Growing up in Chicago, if you were into basketball in the 2000s, you knew exactly who Luol Deng and Derrick Rose were. I remember those Bulls jerseys everywhere — the throwbacks, the custom tees, the kids hoopin’ in every park, dreaming like we were gonna run it someday. Watching #9 and #1 on that court? It was like seeing the whole city’s hope wrapped up in two dudes we felt we knew. That hustle, that heart — that was ours.
But here’s what really gets me: Luol didn’t just ball hard on the court… he turned that same discipline and Chicago tenacity into a serious business empire. After his NBA career, Deng didn’t just disappear or chill — he built something lasting.
Luol’s story is so Chicago — drafted by the Bulls, traded to the city we bleed for, and then planting roots in the real world. He played 15 seasons in the NBA, was a two-time All-Star, and stacked up over $166 million in earnings before he ever did anything else. But the real magic happened when he started thinking about life off the court while he was still playing.
See, Luol didn’t wait until after retirement to make moves. When he was at Duke, he linked up with mentors — even the daughter of JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon — and through those connections got real estate guidance way before most athletes even think about investing.
That led to D3N9, his own real estate company started in 2014. And y’all — this ain’t some small side gig. Luol’s portfolio includes everything from spec houses in the Hamptons to multifamily units in Baltimore, plus hotels, resorts, and casinos — all valued around $200 million.
Let that sink in for a second:
- The same dude we watched lock down defenders at the United Center…
- The same guy who fought for every bucket with D-Rose…
- Turned that hustle into a real estate empire worth hundreds of millions.
That’s the kind of legacy that makes Chicago proud — because it shows what’s possible when you don’t just chase fame but build wealth and impact. Some people play the game, but Luol mastered the game on AND off the court.
If you grew up here — watching those Bulls teams, hyped every time D-Rose hit a jumper, cheering Luol like he was family — this isn’t just sports nostalgia. It’s a reminder that our people can—and do—win at life after the spotlight fades. And that’s a story worth telling.
