2024-25 Houston Rockets: A quick preview

The Houston Rockets have made significant strides in rebuilding their roster, boasting a solid young core, but in the stacked Western Conference, they could face stiff competition for a play-in spot. Over the past few years, the Rockets have added …

The Houston Rockets have made significant strides in rebuilding their roster, boasting a solid young core, but in the stacked Western Conference, they could face stiff competition for a play-in spot.

Over the past few years, the Rockets have added talented players like Alperen Sengun and Jalen Green, both of whom are eligible for extensions as they enter the final year of their rookie contracts. Whether these two become long-term cornerstones for head coach Ime Udoka remains to be seen. If they don’t fit into the Rockets’ long-term plans, they could be potential trade assets, especially since the team has stockpiled draft capital to make a big move when the time is right.

The long-term goal is clear: evolve into a playoff team, if not this season, then by next year, with an eye toward competing for titles later on.

However, the immediate focus will be on improving their offense, which lagged behind their defense last season. With continued development, the Rockets could be in the play-in conversation this year, but given the depth of competition in the Western Conference, they’ll need to take big steps forward to secure their spot.

NBA 2K25 ranks Rockets guards Jalen Green, Fred VanVleet in top 60 players

Rockets guards Jalen Green and Fred VanVleet checked in at No. 56 and No. 57, respectively, on NBA 2K25’s top players ranking.

To help promote the September 6 release of the annual NBA 2K video game (this year, known as NBA 2K25), developers are gradually releasing overall ratings for players around the league.

For example, we recently learned that Houston Rockets guard Reed Sheppard has a 73 overall rating — third-best among rookies. To determine each player’s value, various basketball skills are rated on a scale from 1 to 100, and the average helps form an overall rating.

On Tuesday, NBA 2K leaders released overall ratings for players ranked from 51 to 100 in the league. Rockets guards Jalen Green and Fred VanVleet were ranked at No. 56 and No. 57, respectively, with an overall rating of 84. Interestingly enough, they were just in front of former Houston superstar James Harden, who checks in at No. 58 as he enters his second season with the Los Angeles Clippers.

Rockets center Alperen Sengun isn’t on the 51-to-100 list, so presumably he will be included among NBA 2K25’s top 50 players entering the 2024-25 season. The full 51-to-100 list is available here.

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Jalen Green organizes August mini-camp for 2024-25 Rockets

Fourth-year Rockets guard Jalen Green is organizing a players-only mini-camp this week, per Kelly Iko of The Athletic.

Heading into his fourth NBA season, 2024-25 is a big year for fourth-year Houston Rockets shooting guard Jalen Green.

At a team level, the young and improving Rockets (41-41) have fairly high expectations coming off a year with the league’s biggest annual wins increase (19), relative to the previous season.

As an individual, Green is likely headed into free agency (albeit restricted) for the first time during the subsequent 2025 offseason.

So, both from a team standpoint and in terms of individual value, there is a lot to prove for the No. 2 overall pick from the first round of the NBA’s 2021 draft. Thus, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that Green seems to be taking his 2024 offseason quite seriously.

Per Kelly Iko of The Athletic, Green is organizing a players-only mini-camp this week. Teammates such as Alperen Sengun, Jabari Smith Jr., Reed Sheppard, and Amen Thompson are among those slated to attend, and it’s a chance to build chemistry before a new season.

No players are required to be present, since training camp for the 2024-25 campaign won’t officially begin until late September in Houston. Yet, there is value in reporting to camp in shape and in good basketball form, and that’s what Green and the Rockets will try to do.

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Is Jalen Green already a top-10 shooting guard? HoopsHype thinks so

Rockets star Jalen Green checks in at No. 9 on HoopsHype’s list of the NBA’s top shooting guards for the 2024-25 season.

Jalen Green nearly won Western Conference Player of the Month honors after a spectacular March, during which he led the Houston Rockets to an 11-game winning streak while averaging nearly 30 points per game. Yet, a month earlier, head coach Ime Udoka hinted that he was considering taking Green out of the starting lineup.

It’s that kind of up-and-down play that makes Green’s performance hard to fully project entering his fourth NBA season this fall. But HoopsHype’s Frank Urbina is seemingly a believer.

In HoopsHype’s positional rankings for the 2024-25 season, Green checks in at No. 9 in the league at shooting guard, and he’s just ahead of big names such as Tyler Herro of the Miami Heat; CJ McCollum of the New Orleans Pelicans; and Bradley Beal of the Phoenix Suns.

