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Houston Rockets

Rockets trade Lowry, stay focused on Howard

The consensus was already that it had not been a good offseason for Daryl Morey and the Rockets, and then they traded the last point guard they had left on their roster.

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Kyle Lowry and Dwight Howard

Kyle Lowry is on the way out and the Rockets hope to have Dwight Howard on the way in

The consensus was already that it had not been a good offseason for Daryl Morey and the Rockets, and then they traded the last point guard they had left on their roster.

The Rockets sent Kyle Lowry to the Toronto Raptors on Thursday, getting in exchange forward Gary Forbes (throw-in) and a future first round pick that is protected in such a way that makes it highly likely it will be a lottery pick. According to the Houston Chronicle, Houston receives the Raptors draft pick next year if it falls between 4-14. If not, it must fall between 3-14 in 2014 or 2015 or 2-14 in 2016 or 2017 to come to Houston. If it never hits any of those ranges, the pick goes to Houston unprotected in 2018.

The word coming from the organization is the same as it was when the team tried to move up in last week’s draft — whether it is in a trade for a superstar or to keep for themselves, they got a valuable piece in this move. The Rockets are still pursuing Dwight Howard and are “not out of it,” according to multiple sources with the team. The team also created about $4.25 million in cap room in the deal.

I don’t like this trade… I love it.

Could Kyle Lowry have eventually led the Rockets to a championship? Yes, absolutely, so long as he was flanked by Michael Jordan and Wilt Chamberlain. Like everyone else on the roster, Lowry was a good but not great player.

As for what they got in return — take a look at every substantial trade where a rebuilding team dumped off a true superstar and their incentive was to get one or more lottery picks in return. Deron Williams went to the Nets for multiple lottery picks. The “projected lottery pick” of the Timberwolves was a key piece to the Hornets-Clippers trade of Chris Paul this past season. If you’re Orlando considering a house cleaning in moving Howard, do you want a top 15 point guard (and $6M annual commitment) or a future lottery pick?

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The market for Lowry was and is limited. Cross off the 10-15 teams with better point guards, then cross off teams that are looking to rebuild. You’ve got only a small handful of franchises that both need to fill a hole at the one and want to make the immediate “jump” to playoff team.

Bottom line: What the Rockets did here was trade a $25 Macy’s gift card for $50 cash, which can be used anywhere. What they got for Lowry is a stronger, more flexible trade asset than Lowry himself, and the Rockets right now are in the business of trades.

Furthermore, this trade shot the bird at the criticisms of Daryl Morey and the Rockets front office that I think have been accurate the past two to three seasons.

    1. They don’t think big picture (and I don’t mean “we added a top-20 protected pick in 2017” kind of big picture).
    2. They are not willing to take a step back.
    3. They are not willing to take 70, 60 or even 50 cents on the dollar.

Time will tell if this pays off, but the Rockets are not taking the safe, fill-some-holes route they took last summer when they patched the roster with Samuel Dalembert then went to PF Chang’s to call it an offseason. Morey just depleted his roster of its greatest strength — the point guards. That’s ballsy. They are absolutely aiming much higher than they have the past few years.

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If the Rockets keep this pick, it accelerates the rebuild process by exactly 365 days. Look for them to trade it though, and we know they are going after Howard. What we don’t know — what happens if the Rockets don’t get Howard?

This is where I lose confidence in the Rockets.

Do I believe for a minute they will do what it takes (tank, play youth) if they come up short on a trade for a legit superstar? I’d like to, but no, not really. Rockets owner Les Alexander has not shown a willingness to take a step back to rebuild, and while I think it would absolutely be the right thing to do to eventually bring championship basketball back to Houston, I’d say there’s a better chance of being struck by lightning while building a snowman in hell than there is of the Rockets changing that philosophy with a new television network/deal set to launch and the 2013 All-Star Game on the way. My concern is that, falling short of Howard, the Rockets will jump on a Pau Gasol or Josh Smith lifeboat — a second-tier star jump to the playoffs but not a path to greatness.

But what’s clear is the Rockets have gotten the message, making several moves that suggest they know they can no longer be stuck in this 9th seed, 14th pick purgatory they have locked their fans in the past three seasons. Up or down works just the same, but this trade improves their chances to get off the mediocrity treadmill and head in either direction they choose.

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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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Analysis

Report: Rockets not likely to pursue Ja Morant trade with Grizzlies

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Rafael Stone Houston Rockets general manager

Just prior to training camp, the Houston Rockets lost veteran point guard Fred VanVleet (right knee ACL repair) to a potentially season ending injury.

That development led many observers around the league to speculate that Houston might pursue an external upgrade at point guard.

Yet, six games into the 2025-26 season, the Rockets (4-2) own the NBA’s best offense. They also have the majority of their point-guard reps going to Amen Thompson and Reed Sheppard, two promising young talents who should only improve as the year progresses.

