Cam Whitmore’s emergence excites Rockets GM Rafael Stone

“I’m excited,” Rockets GM Rafael Stone says of rookie guard Cam Whitmore. “I think he’s flashed really, really high-end offensive talent.”

In last Monday’s press conference to wrap up the NBA’s 2024 trade deadline, Houston Rockets general manager Rafael Stone addressed a wide range of subjects related to transactions and beyond.

One of those discussion topics was rookie swingman Cam Whitmore, who has come on strongly in recent weeks.

Drafted at No. 20 overall in the 2023 first round out of Villanova, he averaged 18.1 points (47.2% FG, 42.3% on 3-pointers) and 4.8 rebounds in only 20.8 minutes over his last eight games.

Regarding Whitmore’s play, Stone said:

We’re excited about Cam. He can score the ball and we knew he was the type of athlete he showed on the court, that was pretty obvious. But I’m excited. I think he’s flashed really, really high-end offensive talent. And a lot of the stuff we’ve asked of him defensively, he’s working on. And so again, just like the rest of our group, it needs to translate. It needs to be every game, every possession.

Whitmore missed Houston’s final three games before the All-Star break with a right ankle sprain. But he’s expected to be healthy when the Rockets resume play on Thursday in New Orleans.

Complete video of Stone’s press conference is available below.

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Rockets anticipate operating above NBA’s salary cap in 2024 offseason

After trading for Steven Adams, the Rockets will likely above the NBA’s salary cap this offseason, per general manager Rafael Stone. Here’s what it means.

When Houston made its recent trade for veteran center Steven Adams, one of the obvious implications was that it was made with future years in mind. Adams is unavailable to play this season, but he’s under contract for 2024-25 at $12.6 million and he is expected to serve as a strong backup to Alperen Sengun.

Once Houston exchanged the expiring contract of Victor Oladipo for Adams’ multiyear contract, it was clear the Rockets were not looking to maximize financial space beneath the NBA’s salary cap during the 2024 offseason.

In theory, Houston could have opened a moderate amount of room by allowing Oladipo’s contract to expire and not picking up the options on  Jae’Sean Tate, Jeff Green and Jock Landale.

However, the small financial gap between that space (approximately $15.8 million) and the NBA’s non-taxpayer mid-level exception (aproximately $12.9 million starting salary) probably wouldn’t have been worth losing access to Houston’s bi-annual exception (approximately $4.7 million), its Kevin Porter Jr. trade exception ($4.5 million) and the ability to use expiring contracts of Tate, Green and Landale to match salary in trades.

To go under the cap, Houston would need to to renounce those salary cap exceptions and turn down some or all of those contracts. It also would have needed to offload their incoming first-round draft pick from Brooklyn, which could land in the top-10 selections.

With that in mind, as part of last Monday’s press conference to wrap up the 2024 trade deadline, general manager Rafael Stone was asked whether the Adams deal makes it likely Houston will operate above the salary cap in the upcoming offseason. He responded:

Yeah, it does. There still are scenarios where we could dip down, but I think very, very likely we will be above the cap.

Complete video of Stone’s press conference is available below.

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Wide Receiver with a QB Mentality: Rice’s Luke McCaffrey projects as versatile asset in NFL

Wide Receiver with a QB Mentality: Rice’s Luke McCaffrey projects as versatile asset in NFL entering the 2024 draft

There are a few prospects that have been brought up in the NFL Draft over recent years dubbed “quarterback with a linebacker mentality.”

But there’s something to be said about “wide receiver with a quarterback mentality.”

Rice signal-caller AJ Padgett describes Luke McCaffrey as the most quarterback-friendly wide receiver he’s ever played with.

So much so that it’s almost “telepathic.” That particularly came to light in the Lending Tree Bowl in December of 2022 when the Rice Owls were facing the Southern Miss Golden Eagles.

“We have this one route in our playbook, and in it, Luke is basically just reading the leverage on the guy over him and he’s going to decide whether he’s going to go in or if he’s going to go out,” Padgett said.

