News Rockets Team Notes

Rockets Contend With Phoenix Rising From The Ashes, A Little

imagn-27608861.jpg

Houston Rockets vs Phoenix Suns​

November 24, 2025​


Location: Mortgage Matchup Center, Really, Seriously, Mortgage Matchup? Phoenix, AZ

TV: Space City Sports Network

Radio:KBME Sports Talk 790

Online: Rockets App

Gametime: 8:30 PM CST

Probable Starting Lineups​


Rockets: Reed Sheppard, A. Thompson, Jabari Smith Jr., Alperen “Thin Jokic” Sengun, The Funaki

Sunz: Devon Cream Tea Booker, Jordan Goodwin Fellas, Dillon Le Villon Brooks, Rolls Royce OrNot, Oso Very Igohodaro

It’s a late start, in Phoenix this time, with no falcon in evidence.

If you’re not afraid to stay up late with the night owls, join us at

Join us here https://www.playback.tv/nbalatenet

Still no polls. Don’t blame me.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/gener...d-with-phoenix-rising-from-the-ashes-a-little
 
Houston Rockets vs. Golden State Warriors game preview

gettyimages-2213435365.jpg


Tonight is another game that is probably in front of a sold out arena excited to see their former star Kevin Durant.

While the Houston Rockets will not have their ace closer tonight against the Golden State Warriors, this game still has stakes. These teams, of course, played a 7-game first round series last time. The Warriors prevailed behind wins in Games 1 and 7 in Houston. You could easily look at that series as the incident that caused Rafael Stone to act after three years of mostly standing pat and focusing on the draft.

The game also matters for the NBA Cup. For Houston to advance, they need to win tonight and would need to win tonight by a lot of points and get help elsewhere on Friday. Suffice to say, the Rockets almost certainly won’t be playing in Las Vegas.

Houston will be without five players that figured to be rotation players this season. Besides the normal Fred VanVleet absence (so ubiquitous that I’m not writing it in the injury report section) and Definitely Fictional Signing (who apparently exists), the Rockets will be without Tari Eason, Kevin Durant, and Steven Adams. The Wariors are also down a few pieces.

The good news for Houston is that after tonight, they’ll have three days off before playing their first back-to-back of the season, with both games taking place in Utah.

Tip-off


9pm CT

How To Watch


ESPN

Injury Report

Rockets


Tari Eason: OUT (leg)

Dorian Finney-Smith: OUT (ankle)

Kevin Durant: OUT (personal)

Steven Adams: OUT (ankle)

Warriors​


Jonathan Kuminga: OUT

Al Horford: OUT

Draymond Green: GTD

The Line (as of this post)


GS -1.5

Check here for updates

Looking ahead because we can


Sunday afternoon on the road against the Utah Jazz

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...rockets-vs-golden-state-warriors-game-preview
 
Let’s give Kevin Durant’s family the same privacy you’d also want for your family

gettyimages-2247955039.jpg


Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant missed Monday’s game against the Phoenix Suns, due to a personal family matter. The game would’ve been a homecoming, of sorts, for KD. He’ll also miss Wednesday’s game against the Golden State Warriors, due to the same reason.

The early thought *should be* that we hope all is well with Durant and his family. If he has to miss more games, let him. Life is bigger than basketball. Or any sport.

We don’t deserve clarity or an explanation. Again, life is bigger than anything else.

Some have speculated the cause of Durant’s absence. It’s been theorized that maybe Durant has a child on the way. Or maybe Durant lost a loved one.

Let’s stop probing and speculating. We don’t need to know the reason.

There was even a reporter who tried to grill Rockets coach Ime Udoka on exactly why Durant wasn’t suited up. When Udoka stated that it was due to personal reasons, the reporter pushed and pushed.

Join the conversation!​


Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • Coming soon: New, improved notifications system!

Because that wasn’t good enough. Apparently they thought THEY deserved to know the specifics.

They masqueraded it by telling Udoka that his explanation leaves the door open for people to fill in the blanks with whatever justification they please. Udoka stood ten toes down and essentially said mind your business.

The whole situation makes me a bit uncomfortable. And I’d like for people to personalize things, a bit.

At your job, you likely aren’t tight with everyone on the org chart.

If you had something personal that caused you to need to step away from work, would you owe EVERYONE an explanation? Or just your direct supervisor?

We all know the answer to that.

Furthermore, you wouldn’t even want everyone to know what’s caused you to miss work, although you obviously couldn’t prevent them from gossiping and speculating.

You’d hope that your boss wouldn’t delve into specifics of why you’re out of office but you wouldn’t be able to prevent that either.

But you would deserve and be entitled to a modicum of privacy, on a personal level. As a human being.

Athletes are no different, regardless of their platform, influence, or affluence.

Let’s treat Durant like you’d also wish to be treated.

