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Houston Rockets

Jabari Smith Jr. thinks he deserves a return to Rockets’ starting lineup

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HOUSTON — The Rockets traded away two starters (Jalen Green and Dillon Brooks) in the deal bringing in superstar forward Kevin Durant, and they subsequently lost veteran point guard Fred VanVleet to an ACL tear in his right knee.

So, relative to when we last saw the Rockets in the 2025 NBA playoffs, Houston only has two players — Amen Thompson and Alperen Sengun — remaining from that lineup.

As a perennial All-Star and one of the greatest players in league history, Durant will obviously join them in that starting group.

The other two spots, however, are up for grabs. Candidates would seem to include guard Reed Sheppard; forwards Jabari Smith Jr., Tari Eason, and Dorian Finney-Smith; and center Steven Adams.

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Smith is entering his fourth NBA season, and he started at power forward until breaking his hand midway through last season. Thompson then seized the vacant position and never relinquished it in compiling an All-Defensive First Team season.

In 2025-26, however, the Rockets have a window to potentially start Smith and Thompson together — and after signing a five-year contract extension this offseason, it seems Smith is hopeful of that being the case.

“Nobody has really mentioned it to me, but I’m expecting it,” Smith said at Monday’s media day to open training camp. “It’s something that I’ve been working on, something I feel like I deserve, and something that I’m going to show that I deserve.”

“But at the end of the day, it doesn’t really matter. You can see Ime (Udoka) really doesn’t care about it. He’s going to play who’s playing (well). It’s a small issue, a small question that everybody has. But at the end of the team, we’re a team, and we’re going to compete with the five that are on the floor. That’s what it is. But to answer your question, nobody has talked to me, that hasn’t even been mentioned yet.”

Drafted at No. 3 overall in the 2022 first round, Smith has averaged 13.0 points (43.2% FG, 34.0% on 3-pointers) and 7.5 rebounds in 31.1 minutes per game over his first NBA seasons. Relative to those first three years, the 22-year-old said Monday that he’s made several improvements during the 2025 offseason.

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“I’m a lot more comfortable handling the ball and initiating,” Smith told reporters. “I’m a lot more aggressive driving to the rim, and being able to take bumps and change direction, and change my pace. That’s something I’ve been working on. Basically, I feel like you’re going to see a more decisive Jabari. More aggressive. Aggressiveness comes with confidence, and my confidence in myself has grown tremendously.”

“Everything I do, the way I talk, the way I walk, everything is going up. I feel like I’ve improved in every facet of my game. This was a really big summer for me, and I’m just ready to showcase it.”

While not confirming his starting lineup just yet, Udoka also noted Smith’s clear progress.

“I do think Jabari showed tremendous growth this offseason, and obviously he started the majority of his time here, before the injury,” Houston’s head coach said earlier this month.

“But we’ll take a look at everything. We feel we have incredible depth this year and a lot of versatility, so we could go a number of different ways, as far as that. I think some of that will be proven in training camp.”

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Houston Rockets

Former Westbrook teammates agree — they’ve never seen an athlete in the NBA like Amen Thompson

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Kevin Durant raves about Amen Thompson

From the moment they selected Amen Thompson with the fourth pick in the 2023 NBA Draft, the Houston Rockets have been ecstatic about his potential.

Inside the organization, from the front office to the coaching staff, there’s been a consistent belief in Amen’s enormous upside, built on his rare combination of size, elite athleticism, defensive instincts, relentless work ethic and inner drive. Even before the draft, I felt confident they would have taken him ahead of Scoot Henderson — a controversial take at the time — and I said that was their view repeatedly. That’s how highly they regarded him.

Houston sees Amen not just as a key piece, but as a foundational cornerstone, the kind of player who could eventually become a top-10 talent in the league.

And it looks like Kevin Durant might be seeing some of the same things that has the Rockets so excited.