“It was third and long and we had called that route. I was thinking in my brain, ‘I really hope that he just runs straight and just sits and doesn’t go anywhere.'”

That’s exactly what McCaffrey did, with no verbal communication. It was as if he had read the quarterback’s mind, the way Padgett puts it.

“I threw before he broke, and it seemed like we had telepathy,” Padgett said. “It was the most crazy thing and we ended up scoring on the drive. Everyone was talking about how insane in was on the sidelines.”

One of the main reasons why McCaffrey is so good at understanding things from the quarterback perspective is because he was one himself. It was the position his name was under at Nebraska, and after a short stint at Louisville, he came to Rice where the decision to switch positions was completely left up to him.

It’s been for the better in his eyes.

“When I switched positions, it was a time in my life where I kind of opened myself up to a different world. I was so thankful because I felt like I got to be myself a whole lot more.”

And the move paid dividends for the Owls offense.

“I feel like at the receiver position, it’s hard to be 10 percent of someone’s offense,” Rice head coach Mike Bloomgren said. “And I feel like he was 40 percent of ours.

McCaffrey finished out the 2023 season with 71 receptions for 992 yards and 13 touchdowns just one season after catching 58 passes for 723 yards and 6 touchdowns.

“From a tangibles perspective, you get a guy who is sudden. You get a guy who understands the game incredibly well, which is why he plays so fast at the wide receiver position,” Bloomgren said.

His catch radius and consistency with his hands showed year-over-year improvement.

“He’s stronger than everyone gives him credit for, and everyone thinks ‘this dude can’t run’, but he can.”

McCaffrey had obvious success at wideout, but it didn’t end there.

He’s truly done it all, and all of those abilities will make him an asset in more ways than one at the NFL level. McCaffrey himself calls his versatility his best quality.

“We would give him a reverse every game. We’d run a quarterback-driven run, a wildcat type of thing with him,” Bloomgren said.

“He just did so much, in addition to when we had to be in a sting punt situation. He’d jump out there and be the gunner and make the play. He did so much for our football team, not just our offense.”

Coming from the system Rice runs offensively is also something that draws scouts in.

“We ran a system where every play is three plays in one,” McCaffrey said.

He noted the translation at the Senior Bowl, where prospects from a host of different programs and backgrounds had to adjust to a completely new system.

“It’s really cool to go through that and to be able to have to have read a defense already for the past three years at Rice and then get into an offense like this where you’re in the huddle,” McCaffrey said. “You have long play calls and you’re used to it.”

“A lot of guys come from systems that don’t.”

But more than anything else, McCaffrey is known for who he is as a person and a teammate as someone who “always walks into the building with a smile on his face.”

Padgett, who was just two lockers down from him at Rice, and anyone else who has spent time around McCaffrey will tell you that.

“You see the McCaffrey family all the time on social media all the time. Knowing Luke, all the great things you hear about him and his family, I’m inclined to believe all of that is true.”

“He’s everything you want in terms of a worker. He prepares the right way and is always going to be the most prepared guy. He walks in the building with a smile every day.

Luke McCaffrey never has a bad day, according to Bloomgren.

“Today is the best day of his life and tomorrow is going to be even better. That’s just the way he lives.”

Rockets GM Rafael Stone on Jalen Green: ‘On paper, a great fit’

“Jalen [Green] has been and continues to be, on paper, a great fit with us,” Rockets GM Rafael Stone says. “He has a skill set that isn’t replicated on our roster.”

As part of Monday’s press conference to wrap up the NBA’s 2024 trade deadline, Houston Rockets general manager Rafael Stone addressed a range of subjects related to transactions and beyond.

One of those subjects was third-year guard Jalen Green, who was occasionally referenced in rumors as a potential trade candidate in the weeks leading up to the Feb. 8 deadline.

But the Rockets ultimately chose to keep the 22-year-old, whose performance has improved in recent weeks.

So, as Green approaches a 2024 offseason in which he will be eligible for a contract extension, what do the Rockets want to see from him?

