Chicago Bulls, 2012-13
Tattoo percentage:60% (9 players with tattoos, 6 without)

The Bulls increased their tattoo percentage from last year.
Players with tattoos:
Carlos Boozer
Boozer is one of the most heavily tattooed players on the Bulls. In September of this year, he added portraits of his three sons to his legs.
Daequan Cook
Among Cook’s many (10+) tattoos are his daughter’s name and the words “Daddy’s Angel.”
Richard Hamilton
A recent video uploaded by UnFamous Tattoo Culture in Miami shows Hamilton getting a portrait tattooed on his chest. The video also offers glimpses of the other tattoos hidden by his jersey, including the great “Love For the Game” tattoo which features a hybrid basketball/heart (photo above).
Kirk Hinrich
Hinrich has a chain tattooed on his left wrist in honor of his late grandfather.
Nazr Mohammed
Mohammed has his name tattooed on his left shoulder above a basketball passing through a hoop.
Nate Robinson
At the beginning of the year, a USA Today interview included a ton of information about Robinson’s acronym tattoos, including FROG (Fully Rely On God); PUSH (Pray Until Something Happens); JUMP (Jesus Understands My Pain); and GAME TIME (God Answers Me Every TIME).
Derrick Rose
The Windy Apple has a great rundown of all of Rose’s tattoos.
Marquis Teague
Teague has a tattoo on his left shoulder with a basketball and the text “God Judge Me.”
Malcolm Thomas
A U-T San Diego article written during Thomas’s years at San Diego State University discusses the player’s relationship with his daughter. One paragraph describes the tattoo he received several days before her birth: “Thomas had a tattoo added to his right arm, next to the one for his mother. It is a rose with “Mikeala” written beneath it.”
Players without tattoos:
Marco Belinelli
Jimmy Butler
Luol Deng
Taj Gibson
Joakim Noah
Vladimir Radmanovic
Chicago Bulls 2011-12
Tattoo percentage: 54% (7 players with tattoos, 6 without)

Even with the loss of Rasual Butler and Keith Bogans, the tattoo percentage for the Bulls stayed about the same as last year’s squad. A lot of variation here—there’s definitely some extrapolation to be had between Boozer’s self-obsessed tattoos, Rose’s declarations of love and inspiration, and Noah’s assertion that it’s more original to not have tattoos at this point. But not by me.
Players with tattoos:
Carlos Boozer
Boozer recently launched a website which includes a photo gallery of his tattoos. It’s not exhaustive, but does include a nice photo of his “look back and thank god, look forward and trust god” chest tattoo. But the “C BOOZ UNLEASH THE BEAST” tattoo is disappointingly absent.
Ronnie Brewer
Brewer may lead the league in basketball tattoos, with a ball tattooed on each shoulder and a hoop tattooed on his forearm.
Richard Hamilton
The tattoo of a skeleton hand emerging from the grave spinning a basketball is an all-time favorite. For the NBA Mailbag, he described the tattoo: “I have R.I.P. coming out the ground on a tombstone that means basketball for life, basketball till I die. Yeah.”
Kyle Korver
In 2006, Korver told Sports Illustrated that he promised his mother he’s wait until her death before getting a tattoo. In 2009, as reported by Omaha.com, he and his brother Kaleb got tattoos of their favorite bible verses. Kaleb remarked that their mother was “good with it” and that they’re trying to convince their other two brothers to join in.
John Lucas III
The Windy Apple’s March 2012 feature “15 Things You Didn’t Know About John Lucas III” includes a photo of the text tattooed on Lucas’s back.
Derrick Rose
A 2011 video interview shows Rose’s new tattoo, the word “HOPE” across his left wrist. For the interview, the 2011 MVP described the emotional impetus for the design: “when things seem like it’s hard, and you think you don’t got no one else on your side, and you feel alone and all that, there’s always a chance and you’ve always got to keep hope alive. And I want to be that hope for kids, for adults or whoever. When they see me, they just want to go hard at whatever they’re doing. Just because they see the way that I am and they see the way that I play.” Also worth noting is this 27 second video of Rose’s car pulling up to a tattoo shop in Chicago and people going ABSOLUTELY BONKERS.
C.J. Watson
According to an interview for Black Sports Online, Watson got his first tattoo at the age of 16. The design includes his nickname—Quiet Storm—which also doubles as the name for his foundation. Watson reveals in the interview that the nickname was suggested by his sister while they were at the tattoo shop.
Players without tattoos:
Omer Asik
Jimmy Butler
Luol Deng
Taj Gibson
Joakim Noah
Brian Scalabrine
Detroit Pistons, 2010-11
Tattoo percentage: 67% (10 players with tattoos, 5 without)