With that in mind, even as tensions seemingly rise in Memphis between the Grizzlies and two-time All-Star Ja Morant, it doesn’t seem as though Houston is interested in pursuing a trade (should the 26-year-old eventually hit the market).

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The Athletic’s Sam Amick writes:

The Grizzlies’ next opponent, the Houston Rockets, need a point guard after losing Fred Van Vleet to a torn ACL in the preseason… but, per a team source, are unlikely to pursue him.

The are, of course, some extracurricular concerns involving Morant.

But from a Houston perspective, the logic appears to be basketball-related.

The Rockets have an elite offense, as is, so why would GM Rafael Stone bring in a high-usage player who would potentially take away touches and playmaking opportunities from the likes of Thompson, Kevin Durant, and Alperen Sengun?

The Rockets also expect VanVleet back at some point, and by the start of the 2026-27 season at the latest. Morant is under contract through the 2027-28 campaign, and historically, he’s a significantly higher-usage player than VanVleet.

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Should the on-court results significantly change, it’s possible that Stone and the Rockets could revisit the Morant option by the in-season trade deadline of Feb. 5, 2026. But based on what we know now, it doesn’t appear likely that Houston will be involved in any bidding.

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Analysis

As Houston’s point guard, Amen Thompson draws praise from Jason Kidd for his offense

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HOUSTON — Amen Thompson may not look like a traditional point guard, but he’s filling in capably for the Rockets in the absence of veteran Fred VanVleet.

The Rockets (3-2) entered Monday’s home game versus Dallas (2-4) on a three-game winning streak, and their 22-year-old rising star was +77 when playing during those games.

For the season, Thompson is averaging 15.0 points (46.7% FG), 6.0 rebounds, 5.8 assists, and 2.6 turnovers per game, and the versatile 6-foot-7 prospect remains best known for his defense (Thompson earned NBA All-Defensive First Team honors last season).

Yet, in pregame comments from Toyota Center, Mavericks head coach Jason Kidd — a Hall of Fame point guard from his NBA playing days — went out of his way to praise Thompson’s abilities on offense.

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When asked about Thompson’s defense, Kidd replied:

He’s playing the game at a very high level, not just on defense but on the offensive end, too. Driving the ball, and putting a lot of pressure on the defense at the rim.

I know everyone talks about his defense, but the way he’s handling the ball, it puts a lot of pressure (on the opponent).

Houston continues to rank No. 1 in the NBA in offensive rating, so Thompson’s individual contributions are clearly making it work for the Rockets as a team, as well.

The Rockets are without Jabari Smith Jr. (right ankle sprain) in Monday’s game, so Thompson started alongside Kevin Durant, Josh Okogie, Tari Eason, and Alperen Sengun.

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Analysis

Rockets rout Raptors as Houston becomes NBA’s No. 1 offense

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With Wednesday’s 139-121 victory at Toronto, the Rockets (2-2) secured their first winning streak of the 2025-26 campaign and are now NBA’s top-rated offense of the young season.

Featuring Dave Hardisty, Ben DuBose, and Paulo Alves, our “ClutchFans Live” postgame show recaps all the key storylines from that showing against the Raptors.

Discussion topics include big scoring games from Kevin Durant and Jabari Smith Jr.; a dominant rebounding performance, led by interior strength from Steven Adams and Alperen Sengun; a subpar shooting night by Reed Sheppard; and potential concerns on defense, where the Rockets currently rank in the bottom half of the league.

In the win at Toronto (box score), Durant, Smith, Sengun, and Amen Thompson combined for a whopping 92 points, with each shooting at least 50% from the field.

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Houston Rockets

Rockets crush Nets, get first win of 2025-26 season

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Houston Rockets vs Brooklyn Nets 10/27/2025

It’s been a bumpy start, and it wasn’t exactly the 1996 Bulls on the other end, but the Rockets got their first win of the season Monday night.

Tari Eason broke out with 22 points — 20 in the first half — as the Rockets pulled away late first quarter and never looked back.

Alperen Sengun scored 21 points, hitting a pair of triples, Kevin Durant added 19 and Amen Thompson was a +33 in 25 minutes, handing out eight assists to zero turnovers.

Ben DuBose and I talked Rockets after the game — starting Josh Okogie over the ‘Double Big’, Tari’s breakout and Amen’s solid point guard showing.

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Houston Rockets

Live Postgame Show after Rockets home opener vs Pistons

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Houston Rockets vs Detroit Pistons 10/24/2025

The home opener is tonight, with Kevin Durant playing a regular season game in front of the home crowd for the first time, when the Rockets take on the Pistons at 7:00 pm Central.

Detroit is missing that shooter they had in Malik Beasley and Jaden Ivey (knee surgery) is out, but Cade Cunningham is always a tough out. They added Duncan Robinson this season who should theoretically provide that shooting pop, but he was a bust in their season opener.

Come join David Weiner (@BimaThug) and I tonight after the game as we discuss what we saw and get live fan reaction. Subscribe to ClutchFans on YouTube to get notifications when we go live!

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