- Ben Golliver of Sports Illustrated examines LeBron James‘ possible thinking as he faces free agency next offseason. A lot has been made of James possibly considering Los Angeles as a place of interest but Golliver looks at the Rockets and Spurs as two possibilities for King James.
- Rockets forward Ryan Anderson was in New York tonight after a summer filled with trade rumors involving the Knicks, writes Jonathan Feigen of The Houston Chronicle. Anderson was a key figure in Houston’s quest to acquire Carmelo Anthony, but he says he never believed a deal was close. “I don’t think that was too much of a realistic thought to a lot of people because it was so much of what you believe,” Anderson said. “There were so many different news articles. Maybe in preseason there was a little bit of a thought because it was so fresh, but not at all now, I’m ready to move forward this year. We have a battle tonight. We have to focus on that. That’s 100 percent where my mind is now.”
- Rockets coach Mike D’Antoni expects Chris Paul to return in about two weeks, Feigen tweets. Paul has been sidelined since opening night with pain in his knees.
- With Trevor Ariza healthy and back in the Rockets‘ lineup, the team has sent Troy Williams back to the Rio Grande Valley Vipers, per Jonathan Feigen of The Houston Chronicle (Twitter link).
- DeAndre Jordan‘s future looms large for the Clippers, since he’s eligible for free agency next summer. According to Lowe, Los Angeles has explored trading Jordan, but the only time the team “gained semiserious traction” on anything was at the 2017 deadline. That proposed deal would have sent Jordan to the Rockets in exchange for Clint Capela, players, and picks.
[SOURCE LINK]
- Trevor Ariza‘s unexpected return from injury made Isaiah Canaan expendable, relays Jonathan Feigen of The Houston Chronicle. The Rockets made the surprising decision to waive Canaan on Saturday, just four days after he was signed. Coach Mike D’Antoni explained that the team expected Ariza to be sidelined three to four weeks with a sprained left foot, but he recovered in a matter of days. “We’re disappointed because I know Isaiah was really excited about getting back with the Rockets,” said Mark Bartelstein, Canaan’s agent. “When they got the perimeter play of Trevor back, Daryl [Morey], the Rockets general manager called and said ‘I don’t think there’s enough minutes for us to just justify using up our cap flexibility.’ While we’re disappointed, we understand it. If there’s not an opportunity for Isaiah to play, they’re so tight up against it, it put them in a tough situation. They want to stay in close contact where if something were to happen with the roster and they have a need, I know he’s the first guy they’ll look at.”
- The Rockets used Bobby Brown, rather than Canaan or Demetrius Jackson as their backup point guard in their last two games, Feigen writes in a separate piece. Jackson got the call after Chris Paul was hurt on opening night, but he has a two-way contract and is limited to 45 days in the NBA. The team wants to give him time to develop in the G League. Brown played just 25 games last season, but appears to be part of the rotation until Paul returns.
The Rockets have waived Isaiah Canaan just four days after he signed with the team, tweets Jonathan Feigen of The Houston Chronicle.
The 26-year-old guard got into just one game and saw four minutes of action before being let go. Although the Rockets are short-handed because of injuries, Canaan didn’t play in Friday’s game at Charlotte, Feigen notes, with Bobby Brown being used as the backup point guard.
Houston will incur a $53K cap hit for Canaan, according to Bobby Marks of ESPN (Twitter link). The move brings the Rockets’ roster back down to 14 players.
This is the second time Canaan has been waived in the past two weeks. He spent the preseason with the Thunder, but didn’t survive the final roster cut.
Friday marked the five-year anniversary of the Rockets‘ franchise-altering deal to acquire point guard James Harden from the Thunder. Since joining Houston, Harden has evolved into one of the NBA’s top players. In five seasons with Houston entering 2016/17, he has been a runner-up for the Most Valuable Player award twice and made the NBA All-Star team five times.
As Jonathan Feigen of The Houston Chronicle writes, Harden, 28, looks back at the trade bringing him to the Rockets fondly.
Harden spent his first three seasons in Oklahoma City as one of the NBA’s most potent sixth men, winning the Sixth Man of the Year award for the 2011/12 season. Now, Harden is signed long-term by the Rockets as the face of the franchise. That status was unattainable in OKC with former MVP Kevin Durant and then-budding superstar Russell Westbrook in the fold.
- Feigen writes in a separate article that Chris Paul, who has missed five of the Rockets’ first six games due to a bruised left knee, had no idea he would miss this much time. Paul banged knees with Mario Chalmers almost a week before the Rockets’ season-opener against Golden State and has not played since the team upset the Warriors to open the year.
Hoops Rumors is breaking down the 2017 offseason for all 30 NBA teams, revisiting the summer’s free agent signings, trades, draft picks, departures, and more. We’ll evaluate each team’s moves from the last several months and look ahead to what the 2017/18 season holds for all 30 franchises. Today, we’re focusing on the Houston Rockets.
