Bargnani, DeRozan have 24 each as Raptors win

This wasn’t the way the Chicago Bulls wanted to welcome Joakim Noah back to the lineup. It wasn’t much of a way to warm-up for Thursday’s meeting with Miami, either.

TORONTO (AP) — This wasn’t the way the Chicago Bulls wanted to welcome Joakim Noah back to the lineup. It wasn’t much of a way to warm-up for Thursday’s meeting with Miami, either.

Andrea Bargnani and DeMar DeRozan each scored 24 points, Jose Calderon had 17 assists and the Toronto Raptors beat the Bulls 118-113 on Wednesday night, snapping Chicago’s four-game winning streak and spoiling Noah’s return from thumb surgery.

"It’s definitely not the result I wanted but we’ve just got to keep fighting," Noah said. "We’ve got to come with a better edge."

Derrick Rose scored 19 of his 32 points in the fourth quarter and added 10 assists, and Carlos Boozer had 24 points for the Bulls, who had won 10 of their previous 12.

Amir Johnson scored 17 points, Leandro Barbosa had 13 and Sonny Weems 12 as the Raptors beat the Bulls for the first time in three meetings. Toronto had won just two of its last 20 but shot 58.1 percent against the Bulls, the best showing by a Chicago opponent this season.

Asked what disappointed him most about his team’s defense, Chicago coach Tom Thibodeau was blunt.

"What didn’t?" he said. "Every aspect. Start with defensive transition, keeping the ball out of the paint, challenging shots. Every aspect of our defense went out the window.

"Offensively we scored more, but defensively it was a disaster," Thibodeau said.

The Bulls, who host the Heat on Thursday night, don’t have much time to sort out what went wrong.

"We wanted this so we would go into (the Miami game) with a lot of confidence," Rose said. "Now we’ve got to go into it very aggressively. We’ve got to prove the point that we can play defense."

Noah returned to the starting lineup after missing 30 games because of surgery to repair a torn ligament in his right thumb. The Bulls had gone 22-8 in his absence.

Thibodeau said he would use Noah in 6-to-8 minute increments as he worked to regain his conditioning. Noah finished with seven points and had 16 rebounds in 24 minutes.

"He missed a lot of time," Thibodeau said. "He’s rusty. His timing is not there."

Chicago got 19 points from Luol Deng and 11 from Ronnie Brewer.

After Brewer missed a free throw that would have tied the game at 92 with 8:27 left, Toronto answered with a pair from the line by Weems, a baseline jumper from Barbosa and an alley-oop pass from Calderon to Johnson, forcing the Bulls to call timeout with 6:14 left and the Raptors up 98-91. Rose stopped the run with a three-point play before Toronto pushed its lead to eight.

Boozer scored on a layup and a hook shot as the Bulls scored six of the next eight points, making it 104-100 with 3:04 remaining. Barbosa’s three-point play gave Toronto a seven-point lead, but Rose made four straight free throws, then tied the game at 107 on a 3 with 1:59 left.

DeRozan and Rose each made layups, then each made a pair from the line. DeRozan made two more free throws with 49 seconds left and, after Rose missed a jumper at the other end, a layup by Johnson gave the Raptors a 115-111 lead with 16 seconds to play.

"Defensively we just weren’t there," Rose said. "When we needed a stop toward the end."

Noah missed all four shots he took in the first quarter but did pick up 10 rebounds, and Deng scored 10 points as the Bulls led 27-21 after one quarter. The Raptors battled back to tie it at 43-all late in the first half, but the Bulls reclaimed the lead thanks to seven points from Boozer. An alley-oop from Calderon to DeRozan cut Chicago’s lead to 58-55 at the half.

Toronto led 81-72 on a jump shot by Davis with 2:37 left in the third but the Bulls ended the quarter with a 9-4 run to trail 85-81 heading into the fourth.

Acquired from the Bulls on Monday in exchange for a first-round draft pick in 2011, James Johnson made his first start of the year against his former team. He finished with nine points.

"From the opening tip he brought an aggressiveness that we wanted him to bring," Raptors coach Jay Triano said. "He had three blocked shots and he likes to get up."

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.

(AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Chris Young)

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