Houston Overcomes Infection By Dallasites, Wins 111-107

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Here comes your man. No, really. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Logan Riely/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

This one wasn’t pretty, but it was effective in the end.

Tonight none of the big names for the Rockets had a good offensive night. Sengun just looks broken right now, but of course he’s playing because Adams is out for the season, and no one has seen fit to reward Capela’s generally very good play of late with more minutes for him. The Rockets did enough late in the game, and held on to a lead that persistently narrowed as they once again had great difficulty with late game offense.

The Rockets finally got to play the Mavericks in Houston, and the game was close. Some people might wonder how Dallas, without Day-To-Davis, and Kyrie Irving can be competitive. One is they drafted what looks to be a truly amazing player in Cooper Flagg, who is doing what he’s doing at 19, and two, their roster is actually set up to work around such a player. It was built for Luka Doncic (and Irving was the second PG, and mostly an off ball scorer) but it largely works for Flagg as they are, without much fanfare now, using Flagg almost exactly as they did Doncic. That team reached the Finals, so being competitive, minus Irving, isn’t actually a miracle.

The Rockets lead at the half 59-51, and it might be hoped that they’d continue to build on their lead and have an easy time of it. But if you’ve watched the Rockets much this season, “Win, Over Easy” is rarely on the menu these days.

Cooper Flagg, coming off a 49 point outburst (in a loss) to Charlotte, scored scored 34 tonight, and seemingly all of Dallas’ points from midway through the 4th quarter that weren’t free throws, sort of lucky, or Klay Thompson annoyingly realizing he was in Houston, and making a few shots late, too. It wasn’t quite enough.

Durant, Thompson and Sengun all scored late, but the Rockets made it harder than it needed to be on themselves. They are persistently bad at trying to pass, and overpassing, on what should be easy looks, or an opportunity to go strong at the basket and get free throws. One example late was Tari Eason, on a fast break, deciding to pass to Jabari Smith at his feet. Jabari probably needed to slow down, and be a trailer rather that running beside or ahead of Eason, but these are offensive fundamentals, and best ignored in favor of More Defense. The point being, they do this sort of thing a lot. Some of it is being young, but for a bunch of young athletes to clank as many fast breaks as they do is distressing.

The shooting for the likely scorers was just bad, to make things more interesting. The two usual top scorers went Durant – 6-17, Sengun – 6-20. They did have 8 and 7 assists respectively, so they contributed to the team that way. Fortunately Jabari was 7-13 and 3-5 from three. Tari Eason was 7-15, also 3-5 from three. Amen Thompson was, you guessed it 7-15 as well, and took zero threes (yay). Sheppard was only 3-8, mainly due to going 0-4 from three. He looks to be rushing his shot, and there’s rarely a reason for him to do so. Josh Okogie, though, continues to be a nice surprise, 5-11, but recorded that great number again, 3-5 from three. If the Rockets are shooting it well from three, their lives could be made a lot easier by simple Shooting More Threes. They did take more than Dallas tonight, 26-23.

Many of the non three point misses for Eason, Jabari and Okogie came from unforced errors, and bad decision making on some shots. Okogie overall has been a great surprise, and very valuable to the Rockets. This is fortunate, as Dorian Finney-Smith has effectively contributed nothing to the team so far. His ten minutes tonight were slightly disastrous. This is worrisome, as the Rockets need him to play better, so hopefully the second half sees him being the player we’ve hoped to see since the signing last summer.

Tonight we also saw the offense only be initiated by Thompson, Sengun, and to a limited extent Sheppard. We saw Durant positioned far better to score and pass, as well. What we didn’t see, thankfully, was the Rockets spamming the same Durant high dribble hand off, ISO, play, very much at all. It appears to have registered that defenses key on that. This had positive effects. The Rockets turned the ball over only 5 times. Durant turned it over once, to his 8 dimes, Sengun 2 to his 7. Thompson? Say Amen, somebody, 9 assists and no turnovers.

Just eliminating so many live ball turnovers, ones that are very difficult to defend in transition because they occur above the top of the three point arc, may have been the difference in this game.

Sengun really, really, seems to need a rest and to heal up. He’s moving poorly, and has trouble getting to where he needs to be on both offense and defense. It’s affecting his shooting as well. You could take the past few weeks as evidence Sengun is now a bad player, or go with the overwhelming weight of his previous seasons and consider what might be wrong with him.

Why Capela can’t take another 8-10 minutes per game, to let Alpie rest a bit, is beyond me. His offensive chemistry with Reed is very good, as well. Capela does the traditional center PNR, with strong, real, pick setting. He rolls to the rim pretty well even now. Alpie almost doesn’t do it at all. This is a shame, because Sengun rolling and diving to the basket to score, dime a say, cutting Amen, Tari, Jabari or Durant on the baseline, or pass to a shooter in the opposite corner strikes me as something that would be incredibly difficult to stop.

In the end, the team got it done, and I’m sorry for a shorter recap, but I’m pinch hitting tonight. More wordy recaps will surely follow, but not tonight. Tonight we can be grateful the Rockets got a win, after things got dicey late.

The Old TC continues to be a fortress for the Rockets, their record there is 17-4.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...vercomes-infection-by-dallasites-wins-111-107
 
Rockets head up north to take on Mavericks

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Jan 29, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Houston Rockets forward Jabari Smith Jr. (10) handles the ball against the Atlanta Hawks in the fourth quarter at State Farm Arena. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images | Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Houston Rockets vs Dallas Mavericks​

January 31, 2026​


Location: American Airlines Center – Dallas, Texas

TV: ABC

Radio:KBME Sports Talk 790

Online: Rockets App

Time: 7:00 PM CST

Probable Starting Lineups​


Rockets: Amen Thompson, Josh Okogie, Kevin Durant, Jabari Smith Jr., Alperen Sengun

Mavs: Cooper Flagg, Max Christie, Naji Marshall, P.J. Washington, Daniel Gafford

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...ets-head-up-north-to-take-on-dallas-mavericks
 
Injuries have kept the Rockets from executing their gameplan

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HOUSTON, TEXAS - JANUARY 18: Steven Adams #12 of the Houston Rockets reacts in the second half against the New Orleans Pelicans at Toyota Center on January 18, 2026 in Houston, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Excuses, excuses…

Injuries. Yuck.

The worst part of sports. Bar none. Everything you planned was wasted. It was all contingent on the roster you thought you had.

You know injuries are coming, but you don’t know when or where. They cannot be accounted for.

They’ve been one of the defining features of the Houston Rockets’ season.

There are different types of injuries – or more to the point, different types of NBA players. The Rockets’ stars have mostly been healthy. Alperen Sengun has been dealing with some ailments lately. They seem to be impacting his level of play when he can get on the floor. Still, he’s appeared in 39 of the Rockets’ 46 games.

Still, an NBA team can’t survive on star power alone. There are lower usage players who are functionally integral to a team’s gameplan.

The Rockets have been missing those guys all year.

Key Rockets players are missing​


It starts with Fred VanVleet.