The game of life is bigger than the game of basketball.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...ly-the-privacy-youd-also-want-for-your-family
 
Rockets overcome a 14-point deficit to beat the Warriors 104-100

imagn-27688800.jpg


Heading into Wednesday’s match with the Golden State Warriors, the Rockets knew they would be without Kevin Durant for the second consecutive game due to personal reasons and Steven Adams would be out as well. So, Reed Sheppard was inserted into the starting lineup for the second consecutive game and Clint Capela would see extended minutes.

Early on, shot making was not at a premium for the Rockets. they shot just 9-of-28 in the first quarter. The Warriors made five three-pointers on the quarter, but were not exactly shooting the nets down either, and thanks to the Rockets offensive rebounding they were able to keep the game close with only a three-point deficit after the first quarter.

The Rockets shot 12-of-24 in the second quarter, but none of those shots came from three-point territory. Meanwhile, they allowed the Warriors to shoot 12-of-23 in the quarter including 5-of-11 from the arc, causing the halftime deficit to hit 12 points. The Rockets did themselves no favors at the free-throw stripe either, and it began to look as if they were once again saving their worst efforts for an NBA Cup game.

The Rockets would get to be down by as many as 14, but the kept plugging away. Defense and offensive rebounding were the formula. With Alperen Sengun and Amen Thompson struggling from the field it would be up to Reed Sheppard to provide the offense and that’s just what he did. With a career-high 31 points to go along with 9 rebounds, 5 assists, 2 blocks and a steal, Sheppard would be the spark the team needed to get back in the game.

On a night where the Rockets shot 39.4 percent from the field, 28.2 percent from three, and missed 9 free-throws it was again defense and offensive rebounding that would make the difference for the Rockets. The Warriors themselves only shot 42.7 percent from the field including 27.9 percent from three, and the Rockets out rebounded them 66 to 54, with the offensive rebounding edge favoring the Rockets 25-13.

The Rockets dominated the third quarter 27-17 to pull within one-point, then dropped a 30-piece in the fourth quarter with big shots coming from Sheppard, Thompson, and Alperen Sengun. All in all, it was a great team victory on the road, once again without Kevin Durant. Amen only had 10 points but grabbed 14 rebounds and made a huge bucket late in the fourth off a great pass from Reed Sheppard where Amen caught the ball in mid-air and banked it in off the glass in one motion. Sengun finished the night with 16 points, 6 rebounds, and 6 assists. Jabari chipped in with 15 points, Aaron Holiday had 14 points, and Clint Capela grabbed 12 rebounds.

Despite the win, the Rockets will unfortunately not be advancing to the knockout round of the NBA Cup due to Memphis defeating the Pelicans. Still, the Rockets get a quality win against the team that eliminated them form the playoffs last season and they did it without their best scorer. Reed Sheppard continues to make huge strides in his game and overall confidence. The Rockets win their third game of the season after trailing by at least 14 points, which shows their resilience regardless of who is on the floor. The Rockets will get to spend the Thanksgiving holiday with their families before heading out to Utah for the season’s first back-to-back, both games against the Jazz on the road. We will have all the coverage you need all season right here on TDS! Happy Thanksgiving and GO ROCKETS!

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...engun-steph-curry-jimmy-butler-draymond-green
 
Rockets square off against the Warriors in Game 4 of NBA Cup action

imagn-26095435.jpg

Houston Rockets vs Golden State Warriors​

November 26, 2025​


Location: Chase Center: San Francisco, CA

TV: ESPN

Radio:KBME Sports Talk 790

Online: Rockets App

Gametime: 9:00 PM CST

Probable Starting Lineups​


Rockets: Reed Shepard, A. Thompson, Josh Okogie, Jabari Smith Jr., Alperen Sengun

Warriors: Gary Payton, Steph Curry, Jimmy Butler, Moses Moody, Draymond Green

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...durant-amen-thompson-jimmy-butler-steph-curry
 
Rockets assign Jae’Sean Tate, JD Davison to Rio Grande Valley Vipers

gettyimages-2243731127.jpg


On Saturday, the Houston Rockets made a few relatively minor roster moves, assigning both Jae’Sean Tate and JD Davison to the Rio Grande Vipers.

Neither move was much of a surprise, as both players were averaging right around five minutes per contest, when they played. However, Davison played in just five games (such is life for players on two-way deals).

Tate only suited up for eight of the Rockets’ 14 games this season.

Tate has far exceeded the expectations of an undrafted player. Especially one who made it to the NBA at age 25.

He’s played six seasons in the NBA, to date, and has raked in roughly $27 million.

On a scale of a professional athlete (specifically an NBA player), that’s a relatively low number. But that’s generational wealth, nonetheless.

With the Vipers, Tate will at least have the opportunity to compete and develop his game.

The Rockets’ wing depth has caused Tate to drop out of the rotation, in addition to his skillset limitations (i.e. his lack of long-range shooting, which has killed spacing essentially anytime he’s been in the lineup).

Not to mention health issues earlier in his career.

