Rockets star Alperen Sengun drives increased NBA interest in Turkey

Alperen Sengun’s breakout 2023-24 season with the Rockets led to a spike in NBA interest from Turkey, according to the league’s data.

The National Basketball Association (NBA) announced Monday that its  2023-24 regular season delivered record-breaking engagement in Europe and the Middle East across the NBA App, NBA League Pass, and the league’s 18 localized social media accounts in the region.

Complete details are available in the league’s announcement.

As it pertains to the Rockets, the NBA included some interesting data:

Driven by Alperen Sengun’s breakout season for the Houston Rockets, Turkey ranks third among followers of @NBA on X [formerly Twitter], behind only the United States and the Philippines. NBA League Pass subscriptions in Turkey increased by 41% year-over-year.

Just 21 years old, Sengun led an improved Houston team in scoring (21.1 points) and rebounds (9.3) during the 2023-24 season, all while shooting a team-high 53.7% among rotation players.

The success of the Turkish big man, who drew All-Star consideration in January, played a key role in Houston registering a league-leading improvement of 19 wins (22-60 to 41-41) relative to the prior season. He’s a finalist for the NBA’s Most Improved Player award and is eligible for a contract extension this offseason.

[lawrence-related id=123434,123326]

Rockets star Alperen Sengun named Most Improved Player finalist by NBA

Houston’s Alperen Sengun, Philadelphia’s Tyrese Maxey, and Chicago’s Coby White are the NBA’s Most Improved Player finalists this season.

Despite his 2023-24 season ending early due to a March 10 ankle injury, third-year center Alperen Sengun showed enough over the preceding 63 games with the Houston Rockets to be one of three finalists for the NBA’s Most Improved Player award.

On a per-game average basis, the 21-year-old Turkish big man led the Rockets in scoring (21.1 points) and rebounds (9.3), all while shooting a team-high 53.7% among rotation players.

That was enough for Sengun to earn All-Star consideration earlier this year, and it makes him a finalists for one of the league’s prestigious annual awards. Other finalists are Philadelphia 76ers guard Tyrese Maxey and Chicago Bulls guard Coby White.

The NBA’s latest criteria calls for players to participate in at least 65 games to be eligible for its awards. However, ESPN’s Kevin Pelton did recently note a potential exception to that rule:

Sengun will only be eligible if an independent doctor rules he will be unable to play through May 31 due to the injury that ended his regular season two games shy of the 65-game minimum.

It appears that was the case. The winners of the awards will be announced at a later date during the league’s 2024 playoffs.

[lawrence-related id=123367,123326]

Rockets confident in Jalen Green, Alperen Sengun fitting together

“Fundamentally, great players can play with great players, and they’re not positionally similar,” Rockets GM Rafael Stone says of Jalen Green and Alperen Sengun.

With some exceptions, the peaks of third-year center Alperen Sengun and guard Jalen Green — both drafted in the NBA’s 2021 first round — generally came at different times for the Houston Rockets.

Sengun flourished over the first few months of the 2023-24 season, even making an All-Star push at midseason. Then, with Sengun sidelined by an ankle injury for the final month-plus of the season, Green nearly earned March Player of the Month honors.

There were occasional games of overlap where both were in peak form at the same time, and it’s worth noting that Green had already shown several games of improved play prior to Sengun’s March 10 injury. Yet, for the season as a whole, it’s a fair observation to say that both prospects were rarely at their best, simultaneously.

So, as Houston turns its focus to 2024-25, is that a concern as the Rockets (41-41) try to go from a .500 season to a winning team that earns a spot in the 2025 Western Conference postseason?

General manager Rafael Stone and head coach Ime Udoka are aware of the concern, but it doesn’t sound like they’re particularly alarmed or troubled. At Tuesday’s end-of-season media availability session with Houston reporters, here’s how Stone responded to a question of whether Sengun and Green are a good complement to each other:

One’s a guard, one’s a center. One of the guys I’ve worked with a long time has a saying that “Someone has gotta score.” The more shots you get, the more you’ll score. In that sense, Jalen benefitted from getting additional shots.

He started playing really good basketball prior to Alperen’s injury. His scoring tailed off a little bit at the end, but he really played some really good games at the end of the season where he didn’t score particularly well.

It’s about putting yourself in position for success. He made some big steps midseason that set him up that way. Fundamentally, great players can play with great players, and they’re not positionally similar.