How did the Rockets succeed last year? By controlling the possession game. They dominated the offensive glass, and their 14.0% Turnover Percentage ranked a sufficient 11th in the NBA.

They still control the glass. Their 40.6% Offensive Rebound Percentage is historic. Regrettably, their 15.8% Turnover Percentage is third-worst in the league.

There’s a clear causal relationship between the increased turnover and the loss of VanVleet. He’s one of the safest point guards in the NBA. VanVleet seldom makes mistakes.

At times, fans complained about his conservative brand of offense. The league’s most significant needle-movers indeed take risks to yield rewards. That’s why VanVleet isn’t a superstar, but his ability to manage the offense was always part of the game plan.

Now, there’s concern that the other half of the plan will be compromised.

Steven Adams was an undeniably large part of that dominant offensive rebounding. He’s one of the best in league history. Clint Capela will suffice, and the Rockets will still lead the NBA in Offensive Rebounding % at the end of the season. That said, their utter dominance may be weakened.

Especially if Tari Eason keeps missing games. Like Sengun, he’s been around more than not (36 games), but given his history, the missed games are a cause for concern. Sengun likely needs to just take a week off and let that ankle fully heal. It’s a bit more difficult to diagnose the oft-injured Eason. Getting his additional offensive rebounding from the wings has been part of Houston’s strategy as well.

What will they do if he’s not available?

Rockets need to focus​


What’s more, Dorian Finney-Smith’s whole season has been compromised. He was Houston’s big summer signing. It’s not Finney-Smith’s fault, but Houston has seen little return on investment. Even when he’s available, Finney-Smith looks like he’s working through the rust.

This team feels snake-bitten. Little has gone right. Well…

There’s always next year.

VanVleet should be back. Adams too. If everything clicks, the 2026-27 season could be a banner year for the Rockets:

But they can’t afford to think that way.

Win a playoff series. That’s all we ask in 2025-26. It would be a step forward. After that, the Rockets would be playing with house money:

If they were structurally intact, it would be a different story.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...houston-rockets-from-executing-their-gameplan
 
Houston Rockets vs. Indiana Pacers game preview

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HOUSTON, TEXAS - DECEMBER 29: Kevin Durant #7 of the Houston Rockets drives to the basket against Pascal Siakam #43 of the Indiana Pacers in the first half at Toyota Center on December 29, 2025 in Houston, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Indiana Pacers have won three straight games at five of their last six at home. That includes wins over the Boston Celtics, Miami Heat, and New Orleans Pelicans (a team Houston has struggled with this season). Oh, and in the midst of all that they went into Oklahoma City and beat the Thunder.

We’re at the point of the year where teams are outright tanking. Even the teams that know that it’s in their best interest to be bad are trying to learn what they have while remaining competitive. As the better teams look to the All-Star break as an opportunity to rest and recover, teams at the bottom of the standings see wounded contenders ready to be taken down. Then, after the All-Star break, they can have conversations with their veterans that go along the lines of “Do you really want us to play you 30 minutes a night, or would you rather save your legs and extend your career by another season?” Right now, the Pacers are trying to show proof of concept to their fans and the league. Next season, armed with a lottery pick and a returning Tyrese Haliburton, they’ll look to make a run at the Eastern Conference title once again.

And in case you’d forgotten, there are some good players still playing in Indiana. Pascal Siakam is one of the most well-rounded players in the league. Jarace Walker, the former Cougar, always has something extra for Houston. Aaron Nesmith showed last season that he’s a bona fide 3-and-D guy. Jay Huff loves to reverse dunk. Benedict Mathurin is a microwave scorer off the bench. T.J. McConnell is their version of “the guy you hate unless he’s on your team,” except McConnell is actually fun to watch. And of course I’ll save Andrew Nembhard for last. He just dropped 26p/10a/6r against the Hawks in anticipation of Gonzaga’s big with over St. Mary’s on Saturday. He’s a starting-caliber point guard and it’s going to be interesting if they see the duo of him and Haliburton being able to play together long term or if they look to move Nembhard in an attempt to replace some of what they lost in Myles Turner.

Tip-off


6pm CT

How To Watch


Space City Home Network

Injury Report

Rockets


Steven Adams: OUT

Fred VanVleet: OUT

Pacers​


Obi Toppin: OUT

Tyrese Haliburton: OUT

The Line (as of this post)


N/A

Check here for updates

Looking ahead because we can


Wednesday night at home against the Boston Celtics

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...ouston-rockets-vs-indiana-pacers-game-preview
 
Rockets look for another win vs. Pacers

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Jan 31, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; Houston Rockets guard Josh Okogie (20) reacts with forward Tari Eason (17) after a play during the second half against the Dallas Mavericks at Toyota Center. Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images | Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

Rockets vs Indiana Pacers​

February 2, 2026​


Location: Gainbridge Fieldhouse — Indianapolis, Indiana

TV: Space City Home Network

Radio:KBME Sports Talk 790

Online: Rockets App

Time: 6:00 PM CST

Probable Starting Lineups​


Rockets: Amen Thompson, Tari Eason, Kevin Durant, Jabari Smith Jr., Alperen Sengun

Pacers: Andrew Nembhard, Bennedict Mathurin, Aaron Nesmith, Jarace Walker, Pascal Siakam

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...ockets-look-for-another-win-vs-indiana-pacers
 
Watching this team lately has been... an experience. The win over Dallas was solid but man, those late game struggles are getting predictable. You'd think a team with this much talent could close out games more comfortably.

The Sengun situation is frustrating to watch. He's clearly not himself and you can see it in his movement. When a guy who's normally so fluid looks labored out there, something's definitely off. The article makes a good point about Capela - giving Alperen an extra 8-10 minutes of rest per game seems like such an obvious solution. Capela's been playing well and his chemistry with Reed in the pick and roll is genuinely fun to watch. Traditional center play still has value.

Flagg is going to be a problem for everyone in this league for the next decade. 34 points against us after dropping 49 on Charlotte? At 19? Dallas stumbled into something special there.

The turnover issue is real though. Going from 11th to third-worst in turnover percentage isn't just bad luck - that's the VanVleet effect. Say what you want about his conservative style but the man takes care of the ball.

Hoping tonight against Indiana goes smoother. The Pacers have been playing well lately and Siakam always brings it. Walker too, seems like former Cougars always have a little extra for Houston games.

At this point I'd settle for a comfortable fourth quarter. Is that too much to ask?
 
Alperen Sengun’s NBA All-Star snub can be a good thing for Rockets

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HOUSTON, TX - JANUARY 31: Alperen Sengun #28 of the Houston Rockets stands for the National Anthem before the game against the Dallas Mavericks on January 31, 2026 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Logan Riely/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Heading into the 2025-26 NBA season, there was chatter that the Houston Rockets could have a trio of All-Stars, comprised of Amen Thompson, the newly-acquired Kevin Durant and Alperen Sengun.

The first half of the season is over and the All-Star rosters are set.

It’s official.

Unless a player declines, due to injury, which we see all the time.

The Rockets have one All-Star. Just Durant.