As for Davison, again, there couldn’t have been a reasonable expectation for an alternative outcome. Hope is an entirely different conversation, however.Especially based on his preseason showing. He was making plays for the Rockets. And shooting like a mad man, to the tune of 47.1 percent from long-range.

If this were last season, that would have been especially appealing. However, this year’s Rockets have the best 3-point shooting attack.

Surprisingly, the Rockets are shooting 42.1 percent from deep, which again tops the league (although the attempts rank fewest in the league).

Regardless, Davison had fans hoping that Houston had identified the next big thing. An unheralded potential key role player, if you will.

Especially considering the team’s need for a point guard, following Fred VanVleet’s season-ending injury.

He’ll likely turn up in the G-League, again. He was the G-League MVP, so he’s certainly going to thrive.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...n-tate-jd-davison-to-rio-grande-valley-vipers
 
Three things Houston Rockets fans should be thankful for

imagn-27688826.jpg


It’s that time of the year! A day for family, food, fun, and most importantly, taking time to remember what to be thankful for. This Thanksgiving season, Rockets fans have plenty to be thankful for.

1. Reed Sheppard​


After a rough first game of his season, Reed Shepard’s play these past games have been nothing short of spectacular.. Reed is not only shooting exceptionally well from three, but his defense has improved as well. Last game against the Warriors with Kevin Durant out, Alperen Sengun and Amen Thompson didn’t have it going, and Houston needing a go-to scorer, Reed delivered, scoring 31 points and hitting the game-clinching free throws. After his play lately, it’s only a matter of time before Reed finds himself a permanent member of the starting lineup.

Join the conversation!​


Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • Coming soon: New, improved notifications system!

2. Josh Okogie​


Okogie was a late addition to the roster this summer, as he was the last player to get added to the roster. It’s no secret that teams weren’t lining up to sign him after he was released from Charlotte this July. I was excited for Okogie, but like many fans, I kept my expectations low. I expected Okogie to be a good third option and a member of the stay-ready crew

It’s safe to say Okogie has exceeded his expectations by a mile, starting ten games. Okogie is a career 30.5% three-point shooter for his career, but is shooting 42.9% on career high attempts per game.
Okogie plays his role perfectly; he does the dirty work, defends exceptionally well, and doesn’t hesitate to shoot to three when he’s open. Houston fans should be beyond thankful for having him on this team, especially on his bargain of a contract.

3. Kevin Durant​


Last but certainly not least, Rockets fans should be thankful for a Kevin Durant. It was clear last season that the Rockets lacked a closer, someone to go to late in the game when they needed a bucket. The sometimes-you, sometimes-me offense could only get the team so far. This summer, Houston was able to acquire Kevin Durant, who not only gave the Rockets a closer but is one of the best players the NBA has ever seen. A closer isn’t all Durant has given Houston; however. Houston also gained a veteran player with championship experience and a great mentor for Jabari Smith Jr.

I hope those who celebrate had a great day full of family and fun, and are ready to watch the Rockets in action on Sunday, Utah vs the Jazz at 2:00 central on Space City Home Network or NBA League Pass.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...ets-fans-should-be-thankful-for-reed-sheppard
 
The Rockets triangle offense of the future

usa_today_17945741.jpg


Some sports writers are sports experts. Some are writing experts. Those who are both are few and far between, and there’s a decent chance their name rhymes with (Tic) Tac Toe.

(Zach Lowe. It’s Zach Lowe).

I’m not here because I have any formal background in basketball. I’m a trained writer. Basketball is merely the conduit. I say all of that to say this:

Bear with me.

My understanding of the triangle offense may not be much stronger than yours. If I’m way off base, I know someone will softly inform me in the comments. Consider this more of an invitation to discussion than an article:

Do Alperen Sengun, Amen Thompson, and Reed Sheppard make a perfect triangle?

The Rockets may have the perfect triangle​


In rudimentary terms, the idea is to get the ball to a strong passing/scoring big on the low block, where he has three options: 1. Try to score, 2. Pass to a guard who can shoot in the corner, or 3. Pass to a cutter. Those three players form a “triangle” on the strong side.

The Rockets have all the pieces to make this work. Sengun’s offensive abilities are well-documented. Sheppard is a nuclear three-point shooter. Thompson is generating 1.51 points per possession (PPP) as a cutter this year, which lands in the 81.5th percentile. That’s solid, and in an offense that caters more to his cutting, he could likely do better.

None of this will be applied in 2025-26. Firstly, the Rockets aren’t going to explore an offensive dynamic that doesn’t include Kevin Durant for the time being. Moreover, it would be too ambitious to try to add this substantial a wrinkle midseason. It could be something to consider moving forward:

Should the Rockets run the triangle full-time?

The Rockets can modernize an old strategy​


No.

A triangle offense doesn’t cater to Reed Sheppard’s strengths. These sets would mostly be leaning into Sengun’s decision-making faculties. That’s something the Rockets should be doing, but Sheppard is earning on-ball trust as well.

