Well, the season is saved! The Rockets scored a robust 125 points, held their opponent to just over 100, and essentially stomped their opponent from beginning to end. Wait, I’m getting word that their opponent was the Utah Jazz, a team that claims not to be losing intentionally, but their growing fines from the NBA league office might suggest otherwise.
The Jass are what? 18-40? That’s not…good. So far from good, or trying to win, that again,they’ve been fined for it. Still, pretty much this Jazz team, but including Keyonte George, did in fact beat the Rockets earlier in the season. If you told me the Jazz, playing the Rockets at home would do their very best to get a win, and try to lose everything else, except against Portland, I’d believe you.
But there’s no reason to look askance at the result we had hoped, or in some cases, expected, to see. If you wanted to see the Rockets run some offense, they did. It happened. Write it down, that on February 24th, 2026 Kevin Durant ran several baseline cuts. It did my cruel, flinty, hater, heart good to see the Rockets actually move purposefully on a basketball court on offense.
If you wanted the Rockets to grab an opponent by metaphorical throat early, rather than Latrell Sprewell style, and not let go, they did that, too. The Rockets won the first quarter 38-22. They won the second and third quarters 30-25 and 32-28 respectively. It wasn’t until an entirely garbage time 4th quarter that the Jazz got to 30 points in a quarter.
What else did we see? Well, we saw the Rockets actually feature the three point shot. They took 40 threes to Ime Udoka’s former lead assistant in Boston, Will Hardy’s team’s 44. The Rockets shot at a robust, encouraging, possibly unsustainable, 45% clip on threes. The Jazz made a sad, bluesy, trombone of 18%. Maybe this is make or miss league stuff, but you can’t make or miss threes you don’t take. This 40 attempts is pretty much the level maintained by nearly every good NBA offense. Actually making such shots will force opponents out of the paint, where they usually hang around, making life difficult for Alperen Sengun, Kevin Durant, and Amen Thompson, all at the same time.
This is the first game in a very long time where the Rockets looked like an NBA offense. Admittedly against a tanking team, but one positive feature of this win might have been less focus on Kevin Durant. We also saw more positioning of Kevin Durant somewhere, anywhere, besides the top of the three point arc. Durant only took 13 shots tonight, 5 of which were threes. That might be a low shot output, but it’s a shot distribution I like a lot more. Durant standing in the corner is doom for opponents, as he can actually drive to his middie from there, unlike Amen standing in the corner, which is doom to the Rockets.
The player who came through tonight, who looked, dare I say, like the player we’ve been hoping to see, was Jabari Smith Jr. Jabari was 12-17, and 6-11 from three point range. He seemed to be playing freer, and I think a more free Jabari is a better Jabari. He seems to me to be a player who suffers inordinately from overthinking. Jabari was 6-6 from inside the three point line, and it seemed like A) no one on the Jazz could hold him, and B) he actually used his 3pt shot, and his height, to unlock his other shots. Jabari also had 9 boards, 3 steals, and 3 blocks. The turnovers were a bit unfortunate, but do not mar the long awaited The Return of Jaswishy. Long may he swish.
Alperen Sengun also had a good game, one in which no Rocket dominated the shot tally. He was 7-12, with 9 rebounds, 9 assists, 1 steal, and 2 blocks. He was 2-2 on his FTs. Why Alpie needed to play 36 minutes, and Clint Capela 10 minutes in this one is anyone’s guess. Capela has accumulated enough positive +/- nights, or been the least bad player off the bench enough, that it should warrant more minutes, in my opinion. Perhaps there are medical reasons why not, but if it’s not that, it’s hard to see why he doesn’t play a bit more.
Amen Thompson had something of an odd game, on the offensive side, with 3 ast to 6 TO. But he did attack aggressively, and made 4-5 FT. He was 8-9 on the shots that did count, none of which were 3pt shots. So very high efficiency as an offensive player, low as a distributor.
The last starter, Tari Eason, was disruptive, but seemed to feel the bite of regression a bit on his three point shots, going 1-5. He did grab 10 rebounds. The Rockets lost the offensive rebounding game, maybe because they just didn’t miss much 57% overall, and 45% from three. They did, however, crush Utah on the glass overall, 53-36.
The Rockets also didn’t have anything resembling a free throw edge. They took 11 to Utah’s 30. I don’t think Utah earned that many trips to the charity stripe, but part of the reason Houston didn’t take as many FTs was Utah didn’t do much defending, and Houston did.
Dorian Finney-Smith played 20 minutes of nothing much. We might have hoped to see him have a get right game as well. While he’s never been a high stats output player, you might like to see more than 3/4/0/0/0 with a turnover in 20 minutes, in a game the Rockets dominated.
Reed Sheppard had quite a good game in my opinion. He scored 15 on 5-9 shooting, with all of those attempts coming from three point range. He had 3 rebounds, 4 ast, 3 to, an 1 stl. His point guarding wasn’t superb, but it was there, and if the Rockets want to give Reed at least 10 shots from three a game, I think it would help them a lot in the long run.
Josh Okogie returned from his banishment, or silent treatment, or whatever, and played 12 mostly anonymous, but high energy, minutes. I can also report that Aaron Holiday, Uncle Jeff, and Isaiah Crawford are alive.
This is the first game in a very long time where I actually enjoyed watching the Rockets play offense. If some thought the Rockets could not run coherent offense, for mysterious reasons, this is proof that it is, at least, a possibility. Hopefully this easy, good shooting, win will lead the Rockets to a better place. On offense, and mentally. Maybe it will do the same for the Dear Old Dreamshake. At any rate, it’s a win, and not a troubling one in any respect.