The challenge that exist for us is not Jalen and Alperen. It’s Jalen, Alperen, Amen [Thompson], Tari [Eason], Jabari [Smith Jr.], Fred [VanVleet], Dillon [Brooks], and Cam [Whitmore]. We’re a team. Ime has to find a way to mesh everyone, but a lot of that is on them and the choices they make.

Every team, every year faces that challenge. Every year someone comes back and added to their game… and [the question is] how do you incorporate that. Or, they want to do more, and how do you incorporate that?

That’s the challenge in front of us. It’s a great one to have these talented young guys who are getting better and having more potential, but we’re cognizant it is a challenge.

Udoka then added his own perspective regarding Sengun and Green, who finished as Houston’s top-two scorers in average points per game during the 2023-24 season. Among his comments:

Jalen had more opportunity with Alperen out. They have contrasting styles. Early on, we leaned on Fred to get us into sets, initiate everything and get our turnovers down. Alpi being one of the top low post scorers, Jalen wasn’t gonna have the same opportunity as in the past.

Sometimes it comes down to making shots. With the ball in his hands, he goes on a hot streak. He was playing well before Alperen went down.

We’re looking forward to that combo meshing next year with more experience and understanding what we’re looking for from both of them.

It’s funny, they said the same thing about [Jayson] Tatum and [Jaylen] Brown. “Can they mesh together?” A lot of times, it’s the guys that every team would want. Everyone would want Jalen and Alpi on their team. I think it’s a no brainer that it can work, and we’ll see it going forward.

Udoka, of course, coached Tatum and Brown with the 2021-22 Boston Celtics, who advanced to the 2022 NBA Finals.

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

[lawrence-related id=123326,123316]

Rockets open to, but not burdened by, contract extension talks with Jalen Green and Alperen Sengun

“It’s not a burden or a crushing pressure,” Rockets GM Rafael Stone says of potential contract extension talks this summer with Jalen Green and Alperen Sengun.

As first-round picks from the 2021 NBA draft, Jalen Green and Alperen Sengun are set to enter the fourth and final seasons of their initial rookie-scale contracts with the Houston Rockets.

Both have improved while flashing moments of brilliance, and Sengun drew All-Star consideration earlier this year. On paper, there is a case to be made to consider a contract extension for both players, which could keep them formally under club control for years to come.

Yet, for general manager Rafael Stone, there’s also math to consider. If the Rockets let Sengun and Green play out the final year of their current deals, they would hit restricted free agency in the 2025 offseason, which — beyond standard negotiating rights — gives the Rockets the right to match any outside offer and retain each player.

To make both restricted free agents, the Rockets would have to put a “cap hold” on their initial 2024-25 salary books. That figure is determined relative to each player’s original contract and draft slot.

For Green, the No. 2 pick in 2021, his cap hold is projected at a starting annual salary of $31.2 million for the 2024-25 season. For Sengun, the No. 16 pick, it’s $16.3 million.

In that 2025 offseason, the Rockets could have significant financial flexibility should they not pick up the team option on the final year of Fred VanVleet’s contract. Yet, if the Rockets give Sengun or Green an extension in 2024, each cap figure for the 2025 offseason would change from the aforementioned hold amounts to the starting salary of the new contract.

Both figures are below the NBA’s maximum-salary contract — and well below it, in the case of Sengun. So, if the Rockets plan to give either player the maximum deal or anything close to it, it benefits their 2025 cap flexibility to wait until that offseason. For the players involved, any new contract wouldn’t start until the 2025-26 season in either scenario, so there’s not significant harm from waiting.

Here’s how Stone characterized the extension situations during his end-of-season media availability on Tuesday:

I’ll always talk to any player, at any time, about any thing. We want to have a relationship with them that is based on communication. We will definitely talk about it.

The way the CBA (collective bargaining agreement) is set up, you can extend, but you don’t have to, and you can always revisit next summer. In that sense, there’s no gun to our head, or anything else.

We’ll have conversations. We’ll see what makes sense for us, what makes sense for them, and both sides will make whatever decisions we make.

It’s an opportunity to have good discussions with them, and we look forward to that. But it’s not a burden or a crushing pressure.

