Rockets notes: Hot dogs with Fruit Loops, Alperen Sengun ankle update, Gerald Green leaves staff

Friday was a busy day at Toyota Center, with updates on Alperen Sengun’s ankle, Gerald Green’s Rockets coaching departure, and jumbo hot dogs with Fruit Loops, bacon, and mac and cheese.

The Houston Rockets unveiled new culinary options at Toyota Center for Friday’s home game versus Dallas, including a jumbo mac-and-cheese hot dog complete with Fruit Loops and bacon toppings.

Needless to say, the social media reaction was swift and unforgiving. “This is the Rockets’ worst decision since trading Chris Paul and a pack of picks for Russell Westbrook,” tweeted ESPN’s Tim MacMahon.

Within the first two hours of the team’s original post on Friday afternoon, it had been quote tweeted more than 3,000 times.

There were also, however, more positive updates on Friday. Bench sharpshooter Armoni Brooks is back with the team after a stint in health and safety protocols, and native Houstonian Gerald Green is attempting an NBA comeback by joining Houston’s G League affiliate.

Then again, the Green news was also somewhat bittersweet at Toyota Center, since he’s leaving his recent role as a player development coach with the Rockets — and league rules prohibit him from joining Houston as a player in the same season that he was a coach there.

Excluding the culinary concept, head coach Stephen Silas offered insight on many of those topics, along with an update on the sprained right ankle of rookie center Alperen Sengun and his outlook moving forward after going through his first on-court workout since the Dec. 31 injury.

Scroll on for pregame updates from Friday at Toyota Center.

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Former Celtic Gerald Green to join Rockets G-League team

Former Boston Celtics draftee Gerald Green to come out of retirement, join Houston Rockets G-League team.

Former Boston Celtics guard Gerald Green is going to join up with the Rio Grande Vipers, the Houston Rockets G-League affiliate, according to The Athletic and Stadium’s Shams Charania. He has not registered an NBA minute since 2018-19 after missing all of the 2019-20 season with a foot injury. Green had signed with the Rockets as an assistant coach but left the team Thursday to pursue a return to the NBA.

Green is a 12-year NBA veteran who has played for eight different organizations, including three seasons over two stints with the Celtics and two seasons with the Rockets. He played 160 games in Boston after being drafted with the No. 18 pick in the 2005 NBA draft.

Green played in 73 games for the Rockets in 2018-19, averaging 20.2 minutes, 9.2 points, 2.5 rebounds and 0.5 assists per game for them. He was most productive with the Phoenix Suns from 2013 to 2015, where he averaged 14 points per game and shot 38% from three-point range.

This post originally appeared on Celtics Wire. Follow us on Facebook!

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Now unretired, Gerald Green to play for Houston’s NBA G League affiliate

Gerald Green isn’t eligible to play with the Rockets this season, since he was a coach, but Houston is giving him a G League deal as he looks to earn a potential NBA opportunity elsewhere.

Now unretired and no longer a member of Houston’s coaching staff, Gerald Green isn’t eligible to play with the Rockets in the 2021-22 NBA season due to salary cap circumvention rules and the fact that he was already on the team’s payroll as a player development coach.

However, that doesn’t mean the team can’t use its resources to help the longtime fan favorite potentially earn an NBA opportunity elsewhere.

To that end, Shams Charania of The Athletic reports Friday that Green is joining the Rio Grande Valley Vipers, Houston’s NBA G League affiliate. If he plays well, the 35-year-old could become a candidate for a 10-day contract from some other NBA team, since clubs are giving those out much more frequently this season due to COVID-19 absences.

Even if Green somehow was an option to the Rockets, he wouldn’t seem to be an ideal fit, anyway, in a season that is primarily about evaluating younger options who could contribute in the years ahead.

Thus, the Rockets are working with the native Houstonian — and a beloved role player and bench sharpshooter from the 2017-18 and 2018-19 teams — to help him find a basketball fit that works.

Should it not happen, Green tells Mark Berman of Fox 26 Houston that general manager Rafael Stone has already informed him that his prior coaching job with the Rockets will still be available to return to.