Stone addressed that at his press conference:

Jalen has been and continues to be, on paper, a great fit with us. He has a skill set that isn’t replicated on our roster.

My expectation of him and he knows this … is that the defense, which has gotten better, is still going to get a lot better. That the physicality and the efficiency are all going to get better.

He needs to take those steps. That’s extraordinarily important. He’s aware of it. We’re aware of it. And that’s the challenge, for him and for us.

The complete video of Stone’s comments is available below.

With averages of 18 points (41.1% FG), 4.8 rebounds and 3.4 assists per game, Green is Houston’s second-leading scorer this season.

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Amen Thompson electric, but Rockets continue road misery in Memphis

Rookie guard Amen Thompson (19 points, 12 rebounds, 53% FG) was outstanding, but Houston’s road misery continued versus lowly Memphis.

In their final game before the NBA’s 2024 All-Star break, the Rockets (24-30) continued their road misery with Wednesday’s 121-113 loss (box score) to the Grizzlies (19-36). Houston is 5-21 away from home this season, with the latest humiliation coming versus a lowly Memphis squad that had lost nine straight games going in.

Houston enters the break 12th in the Western Conference standings, 3 games behind Golden State in 10th, what would be the final berth of the 2024 play-in tournament.

Both teams were short-handed on Wednesday, with Ja Morant, Desmond Bane, Marcus Smart and Brandon Clarke among the rotation players absent for Memphis. Those unavailable for the Rockets included Fred VanVleet, Tari Eason and Cam Whitmore.

Starting for VanVleet, rookie guard Amen Thompson was a bright spot for the Rockets, finishing with 19 points and 12 rebounds while shooting 9-of-17 from the field (52.9%). But backcourt mate Jalen Green was a disaster, finishing with just 4 points and 3 assists in 23 minutes while shooting 2-of-7 overall (28.6%), 0-of-4 from 3-point range, and not earning a single fourth-quarter minute.

Granted, Green was far from alone in his shooting struggles. Starting forwards Dillon Brooks and Jabari Smith Jr. combined to shoot just 8-of-30 overall (26.7%) and 2-of-16 on 3-pointers (12.5%).

Alperen Sengun tallied 19 points (50% FG), 6 assists and 5 rebounds. Aaron Holiday added 19 points off the bench while making 5-of-8 from 3-point range (62.5%). Houston connected on 11-of-36 from beyond the 3-point arc as a team (30.6%), and without Holiday, that dipped to a woeful 6-of-28 from distance (21.4%).

Memphis raced to a 23-point lead midway through the first half before a furious Houston rally in the middle portions of the game gave the Rockets a two-point lead early in the fourth. But Houston couldn’t sustain that momentum, and in a familiar theme from recent weeks, the frantic rally wasn’t enough to get over the final hump.

Rookie forward GG Jackson led the Grizzlies with 20 points and 9 rebounds in only 24 minutes off the bench, making 8-of-15 shots (53.3%) and 3-of-5 from 3-point range (60%). Jaren Jackson Jr. added 18 points in 27 minutes on 3-of-6 shooting from 3-point range (50%), including a pair of big triples in the fourth to stem the tide.

Here’s our look at Wednesday’s highlights and postgame interviews, along with reaction by media members and fans. After the All-Star break, the Rockets return to action on Feb. 22 in New Orleans. Tipoff versus the Pelicans is at 7 p.m. Central.

Reaction: Rockets beat Knicks before buzzer as Aaron Holiday erupts late

Aaron Holiday scored 11 clutch fourth-quarter points versus the Knicks, including the winning free throws with 0.3 seconds left, as Houston ended its losing streak.

HOUSTON — In their penultimate game before the NBA’s 2024 All-Star break, the Rockets (24-29) snapped a four-game losing streak with Monday’s dramatic 105-103 home win (box score) over the Knicks (33-21). Aaron Holiday, who scored 11 of his 18 points in the fourth quarter, hit two tiebreaking free throws with 0.3 seconds left after a controversial foul was called on New York’s Jalen Brunson.