Generally speaking, the triangle rests on read-and-react principles. The broader point here is that the Rockets’ three most exciting young players are all high feel guys, so Ime Udoka should trust them to make reads. Instilling some triangle principles could be useful, but that’s not to say the Rockets should become “the triangle team”.

They should be thinking about their post-Durant identity. Sure, we don’t know what the future holds. The Rockets may make a blockbuster trade or draft someone who changes the entire calculus.

Here’s what we do know: Barring catastrophe, Durant will retire long before Sengun, Sheppard, or Thompson. We also know that Sengun, Sheppard, and Thompson have all looked like cornerstones. So it’s logical for the Rockets to start considering life after Durant.

What do three cornerstones make? A triangle.

It won’t be your grandfather’s triangle. This won’t be straight out of the Tex Winter playbook. When the Bulls ran the triangle, it was mostly to get Michael Jordan (ostensibly the cutter) a better position in the midrange area. When the Lakers ran it, it looked closer to what the Rockets could run, but where Shaq was very focused on scoring, Sengun should be leveraging his passing chops to find Sheppard for three or Thompson for a layup more often.

I’m at least 90% sure that makes sense.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...re-alperen-sengun-reed-sheppard-amen-thompson
 
Houston Rockets vs. Utah Jazz game preview

gettyimages-2240035020.jpg


The Houston Rockets are finally playing a back-to-back.

Long after every other team has already had one (or several), Houston stays on the road to take on the Utah Jazz, a young team that feels like they’re just waiting for someone to throw a preposterous amount of picks at them for Lauri Markkanen. Danny Ainge is hoping that he can find another GM in the Billy King or Nico Harrison mold that will just give him a bunch of assets and then proceed to immediately suck. So far, there have been no takers.

I mention it a lot in our Playback streams, but the Jazz were an incredibly feisty against Houston last season. Christian and I have mentioned that Utah played its two best games of the year against the Rockets and no one else. The teams split those, and it wasn’t until the third and final meeting where the Jazz gave up the ghost and conceded that they were actually a bad team.

Those games were full of “random guy has the night of their life,” which included Keyonte George (who is actually good), Brice Sensabaugh (who probably isn’t), and Isaiah Collier (who definitely isn’t…yet?). Nevertheless, the Jazz try hard and won’t be an easy out, especially at home. Plus, teams rarely get swept in a home-and-stay-home.

Utah plays a Houston-lite style by attacking the offensive glass (sixth in the league) and getting to the free throw line (third). They don’t play a great brand of defense, but they do rebound most of their opponent’s missed (seventh). Basically, this game will come down to rebounding. If Houston keeps doing what they do, they should win.

Tip-off


2pm CT

How To Watch


Space City Home Network

Injury Report

Rockets


Tari Eason: OUT (leg)

Dorian Finney-Smith: OUT (ankle)

Kevin Durant: GTD (personal)

Steven Adams: GTD (ankle)

Jazz​


Georges Niang: OUT

Ace Bailey: GTD

Walker Kessler: OUT

The Line (as of this post)


HOU -11.5

Check here for updates

Looking ahead because we can


Monday night on the road against the Utah Jazz

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rockets-game-previews/36977/houston-rockets-vs-utah-jazz-game-preview
 
Rockets ready to rock with Jazz

imagn-27688608.jpg

Houston Rockets vs Utah Jazz​

Sunday, November 30, 2025​


Location: Delta Center: Salt Lake City, Utha

TV: Space City Home Network

Radio:KBME Sports Talk 790

Online: Rockets App

Gametime: 2:00 PM CST

Probable Starting Lineups​


Rockets: Reed Shepard, A. Thompson, Kevin Durant, Jabari Smith Jr., Alperen Sengun

Jazz: Gary Payton, Steph Curry, Jimmy Butler, Moses Moody, Draymond Green

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...ock-with-utah-jazz-kevin-durant-reed-sheppard
 
Houston Rockets vs. Utah Jazz game preview

gettyimages-2249233386.jpg


This is the preview for the second game of a back-to-back between the Houston Rockets and Utah Jazz.

Houston won the first game 129-101, and the game was comfortably in hand in the second quarter. The Rockets scored at least 30 points in each quarter and none of Houston’s starters played more than 31 minutes.

Back-to-backs are usually splits, and you know the Jazz will want to come out strong after a disappointing first game. Houston cannot get complacent or this could get tight. Steven Adams will probably sit tonight as the Rockets have been pretty clear that he’ll be sitting out one game of back-to-backs.

