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Notes from Daryl Morey’s Q&A with fans

Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey met with fans for an informal Q&A session after Wednesday night’s home loss to Philadelphia. I was fortunate to be able to attend and here are some notes and quotes from the round of questioning.

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Houston Rockets Daryl Morey

Houston Rockets GM Daryl Morey answered fan questions after Wednesday night's game

Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey met with fans for an informal Q&A session after Wednesday night’s home loss to Philadelphia. I was fortunate to be able to attend and here are some notes and quotes from the round of questioning.

What’s Missing?
When asked what it is that the Rockets are missing or need, Daryl did not sugarcoat it.

“We need a center. We need a franchise player,” said Morey. “We used to have a franchise center, so he did both, and now we have neither.”

T-Will
Daryl said the Rockets did not trade for Terrence Williams for nothing and that he hasn’t soured on the deal, despite Williams not being in the rotation at the moment.

“We really like his talent,” said Morey. “We think he has the ability to really play at a high-level, could play at an All-Star level.”

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Morey said Coach Adelman right now is going with guys he knows in a playoff push but that Williams “fits bigtime into our plans I think over time.”

Jimmer Mania
Who is his favorite NBA player?

Mark Price, by a huge margin,” said Morey, who is from Cleveland.

This response turned comical though as Daryl then somehow managed to segue that answer into his all-too-honest analysis of BYU point guard Jimmer Fredette (despite intentionally not saying his name), a prospect that NBA teams will be looking at in the upcoming NBA Draft. Realizing he probably shouldn’t have done that, Morey laughed and then turned to me with the camera and said, “Leave that part out.” So alas, I’ll do just that.

Adelman
The Q&A session was loose, fun and from the hip, but when Daryl was asked about Rick Adelman’s lame duck status as coach with his contract expiring after this season, the tone turned serious. Daryl was brief and to the point.

“With Coach Adelman, we’re going to sit down after the season and figure it out,” said Morey.

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Defense
Daryl recognized that the Rockets have struggled defensively. When asked what was the biggest reason for the Rockets fall from being a Top 5 Defense, the GM listed missing Yao Ming as reasons “one, two and three.”

“It’s not just Yao Ming, just any sort of five who can defensive rebound, the most important thing, and second, be a presence in the middle to discourage drivers,” said Morey.

Morey added that not having a big center almost puts a hard cap on how good they can become defensively.

“Right now, our guys, a lot of them, really care about defense,” said Morey. “A lot of them play hard on defense. Could be playing the best they’ve ever played — and I’m not saying they are. I’m not saying we don’t have room for improvement — but if they were the absolute best, I don’t think we get much better than average or near average without a five in the middle. It’s just too hard of a thing to overcome.”

High Praise for Lowry
Morey was asked about how Kyle Lowry has slipped in charges drawn, rebounding and in attacking the hoop (drawing fouls) “per opportunity” this season. The GM chalked that up to Lowry’s transition to a larger role, going from 15-25 minutes off the bench to a 30-40 minute starter.

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On a career night for Lowry (36 points on 15-18 shooting), Morey had high praise for the Rockets starting point.

“He’s still one of the best point guard rebounders, by a huge margin. Still one of the best defensive point guards by a huge margin. Still a great foul-drawer, by a big margin,” said Morey. “He was literally like the best in all of basketball last year for a lot of those things. To expect him to transition to the starting role and still be at these heights very few people ever see, even in NBA history, at his position was unrealistic. He’s obviously been awesome. You could argue for a few guys for being our best player this year, I would say Kyle is probably #1, if I had to vote.”

Last Year vs. This Year
Morey was asked about the aggressiveness in last year’s team that seems to be missing in this year’s Rockets squad. Morey felt that both teams were “very similar” and are tracking almost identical (40-win team). He said the offense this year is a little better (attributing that to Kevin Martin) and the defense is worse. With Yao, Morey said he expected the Rockets win total to be in the “high 40’s,” but that without him it’s not a surprise they are where they are.

Morey felt that Kevin’s having arguably his best year and that both Luis and Kyle are having great seasons, but there is something he is still hoping to see.

“My biggest disappointment — we needed some of our young players to take a big step forward, like Aaron did last year,” said Morey. “We haven’t had that. There’s still time. I still think Jordan, Patrick, Chase, Courtney — one of those guys could take a big step forward and play well. That’s something that we still need. If we’re going to make the playoffs, one of those young guys has got to take a big step forward the rest of the way.”

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AB’s Market Value
Morey was asked about Aaron Brooks‘ trade value around the league, a question begging for a more political response.

“He’s a very good player,” said Morey. “We’re committed to him. He’s obviously struggling a bit right now but he’s won a lot of games for us and we’re big fans of Aaron. Not only are we big fans, but the league is too.”

Trades
As you can imagine, Daryl fielded several questions about potential deals, with the February 24th trade deadline just one week away.

“We’re going to try to make a trade to get somebody at a high-level, or someone who can develop into a high-level, or even trade for a pick that has a chance to be very high,” said Morey. “Any of those three. All are hard paths. All have low probability of working, but our job is really to go for the best path with the best chance among a bunch of really hard options.”

I then asked Daryl if he was confident he could make a deal beneficial for the Rockets right now, or if this was more of a situation where things will “open up” at the deadline.