The Pistons are currently one of the most tattooed teams in the league. While tattoos in the NBA seemed to reach their peak in the mid-2000s, in the years following Iverson’s dominance, it’s Detroit’s oldest players—Rip Hamilton, Ben Wallace, and Tracy McGrady—who have the most tattoos on the team, and the players in their mid-20s, who got their start during AI’s era, that avoided them.
—
Players with tattoos:
Will Bynum
Bynum demonstrated considerable confidence in himself by getting the NBA logo tattooed on his arm in high school.
Ben Gordon
Gordon’s left arm manages to combine two of the most popular themes for NBA tattoos—basketball and religious iconography—into one design where an angel bequeaths a ball to a prostrate figure.
Richard Hamilton
Rip Hamilton has a few tattoos, including a tribute to his grandfather and a lion. He described one of his favorites for the NBA mailbag: “I have R.I.P. coming out the ground on a tombstone that means basketball for life, basketball till I die. Yeah.”
Jason Maxiell
Has a tattoo on his left shoulder.
Tracy McGrady
McGrady, who has suffered a lot of criticism from announcers and analysts, has a response on his right shoulder, just below a speeding basketball and his nickname. Against a curled scroll, a poignant bit of scripture: “AND EVERY TONGUE THAT SHALL RISE UP AGAINST THEE IN JUDGEMENT SHALL BE COMDEMNED—ISAIAH 54:17.”
Rodney Stuckey
Stuckey’s right shoulder features an elaborate design with what appears to be a skyline, a river, and a prince holding a basketball.
DaJuan Summers
Summers has both arms well covered, but it’s his first tattoo, acquired in high school, that he looks to for comfort: “‘It has my name on it,’ says his mother, Twana, a supermarket meat cutter who raised her three kids alone in Baltimore after her husband died when DaJuan was just 3. ‘And it has the names of [his sister] Regina and [brother] Malik. He says when things get tight, he grabs that tattoo.’”
Ben Wallace
While the literal embrace of his nickname, Big Ben, is his most distinct tattoo, Wallace’s “No Pain No Game” design has a direct message that speaks to his physical game.
Terrico White
Bucking the trend of young players not getting tattoos because it might mess up sponsorship deals, White entered the league at 20 years old with almost-full sleeves, including a lengthy text passage on his right wrist.
Chris Wilcox
Wilcox has a sunburst on his right shoulder, and a portrait of Christ on his left.
Players without tattoos:
Austin Daye
Jonas Jerebko
Greg Monroe
Tayshaun Prince
Charlie Villaneuva
Chicago Bulls, 2012-13
Tattoo percentage:60% (9 players with tattoos, 6 without)

The Bulls increased their tattoo percentage from last year.
Players with tattoos:
Carlos Boozer
Boozer is one of the most heavily tattooed players on the Bulls. In September of this year, he added portraits of his three sons to his legs.
Daequan Cook
Among Cook’s many (10+) tattoos are his daughter’s name and the words “Daddy’s Angel.”
Richard Hamilton
A recent video uploaded by UnFamous Tattoo Culture in Miami shows Hamilton getting a portrait tattooed on his chest. The video also offers glimpses of the other tattoos hidden by his jersey, including the great “Love For the Game” tattoo which features a hybrid basketball/heart (photo above).
Kirk Hinrich
Hinrich has a chain tattooed on his left wrist in honor of his late grandfather.
Nazr Mohammed
Mohammed has his name tattooed on his left shoulder above a basketball passing through a hoop.
Nate Robinson
At the beginning of the year, a USA Today interview included a ton of information about Robinson’s acronym tattoos, including FROG (Fully Rely On God); PUSH (Pray Until Something Happens); JUMP (Jesus Understands My Pain); and GAME TIME (God Answers Me Every TIME).
Derrick Rose
The Windy Apple has a great rundown of all of Rose’s tattoos.
Marquis Teague
Teague has a tattoo on his left shoulder with a basketball and the text “God Judge Me.”
Malcolm Thomas
A U-T San Diego article written during Thomas’s years at San Diego State University discusses the player’s relationship with his daughter. One paragraph describes the tattoo he received several days before her birth: “Thomas had a tattoo added to his right arm, next to the one for his mother. It is a rose with “Mikeala” written beneath it.”
Players without tattoos:
Marco Belinelli
Jimmy Butler
Luol Deng
Taj Gibson
Joakim Noah
Vladimir Radmanovic
Chicago Bulls 2011-12
Tattoo percentage: 54% (7 players with tattoos, 6 without)