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The future Hall of Famer raved about Thompson on Media Day, calling him a “do-everything, 6’7 athletic freak of nature” and that the league has never seen the type of athleticism that Amen has brought to the NBA.

Keep in mind, this is a former teammate of Russell Westbrook’s, and he’s not the first one to say that very thing. Steven Adams said in January that Amen Thompson was “one of a kind” and that he’s never seen this type of athleticism before.

Durant is now echoing the same sentiment, pointing out the second jump ability. On Thursday, Day 3 of Training Camp, KD elaborated to Chancellor Johnson on what he’s seeing out of Amen Thompson.

“I think he’s just unique,” said Durant. “It’s just different. The separation… his length, how he uses his second jump, off both feet, off one foot — it’s ridiculous. How he can go from taking a spin to just jumping off the ground so fast. His launch pad is just different. And it’s only going to get better.”

There’s no slight toward Russ here — this isn’t personal. The story is simply Amen. He continues to blow away his teammates with his growth, impact and outrageous athleticism. At 6-foot-7 with a 7-foot wingspan, no college background, and already an NBA All-Defensive First Team selection in just his second season, the 22-year-old is showing why Houston has every reason to be thrilled about his future.

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Dorian Finney-Smith (ankle) likely to miss regular-season games for Rockets

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Veteran forward Dorian Finney-Smith, who signed with Houston as a free agent in July, is very bullish on his fit with the Rockets.

“I love playing with a bunch of people who take pride in guarding guys, and whenever you play Houston, you know it’s going to be a tough game,” Finney-Smith said at Monday’s media day to begin training camp.

“Sometimes the referee can’t call all the fouls, because they’re going to hit you every possession,” he joked. “It’s exciting to be on this side.”

Finney-Smith cited his defensive communication, desire to win, and competitive mentality as key aspects of his game. So, too, is last season’s 3-point shooting percentage of 41.1% — a career-best number.

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Unfortunately, Finney-Smith isn’t yet a full participant in training camp. The 32-year-old underwent surgery in June to correct a lingering ankle injury from recent seasons, and head coach Ime Udoka confirmed Wednesday that he isn’t yet cleared for contact.

“No contact, but doing all the shooting and other things, as well as getting treatment during practice,” Udoka said of Finney-Smith’s current status.

When asked if the Rockets expect Finney-Smith to be ready for the Oct. 21 regular-season opener at Oklahoma City, Udoka said “no, probably not.”

Udoka said he does not yet know how long Finney-Smith’s debut will be delayed. The ankle procedure took place in early June, so the Rockets were aware of it when they agreed to sign him on June 30.

In comments at Monday’s media day, the 6-foot-7 forward suggested that it wouldn’t be a lengthy delay.

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“Soon,” Finney-Smith said of a potential return timetable. “I’ve been running, so it’s been getting better.”

His ankle injury had reportedly lingered in previous seasons.

“I’m a competitor, I want to play, but sometimes I probably made the injury worse because I don’t like to sit out,” he explained. “You might have to save me from myself, and I wish I’d have somebody to tell me to take it easy, two years ago. But that’s what got me here. Being that hard-nosed guy, sometimes the things that get you where you’re at can also hurt you. So, I’m learning, and sometimes I have to listen to my body.”

Now 32 years old, Finney-Smith averaged 69.9 games per season (at 29.5 minutes per game) over the last seven NBA seasons, and he also played in 40 additional playoff games (at 35.5 minutes) over that span.

That type of mileage appears to have taken a cumulative toll — and while the expectation is for the surgery to resolve the issue, it may require a bit more recovery time over the coming weeks.

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For now, any Finney-Smith absence could open up more minutes at Houston’s forward spots for players such as Jabari Smith Jr., Tari Eason, and Jae’Sean Tate.

Besides his versatile defense, Finney-Smith should be missed on offense as a shooter and floor spacer. To this point in their young NBA careers, Smith, Eason, and Tate have yet to have a shooting season even close to Finney-Smith’s 41.1% clip from 3-point range.