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Gerald Green unretires as NBA player, leaves Rockets’ coaching staff

With COVID-19 issues creating more NBA playing opportunities, Gerald Green is leaving Houston’s coaching staff to join the G League as a player. He is not eligible to play for the Rockets.

With COVID-19 issues across the NBA creating more playing opportunities for veterans, Gerald Green is leaving Houston’s coaching staff to join the G League as a player. Earlier this year, Green had joined the player development staff of Rockets head coach Stephen Silas.

Now 35 years old, the 12-year NBA veteran is pursuing a return to the league as a player, as first reported by Shams Charania of The Athletic.

Due to salary cap circumvention rules, Green is not eligible to play for the Rockets this season because he was on the coaching staff. But according to Jonathan Feigen of the Houston Chronicle, there is a possibility that Green could play for Houston’s G League affiliate, the Rio Grande Valley Vipers, while seeking to earn an NBA opportunity elsewhere.

For his career, Green has averaged 9.7 points (36.1% on 3-pointers) and 2.5 rebounds in 19.8 minutes per game. A native Houstonian, he was selected by Boston in the first round of the 2005 NBA draft.

Green was initially known for his elite athleticism, including a win in the 2007 NBA Slam Dunk Contest at All-Star weekend, but strong shooting with a quick release became his Green’s calling card as his career progressed. He proved to be a crucial bench shooter for the Rockets during the 2017-18 and 2018-19 seasons, which were two of the most successful in team history. However, he hasn’t played in an NBA regular-season game since fracturing his foot during the 2019-20 preseason.

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Former Boston Celtics draftee Gerald Green retires

Houston native and former Boston Celtics guard Gerald Green has retired from the NBA after 12 seasons in the league.

Former Boston Celtics draft pick Gerald Green has announced his retirement and he will join the Houston Rockets coaching staff, the team announced Friday. Green, a Houston native, was picked by the Celtics No. 18 overall in the 2005 draft. He spent his first two seasons with Boston before being traded in the deal that landed the Celtics Kevin Garnett. He later returned to the Celtics for one year in 2016-17 in a bench role, scoring 5.6 points per game.

His best production came with the Phoenix Suns in 2013-14, where he played in all 82 games and scored nearly 16 points per game while shooting 40% from three-point range. He finished fourth in the league that year in made-three-pointers. In his 12-year career, Green played for eight different NBA teams and overseas.

Green has not played since 2018-19 after missing last season with a foot injury. He had been a free agent after being waived by the Rockets in December 2020.

This post originally appeared on Celtics Wire. Follow us on Facebook!

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Houston native Gerald Green retires and joins Rockets’ coaching staff

Native Houstonian Gerald Green announced Friday that he is retiring from the NBA and joining the coaching staff of the Rockets.

The Houston Rockets officially announced that they are adding former Rockets guard and 12-year NBA veteran Gerald Green to their coaching staff as a player development coach.

The former high school All-American attended Gulf Shores Academy, where he averaged 33 points per game and finished his senior year as the No.1 player in the nation. He committed to Oklahoma State, but after seeking advice from some current NBA players, he hired an agent and submitted his name into the 2005 NBA draft.

Green was selected by the Boston Celtics with the 18th overall pick in the 2005 draft. He contained his emotions when announcing his retirement to the media in attendance at the Toyota Center before the home opener game between the Rockets and Oklahoma City Thunder.

“Some things in life you have to learn to close one chapter and open up another,” said Green. “I would like to thank Tilman and Patrick [Fertitta] for this opportunity. With that being said, I will be retiring from the game of basketball and joining the Houston Rockets coaching staff. I could not be more excited about it.”

After two seasons with the Houston Rockets, Green had to sit out the 2020-21 NBA season after he suffered a foot injury. He spent the entire off-season recovering and trying to get back on the court and continue his NBA career. Green said he realized that his career may be over after his body was not responding well to his workouts.