His placement isn’t a debate.

Sengun not making the team has prompted a bit of buzz. To many, he was snubbed.

Particularly when comparing Sengun to Oklahoma City Thunder big man Chet Holmgren.

Statistically speaking, there’s a pretty viable argument in Sengun’s favor. (Especially if you throw out efficiency).

He’s averaging 21 points, 9.2 rebounds, 6.4 assists, while Holmgren is averaging 17.7 points, 8.5 rebounds, 1.6 assists and 2.1 blocks.

Holgren is shooting 56.6 percent from the field, 36.6 percent from three and 77.8 percent from the foul line, while Sengun is shooting 50 percent from the field, 30 percent from deep and 68.4 percent from the foul line.

The Thunder big man is shooting 62.3 percent effective shooting, while Sengun is posting 51.8 percent chops.

Holmgren is also shooting 65.7 percent true shooting, whereas Sengun is shooting 55.4 percent true shooting.

Again, it’s close, in totality.

The real snubs belong to the LA Clippers, as Kawhi Leonard is having a career season and didn’t make the cut, while James Harden is averaging 25.4 points and 8.1 assists.

They certainly are more belonging than Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James, based on this season.

The reality is that this benefits Sengun, for a multitude of reasons. Let’s hone in on two.

For one, he’ll have a chip on his shoulder for the rest of the way, as he’ll be out to prove that he is indeed one of the stars of today’s league.

But more importantly, Sengun can use the break to get healthy. It’s clear that he’s still trying to grind through a fairly recent ankle injury.

Credit to him for trying to push through it, but the playoffs are around the corner.

That’s what’s most important. Then, he’ll really be able to prove his star status.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/nba-a...-snub-can-be-a-good-thing-for-houston-rockets
 
The ghost of James Harden still haunts the Rockets

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INGLEWOOD, CA - APRIL 9: James Harden #1 of the LA Clippers handles the ball during the game against the Houston Rockets on April 9, 2025 at Intuit Dome in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE(Photo by Tyler Ross/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Admit it…

Some part of you wants it.

Some flames never die. Some memories gradually fade into the abyss. Others are visceral. You could reach out and grab that moment. Your instinct is to re-live it, because psychologically, you never stopped living it in the first place.

James Harden. The Beard. Based on demographics, the odds are fairly high that this is the best player you ever watched in a Houston Rockets uniform. Only one man in history has represented the team better. If you were alive during the Patron Saint’s back-to-back title runs, consider yourself blessed.

For the rest of us, it’s Harden. Beautiful, flawed James Harden.

It doesn’t matter where he goes next. Harden will be remembered as a Rocket. The recent rumors suggest that he’ll be joining the Cleveland Cavaliers.

That feels wrong.

Rockets reunion unlikely for now​


That said, we cannot let feelings dictate decisions. Not if our name is Rafael Stone. We must let logic take the wheel.

Logically, it would be nearly impossible to bring him in via this year’s trade market. First things first: Fred VanVleet is Ime Udoka’s sparring partner. He is not going anywhere. The Rockets won’t even broach the subject of him waiving his implied No Trade Clause. They brought VanVleet in to be a cultural staple, and sending him unceremoniously packing isn’t in the cards.

Dorian Finney-Smith and Steven Adams bring us close to Harden’s contract, but not close enough. They make a combined $27ish million to Harden’s $39.3 million. You’d have to part with someone like Jabari Smith Jr. or Reed Sheppard.

This is where the brain overrides the heart. It doesn’t matter if you think Smith Jr. is a long-term role player. It’s irrelevant if you think Sheppard is too short to crack Udoka’s rotation. Trading either for a 36-year-old would be bad business.

Particularly when his fit with the team isn’t even clear.

Harden would have new role with Rockets​


When Harden was in Houston, he popularized the term “heliocentric” basketball. It was a word Twitter (ah, how I miss Twitter) hipsters (are hipsters still around?) used to sound smart, until everyone started using it.

He still plays roughly the same way. At 36, Harden is still a monster with the ball. He’s in the 83.4th percentile in Points Per Possession (PPP) in isolation plays this year.

Still, the Rockets shouldn’t necessarily want the ball in his hands too regularly.

The 2025-26 Rockets are sorely missing a ball-handler. That ball-handler is VanVleet. Conceptually, he was always the perfect fit alongside a playmaking big man like Alperen Sengun. VanVleet can capably get the ball up the floor and into the hands of the guy who’s actually making the play. Harden makes the play.

He’s not been particularly portable throughout his career. Harden has two modes: brilliant scorer who’s pass-friendly, and brilliant passer who’s score-heavy. He adjusts his profile based on roster construction, but there is no JJ Reddick (forever the consummate example of an off-ball player) in his game.

None of which is to say the reunion couldn’t be successful. The Rockets could stagger Harden and Sengun as often as possible. Harden may not be an active off-ball player, but he does have off-ball gravity. Coupled with Durant, he’d make it more difficult for teams to double-team Sengun.

So – I want to see it, too. But I want to see it under the right circumstances. That means not trading Smith Jr., Sheppard, or anyone under 25 for Harden right now.

It means Harden accepting a below-market contract to come home this summer. If that’s an option, the juice is suddenly worth the squeeze. The Rockets can figure out the basketball mechanics later, and take a low-cost talent upgrade at a position of need.

If that hurts anyone, it’ll be Reed Sheppard. The reality is, Sheppard was drafted to a win-now team whose head coach has a philosophical opposition to playing him. The path forward is not clear for Sheppard, whether Harden comes or not.

Granted, Harden isn’t a defensive stalwart either. That said, he’s always been someone you can hide on bigs, because he can randomly kind of guard bigs in the post. Imagine Sheppard trying to withstand a Nikola Vucevic post-up, and tell me Harden wouldn’t be a better option for Udoka.

Better yet, I dare you tell me you don’t want Harden back in Houston under the right circumstances – and actually mean it.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...james-harden-still-haunts-the-houston-rockets
 
Houston Rockets vs. Boston Celtics game preview

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BOSTON, MA - NOVEMBER 1: Derrick White #9 of the Boston Celtics drives to the basket during the game against the Houston Rockets on November 1, 2025 at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Houston Rockets have won three straight games. Tonight, they welcome the Boston Celtics to Toyota Center, who are on a two-game winning streak of their own (and are crushing the Mavericks in Dallas as I type this).

When these teams met early in the season, Boston was also on a winning streak but were still trying to find themselves in a Jayson Tatum-less, post-Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis world. They were incorporating Joe Mazzulla’s style with new personnel like Anfernee Simons and guys like Sam Hauser and Neemias Queta getting more run than in years past. Simons has been traded to Chicago and Nikola Vucevic, his “replacement” on the roster, is expected to be out tonight while physicals are procured and travel is undergone.