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“I think last year if you had asked me who you’ll trade for and list the chances, Kevin Martin would have been near the bottom,” said Morey. “Didn’t have any sense he might be available. It’s really hard to predict right now. We have a lot of discussions going that could turn out positive, but it’s very hard to predict.”

Morey added that the Rockets are thinking long-term in their conversations about trades.

“The priority for our deals is definitely how does the player we get fit into a potential championship caliber team,” said Morey. “This year is not a big factor in our deals. That doesn’t mean we’ve — it’s just second priority. It’s much less priority than how do these players fit into a winning plan going forward.”

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Armed with a bizarre fascination for Mario Elie and a deep love of the Houston Rockets, Dave Hardisty started ClutchFans in 1996 under the pen name “Clutch”.

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The 2025-26 season is here! The Rockets open their season, with Kevin Durant making his Houston debut, tonight in Oklahoma City.

Come join Ben DuBose and I live after the game on the ClutchFans YouTube channel as we discuss and react to how the season opened up.

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The extension deadline came and went today and the Rockets did not come to a contract agreement with Tari Eason.

Maybe in hindsight this should have been foreseen — the Rockets signed Jabari Smith Jr. early in the summer but never followed that with news of a locked-up Tari. Eason himself expressed what appeared to be frustration at Media Day before training camp opened, and then Kevin Durant’s extension announcement came without a Tari deal preceding it.

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Rockets, Kevin Durant sign two-year extension at sub-max rate

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Just as he suggested when training camp opened, Kevin Durant has indeed signed a contract extension to remain with the Houston Rockets.

The two-year extension, which is the maximum contract length Durant can sign at 37 years old, is for $90 million and contains a player option for year two, per ESPN’s Shams Charania.

While Durant’s deal is for the maximum length, it is not for maximum money. Durant was eligible to sign a two-year deal for as much as $122 million, so the agreement represents a sizable discount for the future Hall of Famer.

With a deep and increasingly expensive roster, the Rockets are taking a diligent approach to planning out future payrolls, which incentivized general manager Rafael Stone to reach deals early and negotiate team-friendly numbers.

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“The Rockets were a projected $80 million below the second (luxury tax) apron for next season,” writes ESPN’s Bobby Marks, formerly a front office executive with the Brooklyn Nets. “The extension gives Houston the flexibility to retain Tari Eason, add in free agency, while also remaining under.”

The deadline for Eason’s rookie-scale extension is at 5:00 p.m. Central on Monday. Without an agreement, the LSU product would be slated for restricted free agency in 2026.

As for Durant, he is now under contract with the Rockets through the 2027-28 campaign, albeit with the final year on a player option. The deal kicks in after the 2025-26 season, which begins with Tuesday’s regular-season opener.

Charania elaborates:

Durant understood when he chose the Rockets as a trade destination that he would be sacrificing money on a new deal — in this case, around $30 million — so that the two sides could partner for the long term and give the franchise team-building flexibility.

Durant now holds the record for the highest career earnings in NBA history at $598.2 million based on current and future salaries, surpassing LeBron James ($583.9 million). Durant is earning $54.7 million this season and now has a total of three years and $144.7 million on his contract.

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Even entering his 19th NBA season, Durant continues to produce at an elite level, and his scoring efficiency in Houston’s perfect preseason slate remained very high.

Thus, to no surprise, the Rockets made it a priority to lock up Durant as a cornerstone player into what could be his third decade in the NBA.

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Neither Jae’Sean Tate nor Dorian Finney-Smith played in the 2025-26 preseason for the Rockets, with both Houston forwards sidelined due to offseason ankle surgeries.

While neither issue is considered a long-term concern, Tate is slightly ahead of Finney-Smith in his recovery, and the hope is that Tate could be available when Houston’s regular-schedule begins at Oklahoma City on Tuesday night.

“Jae’Sean did all the contact stuff today,” head coach Ime Udoka told ClutchFans after Saturday’s team practice in Houston. “It was good to see him out there playing. He was a little winded, but he’ll get his legs back, eventually.”

“Dorian is a little bit behind and working his way back, but it’s good to see Jae’Sean out there, and hopefully he’s ready for opening night.”

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The team has yet to disclose a projected timetable for Finney-Smith’s return, though he is doing some running drills and is a partial participant at practices.

Tate wasn’t cleared for contact work until after the preseason, so the hope is that Finney-Smith isn’t far behind. However, it won’t be in time for the regular season’s first week.

With Finney-Smith sidelined, Tari Eason and Josh Okogie would seem to be candidates for expanded roles in the interim.

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It’s been a mixed bag for Rockets second-year guard Reed Sheppard, but Thursday night, his potential was on full display.

With several key players — Kevin Durant, Amen Thompson, Jabari Smith Jr., Alperen Sengun, Steven Adams, Clint Capela — sitting out, Reed Sheppard led the B-Team in Atlanta and feasted, hitting 12-22 shots for 29 points, including 5-13 from three-point range. He added 4 steals, 3 blocks, 6 assists and 6 rebounds.

Ben Dubose and I discussed the preseason, Reed’s strong showing, the clock running down on Tari Eason’s extension and the regular season opener this Tuesday in Oklahoma City.

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