“I’ve been going through some things this past year trying to get right,” Green said. “It was a little tough, working out every day. I didn’t have anything left in the tank.”

Rockets general manager Rafael Stone joined Green at the press conference and was elated to have him join his staff.

“Gerald is a special guy. Gerald’s the type of person who brings a smile to your face when you’re in his presence. There’s no business, no organization in the world that’s not better for having people like that. We’re just really happy to have him with us.”

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Every player in Boston Celtics history who wore No. 5

This is every player in Boston’s history who wore the Celtics’ No. 5 jersey for at least one game.

The Boston Celtics have more retired jerseys than any other team in the NBA, but that doesn’t mean the rest of their jerseys have little history of interest tied to them.

In fact, with 17 titles to their name and decades of competitive basketball played in them, their unretired jersey numbers pack in some of the most history not hanging from the rafters of any team in the league. To that end, we have launched our accounting of that history, with every player in every jersey worn by more than one Celtics player in the storied franchise’s history accounted for.

Today’s installment focuses on the 21 players who wore No. 5 over the years.

Former Rockets guard Gerald Green reportedly works out for Houston

Gerald Green joins Monta Ellis as former NBA guards who recently worked out for the Rockets, according to The Athletic.

It appears that Monta Ellis isn’t the only former NBA guard to work out for the Rockets in recent days. Per Kelly Iko of The Athletic, former Houston guard Gerald Green also worked out for his old team.

Now 35 years old, Green averaged 10.3 points (36.0% on 3-pointers) in 21.1 minutes per game with Houston during the 2017-18 and 2018-19 seasons. The 6-foot-5 sharpshooter did not play in the 2019-20 season after fracturing his foot in the preseason, and he was released by the Rockets after the 2020-21 preseason due to a lack of roster spots.

A native Houstonian and fan favorite at Toyota Center, Green hasn’t played in the NBA since his release by the Rockets. Should he get another call from his hometown team, expect him to jump at the opportunity.

It remains to be seen if the Rockets will seriously consider adding either Green or Ellis to the 2021-22 roster. At the moment, Houston’s backcourt appears relatively full, with veteran options headlined by John Wall, Eric Gordon, and DJ Augustin and talented young prospects including Kevin Porter Jr., Jalen Green, and Josh Christopher.

However, it’s certainly possible that injuries or future transactions could change the calculus. In that event, it makes sense for general manager Rafael Stone to keep a close eye on the status of alternative options.

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Rockets plan to ‘figure out a way’ to bring back Gerald Green

Stephen Silas: “We’re going to figure out a way if he doesn’t get picked up by somebody else for him to be a Rocket, which he should be.”

Referring to it as a “numbers game,” Houston head coach Stephen Silas said after Sunday’s practice that the Rockets are planning to bring back recently waived swingman Gerald Green this season, if at all possible.

“He’s still going to be part of the family, obviously,” Silas said. “We’re going to figure out a way, if he doesn’t get picked up by somebody else, for him to be a Rocket, which is what he should be.”

The Rockets are subject to a hard salary cap after the offseason sign-and-trade acquisition of Christian Wood, and the season-ending injury to Chris Clemons caused the second-year guard’s contract to become fully guaranteed. It then became difficult to fit in a contract for Green — who was signed just prior to training camp — beneath the hard cap.

“Gerald’s in the hearts of all of us,” said veteran teammate PJ Tucker, who played alongside Green with the Rockets during the 2017-18 and 2018-19 seasons. “It’s never fun when brothers get released.”

A native Houstonian, the 35-year-old Green is clearly a strong candidate to return later in the season, once the pro-rated amount of a minimum salary becomes low enough to fit under the hard cap.

However, it’s certainly possible that Green played well enough in the preseason to receive a contract from another team before Houston is able to offer one. In two exhibitions, Green averaged 11.5 points (50.0% on 3-pointers) and 4.0 rebounds in 13.7 minutes per game.

Prior to Clemons’ injury, it appeared that Green’s performances had put him on course to make the roster of his hometown team.