Tonight marks the start of a TOUGH seven-game stretch for Houston that extends on either side of the All-Star break. After tonight, Houston stays home for a game against the SCORCHING Charlotte Hornets, who will be going for their eighth straight win while Houston will be on a back-to-back. Then, it’s off to Oklahoma City for a matinee on Saturday. After a couple of days off, the Rockets will host the Clippers for two straight games in two straight nights. The Clippers just traded James Harden but have been the best team in the NBA since Christmas (by a wide margin). Finally, after the All-Star break, the Rockets will be on the road against those same Hornets, who might be going for their 12th straight win. Finally, Houston heads to Madison Square Garden to take on the surging New York Knicks.

There are definitely still some rough stretches remaining on the schedule after this one, but nothing as sustained as this. If Houston comes out of this 4-3 or even 3-4, I think I’d take it. Now you can call me a “fake fan” or whatever for not predicting 7-0.

Tip-off


7pm CT

How To Watch


Space City Home Network

Injury Report

Rockets


Steven Adams: OUT

Fred VanVleet: OUT

Celtics​


Nikola Vucevic: OUT

Jayson Tatum: OUT

Chris Boucher: OUT

The Line (as of this post)


N/A

Check here for updates

Looking ahead because we can


Thursday (tomorrow) night at home against the Charlotte Hornets

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...ouston-rockets-vs-boston-celtics-game-preview
 
Rockets look to keep wining versus Boston

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Feb 2, 2026; Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; Houston Rockets center Alperen Sengun (28) in the second half against the Indiana Pacers at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images | Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images

Houston Rockets VS Boston Celtics

February 4, 2026


Location: Toyota Center — Houston, Texas

TV: SCHN

Radio:KBME Sports Talk 790

Online: Rockets App, SCHN+

Time: 7:00 PM CST

Projected Starting Lineups

Houston:

Amen Thompson

Tari Eason

Kevin Durant

Jabari Smith Jr.

Alperen Sengun

Boston:

Derrick White

Baylor Scheierman

Jaylen Brown

Sam Hauser

Neemias Queta

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rockets-game-threads/38190/rockets-look-to-keep-wining-versus-boston
 
Houston Rockets vs. Charlotte Hornets game preview

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CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - DECEMBER 23: LaMelo Ball #1 of the Charlotte Hornets shoots the ball while guarded by Jabari Smith Jr. #10 of the Houston Rockets in the second quarter during their game at Spectrum Center on December 23, 2024 in Charlotte, North Carolina. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Note: I’m writing this preview before the Houston Rockets take on the Boston Celtics. I’m also writing this well ahead of the NBA trade deadline, which is Thursday at 2pm CT. So if you’re wondering why I’m not talking about how the Rockets have traded for prime Hakeem Olajuwon or whatever, you have your answer.

The Charlotte Hornets have won seven straight games and are looking for their first 8-game winning streak since 2000. They are the only team in American sports (non-football category) to not own a winning streak of 8 games or more this millenium.

Tonight, they’ll have a great shot at it since the Rockets will be on a back-to-back (and therefore be without Tari Eason and/or Dorian Finney-Smith) while Charlotte comes in well-rested having not played since Monday.

Charlotte has Brandon Miller starting to make “The Leap,” an underrated point guard in LaMelo Ball (how can a guy be underrated when he’s on a max deal?), rookie contributors Kon Knueppel and Ryan Kalkbrenner, and savvy veteran Grant Williams. Moussa Diabate patrols the middle, but the Hornets like the gang rebound like Houston. In their most recent game against the Pelicans, six players grabbed at least seven rebounds. I’m not sure I’ve ever seen anything like that before.

Tip-off


7pm CT

How To Watch


Space City Home Network

Injury Report

Rockets


Tari Eason: OUT

Steven Adams: OUT

Fred VanVleet: OUT

Hornets​


Coby White: GTD

Mike Conley Jr.: GTD

KJ Simpson: OUT

The Line (as of this post)


N/A

Check here for updates

Looking ahead because we can


Saturday afternoon in Oklahoma City against the Thunder

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...ton-rockets-vs-charlotte-hornets-game-preview
 
NBA Trade Deadline day: Will the Rockets be active?

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SALT LAKE CITY, UT - JANUARY 08: Anthony Davis #3 of the Dallas Mavericks holds his left hand as he reacts to pain after injuring it against Lauri Markkanen during the second half of their game at the Delta Center on January 8, 2026 in Salt Lake City, Utah. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.(Photo by Chris Gardner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Here’s a place to discuss NBA Trade Deadline Day. Will the Rockets be busy? It’s been a busy trade season, against the expectation of most observers. The Rockets, being hardcapped, will have difficulty making a trade, but it’s possible. Will Giannis be a Rocket? Will the whole roster be replaced with new, better, players? Stay tuned!

I’ll update this post throughout the day with any further significant trades that have occurred on deadline day, or any Rockets action.

DATELINE: Milwaukee

Nothing is happening. Giannis, to the chagrin of some, will almost certainly not be a Rocket this season.

DATELINE: Milwaukee

Something IS happening, but not Giannis related. Bucks are trading Cole Anthony and Amir Coffey to the Suns for Nick Richards and Nigel Hayes-Davis. The Suns are making plans for Nigel.

DATELINE: Boston

The Celitcs are trading Chris Boucher to the Jazz. Probably a tax move. Compensation unknown.

DATELINE: New York, New York

The Knicks are acquiring Jose Alvarado from NOLA for Dalen Terry. Our dreams of a guard shorter than Sheppard, Holiday, and Davison have been quashed.

DATELINE: Memphis, Tennessee

No one wants Ja.

DATELINE: Denver, Rocky Mountain Hiiiiiiiiiiiiigh

Nuggies trade Hunter S Tyson and a 2032 second-round pick to Nets for least favorable Clippers/Hawks 2026 2nd rounder. Denver opens a roster spot, ducks tax, which must make one of the richest men in America happy.

DATELINE: Philly Cheese Steak Country

76ers trade Eric Gordon and a 2032 second-round pick swap to the Memphis Gristle. A second round swap! Be still my heart. This will allow some sort of roster and tax stuff for Morey. Gordon gets a new place to go fishin’ and will perhaps appreciate the gigantic Bass Pro Shop in the Memphis Pyramid.

DATELINE: Dallas

UPDATE: The worst trade in NBA history somehow got worse, as Day-to-Davis will learn wizardry for the two worst first rounders I’ve ever seen in a trade.

DATELINE: LA

The Lakers acquire The Duck, Luke Kennard from the Hawks in exchange for Gabe Vincent and a 2032 second rounder. This will surely improve the Lakers defense.

DATELINE: Minneapolis, MN

The Timberwolves trade Rob Dillingham, Leonard Miller for Ayo Dosunmu and four, count ‘em, four, 2nd round picks. Reed Sheppard has so far worked out a lot better than his backcourt mate at Kentucky, at least.

DATELINE: Tronno

The Raptors acquire Trayce Jackson-Davis from the Warriors for a 2nd round pick.

DATELINE: Indy, Indy

The Pacerzzzz aquire Ivica Zoobatz from the Clippers for something or other. The Clips seem to be cleaning house, and getting other teams’ picks. I wonder why?