If either Sengun or Green is open to a new contract with a starting annual salary at or below those projected cap-hold figures — or below what the team feels they may potentially command in free agency — there could be a mutually beneficial scenario to extend in 2024.

The player would get the benefit of added financial security from signing that contract a year early, and the team would protect itself from the risk of potentially paying more money — should that player’s performance in 2024-25 make them worthy of a larger deal.

But if the player is set on a higher figure, as is his prerogative, there’s only downside to the team in doing a 2024 deal. The Rockets could offer the same contract in a year, with an identical starting date, yet with a lower salary figure on their initial 2025 books.

By waiting until 2025, the team is also more protected in the event of a major injury or disappointing season that might unexpectedly lower the player’s future value, relative to what is known now.

So, the question for 2024 is whether either player is open to a compromise scenario where both sides benefit. Time will tell.

Regardless of how those 2024 talks end up, it’s all a matter of timing. When asked Tuesday, Stone was adamant the Rockets have the financial backing to keep all of their core six of young players (Green, Sengun, Jabari Smith Jr., Tari Eason, Cam Whitmore and Amen Thompson) beyond their initial NBA contracts.

“We do,” Stone concluded.

[lawrence-related id=123316,123320]

No regrets: Fred VanVleet empowered by leadership role with resurgent Rockets

“I just felt empowered and honored that I was the guy who was thought of to help lead this ship in the right direction,” Fred VanVleet says of his first Rockets season.

After spending his first seven years in the NBA with the Raptors, guard Fred VanVleet decided it was time for a change. He knew he was an asset to the team, having worked his way from a role player to an NBA All-Star during his tenure in Toronto.

The Raptors’ organization wanted him to be an intricate part of helping lead them back to success, as he had done as a reserve player when the Raptors won the NBA Finals in 2019.

Yet, the former undrafted player out of Wichita State declined his $22.8-million player option for the 2023-24 season and tested the free agent market in the 2023 offseason. He was not on the market for long. The Rockets made him the highest-paid undrafted player in the NBA history with a three-year, $130-million contract.

When paired with newly hired head coach Ime Udoka, whom VanVleet respected after competing versus the Boston Celtics when Udoka led them to the 2022 NBA Finals, VanVleet knew Houston was serious about turning things around after three tumultuous years resulting in an average win total of under 20 per season.

“From Day 1,” VanVleet said when asked when he knew he had made the right decision to join the Rockets.

“Talking to coach (Udoka), brainstorming and putting our minds together on what we wanted this thing to be and what we wanted it to look like, I just felt empowered and honored that I was the guy who was thought of to help lead this ship in the right direction.”

His floor leadership proved valuable to young players Jalen Green, Alperen Sengun and Jabari Smith Jr.. He helped lead the Rockets to a non-losing season (41-41) for the first time in four years. Even though Houston missed its goal of advancing to the postseason, VanVleet is happy about the progress made on and off the court.

“We fell short of our goal; I want to make that clear,” VanVleet said during his exit interview after Sunday’s win over the Clippers in Los Angeles. As a veteran, VanVleet was held out of Houston’s final two games after pouring in a combined 79 points on elite efficiency during the two previous games (at Utah and home versus Orlando).

“We had the playoffs in our sight, and we fell short of that, but we made tremendous progress,” he said. “Especially if you are going to go back to where things were the past few years. To be able to come and turn this thing around or get it going in the right direction, it has been a great accomplishment so far, but not where we want to be.”

VanVleet had a career season, dishing 8.1 assists per game to rank No. 7 in the NBA in that category. In 24 of his 73 starts, VanVleet finished with 10 or more assists, including a season-high total of 17.

Another key attribute was VanVleet’s inability to turn over the ball, which the Rockets struggled with before his arrival. His 1.73 turnovers per game was the lowest he has had as a starter.

“He has been a very vital piece to us putting this thing together for the future,” Udoka said of VanVleet. “We just have to keep moving in the right direction, if we want to take that next step.”

[lawrence-related id=123285,122471]

Rockets expect Alperen Sengun, Jae’Sean Tate to miss rest of season with ankle sprains

With playoff contention off the table, the Rockets seemingly won’t risk the injury recoveries of Alperen Sengun and Jae’Sean Tate (both have a right ankle sprain).

With only four games left to play in the 2023-24 season and postseason contention off the table, it no longer makes sense for the Houston Rockets to be aggressive with any injury return timetables.