Tip-off


8pm CT

How To Watch


Space City Home Network

Injury Report

Rockets


Tari Eason: OUT (leg)

Dorian Finney-Smith: OUT (ankle)

Steven Adams: GTD (ankle)

Jazz​


Georges Niang: OUT

Walker Kessler: OUT

Kevin Love: GTD

The Line (as of this post)


N/A

Check here for updates

Looking ahead because we can


Wednesday night at home against the Sacramento Kings

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rockets-game-previews/37005/houston-rockets-vs-utah-jazz-game-preview
 
Rockets roll over Jazz 129-101

imagn-27712315.jpg


There’s not too many more satisfying things as a Houston Rockets fan (especially one that’s been around a while) as a blowout victory over the Utah Jazz. And that’s exactly what we got today, as the Rockets trampled over Utah 129-101 behind Kevin Durant and Alperen Sengun.

Durant played his first game back since missing two games for personal reasons, and he didn’t miss a beat, going off for 25 points, 6 rebounds, 4 assists, 3 steals and a block while shooting 10-for-14 from the field and 3-for-4 from deep. He only had to play 30 minutes due to the blowout.

Sengun was Houston’s leading scorer, with 28 points, 4 rebounds, 5 assists and a steal. He was 10-for-15 from the field and 7-for-9 from the foul line. Alpie did his damage in just 28 minutes of court time. When these two have it rolling like that, the Rockets are tough to beat.

Jabari Smith Jr. added 15 points, and Steven Adams had 13 points, 12 boards, a steal and a block in only 17 minutes of action. He dominated the game physically during his time on the court, finishing a +24 in those limited minutes.

Reed Sheppard was officially in the starting lineup for the Rockets, and he finished with 9 points, 6 boards, 4 assists, 4 steals and 2 blocks, showing his can contribute in a multitude of ways, even when he’s not scoring a ton. He was efficient, shooting 4-for-8 from the field and 1-for-3 from deep. He played 31 minutes and was tied for game-high with +33.

Houston shot 53 percent as a team and outrebounded the Jazz 50-33, as the Rockets were able to clear the bench in the fourth quarter.

The Jazz were led by Ace Bailey with 19 points and Lauri Markkanen with 18.

The Rockets now move to 13-4 and have won three game in a row. They’ll be back in action again tomorrow for the first back-to-back of the year, once again in Utah against the Jazz. That’s a dangerous game for an emotional letdown after tonight’s easy blow out win. Let’s see if the Rockets can maintain their focus as the clearly superior team.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...tah-jazz-129-101-alperen-sengun-keviin-durant
 
Rancid Rockets Rolled By Jazz 133-125

A picture of Ime Udoka looking serious, of course.


This was without question the worst loss of the season.

I had some fear that the Rockets, having beaten the Jazz soundly Sunday afternoon might go into the second game of the away/also-away-but-in-the-same-town, back-to-back with Utah a bit complacent, and might be at risk of dropping a game they really should win.

To say that’s how the Rockets came out to start tonight’s game is a kindness to the Rockets. The Jazz came out and relentlessly attacked the Rockets. They played with more energy, they got to the loose balls, they out rebounded the Rockets, they made seemingly every two point shot they took. Admittedly many of those were layups. Meanwhile the Rockets struggled to do anything right. Keyonte George of the Jazz, after having one of the worst fairly high usage NBA games possibly ever (19 minutes, 0 points, 0-6, 2 ast, 8 turnovers) had a game more in keeping with his season thus far (28pts, 8-14, 8 ast, and well, a still robust 6 turnovers).

In any case, the Jazz started strong, but the Rockets somehow won the quarter 32 to 31. Giving up 30+ point quarters, though, is not how the Rockets win basketball games. So it would prove tonight. The second quarter they gave up 37 and scored only 25. Still, not terrible, right? They could turn things around in the second half, right?

Well, not initially. The Rockets came out awful in the third quarter, and looked, overall, even more lackluster. At the 4 minute mark of the third quarter the Rockets were down 89-70, and it appeared the favor of a rout was being returned. Not so fast, though. Udoka subbed out Kevin Durant, put in Tate and, of course, Aaron Holiday (who, like a chronic cough, would never go away after than point). Tate, Sengun, Holiday and Capela, but mostly Sengun and Tate, would bring the score to 89-98 in favor of the Jazz in the next four minutes.

The Rockets run continued in the fourth, and Utah coach Will Hardy called no timeouts as it happened. Perhaps his theory was to see if the Jazz could solve things, or perhaps he thought it would be as well to aid the Danny Ainge Forever Tank. We’ll never know.

Over the next five minutes Kevin Durant, Sengun and Jabari brought the game to a very winnable 106-109 with about 7 minutes remaining. The Rockets were also in the bonus. This was about as good as it would get going forward. From that point onwards the Rockets would seemingly get no stops, and Aaron Holiday, and to an extent Kevin Durant would go from helping the Rockets cause, to hurting it, either with terrible shot selection in Durant’s case, or bad defense, and offense, in Holiday’s. Still, he stayed in the game, despite becoming a negative.

Coach Udoka, seemed to be chasing another magical Aaron Holiday night, like his great effort in the game against Cleveland, where he scored 18 points in 19 minutes on fantastic shooting. Tonight was more the opposite. Tonight Holiday played 32 minutes, went 3-10, scored 9 points, and contributed almost nothing but 2 rebounds and 2 assists in what amounted to starters minutes.