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rockets-roster/38204/nba-trade-deadline-day-will-the-rockets-be-active
 
In defense of another quiet Rafael Stone NBA Trade Deadline

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We’ve been here before.

That’s worth remembering. This is not the first time in the Rafael Stone era that there’s been widespread displeasure with Rafael Stone. It’s familiar territory for Houston Rockets fans.

Specifically, it happens on an annual basis at the NBA Trade Deadline.

To be sure, their recent thrashing at the hands of a Brown-less Celtics squad was aesthetically horrifying. Rockets fans would have done as well to throw on Terrifier.

Early in the season, the notion that Houston’s rebound-focused attack was “gimmicky” was controversial. Now, it’s axiomatic. Anyone should recognize that the Rockets are not going to win at the highest level with this strategy.

The basic recipe to totally shut down the Rockets:

1) Sag way off Thompson and Sengun
2) Press up tight on Durant
3) Victory https://t.co/pUkH82CFdR

— Andrew Soukup (@asoukuptx) February 5, 2026

There’s friend of the show (who I believe still reads these?), Andrew Soukup, with a succinct summary of the problem. A pair of non-shooters. For all the high-falutin’ conceptual stuff about dribble hand-offs, cuts from the high post, triangle offense, etc., the reality is that it’s difficult to build a high-powered, portable NBA offense with two non-shooters in the lineup.

So, the roster is flawed. That at least partly reflects on management. Yet, it would be an oversimplification to suggest that putting a flawed roster on the floor singularly characterizes a team’s general manager as “bad”.

Stone has done plenty well during his tenure.

Rockets have drafted well under Stone​


Here’s a refrain I’ve heard several times recently:

“Four lottery picks, four whiffs”.

Firstly, Amen Thompson is not a whiff. That’s a consequence of fans overestimating the expected return on a fourth overall pick. He may not be “Russell Westbrook, Defensive Player of the Year model”, but he’s certainly not a whiff. Such an assessment of Reed Sheppard is also absurdly premature.

Otherwise, you can’t judge draft picks in a vacuum. They must be judged in the context of the draft itself.

It’s unfair to knock Stone for taking Jabari Smith Jr. with the third overall pick. The consensus could not have been firmer. There were three dudes in that draft, Bari was the third, and the Rockets had the third pick. All 30 GMs were making the same decision. Stone was not reasonably going to select Jalen Williams. He can’t be retroactively held to a standard of “shock the world or bust”. You’re locking him into a false dichotomy: either he’s a genius or he’s a bad general manager.

By the way, there’s almost nobody else in 2022 you’d rather have. Jaden Ivey just got traded for a Kevin Huerter sandwich with extra Mike Conley. Dyson Daniels is fun, but Houston doesn’t need a 12.7% three-point shooter in their backcourt. Tari Eason has been good…

Oh, wait.

How about 2024? If you wanted Matas Buzelis, gloat – but only a little bit. He’s still got a negative Box Plus/Minus (BPM). He’s racking up basic counting stats for the Bulls, if that counts as an accomplishment. That said, he’s certainly flashed potential, and if you think he’d have been a better choice than Reed Sheppard, you’re beginning to have a valid case. There’s nobody else I can say the same for. It seems unreasonable to come down on Stone because there’s one guy that he maybe (maybe) should have taken over Sheppard.

Then, there’s 2021: A Stone Odyssey. Not good. Bad.

A critical error. The cardinal sin of the rebuild. Evan Mobley was the choice.

I don’t want to hear “they wouldn’t have drafted Alperen Sengun”. OK – so they’d have compounded the error? Sengun and Mobley would be a great fit together.

On the subject of Sengun…

The Rockets had good lottery luck. Paradoxically, they also had bad lottery luck. Statistically, the balls bounced relatively well. In a vacuum, they got lucky.

Contextually, in the four years that the Rockets tanked, the only two lottery picks who’d have materially changed their fortunes were Cade Cunningham and Victor Wembanyama. That is it. Paolo Banchero is a bad fit with Sengun, and he has not been as good as Sengun, so let us not utter his name again.

Mobley and Chet Holmgren are both excellent, but they’re ceiling raisers. It’d be nice to have either, but they wouldn’t fix this team’s systemic issues. For that matter, neither would Wembanyama, but he’s just so special that he’d change the team by virtue of being him.

Otherwise, you’re asking Stone to – well, draw blood from a stone. If anything, the fact that he walked away from the rebuild with Sengun in the fold is a testament to his drafting acumen.

So is Tari Eason. Give most NBA general managers everything Stone had. Most of them don’t walk away with Sengun and Eason. Other than drafting Green, Stone has made no discernible, significant mistakes that could be identified even without the use of hindsight, which is notoriously 20/20.

What about on the trade market?

Stone needs to make some signature trades​


Stone’s approach to trading has been…meiserly?

There’s not one deal you can point to and call egregiously bad. It’s just that most of his deals have been in the vein of hey, I’ll give you a non-rotational player for an even worse non-rotational player and a heavily protected second. Stone has made a bevy of moves that you wouldn’t notice whether he made them or not.

He has made one noticeable move. You know the one. How does it look now?

Well, let’s see. The Rockets have practically the same Win Percentage (63.3%) now that they finished last season with (63.4%). Yet, that’s not a fair evaluation of the deal. Last year’s Rockets had Fred VanVleet.

The concept behind the Durant deal was always sound. Opponents were always going to sag off of Sengun and Thompson, as described above, and dare a shot maker to make shots. So, trading one of the worst shot makers in the NBA (sorry, residual Green Gangers) for one of the best ought to build on what was already a formidable squad. Even without VanVleet, that might be bearing out:

If not for the loss of Dillon Brooks.

There was no way to flip Green for Durant without including Brooks (or VanVleet). The money has to money. But the Rockets undeniably miss Brooks. They miss his point of attack defense, his (2024-25) floor spacing, and his tertiary shot creation. They miss his cultural impact.

There should be no referendum on Green. This team was not “better with Green than they are with Durant”. They were better with Green, VanVleet, Brooks, and Steven Adams than they are with Durant. At some point, the raw, aggregate net rating of so many players outweighs even a (post-prime, but still) Durant.

Circling back to the thesis: Stone didn’t injure VanVleet or Adams. He didn’t invent the CBA that required him to include Brooks in that deal. He was never going to let Brooks be the deterrent if he wanted Kevin Durant.

So, Stone’s draft record speaks for itself. The totality of his trade activity seems more positive than negative. Here, we have a defensible GM who’s put a deeply flawed contender on the floor.

How do we square that?

Rockets are a work in progress​


The Rockets hold a lot of chips. So, by definition, they’re not all in.

Most of the key rotation players are young. They have a surplus of draft capital. Those are the chips; they aren’t on the table. Analogously, they checked on a small raise by giving up Jalen Green and Khaman Maluach.

So until they’re “all in”, the roster should be treated as an unfinished product. Hypothetically, say the Rockets replace Durant with a lesser version of a shot-creating wing in the draft. Suppose they do the same with any veteran on the roster and otherwise run this exact rotation until the core is in their 30s.