Both teams were short-handed, with the Knicks missing Julius Randle, OG Anunoby, and Isaiah Hartenstein due to injury while Houston was without Fred VanVleet, Tari Eason, and Cam Whitmore.

Brunson led the Knicks with 27 points and 7 assists, though his tying jumper with 8.3 seconds left was offset by his foul of Holiday.

It was a balanced effort for the Rockets, who were led by the best 3-point shooting night of the season from Dillon Brooks.

Key stat lines included:

  • Dillon Brooks: 23 points, 5 rebounds; 8-of-15 shooting (53.3%), 6-of-7 on 3-pointers (85.7%)
  • Jabari Smith Jr.: 20 points, 7 rebounds; 6-of-13 shooting (46.2%), 2-of-6 on 3-pointers (33.3%)
  • Alperen Sengun: 18 points, 6 assists, 3 blocks, 3 reboundsl 6-of-10 shooting (60.0%)
  • Jalen Green: 16 points, 5 rebounds, 4 assists; 4-of-15 shooting (26.7%), 0-of-6 on 3-pointers, 8-of-9 on free throws (88.9%)
  • Amen Thompson: 8 points, 13 rebounds, 5 assists, 5 steals; 4-of-5 shooting (80.0%)
  • Aaron Holiday: 18 points, 4 assists, 3 rebounds; 7-of-14 shooting (50.0%), 2-of-6 on 3-pointers (33.3%)

In a game where the Rockets were out-rebounded by the larger Knicks, 51-39, the gritty defensive contributions by the likes of Holiday, Thompson, and Brooks were critical to Houston holding on.

Here’s our look at Monday’s highlights and postgame interviews, along with reaction by media members and fans. Next up for the Rockets is Wednesday’s game at Memphis (18-35), where tipoff is set for 7:00 p.m. Central. That will be the final game before a hiatus of more than a week for the NBA’s 2024 All-Star Weekend.

Rafael Stone shares outlook on Steven Adams trade, post-deadline state of the Rockets

Rafael Stone met with reporters Monday and explained his perspective on the Steven Adams trade, Houston’s otherwise quiet deadline, and much more.

In the end, the recent trade of second-round draft assets to Memphis for veteran center Steven Adams was the only February 2024 move for the Houston Rockets. While Adams is a reliable big man who has started for playoff teams throughout a strong career, the 30-year-old will not be available until next season due to a knee injury.

Despite several rumors going into Thursday’s in-season deadline day for 2023-24 NBA trades, none came to fruition in Houston.

With the deadline transaction window complete, general manager Rafael Stone took questions from reporters prior to Monday’s matchup versus New York (Houston’s first post-deadline home game). First and foremost on the agenda was addressing the completed deal.

“I think we got a really high-level basketball player, a guy who’s been a dominant rebounding force in the NBA for the last five, six years, one of the best defenders in the NBA,” Stone said. “We obviously feel great with Alperen [Sengun], but I just think now we have truly two starter-level centers next year. Depth is just extraordinarily important. But on top of that, he’s just a very different player, and I think will be a good complement on and off the court for our group.”

Topics in the extended Q&A session included motivations for the Adams deal and his health outlook for the 2024-25 campaign; why no other trades got to the finish line this month; and how Stone views the path forward as the team moves through its rebuilding phases.

Here’s our roundup of what Stone told media members on Monday.

Jalen Green soars to first career triple-double as Hawks clip short-handed Rockets

Jalen Green (26 points, 14 rebounds, 10 assists) had his first career triple-double, but Houston’s short-handed squad couldn’t complete a rally in Atlanta.

In the finale of a frustrating four-game road trip, the short-handed Rockets led by 12 after the first quarter before running out of steam in Saturday’s 122-113 loss (box score) at Atlanta. Dejounte Murray returned from a two-game injury absence and led the Hawks (24-29) with an efficient 34 points, including 12-of-15 on free throws (80%).