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As training camp opens, Rockets see growth from Reed Sheppard, Amen Thompson

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Photo by Ben DuBose

HOUSTON — With Fred VanVleet sidelined for most or all of the 2025-26 season due to an ACL tear in his right knee, the Rockets know they will need to entrust Amen Thompson and Reed Sheppard with more on-ball responsibilities.

So far, so good.

After Tuesday’s opening practice of training camp, Jabari Smith Jr. described areas in which both young prospects have improved from last season.

Regarding Sheppard, Smith pointed to a maturity bump entering his second NBA season. Among Smith’s comments:

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He’s gotten a lot better. The game is slowing down for him. You can just tell, when he’s playing a ball screen and he has the ball in his hands, he just looks more comfortable. Last year, he would look sped up. When people pressured him 94 feet, he would look sped up and shaky, at times. Now, he just looks more under control and more poised.

He just looks older. It’s kind of a natural thing, you’re not supposed to have it all figured it out your rookie year. I know I didn’t. He’s just getting older, stronger, and more mature, and he’s a hard worker. The growth is natural. He’s looking good.

Reed Sheppard, shooter

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— Ben DuBose (@bendubose.bsky.social) September 30, 2025 at 1:52 PM

With Thompson, Smith said the growth is especially apparent in his mid-range shooting. When asked if Thompson is looking more confident as a shooter, Smith said:

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One thing Amen does have is confidence. If he’s open, he’s gonna shoot it. That’s one thing he was working on this summer. He has a lot more confidence in it, especially his mid-range coming off pick-and-rolls. It looks a lot better, more fluid. He’s just a lot more comfortable with it.

If he’s making shots, it makes us a totally different team, and it makes him a totally different player. I’m with it, I say let it fly.

Should Thompson be able to hit mid-range shots at a more consistent clip, it could make defenders more hesitant to sag back against him. And once Thompson is respected more as a shooter, that should open up more driving lanes for him to attack the rim and utilize his elite size and athleticism.

Of course, making those types of shots in training camp at the team’s practice complex is different than making them in NBA games and arenas.

The first opportunity for Thompson and Sheppard to show whether the improvements will translate in real games comes in next Monday’s preseason opener versus the Atlanta Hawks.

Tipoff from Toyota Center is at 7:00 p.m. Central, and the game will be televised on Space City Home Network.

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Patrick Fertitta: Even after Kevin Durant trade, Rockets still focused on building long-term contender

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The Houston Rockets recently traded for a 37-year-old superstar in Kevin Durant, but that doesn’t mean the team’s focus has shifted strictly to a short-term view.

Patrick Fertitta, son of Rockets owner Tilman Fertitta and an increasingly important figure in Houston’s front office, spoke Monday with Matt Thomas of SportsTalk 790 and explained that the appeal of acquiring Durant was in part due to its relatively low price point.

In comments from Monday’s Toyota Center media day to open training camp for the 2025-26 season, Fertitta offered this analysis (via The Matt Thomas Show with Ross):

The right player, and the right deal, presented itself. By no means do I think, ‘We’re going all-in.’ Absolutely not. The deal that we did, the player that we brought in, and what we left ourselves with allows us to be hyper-competitive and have title hopes now… but it does not foreclose anything next year, or in the years following.

We feel like we did something that made us really good now, but it doesn’t hinder our ability to be great in the future, as well.

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Me, Rafael (Stone) and his staff, and Ime (Udoka), we all have a long-term view, and we want to be good for a long time. We’ve just got to be opportunistic. When the right thing comes, we’ll take a hard look at it. It’s usually a pass, but on this one, we said, ‘Let’s go. Let’s do this.’