I very much believe that Aaron Holiday is a useful player. In small doses. He is by no means a 32 minute player unless he’s scorching hot, or it’s a complete blowout. He should not be the lead guard for more than a few minutes. Pretty much all of the Rockets defensive woes in the 4th quarter were the result of switches to target Holiday. Was there an alternative to Holiday being a traffic cone, and not good on offense in the bargain?

Josh Okogie could have certainly contributed 3-10 shooting, but with better defense and rebounding. Reed Sheppard would have been equally targeted, but might have ended up with a steal, or a block, a made shot or two, or some assists. He is in fact taller than Holiday, too. Jae’Sean Tate was a one man comeback in this game, but he was subbed out for Sengun, and not Holiday. I think Tate would have defended better, rebounded better, and could have easily shot 30% (as he went 2-3, he exceeded that) while providing energy Holiday lacked in the 4th quarter, I believe. He’s a better distributor than Holiday, and considerably larger, while not being less mobile. Holidayfrankly looked gassed for much of the fourth quarter. This isn’t surprising, he came in at 8:06 in the third and never left. Again, I actually like Aaron Holiday, he’s useful, but not for 20 straight minutes of game time.

The Jazz, moreover, essentially didn’t guard Holiday after his initial few minutes in the game, as Will Hardy seemingly sensed that he didn’t really have much to offer, and he wasn’t going to get the ball, either. It left defenders free to help. All this, to be very clear, is by no means the fault of Aaron Holiday, but of Ime Udoka.

The death blow was surrendering 133 points, not bad substitutions, of course. This was not helped by an extraordinary stretch of refereeing late in the game. With game still in the balance, the referees called five fouls on the Rockets between 3:49 and 3:13, none of them fouls on a single shot, but for what appeared to be perfectly ordinary defense. This amounted to one foul every 7 seconds of “play” in that time. All of these calls amazingly came on what amounted to a single Utah possession, with an offensive rebound thrown in. It’s fairly rare to see any basketball team reach the bonus in one possession, but that happened tonight, in 36 seconds. (This might have been a good moment to get ejected for Ime, honestly, no one got subbed out anyway.)

To say most of those calls were soft is to give them undue credit. The next two minutes would feature 8 more foul calls, none of them intentional fouling to stop the clock. Mark Lindsay and crew called 13 fouls in the space of 2:27 of game time at the end of the fourth quarter, in a close game. or one foul every 11 seconds of “action”. It’s hard to know just what to say about this sort of officiating takeover. I believe, though, it’s not what anyone watching would choose to see, and the last four minutes of basketball took approximately forty hours of subjective elapsed suffering experienced.

In the end, the Rockets couldn’t make enough shots, or get stops, and Utah won this one 133-125. Normally 125 points would seemingly indicate an easy Rockets win. Not tonight. The Rockets are obligated by the laws of physics or something to have at least one ridiculous loss to Utah every season. Hopefully there isn’t another.

This was the worst Rockets performance of the season, by some distance.

There’s blame to go around everywhere. Most goes to the Rockets players for coming in flat and allowing Utah to score 31/37/30/35 over four quarters. But some must fall on Udoka and staff for what I consider fairly awful in game decision making late. Udoka is overall a great coach, but I believe he fixates on certain things, to the detriment of an overall effort. He also seems fairly slow to react to anything except defensive mistakes by certain players. Bad, or useless, offense generally seems to get a free pass unless turnovers are involved. I think this blind spot of Ime’s hurt the team’s chances in a real way. Occasionally you just have to score more, and there’s no real strategy to do that, other than give Durant still more difficult looks.

Amen, Sengun, Durant all had good stat lines. So what? The Rockets were generally terrible, and the cherry on top is Durant played 40 minutes tonight, on a back to back.

This might be the sort of humbling loss the Rockets as a whole might learn from. That’s about the best that can be taken away for both the players, and the coaching staff. There’s plenty of failure to go around. This was a literal, and also moral, defeat.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rockets-scores-results/37031/rancid-rockets-rolled-by-jazz-133-125
 
Rockets rank third in NBA power rankings

imagn-27688800.jpg


This morning, NBA.com released their weekly power rankings, and the Houston Rockets slotted in at the number three spot behind only the Denver Nuggets and the Oklahoma City Thunder

The Rockets had won three games in a row after suffering a heartbreaking loss to the Nuggets, including two (against teams with winning records) without Kevin Durant. But that was before last night’s ugly loss to the Utah Jazz.

