety of ways. Taj Gibson is a solid-yet-unspectacular player on both ends of the court who learned how to be used as a weapon and not as a prospect.
Jimmy Butler is one of the best defenders in the league and is renowned as a worker dating back to his days at Marquette. I expect his set jumper to improve each season bit by bit. I doubt he'll be a regular marksman yet, but he may shoot in the neighborhood of 34-35% from 3. That's enough hot keep him on the court for all the other things he does.
The real key, however, is shooting. Doug and Mirotic are both good shooters with strong IQ as long as they can stay on the court defensively. Gibson is a decent mid range shooter. Hinrich is no slouch from outside either.
Derrick Rose has a very strong vision and passing ability. The issue is that he's yet to play alongside another supreme offensive threat. The closest he's had were Ben Gordon and Carlos Boozer. In both cases, those guys certainly benefitted from his point guard skills.
When you have a guy as athletic as Rose (and we're seeing that his physical gifts are still there) with strong vision, there are going to be shots opened up for guys on the floor as long as spacing remains good. We saw this with LeBron for years. They aren't going to be a bad team if they play defense and create shots. I think they'll do both and will finish as one of the top teams in the East as a result.
The trump card, however, is that LeBron can defend Rose in the playoffs when needed and disrupt all of Chicago's shot selection as a result. The Heat showed in 2011 that if you can make Rose uncomfortable, he'll falter. I think we'll see a repeat of that this postseason (should the teams match up), and the Cavs will win in 5 or 6 games.