Connect with us
 

Houston Rockets

Rockets Fans Can Give Thanks For The Things That Went Wrong

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone. A big Texans win in Detroit was hopefully accompanied by family, friends and good food. It’s a day of reflection and gratitude, and that goes for the Rockets as well.

Published

on

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone. A big Texans win in Detroit was hopefully accompanied by family, friends and good food. It’s a day of reflection and gratitude, and that goes for the Rockets as well.

So here are 5 things that happened over the last year that were despised at the time, but today we can give thanks for these blessings in disguise.

David Stern’s “Basketball Reasons”
We’re coming up on the one-year anniversary of NBA Commissioner David Stern’s decision to veto the three-team trade that sent Chris Paul to the Lakers, Pau Gasol to the Rockets and Kevin Martin, Luis Scola, Goran Dragic, Lamar Odom and a first round pick to the Hornets, creating the most active thread in our forum’s history.

Make no mistake, this was a shady move covered up by a longtime weasel, and we’re counting the days until Stern’s retirement (436 more, by the way), but this looks like a bullet dodged.

The Rockets would have been a playoff team last year and likely a better team today had they made that move, sporting a PF-C combo of Gasol and Nene along with Kyle Lowry, Chandler Parsons and possibly a re-signed Courtney Lee (not to mention, Linsanity in New York never would have happened).

Advertisement

But the Rockets would have still lacked a star foundation. They also would have forfeited both of their first round picks while being on the hook for over $32 million annually to their frontcourt, with both players showing signs of decline or weakness in the past year. The short-term goal of making the playoffs would have been met, but with fewer avenues to improve moving forward, the future would not be as bright.

The Rockets’ 6-Game Slide
On April 11th, the Rockets, leading in the hunt for the 8th playoff seed, were set to host the Jazz in an important game. As Daryl Morey tweeted the day before, had the Rockets won, they would have had a 96% chance of making the postseason. They lost that game, and the next 5, essentially killing their playoff hopes.

Had this not happened and the team made the playoffs, Houston’s first round pick would have gone to New Jersey/Brooklyn as part of the Terrence Williams trade. Not only would that have been a lost asset, but without that pick, it would have been very difficult to get as high as the 12th pick of the draft, which was the last possible spot they could be at to nab Jeremy Lamb (he was going next to the Suns). Lamb was a key piece of the trade to satisfy Oklahoma City in order to land James Harden.

Tanking 1, Instant Gratification 0.

Magic GM Rob Hennigan’s obsession with Arron Afflalo

Andrew Bynum

Where would the Rockets be if they had traded for Andrew Bynum?

The Rockets seemed perfectly positioned this past summer to make a trade with the Orlando Magic, a team that was begging to be rebuilt. Orlando general manager Rob Hennigan wanted more from Houston, passing on Martin, one or two of the Rockets’ rookies, draft picks (including the coveted Toronto lottery pick) and the chance to unload some salary deadweight.

Advertisement

Instead, Hennigan made the “Wait.. what?” move of trading Dwight Howard for Arron Afflalo, Moe Harkless, Nikola Vucevic and some lousy draft picks… and I can’t be more grateful for his ineptitude.

If the Magic had made the deal with the Rockets, not only would Houston’s cupboard have been bare when Harden suddenly went on the trade block, but they would be stuck right now with Andrew Bynum. The haircut alone is frightening, but he hasn’t played a single game for his new team and the buzz is he may need major knee surgery.

The Rockets avoided an absolute nightmare.

Dwight Howard’s Fear and Loathing of Houston
It’s hard to say that coming up short in acquiring the league’s best center is ever a “good” thing, but where would the Houston Rockets be right now had they put a Rocket red jersey on Howard?

Their Harden trade package would have been used to get him. He absolutely did not want to be here and an extension wasn’t in the cards (doesn’t make financial sense, as he has shown in Los Angeles as well), so a lame duck season would have kicked off. With Jeremy Lin struggling and the Rockets hard-pressed for scoring, we would be besieged with the questions daily: “Is Dwight happy here?” “Will he re-sign?” The February 2013 trade deadline would have hung around this team’s neck like an anchor.

Advertisement

With a young core and an attractive All Star-caliber player in Harden locked up for six years, the Rockets can now afford to be patient and are in a better spot to lure talent than they would have been before. This was the better move.

Decision to Bench Terrence Jones
Rookie Terrence Jones was outstanding at the Vegas Summer League, and was quite effective in the preseason to boot. When Patrick Patterson went out, it was to Jones that Kevin McHale turned for spot starts. That he was going to be a part of the rotation didn’t seem like a question at all.