Thus, to no surprise, injured center Alperen Sengun and reserve forward Jae’Sean Tate likely won’t play again until the 2024-25 season this fall. Both are currently dealing with a right ankle sprain.

“No need to rush them back,” head coach Ime Udoka said prior to Tuesday’s game. While Sengun has steadily increased his physical activities, Udoka said there was still some swelling in the ankle, which would need to go down before he could be cleared to play.

Udoka said that Tate’s injury had lingered for a while, and he missed most of the 2022-23 season while dealing with ankle and foot issues.

“I would say unlikely,” Udoka concluded regarding a potential 2023-24 return scenario for both Sengun and Tate.

With 63 games played, Sengun finishes the season as Houston’s leading scorer (21.1 points) and rebounder (9.3) on a per-game basis, shooting 53.7% overall. He also averaged 5.0 assists in 32.5 minutes.

Tate was among Houston’s most valuable bench defenders.

Without Sengun and Tate, the Rockets (38-40) began their closing stretch of the 2023-24 season with Tuesday’s home finale versus Orlando (46-32). Houston can secure at least a .500 season with victories in three of their final four contests, though they need to win all four games for it to be a winning campaign.

Houston has not had a winning season since 2019-20, when its roster was led by All-Star guards James Harden and Russell Westbrook.

[lawrence-related id=123028,122839]

March memories: Rockets finish with NBA’s best monthly record

The Rockets finished March with the NBA’s best monthly record among all teams, and it’s their first time doing so since the 2017-18 season (65 wins).

The Houston Rockets entered Sunday, March 31, with 11 consecutive victories and a 13-1 record in March, which leads the NBA.

Regardless of Sunday’s outcome at home versus Dallas, the Rockets (38-35) will finish with the league’s best monthly record. It’s their first time with that distinction since Houston’s incredible 2017-18 season, which resulted in the best record (65-17) in team history.

Thanks to that success, Houston is back in the mix for a postseason spot in the Western Conference. They were six games back when the winning streak originally started on March 8, and now they are within a game and will be multiple games above .500 entering April.

Even after losing star center Alperen Sengun to a potentially season-ending ankle injury on March 10, the Rockets haven’t skipped a beat, thanks in large part to a sustained breakout by Jalen Green.

In still images, here’s a look back at some of the defining shots from a most memorable March 2024 for the Houston Rockets.

Rockets coach Ime Udoka disputes tying Jalen Green’s surge to Alperen Sengun injury

“I think they can complement each other very well,” Rockets coach Ime Udoka says of Jalen Green and injured center Alperen Sengun.

After big man Alperen Sengun was lost to a potentially season-ending injury on March 10, third-year guard Jalen Green has played at an elite level for the Houston Rockets, who haven’t lost since.

But a closer look at the data suggests that Green was already on an upward trajectory prior to the loss of Sengun.

Even so, that hasn’t stopped some NBA fans and media members from speculating that Green’s improvement might be correlated with the Rockets playing without a center. Since losing Sengun, head coach Ime Udoka has turned Jabari Smith Jr. into a floor-spacing center while inserting Amen Thompson at a forward spot.

As Udoka sees it, though, that’s largely a separate issue from Green’s continued evolution into a top scorer.

In an appearance on The Matt Thomas Show on SportsTalk 790, the official flagship radio station of the Rockets, Udoka said:

I don’t think there’s a direct correlation. We were playing much faster coming out of the All-Star break. We went 4-1 with Alpi, and our pace had increased, [by] almost twice. Now we’re playing even faster.

The one thing you could say is that he may have more touches without the post presence of Alpi. But our pace was the same.

We wanted to really increase the pace and get the threes [3-pointers] up, and all those things don’t have anything to do with Alperen, except for the crowds that he attracts… and that’s a great thing.

When Jalen was struggling earlier in the year, he had the same quality looks, and Jalen started to read the game better. I think they can complement each other very well.

The complete interview can be listened to here.

As for Green and the Rockets (37-35), who have won 10 straight games as part of their NBA-best record of 12-1 in March, they will look to continue their momentum on Friday night at Utah (29-44). Tipoff from Salt Lake City is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. Central.

Ime Udoka rejected the idea that Alperen Sengun held Jalen Green back from stardom

Rockets coach Ime Udoka doesn’t care for the weird theory about Jalen Green and Alperen Sengun.