Even with the loss of Rasual Butler and Keith Bogans, the tattoo percentage for the Bulls stayed about the same as last year’s squad. A lot of variation here—there’s definitely some extrapolation to be had between Boozer’s self-obsessed tattoos, Rose’s declarations of love and inspiration, and Noah’s assertion that it’s more original to not have tattoos at this point. But not by me.
Players with tattoos:
Carlos Boozer
Boozer recently launched a website which includes a photo gallery of his tattoos. It’s not exhaustive, but does include a nice photo of his “look back and thank god, look forward and trust god” chest tattoo. But the “C BOOZ UNLEASH THE BEAST” tattoo is disappointingly absent.
Ronnie Brewer
Brewer may lead the league in basketball tattoos, with a ball tattooed on each shoulder and a hoop tattooed on his forearm.
Richard Hamilton
The tattoo of a skeleton hand emerging from the grave spinning a basketball is an all-time favorite. For the NBA Mailbag, he described the tattoo: “I have R.I.P. coming out the ground on a tombstone that means basketball for life, basketball till I die. Yeah.”
Kyle Korver
In 2006, Korver told Sports Illustrated that he promised his mother he’s wait until her death before getting a tattoo. In 2009, as reported by Omaha.com, he and his brother Kaleb got tattoos of their favorite bible verses. Kaleb remarked that their mother was “good with it” and that they’re trying to convince their other two brothers to join in.
John Lucas III
The Windy Apple’s March 2012 feature “15 Things You Didn’t Know About John Lucas III” includes a photo of the text tattooed on Lucas’s back.
Derrick Rose
A 2011 video interview shows Rose’s new tattoo, the word “HOPE” across his left wrist. For the interview, the 2011 MVP described the emotional impetus for the design: “when things seem like it’s hard, and you think you don’t got no one else on your side, and you feel alone and all that, there’s always a chance and you’ve always got to keep hope alive. And I want to be that hope for kids, for adults or whoever. When they see me, they just want to go hard at whatever they’re doing. Just because they see the way that I am and they see the way that I play.” Also worth noting is this 27 second video of Rose’s car pulling up to a tattoo shop in Chicago and people going ABSOLUTELY BONKERS.
C.J. Watson
According to an interview for Black Sports Online, Watson got his first tattoo at the age of 16. The design includes his nickname—Quiet Storm—which also doubles as the name for his foundation. Watson reveals in the interview that the nickname was suggested by his sister while they were at the tattoo shop.
Players without tattoos:
Omer Asik
Jimmy Butler
Luol Deng
Taj Gibson
Joakim Noah
Brian Scalabrine
Detroit Pistons, 2010-11
Tattoo percentage: 67% (10 players with tattoos, 5 without)

The Pistons are currently one of the most tattooed teams in the league. While tattoos in the NBA seemed to reach their peak in the mid-2000s, in the years following Iverson’s dominance, it’s Detroit’s oldest players—Rip Hamilton, Ben Wallace, and Tracy McGrady—who have the most tattoos on the team, and the players in their mid-20s, who got their start during AI’s era, that avoided them.
—
Players with tattoos:
Will Bynum
Bynum demonstrated considerable confidence in himself by getting the NBA logo tattooed on his arm in high school.
Ben Gordon
Gordon’s left arm manages to combine two of the most popular themes for NBA tattoos—basketball and religious iconography—into one design where an angel bequeaths a ball to a prostrate figure.
Richard Hamilton
Rip Hamilton has a few tattoos, including a tribute to his grandfather and a lion. He described one of his favorites for the NBA mailbag: “I have R.I.P. coming out the ground on a tombstone that means basketball for life, basketball till I die. Yeah.”
Jason Maxiell
Has a tattoo on his left shoulder.
Tracy McGrady
McGrady, who has suffered a lot of criticism from announcers and analysts, has a response on his right shoulder, just below a speeding basketball and his nickname. Against a curled scroll, a poignant bit of scripture: “AND EVERY TONGUE THAT SHALL RISE UP AGAINST THEE IN JUDGEMENT SHALL BE COMDEMNED—ISAIAH 54:17.”
Rodney Stuckey
Stuckey’s right shoulder features an elaborate design with what appears to be a skyline, a river, and a prince holding a basketball.
DaJuan Summers
Summers has both arms well covered, but it’s his first tattoo, acquired in high school, that he looks to for comfort: “‘It has my name on it,’ says his mother, Twana, a supermarket meat cutter who raised her three kids alone in Baltimore after her husband died when DaJuan was just 3. ‘And it has the names of [his sister] Regina and [brother] Malik. He says when things get tight, he grabs that tattoo.’”
Ben Wallace
While the literal embrace of his nickname, Big Ben, is his most distinct tattoo, Wallace’s “No Pain No Game” design has a direct message that speaks to his physical game.
Terrico White
Bucking the trend of young players not getting tattoos because it might mess up sponsorship deals, White entered the league at 20 years old with almost-full sleeves, including a lengthy text passage on his right wrist.
Chris Wilcox
Wilcox has a sunburst on his right shoulder, and a portrait of Christ on his left.
Players without tattoos:
Austin Daye
Jonas Jerebko
Greg Monroe
Tayshaun Prince
Charlie Villaneuva