As their Western Conference play-in tournament odds continue to fade, the Rockets (23-29) suffered their first four-game losing streak and are 5-20 away from home all season. In a familiar development, Houston’s late comeback bid couldn’t get over the hump despite closing the gap to five points with just over a minute left.

The Rockets, who were on the second night of a road back-to-back after losing Friday in Toronto, were down four key players due to injury: Alperen Sengun (lower back pain), Fred VanVleet (left adductor strain), Tari Eason (left lower leg injury management) and Cam Whitmore (right ankle sprain). The status of those players for the next game, Monday at home versus New York, is not clear.

Given those absences, several of the remaining Rockets stepped into larger roles and fared well offensively. Standouts included:

  • Jalen Green: 26 points, 14 rebounds, 10 assists, 5 turnovers; 10-of-22 shooting (45.5%), 2-of-9 on 3-pointers (22.2%)
  • Jeff Green: 19 points, 6 rebounds, 5 turnovers; 6-of-10 shooting (60.0%), 4-of-7 on 3-pointers (57.1%)
  • Amen Thompson: 12 points, 11 rebounds, 2 steals; 6-of-10 shooting (60%)
  • Dillon Brooks: 14 points; 5-of-19 shooting (26.3%), 2-of-10 on 3-pointers (20%)
  • Jabari Smith Jr.: 9 points, 11 rebounds, 5 blocks, 4 steals; 4-of-15 shooting (26.7%), 1-of-7 on 3-pointers (14.3%)
  • Aaron Holiday: 18 points, 2 assists in 22 minutes; 7-of-10 shooting, 3-of-5 on 3-pointers (60%)
  • Jock Landale: Season-high 9 rebounds in 13 minutes

However, Houston often struggled to get defensive stops versus Murray and Trae Young’s high-octane Hawks. After holding Atlanta to 19 points in the first quarter, the Rockets lost intensity as the game progressed, allowing 38 points in each of the next two quarters.

Here’s our look at Saturday’s highlights and postgame interviews from Atlanta, along with reaction by media members and fans. With the road trip complete, next up for the Rockets is Monday’s game versus the Knicks (33-19), with the tip set for 7 p.m. Central.

Adding injury to insult: Rockets lose game to lowly Raptors, Cam Whitmore to ankle sprain

The Rockets are now a woeful 5-19 on the road this season, and the loss of Cam Whitmore (right ankle sprain) added injury to insult in Toronto.

On the third stop of a four-game road trip, the turnover-prone Rockets (22 total) delivered one of their worst performances of the season in Friday’s 107-104 loss (box score) at Toronto. After trailing by as many as 22 points in the third quarter, Houston’s late comeback bid came up just short, just as it did in the previous game at Indiana.

The Raptors (19-33), led by 25 points from Immanuel Quickley, dealt Houston (23-29) its fourth straight road loss.

Cam Whitmore scored 17 points in just over 17 minutes, shooting 5-of-9 overall (55.6%) and 3-of-5 from 3-point range (60.0%). But fittingly, on a night where so many things went wrong for the Rockets, Whitmore left in the second half and couldn’t continue due to a right ankle sprain — which he suffered late in the first half during a controversial no-call sequence that didn’t go Houston’s way.

The Rockets did not immediately offer a timetable for Whitmore’s return, but his availability for Saturday’s game in Atlanta — which takes place less than 24 hours from the injury — is in doubt.

For better or for worse, other notable stat lines included:

  • Dillon Brooks: 20 points, 2 blocks, 4 turnovers in 30 minutes; 6-of-13 shooting (46.2%), 4-of-5 on 3-pointers (80.0%)
  • Jabari Smith Jr.: 12 points, 11 rebounds in 33 minutes; 5-of-11 shooting (45.5%), 2-of-6 on 3-pointers (33.3%)
  • Jalen Green: 7 points, 2 rebounds, 4 turnovers in 22 minutes; 3-of-11 shooting (27.3%), 1-of-5 on 3-pointers (20.0%)
  • Alperen Sengun: 7 points, 7 rebounds, 2 turnovers in 21 minutes; 3-of-7 shooting (42.9%)
  • Amen Thompson: 8 points, 9 rebounds, 4 assists, 6 turnovers in 31 minutes; 4-of-5 shooting (80.0%)
  • Aaron Holiday: 12 points, 5 assists in 30 minutes; 5-of-13 shooting (38.5%), 2-of-8 on 3-pointers (25.0%)
  • Jeff Green: 11 points, 6 rebounds, 4 assists in 27 minutes; 3-of-11 shooting (27.3%), 1-of-6 on 3-pointers (16.7%), 4-of-5 on free throws (80.0%)

