Chicago Bulls class of 2024 Ring of Honor inductees from left to right, (Back Row) Jim Cleamons, Erik Heiland, Ivika Duran, Clarence Gaines, Jr., John Ligmanowski, Chip Schaefer, Jim Stack, Al Vermeil(Middle Row) Randy Brown, Jud Buechler, Jason Coffey, James Edwards, Jack Haley, Jr., Ron Harper, Bill Wennington, Luc Longley, John Salley, Steve Kerr(Front Row) Artis Gilmore, Matt Kerr, Greg Klein, Bob Love, JJ Parrish, Thelma Krause, Chris Winter, Phil Jackson, Toni Kukoc are honored during the inaugural ceremony at halftime of a game between the Bulls and Golden State Warriors at United Center. Kamil Krzaczynski-USA TODAY Sports

Chicago Bulls fans hit an all-time low on Friday night at United Center. Their actions were so abhorrent that retired Bulls center and current color analyst, Stacey King, couldn’t bite his tongue.

After booing the widow of former general manager Jerry Krause, who was inducted into the team’s newly-created Ring of Honor, bringing her to tears, King lit into the fans.

“Chicago is a sports town. And what we witnessed today when Jerry Krause’s name was called — and the people that booed Jerry Krause and his widow, who was accepting this honor for him — it was the worst thing I’ve ever seen in my life,” King said. “I hurt for that lady. It brought her to tears. And whoever booed her in this arena should be ashamed of themselves. That’s not Chicago. That’s New York, Philly. Chicago’s not like that. We don’t have a reputation of being that way.

“Whether you like Jerry Krause or not, that man brought six championships here. He didn’t shoot a basket, nor did he get a rebound. But he put six titles up in this arena. There’s a lot of teams that don’t even have one. That was really classless. I was disappointed in the people that booed. It was a sad day.”

Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr, who won three of those titles with the Bulls as a player, was equally taken aback by the disrespectful and disgusting behavior.

“It’s shameful. It’s absolutely shameful,” Kerr said after the game, via Cody Westerlund. “I can not believe… I am devastated for Thelma and the Krause family. What can we possibly be thinking?”

Krause died in 2017 at the age of 77. He was responsible for piecing together the great Bulls dynasty but was also blamed for breaking it apart, and was portrayed as the villain in the ESPN miniseries, “The Last Dance.”

Whatever your feelings about Krause, booing his widow to tears during a celebration of that historic team is a remarkable new low, as both Stacey King and Steve Kerr suggested.

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