OK. Now, the criticisms are fair.

For now, it’s OK if the roster is flawed. If Stone were to trade either Amen or Sengun and picks for Antetokounmpo this summer, he’d better follow that up by acquiring players who complement Antetokounmpo. The roster can no longer be fundamentally flawed. The Rockets will be all-in.

Let’s see how we feel about Stone then.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...another-quiet-rafael-stone-nba-trade-deadline
 
Houston Rockets vs. Oklahoma City Thunder game preview

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HOUSTON, TX - JANUARY 15: Isaiah Joe #11 of the Oklahoma City Thunder drives to the basket during the game against the Houston Rockets on January 15, 2026 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Jeff Haynes/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Once again, the Houston Rockets are at a rest disadvantage against a superior opponent. In addition, the Oklahoma City Thunder sat half their roster for their last game in San Antonio.

In reality, none of that matters since the Rockets probably couldn’t beat the Oklahoma City Blue right now. Houston’s offense, which was build around Fred VanVleet’s decision-making and Steven Adams’s rebounding prowess, is so abysmal that calling it “nonexistent” would be an insult to things that don’t exist.

Defensively, Houston hasn’t been as terrible at it feels, but teams have figured out two things: Alperen Sengun cannot defend the pick-and-roll and no one on the Rockets is playing with much IQ on that end of the floor. Threes have been wide open and closeouts have been…lazy, to say the least. Ime Udoka can call all of the angry timeouts he wants, but this team can’t change who they are.

Truly, it hasn’t felt this hopeless as a Rockets fan since the Stephen Silas years. And even then, there was light at the end of the tunnel in the form of lottery picks. Right now, there’s not much silver lining.

I know Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams are out, but how is the line only Thunder by 4.5? This is going to be a bloodbath.

Tip-off


2:30pm CT

How To Watch


ABC

Injury Report

Rockets


Steven Adams: OUT

Fred VanVleet: OUT

Thunder​


Shai Gilgeous-Alexander: OUT

Jalen Williams: OUT

Ajay Mitchell: OUT

The Line (as of this post)


OKC -4.5

Check here for updates

Looking ahead because we can


Tuesday night at home against the Los Angeles Clippers

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...rockets-vs-oklahoma-city-thunder-game-preview
 
Rockets stung by Hornets 109-99

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Feb 5, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; Houston Rockets forward Jeff Green (32) handles the ball against the Charlotte. He was, unfortunately, the best Rocket going tonight. Mandatory Credit: Erik Williams-Imagn Images | Erik Williams-Imagn Images

All of us have a player we like more than others on the team. All of us probably have a player we don’t like as much on the team. Tonight’s game pretty much united both, as with the exception of the deep bench, and maybe, Durant’s night, everyone on the Rockets was fairly dismal. It was a dismal loss, coming back to back on a another dismal loss.

You might look at Kevin Durant’s 31pt 11-21 shooting night and conclude he had a good outing. He didn’t, in my opinion. It wasn’t that he lacked effort, and didn’t make the typically very difficult looks he often gets, he did for the most part. But the fact that Durant is getting mostly tough looks is a deeper problem in itself, whether he can make them most nights or not. The bad part was that KD had 6 liveball turnovers (and a couple of bad plays that weren’t ruled as turn overs but sort of were) to one assist. I’m not a great turnover worrier, but these were almost all back breaking, progress killers. They were almost all of the “pressing to make a pass, to make it happen, to be a hero” sorts, but that pass rarely seemed to connect with anyone but a Hornet. Durant and Amen Thompson recorded 12 of their 18 turnovers.

Charlotte scored 17pts off those turnovers. The Hornets have been, contrary to expectation, rather good lately. They’re 9-1 in their last 10 games, compared to the Rockets 6-4. Since getting a taste of success, the Hornets have seemed hungry for more, and are playing hard. Playing with much more energy tonight than the Rockets, anyway. The Rockets were playing back to back, and the Hornets had rested three days, but if a team fancies itself as one that might go far in the playoffs, that excuse just doesn’t play. The Hornets themselves had 20 turnovers, but it didn’t hurt them as much, it seems. About midway through the third quarter it was clear to me that the Rockets flaccid offense wasn’t going to get the job done.

You might look at Kevin Durant’s night as a good one, turnovers aside. Well, then, that is arguably worse, because earlier in the season the Rockets would generally win games where Durant had a good offensive night. Tonight, despite that, it wasn’t close. The ten point margin was due to the deep bench crew, lead by Uncle Jeff, narrowing the gap, and forcing the Hornets to play their starters late. While that was the most enjoyable Rockets stretch of the game, the outcome never seemed in the balance.

Every Rocket starter besides Jabari Smith Jr, had a pretty bad game. Jabari might have bad nights, but I will say I rarely can fault his effort. I suppose Josh Okogie didn’t stink, but after scoring the opening five points for the Rockets, went on to score one point more all evening. Amen was 3-7 with 7ast against 5 To. Sengun was 3-11, but with 9 boards and 5 assists. Reed was bad, too. The exceptional lift he used to get on his threes is gone right now, and he’s shooting some almost as a set shot. They aren’t going in that way.

The Rockets, despite having less energy than the Hornets tonight, did try. They were all clearly trying. But the most recent Spurs game saw the move of attacking Sengun, and teams that are awake, and the Hornets and Boston are in that group, have been doing it, too. (Hat tip to AK.) We’re seeing tons of offenses call up Sengun in pick and roll actions, and then use a guard or small forward to beat him to the rim. If help comes at the rim, the pass goes to the corner, over and over. Or it doesn’t come, and it’s an easy basket. The reaction to counter this by the Rockets has been impossible to detect, by me, anyway.

Meanwhile, on offense, I counted very few moments when Sengun didn’t have four defenders around him in the paint. Clint Capela was the single Rockets player with a positive game +/-. Sengun was the only regular whose – wasn’t double digits. The deep bench was +12 against starters in garbage time, though!

What I’m seeing is a team with no answers on defense, or offense, other than, you guessed it, try harder. That’s an answer that can work sometimes, but it’s also exhausting if that’s appears to be a coach’s sole response to adversity. The Rockets look like a team for whom the stimulant blast of “TriHrdR” brand energy drink has flatlined.

If the defense is lacking answers, though, the offense doesn’t even know the questions. The Rockets totaled fewer than 200 points in two nights. Their opponents, in those two nights, did not score more than the average for NBA teams, and below their own season average. The Rockets weren’t close to winning either one, because the offense, when it loses the rebounding battle, as it did the last two nights, shows just how weak, inept, and fundamentally outmoded it is. Over the past two nights the Rockets, who trail only the Sacramento Kings in lowest number of 3pt shots attempted, shot around 40 fewer threes than the opposition, and in equal portions.