“For someone to be here for two weeks and become one of my favorite players of all-time — who I didn’t know before I came here — he’s like everything you want,” Silas said from Toyota Center on Sunday. “He’s ready. He has ability. He came into games and was effective. Listen, it’s just like a numbers game, really, and hopefully, he gets an opportunity to come back here to play, or whatever.”

“Everything we are about, Gerald Green is,” Silas added. “It was a sad day to sit with him yesterday. Rafael [Stone] and I sat down with him yesterday and told him the deal, and he was nothing but professional, complimentary, just like Houston ‘til he dies. That was one of the harder things I’ve had to do since I’ve been head coach, to waive him.”

Stone issued the following statement on Saturday night, which is a very unusual step for an otherwise standard waivers announcement.

“Gerald is a truly exceptional human being that is beloved by our organization, the City of Houston and Rockets fans all over the world,” Houston’s GM said. “He has given us so much on the court during his time with the Rockets, but we’re even more proud of the impact he’s had in the community. When Houston was hit its hardest by Hurricane Harvey, Gerald did whatever he could to help those in need. Gerald is all heart, and he will forever be a part of the Rockets family.”

The team clearly hopes, however, that Green can return in an official playing capacity later in the NBA’s 2020-21 season.

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Rockets plan to ‘figure out a way’ to bring back Gerald Green

Stephen Silas: “We’re going to figure out a way if he doesn’t get picked up by somebody else for him to be a Rocket, which he should be.”

Referring to it as a “numbers game,” Houston head coach Stephen Silas said after Sunday’s practice the Rockets are planning to bring back recently waived swingman Gerald Green this season, if possible.

“He’s still going to be part of the family, obviously,” Silas said. “We’re going to figure out a way, if he doesn’t get picked up by somebody else, for him to be a Rocket, which is what he should be.”

The Rockets are subject to a hard salary cap after the offseason sign-and-trade acquisition of Christian Wood, and the season-ending injury to Chris Clemons caused the second-year guard’s contract to become fully guaranteed. It then became difficult to fit in a contract for Green — who was signed  prior to training camp — beneath the hard cap.

“Gerald’s in the hearts of all of us,” said veteran teammate PJ Tucker, who played alongside Green with the Rockets during the 2017-18 and 2018-19 seasons. “It’s never fun when brothers get released.”

A native Houstonian, the 35-year-old Green is clearly a strong candidate to return later in the season, once the pro-rated amount of a minimum salary becomes low enough to fit under the hard cap.

However, it’s certainly possible Green played well enough in the preseason to receive a contract from another team before Houston is able to offer one. In two exhibitions, Green averaged 11.5 points (50.0% on 3-pointers) and 4.0 rebounds in 13.7 minutes per game.

Prior to Clemons’ injury, it appeared Green’s performances had put him on course to make the roster of his hometown team.

“For someone to be here for two weeks and become one of my favorite players of all-time — who I didn’t know before I came here — he’s like everything you want,” Silas said from Toyota Center on Sunday. “He’s ready. He has ability. He came into games and was effective. Listen, it’s just like a numbers game, really, and hopefully, he gets an opportunity to come back here to play, or whatever.”

“Everything we are about, Gerald Green is,” Silas added. “It was a sad day to sit with him yesterday. Rafael [Stone] and I sat down with him yesterday and told him the deal, and he was nothing but professional, complimentary, just like Houston ‘til he dies. That was one of the harder things I’ve had to do since I’ve been head coach, to waive him.”

Stone issued the following statement on Saturday night, which is a very unusual step for an otherwise standard waivers announcement.

“Gerald is a truly exceptional human being that is beloved by our organization, the City of Houston and Rockets fans all over the world,” Houston’s GM said. “He has given us so much on the court during his time with the Rockets, but we’re even more proud of the impact he’s had in the community. When Houston was hit its hardest by Hurricane Harvey, Gerald did whatever he could to help those in need. Gerald is all heart, and he will forever be a part of the Rockets family.”

The team clearly hopes, however, that Green can return in an official playing capacity later in the NBA’s 2020-21 season.

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