On the flip side, Marcus Morris was one of two Rockets (Royce White being the other) that I thought for sure was going to be on the outside looking in for playing time. Morris was overshadowed in Vegas and his preseason was cut short in the first game by an injury.

But when the regular season opened, McHale shockingly went with Morris and stuck with him. The second-year Kansas forward has been the team’s best scoring punch off the bench, averaging just under 10 points and hitting 39% from downtown. While the future is still bright for Jones, he’s not even old enough to drink yet… there’s plenty of time. Morris, however, needed this opportunity now, or things were looking bleak. Like a hot sale on Black Friday, Rockets fans got a sweet deal here — a 2-for-1 special — and now both players may very well pan out.

>> Comments

Advertisement

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”.

Advertisement

Analysis

‘He’s a winner’: In Houston debut, Dorian Finney-Smith makes a clear impact

Published

on

Photo via Rockets.com, Houston Rockets

The sample is small, but the results are hard to deny.

In his first three outings with the Rockets, veteran forward Dorian Finney-Smith is already making a significant impact.

After struggling defensively for much of December, Houston (20-10) is back in the NBA’s top five in defensive rating over its past three games.

All three were commanding victories, starting with a road victory on Christmas over the Los Angeles Lakers, and they all came with Finney-Smith as a new addition to the rotation. Though he signed with the Rockets in July, Finney-Smith sat out the first 27 games of the 2025-26 regular season due to offseason ankle surgery.

Advertisement

In 45 minutes over those three games, the Rockets have a +21.0 net rating differential with Finney-Smith on the floor. By defensive rating, they are 14.3 points better when he plays.

Offensively, the versatile 6-foot-7 forward is making 42.9% of his 3-pointers, and that’s coming off a 2024-25 campaign in which he shot a career-best 41.1% from distance (with the Los Angeles Lakers and Brooklyn Nets).

Advertisement

“He’s an underrated feel-for-the-game guy,” Pacers head coach Rick Carlise said prior to Houston’s victory over Indiana on Monday night. “He’s a quiet connector for a team. He’s about all the right stuff. He’s a winner.”

Carlisle previously coached Finney-Smith for multiple seasons with the Dallas Mavericks.

“It feels amazing,” Finney-Smith said of his health and how he’s currently feeling. “Just happy to be out there. Once I’m on the court, I don’t feel anything. Winning is the most important thing, and I’m just grateful to be out there.”

Ime Udoka, head coach of the Rockets, pointed to “more versatility” as one of the primary benefits of Finney-Smith’s return.

“He is a seasoned veteran, high IQ, and communicator,” Udoka said (via Brian Barefield, Rockets Wire) “Something we have lacked at times is our communication. I think his awareness of every situation is really high. He has been around and done all those roles.”

Advertisement

For the time being, Finney-Smith is limited to approximately 15 minutes per game. Prior to his three appearances in recent days, he hadn’t played in an NBA game since last April, so the Rockets will be understandably cautious as they ramp up his activity.

But that minutes limitation is expected to gradually increase over the weeks ahead, and the Rockets are hopeful that Finney-Smith will be a major contributor by the time the 2026 Western Conference playoffs begin in April. Ideally, he can replace much of what the Rockets lost when they sent Dillon Brooks to the Phoenix Suns in the Kevin Durant trade.

“Whether it is off the bench or starting, he gives us a little more depth at the wing, and he can guard up or guard down,” Udoka says of Finney-Smith. The 32-year-old is widely known around the league for his “3-and-D” skill set on the wing, when healthy.

With an improving defense, Houston (20-10) enters calendar-year 2026 with three consecutive victories and a spot at No. 4 in the Western Conference standings. Next up is a New Year’s Day clash at Brooklyn, where Finney-Smith played for portions of the past three seasons.

Thursday’s tipoff is at 5:00 p.m. Central, and the game will be televised regionally on Space City Home Network (SCHN) and nationally via NBA League Pass.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Analysis

Podcast: As trade season begins, will the Rockets make a splash?

Published

on

Photo by Ben DuBose, ClutchFans

In this roundtable conversation, ClutchFans Editor Dave Hardisty joins Ben DuBose and Paulo Alves to preview the NBA’s upcoming transaction window and its potential implications for the 16-7 Houston Rockets.

December 15 is when players who signed contracts in the preceding offseason become trade eligible, so the period from Monday until the in-season deadline of February 5, 2026, is likely to be among the most active on the 2025-26 calendar.

Discussion topics include roster needs and potential trade targets across the board, including the likelihood of bigger-name deals (such as Giannis Antetokounmpo, Jrue Holiday, and James Harden) and smaller acquisitions along the lines of Keon Ellis, Chris Paul, and Ayo Dosunmu.