Neither Jalen Green nor Sengun were part of Houston’s closing lineup. Sengun struggled to handle Raptors big man Jakob Poeltl, who had with 16 points, 12 rebounds, and 6 blocked shots while shooting 7-of-11 from the field (63.6%). It was a dramatic reversal from when Sengun had his way inside during last week’s meeting.

Houston routed Toronto in that Feb. 2 game, but that was at home, where the Rockets are 18-9 this season. They are a staggering 5-19 on the road, and that discrepancy is a big part of why they’ve fallen to No. 12 in the Western Conference standings, with a potential run to the play-in tournament becoming increasingly unlikely.

Another factor in their recent regression is injuries. Fred VanVleet (left adductor strain) and Tari Eason (left lower leg injury management) both remained sidelined, although there is hope that each could return within the next few days. The Rockets are now 0-5 in the 2023-24 season without VanVleet and 11-18 without Eason.

Here’s our look at Friday’s highlights and postgame interviews from Toronto, along with reaction by media members and fans. As the road trip finally concludes, next up for Houston is Saturday’s game at Atlanta (22-29), where tipoff is set for 6:30 p.m. Central.

In close loss at Indiana, Rockets find late spark from Jalen Green, Amen Thompson

Jalen Green (30 points) and Amen Thompson (13 points, 13 rebounds) were dynamic, but Houston’s frantic comeback bid came up just short in Indiana.

On the second stop of a four-game road trip, the short-handed Houston Rockets ran out of steam in the second half in Tuesday’s 132-129 loss (box score) in Indiana. Houston (23-27) is four games below .500 for the first time in the 2023-24 NBA season.

The Rockets scored 75 points in the first half and led by as many as 10, but their shooting cooled significantly in a third quarter, which the Pacers (29-23) won by a decisive 38-24 margin. Pascal Siakam led the way with 29 points on 11-of-16 shooting (68.8%).

Led by young guards Jalen Green and Amen Thompson, the Rockets fought back valiantly but couldn’t come any closer than three points during a frantic closing sequence. Houston finished on a 25-14 run over the final seven-plus minutes, including a 10-3 burst over the last three minutes.

Standout players for the Rockets included:

  • Jalen Green: 30 points, 3 rebounds, 2 steals; 12-of-20 shooting (60%), 3-of-5 from 3-point range (60%)
  • Amen Thompson: 13 points, 13 rebounds, 6 assists, 3 blocks; 6-of-13 shooting (46.2%), 1-of-4 on free throws (25%)
  • Dillon Brooks: 23 points, 4 assists; 8-of-15 shooting (53.3%), 3-of-6 on 3-pointers (50%)
  • Jabari Smith Jr.: 20 points, 9 rebounds; 8-of-15 shooting (53.3%), 2-of-4 on 3-pointers (50%)
  • Alperen Sengun: 20 points, 10 rebounds, 6 assists; 7-of-15 shooting (46.7%), 6-of-8 on free throws (75%)

Green has scored at least 29 points in five of eight games.

Fred VanVleet (left adductor strain) and Tari Eason (left lower leg injury management) both missed the game due to injury, although there is hope that both players could return within a week or so.

Here’s our look at Tuesday’s highlights and postgame interviews from Indiana, along with reaction by media members and fans. As the road trip continues with its back half, next up for Houston is Friday’s game at Toronto (17-33), where tipoff is set for 6:30 p.m. Central.