With the NBA postseason around the corner, there might not be a better player than the Houston Rockets’ Jalen Green right now.

The former No. 2 overall pick has scored at least 26 points in 11 of his last 14 games. He’s playing easily the best basketball of his young career, which not by coincidence, has merged with a 10-game Rockets winning streak. For all intents and purposes, he’s starting to resemble a franchise superstar.

But some have suggested that Green’s rise has only occurred in the absence of Rockets center Alperen Sengun, who suffered a severe ankle sprain in early March.

In a recent episode of The Matt Thomas Show, Houston head coach Ime Udoka heartily rejected this sentiment, saying there was no “direct correlation” between Green’s resurgence and Sengun’s absence.

To piggyback on Udoka, Green already started to score the ball well before Sengun got hurt. The same plays have been made available to the guard all year. It’s more that of late, with appropriate growth, he’s started to take better advantage of his reads and the way teams are defending him. Sure, Green is probably touching the ball more without Sengun in the fold, but Sengun’s profile is more that of a facilitator than a ball-dominant scorer anyway.

In that respect, he wouldn’t detract much from Green’s more assertive play, regardless.

What should excite the Rockets and their fans is pairing this version of Green with a healthy Sengun. Heck, if all goes well with Sengun’s recovery, we might even see this duo again by the end of the regular season.

The Rockets were smart to keep Jalen Green but now they have a big decision to make

The Rockets could have had Mikal Bridges but Jalen Green looks FANTASTIC.

Welcome to Layup Lines, For the Win’s basketball newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Have feedback for the Layup Lines Crew? Leave your questions, comments and concerns through this brief reader survey. Now, here’s Bryan Kalbrosky.

The Houston Rockets are arguably the hottest team in the NBA right now and Jalen Green is one of the most important reasons why.

Houston has now won eight games in a row and Green was recently named Western Conference Player of the Week. As the Rockets continue to make a push for a spot in the play-in tournament, the explosion from Green is hard to ignore.

It wasn’t long ago that Green was at the center of trade rumors around the deadline. In fact, per Shams Charania, the Rockets and Nets even discussed a deal that could have sent Green (and multiple first-round picks) to Brooklyn in exchange for Mikal Bridges.

The Nets reportedly decided to pass on the offer, which was a blessing in disguise for the Rockets. His value today is already quite a bit higher than it was just a couple months ago.

But it’s the timing of his stellar play that is especially fascinating for the former No. 2 overall pick, who has now emerged as arguably the best player to come from the soon-to-be defunct G League Ignite program. The guard has played particularly well since Houston’s Alperen Sengun was sidelined due to injury.

Some important stats to consider: Green is averaging 27.6 points per 100 possessions during the minutes he has played alongside Sengun this season, per PBPStats. He is averaging 38.2 points per 100 when he is playing without the big man.

Not only are the Rockets playing faster but Green also gets a much larger offensive role when Sengun is not on the court.

His usage rate is 25.3 percent with the big man and 33.8 percent without the big. This gives him an opportunity to play with the ball in his hands and over the past five games, no NBA player has scored more points per game on pull-up shooting.

Green and Sengun, teammates selected in the 2021 NBA Draft, are eligible for contract extensions this offseason. It will become expensive to pay all of their young core, but that’s undeniably a good problem to have.

Houston will have some big decisions to make as the Rockets determine if the long-term pairing of the two players makes sense. They may need more time to figure that out, though it’s better to have too many players excelling than the opposite.

Future NBA players in March Madness

After two rounds of the March Madness tournament behind us, scouts have had countless games to study and several players have stood out.

While there were a few early exits involving the biggest names in this draft class (like Kentucky’s Reed Sheppard and Rob Dillingham), many of the top prospects are still dancing. Even if it isn’t the best idea to put too much weight in a small sample size, it’s inevitable that some will move up and down draft boards due to how they perform.

Based on what evaluators have seen so far, here are some of the future pros who are heating up when it matters most.

Shootaround

Caitlin Clark took a clear hit to the face and fans couldn’t believe it didn’t result in an ejection

— Charles Barkley called the Grand Canyon loss to Alabama ‘the dumbest game of basketball’

Khris Middleton hilariously pleaded with Doc Rivers to score 1 more point for a triple-double (and he did!)

— HoopsHype looked at the top NBA players to never win MVP