Chicago Bulls executive vice president John Paxson isn't sweating the last two weeks filled with turmoil upon the firing of head coach Fred Hoiberg and his immediate replacement with Jim Boylen, a decision that was met with some resistance after the latter's old-school practice habits.

Boylen is hoping to instill discipline and shape the culture of this roster, but players have come out with a sour taste in their mouths — from receiving public criticism and shame from their own head coach, to players like Jabari Parker quickly seeing their opportunity end under Boylen.

The Bulls look disjointed at best, a perception that could hinder Chicago's recruiting of star players in the future — yet something Paxson doesn't worry about now.

“We’re not at that stage to worry about it,” Paxson said, according to K.C. Johnson of the Chicago Tribune. “All along what we’ve talked about is in the long run our young guys developing the way we think they can develop. If they become top NBA players — Lauri Markkanen, Wendell Carter Jr., Zach (LaVine) — and you get to be a pretty good basketball team, that sells people wanting to play with guys like that.

“You see it all the time. The good players want to play with the other good players. So we’ll address that when the time comes.”

There's only one problem with Paxson's statement — the Bulls aren't … err very good. They sit dead-last in the Eastern Conference with a record of 6-23 and have shown no signs of righting that ship under Boylen either, having lost 10 of their last 11 games.