Let’s look at KD’s night one more time through the three point lens. He went 3-4. That’s nice, but the volume is nothing much. That means, though, he shot 8-17 from two, and that’s just not quite efficient enough to justify that many shots for two points. Not quite breaking even analytically isn’t good enough. Neither is Sengun going 3-11. Jabari Smith’s 6-9 from two is fine, but unusual. Simply said, to compete with that high a three point attempt margin against them, the team has to do something else exceptionally well. Score from two point range. Shooting a ton of free throws well. Having the sort of massive rebounding edges the Rockets enjoyed early on, (once again, opponents have adjusted to this by devoting the same amount of effort to the boards, to blunt that edge). The Rockets had none of these.

Bluntly, the Rockets do not run an offensive system in the sense of players knowing what to do and when to do it. Watch their organization on offense, and their lack of reaction to what teammates are doing. Nobody seems to know what actions they should run with what teammates, or what they should be doing except “spacing” around the arc for an offense that hardly shoots any threes by modern standards. I could go on, but simply put, the offense barely exists, and what does exist is outmoded and inadequate.

The average number of points scored in an NBA game this season is around 114. The Rockets lost decisively not breaking 100 points in two games. Their opponents scored fewer than average points, and yet the Rockets had no viable chance of winning either game.

The answer isn’t more defense when the team holds an opponent to under NBA average points. How much additional effort would equalize 40 fewer three point attempts in two nights?

The schedule features OKC in OKC on Saturday. I don’t see things improving immediately.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rockets-scores-results/38222/rockets-stung-by-hornets-109-99
 
Rockets take on Thunder on national TV

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Feb 5, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant (7) and Houston Rockets guard Reed Sheppard (15) reacts after a basket against the Charlotte Hornets during the fourth quarter at Toyota Center. Mandatory Credit: Erik Williams-Imagn Images | Erik Williams-Imagn Images

Rockets vs OKC Thunder​

February 7, 2026​


Location: Paycom Center — Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

TV: ABC

Radio:KBME Sports Talk 790

Online: Rockets App

Time: 2:30om CST

Probable Starting Lineups​


Rockets: Amen Thompson, Tari Eason, Kevin Durant, Jabari Smith Jr., Alperen Sengun

Thunder: Jared McCain, Luguentz Dort, Alex Caruso, Chet Holmgren, Isaiah Hartenstein

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...on-rockets-take-on-okc-thunder-on-national-tv
 
Were the Rockets even working the phones at the NBA Trade Deadline?

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DETROIT, MICHIGAN - JANUARY 23: Head coach Ime Udoka of the Houston Rockets looks on in the second half while playing the Detroit Pistons at Little Caesars Arena on January 23, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

On Thursday, the NBA trade deadline came and went for the Houston Rockets. They were one of the few inactive teams in the league.

There’s a bit of confusion regarding whether the Rockets were even working the phones. General Manager Rafael Stone said that the team had spoken to various organizations and ball clubs.

“Obviously, we talked to every team. We had discussions. But this year, in particular, with the way the cap works, we were hard-capped at the first apron. So constructing trades was hard.”

Stone added that the team has generally been good through the first half of the season, thus, Houston “wasn’t looking to make changes at all”.


That’s a bit of a contradiction, but let’s keep going.

Well-known reporter Jake Fischer noted that Houston hadn’t been in contact with anyone.

“I have not heard the Rockets are actively involved in anything right now, not Coby White, not Ayo Dosunmu, not anything else.”

Chicago Bulls beat writer Joe Cowley of the Chicago Sun-Times reportedly repeatedly that the Bulls and Rockets had been in contact regarding Coby White, as the Bulls coveted Tari Eason but Houston’s brass wouldn’t give Eason up.

(He’s never wavered off that reporting).

So what’s the truth?

Who knows?

In general, the decision to stand pat wasn’t an unwise one.

Although fans don’t want to hear it.

Which is understandable. Especially after watching these last three games against the Indiana Pacers, Boston Celtics and Charlotte Hornets.

(The latter two were on back-to-backs, I know, but Houston lacked effort, especially in the second half of both games).
But from a trade standpoint, you have to have assets. Something to trade.

Not to say that Houston doesn’t have trade chips. They do.

The Bulls proved that.

But those negotiations also proved that Houston doesn’t have players they can sacrifice. This is a top-heavy roster.

Houston was willing to part with…..Dorian Finney-Smith and an injured Steven Adams?

What was that going to fetch? They couldn’t part with Clint Capela, in light of Adams’ season-ending injury.

It would’ve been different if either of those players were on expiring deals. That, in it of itself, holds value.

DFS has three more seasons under contract. Adams has two years left.

Both deals were just signed.

What value do they hold?

Can this team afford to lose Eason or Reed Sheppard for a rental like Coby White? Or Ayo Dosunmu?

Or even Jabari Smith Jr.

Could they risk losing him for a rental?

For the way the roster is built, Houston’s best bet was standing pat.

And it could be why they never seriously engaged in real trade talks.

(Which seems to be the case)

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...even-working-the-phones-at-the-trade-deadline
 
Look, I'm a Bills fan through and through so I don't follow the NBA super closely, but even I can see what's going on here with the Rockets and it ain't pretty.

Rafael Stone standing pat at the deadline? I get the logic from a pure asset management standpoint, but watching this team right now is PAINFUL. You're telling me they couldn't find ANYTHING to address the obvious holes? The offense is completely broken when teams figure out they can just sag off Thompson and Sengun. That's not exactly rocket science (pun intended) for opposing coaches to exploit.

The Durant trade made sense on paper but losing Brooks AND VanVleet AND Adams being hurt? That's a LOT of production and defense gone. And now you're watching this team score under 100 points in back-to-back losses? Come on man.

Here's what kills me - Stone says they "weren't looking to make changes at all" but also admits they talked to every team? Pick a lane, buddy. Either you're shopping or you're not. That wishy-washy stuff reminds me of some of the worst Bills front office years before Beane came in and actually committed to a vision.

The Sengun pick-and-roll defense problem is GLARING and everyone in the league knows it now. You can't just "try harder" your way out of a fundamental scheme issue. That's coaching and roster construction, not effort.

OKC is gonna absolutely demolish them even without SGA and Williams. Only Thunder by 4.5? I'd hammer that over if I was a betting man.
 
Rockets down Thunder 112-106 behind Alperen Sengun’s triple double

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Feb 7, 2026; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; Houston Rockets center Alperen Sengun (28) shoots as Oklahoma City Thunder center/forward Chet Holmgren (7) defends during the second half at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images | Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

The Houston Rockets were facing and Oklahoma City Thunder squad missing Shai Gilgeous-Alexander as well as Jalen Williams and Ajay Wilson, but a win is a win, and the Rockets needed one to get back on track. Alperen Sengun finished with 17 points, 12 rebounds, 11 assists, 3 steals and 3 blocks to lead the Rockets with his second triple double of the season. He was 6-for-12 from the floor and also really had things going as a facilitator.

Houston was led on scoring, however, by Tari Eason, who finished with 26 points, 8 boards and 3 steals. The Rockets wisely kept Eason out of trade talks, as they look for an extension after the season, when Eason will be a restricted free agent. Eason was 5-for-13 from three, and when he’s playing well, the Rockets are a better team. They need him playing — Eason has only played in 60 percent of his possible games as a Rocket.