Three things to consider​

  1. The Rockets held an opponent to fewer than one score per possession for the first time in their victory in Phoenix on Monday. They accomplished this feat 13 times (five of which occurred prior to December 1) last season. Being the only team in the top five on both ends of the court, they have risen to second place defensively.
  2. 28 of the 30 teams have a greater opponent rate than they had the previous season, despite the league-wide free-throw rate having increased dramatically. However, after finishing 19th the previous season, the Rockets have made a very slight rise to sixth place.
  3. During the Rockets’ victory over Golden State on Wednesday, Reed Sheppard scored a career-high 31 points and struck Amen Thompson with a clutch basket, earning him his first two starts of the season in Durant’s absence. After playing just 31 minutes overall with the Rockets’ four full-time starters before Durant’s return on Sunday afternoon, he was still in the starting lineup (with Josh Okogie going to the bench). After 42 minutes, that group has already outscored opponents by 28 points (23.2 per 100 possessions) as of Sunday. The Rockets’ victory in Utah on Sunday marked the beginning of their first run of five games in seven days, despite having the league’s easiest December schedule in terms of cumulative opponent winning percentage (.405). Durant will have his first chance to play against his old team on Friday, as he was not involved in their victory over the Suns last week.

Houston has a relatively easy schedule this week as after facing Utah, they will face Sacramento, Phoenix, and then Dallas. Out of those three teams, Phoenix is the only one above 500 as they are currently seventh in the Western Conference.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rockets-news/37025/houston-rockets-rank-third-in-nba-power-rankings
 
Houston Rockets vs. Sacramento Kings game preview

gettyimages-2202762932.jpg


I don’t need to remind most of you that the Sacramento Kings swept the Houston Rockets last season. In the first meeting, the Kings made 15 consecutive shots over a period over six minutes ansd while the Rockets never gave up, the game was over after that. The second game was the sort of contest Houston could never seem to win last season: a high-scoring affair. Neither team could stop the other but a third quarter cold spell for Houston spelled their doom. In the third and final matchup, Domantas Sabonis got hurt just as the game started, but if you thought Houston would take advantage of that, think again. Once again, Sacramento shot above 50% from the field and won by 10.

That’s the only through line between those three games. There wasn’t a single player that killed Houston in all three games. It was always a team effort. Sacramento shot well from the floor in all of them.

Sometimes, styles make fights. And for whatever reason, even with different coaches, the Kings had the right style to deal with the Rockets, who we must once again remember had a top 4 defense last season.

So don’t look at the injury report. Don’t look at the betting line. Don’t look at the records.

Expect a fight.

Tip-off


7pm CT

How To Watch


Space City Home Network

Injury Report

Rockets


Tari Eason: OUT (leg)

Dorian Finney-Smith: OUT (ankle)

Kings​


Domantas Sabonis: OUT

Malik Monk: GTD

Dennis Schroder: GTD

The Line (as of this post)


HOU -15.5

Check here for updates

Looking ahead because we can


Friday night at home against the Phoenix Suns

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...ston-rockets-vs-sacramento-kings-game-preview
 
How the Rockets can help unlock Amen Thompson

gettyimages-2248917864.jpg


Amen Thompson is one of the best athletes in the NBA. It’s clear when he’s on the break or getting downhill.

In his third season, however, his role has been a little different. Well, drastically different.

Fred VanVleet’s absence prompted the Houston Rockets to move him to point guard, which was interestingly enough his initial position prior to joining the NBA.

Different stakes, however, in the big leagues. Thompson’s counting stats aren’t bad at all.

Not in the slightest.

17.1 points, 7 rebounds, 5.2 assists, and 77.6 percent from the foul line.

The position change hasn’t quite been seamless though. He doesn’t have a jumpshot, no, and he probably never will.

However, he’s regressed there. He’s shooting 47.2 percent from the field, 52.1 percent on twos, 48.8 percent effective field goal percentage, 53.4 percent true shooting.

Let’s dive into his shooting splits. 15 percent on corner threes (after shooting 37.7 percent from there last season). 35.7 percent on twos between 3-10 feet (after shooting 47.1 percent from there last season and even 46.4 percent as a rookie).

27.8 percent on twos between 10 and 16 feet, after shooting 49.3 percent from there last season.

It gets ugly when you pop the hood. A jumpshot would open his game, no question. But again, that likely won’t be a luxury of his.

Part of the issue is Thompson’s shot diet, which seems to consist of low-percentage mid-range shots.

The Rockets can do a few things to help open his game up. He’s been a lead guard on the ball quite extensively.

But it doesn’t have to be like that.

Thompson is an elite cutter to the basket. More slashing and cutting would benefit both he and the Rockets’ offense.

More off-ball reps.

Use him more like a wing offensively. Don’t force the point guard thing on him.

He doesn’t have to start every possession with the ball in his hands.

In fact, the Rockets should allow Reed Sheppard to bring the ball up, which would allow more pick-and-roll action between Sheppard and Alperen Sengun.

It would also allow Thompson more room to cut. Also, Thompson can set screens for Sengun.

Inverted pick-and-roll action.

In conclusion, Thompson can impact basketball without shooting.