The show also explores Houston’s potential desirability on the buyout market and the team’s long-term timeline for title contention, and specifically why those factors might make this a relatively quiet trade window for the Rockets.

Advertisement

Editor’s note: Hardisty and DuBose also host regular “ClutchFans Live” postgame recap shows on YouTube, while DuBose and Alves are co-hosts of the Rockets LaunchPod podcast, presented by ClutchFans and with support from SportsTalk 790 — official flagship radio station of the Rockets. Tune in to both shows for more coverage!

Continue Reading

Analysis

NBA front-offices poll: Rafael Stone’s Rockets rise to No. 3

Published

on

Photo via Houston Rockets, Rockets.com

At 15-6, the Rockets are currently tied for the second-fewest losses in the Western Conference standings, and they own the NBA’s No. 2 net rating.

And yet, just two years ago, Houston was coming off three straight rebuilding seasons with the worst record in the West.

It’s been a remarkable rise under the guidance of general manager Rafael Stone, who has combined the development of young players such as Alperen Sengun, Amen Thompson, Jabari Smith Jr., and Reed Sheppard with the acquisition of impact veterans — namely, Kevin Durant, Steven Adams, and the injured Fred VanVleet.

Making matters even better, the Rockets added and developed all that talent while still retaining several high-end future draft assets, to boot. Houston believes that draft equity can make it a sustainable contender for years to come, both in terms of having desirable trade assets and an ability to replenish its roster depth in cost-efficient ways.

Advertisement

With the 2025-26 regular season now at approximately its quarter pole, The Athletic recently canvassed 36 executives across the league — presidents, general managers, vice presidents, and assistant GMs — to rank the NBA’s top front offices.

Led by Stone, the Rockets’ front office comes in at No. 3, trailing only the last two champions — the Oklahoma City Thunder and Boston Celtics.

“High-end talent, a willingness to be bold, (and) good asset management,” one executive told The Athletic, when asked to sum up the Rockets.

Advertisement

Houston finished with one first-place vote; six second- and third-place votes, apiece; five fourth-place votes; and three fifth-place votes.

“They have drafted well, built a deep team in a tough Western Conference while managing tax aprons,” said one executive who voted the Rockets second. “(They) hired a good coach (Ime Udoka) and built an overall team identity, then added KD for cheap. From where they were only a few years ago, they have done a good job turning it around.”

Per Sam Amick of The Athletic, Stone “values this young core greatly and has frequently resisted the temptation to reach for overpriced roster shortcuts.” Udoka has an “influential voice” with the front office, as well, Amick adds.

Amick notes that the Durant trade came at a relatively low asset cost, adding that the Rockets are uninterested in pursuing a trade with the Memphis Grizzlies for disgruntled star Ja Morant.

The Athletic’s complete front-office rankings can be viewed here. This time a year ago, in the same exercise, Houston finished in a tie for the No. 11 spot.

Advertisement

Continue Reading

Analysis

With NBA Cup run complete, Rockets add Clippers, Nuggets to December schedule

Published

on

Photo via Houston Rockets, Rockets.com

After their Emirates NBA Cup 2025 elimination, the Rockets (12-4) learned two additional December dates for their 2025-26 regular season.

As announced Saturday by the league office, the Los Angeles Clippers (5-14) will visit Houston on Thursday, Dec. 11. Tipoff at Toyota Center will be at 7:00 p.m. Central.

Meanwhile, the Rockets (12-4) will then head to Denver on Monday, Dec. 15, where tipoff versus the Nuggets (13-5) is at 8:30 p.m. Central.

During Cup games, all three of the Clippers, Nuggets, and Rockets went 2-2 in Western Conference group-stage play. Because only four teams out of the 15 in each conference advance to the knockout rounds, a 2-2 record in group games isn’t usually enough to finish among the top four, and that was again the case this year.

Advertisement

To ensure that all teams play 82 regular-season games, teams who don’t advance then have two additional December games scheduled versus same-conference opponents who also did not advance.

In most cases, these add-on matchups come down to a formula. Taking Houston as an example, each season’s schedule includes two games (one home, one away) versus all East opponents and four games (two home, two away) versus most West opponents.

However, if that was the case for all same-conference opponents, the schedule would be at 86 games in length. So, there is a select group — rotating each year — of same-conference opponents on the docket only three times.

To trim down to 80 games (to account for the possibility of Cup advancement), the six West teams with only three dates on Houston’s initial 2025-26 schedule were the Clippers, Nuggets, Warriors, Oklahoma City Thunder, Minnesota Timberwolves, and Los Angeles Lakers.