Kevin Durant was just 6-for-10 shooting for 20 points, 1 rebound, 4 assists, a steal and a block. The Rockets are also a better team when Durant isn’t shooting the ball 20-plus times, and that played itself out here against the Thunder, though there were some clutch Durant moments down the stretch, including a shot that out the Rockets up six with just a minute left in the game. This is how the Rockets need to operate. Team ball the whole way, and then let KD close it out.

Jabari Smith Jr. had another good game, and he seems to be breaking out of his slump a little bit. Jabari finished with 22 points, 10 boards, a steal and a block, as well as played some pretty good defense. The guy is painfully streaky player, which is not out of the ordinary for a 22-year-old. I still see the vision with Jabari, though I’ve admittedly been on the Smith train since the beginning, so I may be biased, but it’s certainly not yet time to give up on his long-term success.

Reed Sheppard finished with 16 points, 3 rebounds, 6 assists, and 3 steals, rounding out every Rockets starter in double figures, though he continues to struggle from three, going just 1-for-4. The Rockets got very little from their bench, as Houston’s previously vaunted depth has taken a huge hit. The Rockets got 11 total bench points, with 8 coming from JD Davison. Who’s going to provide scoring punch off of the bench for Houston right now?

That’s an issue for another day, however, as the Rockets are back on the winning track in the meantime, moving to 32-19 on the season. The Rockets will be back in action on Tuesday against the L.A. Clippers, as they play back-to-back nights in H-town before the break.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...-112-106-behind-alperen-senguns-triple-double
 
The Rockets need to live up to their Space City moniker

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OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - FEBRUARY 7: Kevin Durant #7 and Jabari Smith Jr. #10 of the Houston Rockets high five during the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder on February 7, 2026 at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Logan Riely/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Spacing.

So much discussion around spacing. It’s rudimentary. It’s intuitively easy to understand. More shooters = more shots. More shots = more points. Three is, by now, infamously more than two.

The Houston Rockets have bad spacing by modern NBA standards. It’s undeniably true. Alperen Sengun and Amen Thompson are both poor shooters. They’re also the two best non-Kevin Durant players on the Rockets’ roster. It’s a conundrum.

I’m veering dangerously close to the “Can Sengun and Thompson co-exist?” piece I recently did. That’s fine. Think of me as Virginia Woolf writing another stream-of-consciousness novel, only a man in 2026 writing about the Houston Rockets with about one millionth the talent.

That piece was making the case that Sengun is close enough to being a shooter that he’s likely to reach the level he’d need to reach for the duo to co-exist. This one is more about what happens if he doesn’t reach that level.

Do the Rockets need four-out spacing?

The Rockets will need four-out spacing​


Yes. Case closed.

Although the statistical analysis is somewhat complicated here. The Rockets hung 112 points on the Thunder with Amen Thompson on the sidelines. That’s the impetus for this article. It’s a huge number – in 1999. In 2026, it’s fine.

Factoring in that the Thunder are the best defensive team in the NBA, it looks pretty impressive. Factoring in that they were missing Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams (two positive defenders), it gets downright aggravating. Was this game evidence of a revamped Rockets offense or not?

I say yes. The Rockets attempted 43 threes in this contest. The Warriors lead the league in attempts per game at 45.1, and the Celtics are second at 42.4. The Rockets?

Well, they’re not dead last – but they’re just 0.1 away. Houston’s 30.2 threes per game rank 29th in the NBA. That puts them in company with the Kings, Pistons, Mavericks, and Pelicans.

It seems that there’s room for one homecourt advantage seed that doesn’t shoot enough threes in each conference. Yet, three-point volume alone does not spacing make. Some Rockets fans will cringe reading this, but Jalen Duren is a – wait for it – vertical spacer. His pick-and-rollability (new word) with Cade Cunningham mitigates the non-shooting of the other Thompson. Not for nothing, Ausar also plays largely off-ball, similarly to how his brother played last season.

The Rockets’ spacing is worse. Sengun is best optimized when he’s camped in the paint. Thompson, if he has the ball, needs to get there. So, we’re back where we started:

Can they co-exist?

Rockets may face tough decisions​


Not if neither of them can reliably shoot!

It’s a bitter pill – oh wait, we already did the pill metaphor. Am I, as the kids say, washed?

As constructed, the Rockets are too easy to plan for. Put the opposing center on Thompson. Have him sag off and pack the paint. Now, he can effectively guard Sengun and Thompson at the same time. The paint is closed off, so unless Durant can make lemonade, the offense looks like a firm, yellow, bitter fruit that nobody eats without sugar unless they’ve just done a tequila shot.

Yes, some actions can mitigate the problem. Put Sengun in the high post, have Thompson cut. That’s a good action. You can’t run it for every play. This is a fundamental problem that can’t be fundamentally solved unless one of these guys is a shooter.

What’s the solution?

There’s no reason to rush. There’s still enough reason to hope that one or the other can get their shooting up to snuff. If Rafael Stone wants to see how it looks with VanVleet and Adams back, that’s justifiable, even if it won’t appease the dopamine-chasing masses in need of instant results.

If the need to choose arises, it won’t be easy. Some will disagree. Sengun is the better player, so you choose him. Right?

Arguably. Sengun’s abilities were on full display against the Thunder. He finished with 17 points, 12 rebounds, and 10 assists. Surrounded by four shooters, Sengun reminded the world why he’s evoked Jokic comparisons. He’s a dynamic passer when it isn’t far too easy for rival defenses to crowd him.

Yet, from the point of view of market scarcity, there’s a case for Thompson. As talented as Sengun is, Thompson is arguably the best wing defender in the NBA. Simply put, it would be easier to trade Sengun and picks for a better Sengun than it would be to trade Thompson and picks for a better Thompson. There is no better Thompson (besides, possibly, Thompson).

Ultimately, it may depend on who’s available. If the Rockets want to go the Antetokounmpo route, I think Thompson is the better fit. Antetokounmpo approximates Sengun’s offensive role more closely. Thompson can move off the ball full-time, feast on cuts, and the Rockets can overwhelm opponents with dunk and layup efficiency to offset the low three-point volume. The 81.1% Antetokounmpo is shooting between 0-3 feet would revolutionize this offense if it replaced the 69.1% Sengun is shooting from the same range.

Alternatively, suppose Ant Edwards requested a trade (I loathe the homophobia, but let’s otherwise talk basketball). You keep Sengun. The inside/outside combination would stretch the floor as far as it can be stretched. The Rockets would put opponents in an impossible bind. Edwards (again, minus personal foibles) is the dream target, but this applies to any potential star acquisition who’s an elite three-point shooter.

By now, some readers are sick. Listen – preferably, you can keep both. Ideally, one or the other (again, likely Sengun) develops a reliable enough three to make this viable. If, in a couple of years or so, that hasn’t happened, this could get messy. The Rockets may need to move one or the other.

In this NBA, they’ll need the spacing.

Source: https://www.thedreamshake.com/rocke...s-need-to-live-up-to-their-space-city-moniker
 
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