And he doesn’t have to be an on-ball point guard. Or point guard at all.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...houston-rockets-can-help-unlock-amen-thompson
 
Rockets and Kings rumble in H-town

imagn-27711674.jpg

Houston Rockets vs Sacramento Kings​

Wednesday, December 3, 2025​


Location: Toyota Center — Houston, Texas

TV: Space City Home Network

Radio:KBME Sports Talk 790

Online: Rockets App

Gametime: 7:00 PM CST

Probable Starting Lineups​


Rockets: Reed Shepard, A. Thompson, Kevin Durant, Jabari Smith Jr., Alperen Sengun

Kings: Russell Westbrook, Zach Lavine, DeMar DeRozen, Keegan Murray, Drew Eubanks

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...-rumble-in-h-town-kevin-durant-alperen-sengun
 
Rockets too tough for Kings down the stretch, win 121-95

imagn-27734794.jpg


The Houston Rockets had a nip-and-tuck first half with the Sacramento Kings, before blowing the game open in the second half and taking 121-95 victory in H-town on Wednesday night.

The Rockets were led by Alperen Sengun with 28 points, 10 rebounds, 3 assists and 4 steals on 11-for-20 shooting from the field, and by Kevin Durant, who finished with 24 points, 3 rebounds and 8 assists on 9-for-16 shooting from the floor.

The Rockets used old-fashioned basketball to physically punish the Kings, as they outrebounded Sacramento 62-32, shot 53 percent from the field to the Kings’ 41 percent and only shot a grand total of 16 threes, making 5 of them. Those are some ‘90s basketball numbers right there. Houston had 78 points in the paint to Sacramento’s 46 and also had 30 fast break points to Sacramento’s 7.

Houston also had 20 points, 12 rebounds, 7 assist, 2 steals and a block from Amen Thompson on 8-for-16 from the field, but he also committed 5 turnovers. Jabari Smith Jr. pitched in 14 points, 8 rebounds and 2 blocks, while Steven Adams had 11 points, 8 rebounds and 2 blocks in just 18 minutes off the bench. Reed Sheppard also went back to the bench, though he still played 28 minutes, but only scored 5 points on 2-for-7 shooting, while also grabbing 6 boards and also getting 1 assist, 1 steal and 2 blocks. Josh Okogie drew the start over Reed, and while he had just 3 total points, he was a game-high +24.

Over on the Kings’ side, they were led by two bench players, with Malik Monk and Maxime Raynaud scoring 25 points apiece. Former Rocket Russell Westbrook and DeMar DeRozan led Kings starters with just 12.

The Rockets are now off tonight, but will be back in action on Friday at home against the Phoenix Suns.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...tretch-win-121-95-alperen-sengun-kevin-durant
 
Houston Rockets vs. Phoenix Suns game preview

gettyimages-2249440705.jpg


Let’s get the negatives out of the way: Jalen Green is not playing tonight in his first return to Toyota Center as an opposing player. Devin Booker is also out.

However, Dillon Brooks is available and is going to take 30 shots. It should be a fun time. He got off to a slow start against Houston in the first meeting between these teams, but found his footing in the second quarter and was pretty awesome. He finished with a game-high 29 points and led multiple charges from down double digits.

That was really the story of the first game. Houston locked down Booker (18 points, 6 turnovers) and forced the other Suns to beat them. And every time Houston took a double digit lead and threatened to run away with the game, Phoenix answered with a run of their own. That was until the fourth quarter, when Houston finally put their foot down and won 114-92. Still, the final score didn’t really tell the story.

Tonight is the first night of a back-to-back for Houston. Tomorrow night they’ll be in Dallas to take on the (suddenly surging?) Mavericks. Expect Steven Adams to sit one of these games, but as of this writing there has been no indication as to which game he will miss.

Tip-off


7pm CT

How To Watch


Space City Home Network

Injury Report

Rockets


Tari Eason: OUT (leg)

Dorian Finney-Smith: OUT (ankle)

Suns​


Devin Booker: OUT

Jalen Green: OUT

Isaiah Livers: GTD

The Line (as of this post)


HOU -11.5

Check here for updates

Looking ahead because we can


Saturday night on the road against the Dallas Mavericks

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke.../houston-rockets-vs-phoenix-suns-game-preview
 
Rocket To The Suns

gettyimages-2249862118.jpg

Houston Rockets vs Phoenix Suns​

Friday, December 5, 2025​


Location: Toyota Center — Houston, Texas

TV: Space City Home Network

Radio:KBME Sports Talk 790

Online: Rockets App

Gametime: 7:00 PM CST

Probable Starting Lineups​


Rockets: Reed Shepard, A. Thompson, Kevin Durant, Jabari Smith Jr., Alperen Sengun

Suns: Colin “Gill” Gillespie, Allen “Dick” Grayson, Dillon “Revenger” Brooks, Royce “One Skill” O’Neale, Mark “MaWi” Williams

Dillon is back for a Second Helping of Revenge! This time, it’s Canadian!

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rockets-scores-results/37094/rocket-to-the-suns
 
Back
Top