Add-on games are typically chosen from that group, and the Thunder and Lakers advanced in Cup play, thus taking them off the table. So, it came down to two teams from the other four.

Advertisement

Led by James Harden, the reeling Clippers have yet to play Houston this season, though they will meet again on Dec. 23 in Los Angeles.

Meanwhile, the Nikola Jokic-led Nuggets enjoyed a close Nov. 21 victory in Houston. For the Rockets, Kevin Durant and Alperen Sengun each struggled in that game.

Now, less than a month later — in a matchup that could prove pivotal in the West standings race — Durant and Sengun (assuming health) will get an opportunity to make amends.

Denver and Houston are currently tied for the No. 3 spot in the West (trailing the Thunder and Lakers), though the Rockets are technically ahead by percentage points due to playing two fewer games. Thus, that Dec. 15 rematch could have significant stakes for both sides.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Analysis

This Thanksgiving, the Rockets are thankful for Reed Sheppard

Published

on

Photo via Houston Rockets, Rockets.com

Relative to their expected formula from the 2025 offseason, the Rockets were missing five rotation players in Wednesday’s Thanksgiving Eve playoff rematch versus the Warriors.

Kevin Durant (personal reasons), Steven Adams (right ankle tendinopathy), and Tari Eason (right oblique strain) were all sidelined, and veterans Fred VanVleet (right knee) and Dorian Finney-Smith (left ankle) remain on the shelf after offseason surgeries.

Yet, the Rockets (12-4) still won for a 12th time in 14 games, and they overcame a 14-point road deficit against a high-profile Golden State squad featuring the likes of Steph Curry, Jimmy Butler, and Draymond Green.

The biggest reason was second-year guard Reed Sheppard, who set career-highs in points (31) and rebounds (9) while making 12-of-25 shots (48.0%), including four 3-pointers.

Advertisement

“He was big,” said head coach Ime Udoka, whose Rockets won despite shooting below 40% overall and 30% from 3-point range. “Reed really held us together when guys were struggling.”

For the season, Sheppard — a starter for Udoka over the past two games — is averaging 14.3 points, 3.3 assists, 2.8 rebounds, and 1.6 steals in 24.9 minutes per game. He’s shooting 48.8% overall and 45.5% on 3-pointers, with the latter figure coming in at No. 11 among hundreds of qualified NBA players.

But the advanced metrics are even more impressive. Per Basketball Reference, here’s where Sheppard ranks among his NBA peers in several impact categories:

• Box plus/minus (BPM): No. 5 (7.3)
• Defensive BPM: No. 6 (2.7)
• Offensive BPM: No. 15 (4.6)
• Win shares per 48 minutes: No. 10 (.208)
• Value over replacement player (VORP): No. 16 (0.9)
• True shooting (TS): No. 42 (62.9%)
• Player efficiency rating (PER): No. 40 (19.6)
• Steal percentage: No. 5 (3.3%)

Advertisement

The only players with a superior BPM are a quartet of annual Most Valuable Player (MVP) frontrunners in Nikola Jokic, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Giannis Antetokounmpo, and Luka Doncic. At the moment, Sheppard is the league’s highest-rated American player!

To say the least, those are remarkable efficiency metrics for a 21-year-old in his second NBA season. And it’s not as if Sheppard is posting those in low-leverage minutes, as evidenced by the key plays he made in the fourth quarter to help put the Warriors away.

“Defensively is where he’s shown the most improvement, overall,” Udoka said from San Francisco. “I think he’s taking on the challenge. The blow-bys are getting less and less. He’s catching up with the physicality of the game. Teams are going to try to attack him, at times, but like we said last year and during this summer, make them go east and west and stay in front of them. Help will come. He’s doing a great job of that.”

Sixteen games in, it’s no longer a particularly small sample. Rounding, it’s actually 20% of the 82-game regular season!

Advertisement

Assuming relative health, the 2025-26 Rockets had a high floor entering the season due to the All-Star presence of Durant and Alperen Sengun. But whether they could achieve a championship ceiling likely depended on further leaps from young players — most notably, the high-upside ones like Sheppard and Amen Thompson.

With Durant out, Thompson was the headliner in Monday’s road victory in Phoenix, and Sheppard stole the show two nights later at Golden State.

For everyone surrounding the organization, it’s an appropriate time to be thankful. With these leaps being shown from players who are extremely young and still improving, the Rockets appear set up to be a force in the Western Conference for quite some time.

“It’s going to be exciting when we get fully healthy and whole,” Udoka surmised.

Advertisement

Continue Reading

Trending