Signings:
- P.J. Tucker: Four years, $32MM. Fourth year partially guaranteed ($2.569MM).
- Nene Hilario: Three years, $10.954MM. Third-year player option.
- Troy Williams: Three years, $4.693MM. Second year partially guaranteed ($614K). Third year non-guaranteed.
- Tarik Black: One year, $3.29MM.
- Luc Mbah a Moute: One year, minimum salary.
- Demetrius Jackson: Two-way contract. One year. $50K guaranteed.
Camp invitees:
- Cameron Oliver: Two years, minimum salary. $300K guaranteed. (Waived)
- Chris Johnson: One year, minimum salary. $25K guaranteed. (Waived)
- Bobby Brown: One year, minimum salary. Exhibit nine.
- George de Paula: One year, minimum salary. Summer contract. (Waived)
- Danuel House: One year, minimum salary. Exact terms not known. (Waived)
Trades:
- Acquired a 2018 second-round pick from the Grizzlies in exchange for the draft rights to Dillon Brooks (No. 45 pick).
- Note: The 2018 second-round pick will be the least favorable of the Grizzlies’, Hornets’, and Heat’s selections.
- Note: The 2018 second-round pick will be the least favorable of the Grizzlies’, Hornets’, and Heat’s selections.
- Acquired DeAndre Liggins from the Mavericks in exchange for cash ($75K).
- Acquired Ryan Kelly from the Hawks in exchange for cash ($75K).
- Note: Later waived Kelly.
- Acquired Tim Quarterman from the Trail Blazers in exchange for cash ($100K).
- Note: Later waived Quarterman.
- Acquired Darrun Hilliard from the Pistons in exchange for cash ($1MM).
- Acquired Shawn Long from the Sixers in exchange for the Rockets’ 2018 second-round pick and cash ($100K).
- Note: Later waived Long.
- Acquired Chris Paul from the Clippers in exchange for Lou Williams, Patrick Beverley, Sam Dekker, Montrezl Harrell, Kyle Wiltjer, DeAndre Liggins, Darrun Hilliard, the Rockets’ 2018 first-round pick (top-three protected), and cash ($661K).
- Acquired Jarrod Uthoff from the Mavericks in exchange for cash.
- Note: Later waived Uthoff.
Draft picks:
- 2-43: Isaiah Hartenstein — Signed G League contract.
Draft-and-stash signings:
- Zhou Qi (2016; No. 43) — Signed to three-year, minimum salary contract. Second and third years not guaranteed.
Extensions:
- James Harden: Five years, 35% maximum salary. Designated veteran extension. Starts in 2019/20.
Departing players:
- Patrick Beverley
- Sam Dekker
- Montrezl Harrell
- Isaiah Taylor (waived)
- Lou Williams
- Kyle Wiltjer
Other offseason news:
- Leslie Alexander sold the franchise to new owner Tilman Fertitta for $2.2 billion.
- Extended general manager Daryl Morey through 2022.
- Hired former NBA big man Chuck Hayes as a scout.
Salary cap situation:
- Operating over the cap, but under the tax line. Carrying approximately $115MM in guaranteed team salary. Only minimum salary exception available.
Check out the Houston Rockets’ full roster and depth chart at RosterResource.com.
Story of the summer:
Daryl Morey‘s quest for superstars led him this summer to Chris Paul, who at first glance seems to be an odd match for the Rockets and their up-tempo offense. During his years running the show for the Clippers, Paul preferred to slow things down, excelling in half-court sets. With James Harden emerging as a bona fide star point guard last season for the run-and-gun Rockets, Houston wasn’t really in the discussion throughout the year as a probable landing spot for CP3.
Nevertheless, Morey and the Rockets’ front office had a vision for how the two star point guards could coexist alongside one another, and both players bought into that vision. Heavily recruited by Harden, Paul told the Clippers several days before free agency that he intended to head to Houston.
The only problem? The Rockets didn’t have the cap space necessary to sign Paul if he were to opt out of his contract and become a free agent. Rather than trying to trade Ryan Anderson and his $19.5MM+ cap hit to clear that space – a difficult task, as the team discovered later in the summer – the Rockets made a trade with the Clippers in advance of free agency, with Paul opting into the final year of his deal to make it work.
- After sending him to the Rio Grande Valley Vipers earlier this week, the Rockets have recalled Troy Williams, the team announced today (Twitter link). Williams may help provide some small forward depth for Houston with Trevor Ariza expected to miss at least the next three games.
- Isaiah Canaan, who agreed to a non-guaranteed deal with the Rockets on Tuesday, could play tonight in Philadelphia, according to Jonathan Feigen of The Houston Chronicle. Canaan played for Houston head coach Mike D’Antoni when he was an assistant with the Sixers and has an understanding of his approach. “I know his game and he knows our offense more or less,” D’Antoni said. “We did a lot of it up here. He just went through a training camp [with the Thunder], which I like. He’s already been playing. We need bodies. I could see him playing.” The Rockets are short on guards with Chris Paul sidelined by knee soreness.