To Fertitta’s point, the Rockets gave up only one first-round draft asset in the trade, and that was the No. 10 overall selection in 2025 (which became Duke center Khaman Maluach). Dillon Brooks was and is a role player, and he was quickly replaced in the following weeks by Dorian Finney-Smith, a veteran free agent signing of a similar archetype.

The Rockets did lose Jalen Green, the top scorer from last season’s 52-30 team that finished No. 2 in the Western Conference. But Durant is an immediate upgrade in that perimeter role, and there were questions as to Green’s average efficiency and his playoff underperformance.

So in the end, Houston was able to bring in the 15-time All-Star while not relinquishing its most prized future draft capital (first-round assets in 2027 and 2029 from Brooklyn and Phoenix) or its most coveted young prospects — namely, Alperen Sengun, Amen Thompson, Jabari Smith Jr., Reed Sheppard, and Tari Eason.

Thus, even as Durant inevitably shows some signs of aging in the coming years, the hope is that those will be offset by continued growth and development from young players and other draft assets that are still in the pipeline (which can also be used in future trades).

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“We made some meaningful sacrifices,” Fertitta said of Houston’s rebuilding movement from late 2020 until mid-2023. “We wanted to put ourselves in a position where we could ultimately contend, and contend in a way that was sustainable. Not just taking a shot here and there, but saying we have a five, seven, or 10-year run at this.”

That’s where Durant comes into play. As the Rockets see it, his presence opens the contending window sooner, but it shouldn’t shut it any faster. And he should also help the continued development of those core prospects.

“We think it’s the right fit,” Fertitta said. “Kevin is a special player, one of the greatest players of all-time, and you have to take advantage and be opportunistic when those things present themselves.”

“He works as hard as anybody that we’ve ever had in the building,” Fertitta noted. “He’s a great teammate. Part of the reason why he wanted to be here, and why he is here, is that he’s a believer in what we have going. He’s confident in the veterans we have, and more importantly, that the youth we have are on their way to being impactful, special players.”

If Durant wasn’t 37, or if he didn’t have only one year left on his previous contract, acquiring a player of his caliber likely would’ve cost more of that youth.

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In this case, as counter-intuitive as it might initially seem, the reduced asset cost could make it to where bringing in an older star leads to a longer window of title contention.

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Houston Rockets

Kevin Durant says he expects to sign contract extension with Rockets

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HOUSTON — At the moment, the Rockets and Kevin Durant haven’t yet reached a contract agreement for beyond the 2025-26 NBA season. But that doesn’t mean that one isn’t coming.

During Monday’s media day to preview the upcoming season, the 15-time All-Star made it clear that he didn’t leverage his July 2025 trade to Houston for simply a one-year run.

“I do see myself signing a contract extension,” Durant told reporters. “I can’t tell you exactly when that will happen, but I do see it happening.”

Having played in college at the University of Texas — and with Longhorn connections throughout the organization, including assistant coach Royal Ivey and front-office scout DJ Augustin — Durant made it clear that he had no regrets over his choice.

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“It felt organic and natural coming into the gym, being a Houston Rocket for the first time,” the 37-year-old said. “I always had respect for this coaching staff, this fanbase, this state, this city. It feels right.”

Durant also has previous ties to head coach Ime Udoka, since Udoka was the lead assistant in Brooklyn for a portion of Durant’s stint with the Nets.

“Playing with length, having size, playing in transition, driving and kicking, switching on defense… I wanted to play that style, too,” Durant said.

“Ime has always been one of those guys that understood what I brought to the table, my mentality and my approach to the game. He always respected that and gave me my space to be me.”

Durant will make $54.7 million this season on the final year of his previous contract. Last season with the Phoenix Suns, he earned All-Star honors while averaging 26.6 points, 6.0 rebounds, and 4.2 assists per game — all while shooting an extremely efficient 52.7% overall and 43.0% on 3-pointers.

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Rafael Stone, general manager of the Rockets, declined comment on the current status of negotiations (which do not have a deadline).

Training camp opens on Tuesday.

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