From HoopsHype, the explanation of Green’s ranking:

One of the big question marks in the NBA. The former No. 2 overall pick looked like a max player for a stretch of games late in the season. Our own Mark Deeks even wrote about it back in late March:

“Since March began, Green has averaged 28.5 points per game, fourth in the league behind only Luka Doncic, Giannis Antetokounmpo and Jayson Tatum, and ahead of the greats such as Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Kevin Durant, and Nikola Jokic. He has done so on 50.8% shooting and with a 63.1% true-shooting clip, playing with unbridled confidence and coming up with big plays in the clutch, often against quality opposition. He has for three weeks been the nightly game-changing factor that the Rockets always hoped he would be.”

Green eventually cooled off as the Rockets missed the play-in tournament. But even so, it was a very impressive — and important — stretch for the G League Ignite product, who played some of the best basketball of his career.

And yet, Houston still opted not to extend him this summer. And we still have mounds of evidence that Green, a career 42.1% shooter from the floor, isn’t all that efficient of a player.

Regardless, we’re choosing to believe in that elite run of form as evidenced by where we have him ranked, and think he might be able to tap into that efficient stretch from late last season more often in 2024-25. After all, he’s an explosive athlete with good length and skill. He just needs to get much more adept with his scoring to truly take the next step.

It’s worth noting that the decision not to extend Green’s contract (at least not yet) could be motivated by financial considerations at a team level that are unrelated to his personal performance.

Even so, it’s safe to say that the upcoming 2024-25 campaign is a big one for the trajectory of Green’s career in the NBA.

Can he build on that run of elite form in March? We’ll find out soon, with training camp set to begin in late September.

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Podcast: What’s next for Rockets as 2024-25 training camp nears

This week’s podcast explores what’s next for the Rockets as the 2024 offseason continues, including contractual decisions for Alperen Sengun and Jalen Green.

With the calendar turning to August this week, September isn’t far away. That’s the month that training camps around the NBA will open for the 2024-25 season, which starts in October.

In Houston, the young and improving Rockets are coming off an encouraging 41-41 season. That 19-win improvement, relative to 2022-23, was the biggest annual jump of any NBA team in 2023-24.

So, as a new season approaches, what comes next for Ime Udoka and Rafael Stone’s Rockets? This week’s podcast episode of The Lager Line, hosted by Ben DuBose and Paulo Alves, explores key themes to watch for as the offseason enters its final weeks.

Discussion topics include:

  • Final impressions from rookie guard Reed Sheppard at the NBA’s recently completed 2024 summer league
  • Rotation considerations for Udoka, including why neither Sheppard nor second-year guard Cam Whitmore is assured an immediate rotation role
  • Contract extension considerations involving both Alperen Sengun and Jalen Green (the deadline is just prior to the October regular-season opener)
  • Whether Houston makes sense as a potential trade suitor for Utah forward Lauri Markkanen

Tuesday’s episode, which is sponsored by Clutch City Lager of Karbach Brewing, can be listened to below in its entirety. Each episode is also made available via flagship radio station SportsTalk 790 and to all major podcast distributors under “The Lager Line.”

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Report: Rockets unlikely to offer max contracts in 2024 to Jalen Green, Alperen Sengun

Jalen Green and Alperen Sengun are unlikely to receive maximum-salary contract extension offers in 2024, the Houston Chronicle reports.

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, there are likely to be at least some limits as to any potential extension offers in 2024. On Friday, Jonathan Feigen of the Houston Chronicle said that Houston is unlikely to offer a maximum-contract extension to either Green or Sengun during the 2024 offseason.

Feigen writes:

The extensions for Green and Şengün would be worth as much as $225 million over five seasons, though the Rockets are unlikely to offer the maximum to either player this offseason. Without agreements on extensions, players become restricted free agents after their fourth seasons.

For general manager Rafael Stone, much of the situation comes down to math. If the Rockets let Sengun and Green play out the final year of their current deals, they would hit restricted free agency in 2025, which — beyond standard negotiating rights — gives Houston 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 overall selection 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 were to give Sengun or Green an extension in 2024, that player’s cap figure for the 2025 offseason would change from the aforementioned hold amount 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.

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 any 2024 contract talks end up, it’s largely a matter of timing. When asked in April, 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 deals.

“We do,” Stone said earlier this offseason.

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As extension talks loom, Shams sees Jalen Green, Alperen Sengun as max or near-max players

“They’ve already shown this desire to get a top-flight player at the wing position,“ Shams Charania says of the Rockets.

Though both are extension eligible heading into their fourth NBA seasons, the Houston Rockets don’t have to decide on the next contract for Jalen Green or Alperen Sengun until 2025.

Both would be restricted free agents, should Houston wait.

But be it now or in a year, each has shown enough flashes of brilliance that the Rockets will likely have to pay a premium to keep them around for the next stage of their development.

Speaking on Run It Back on FanDuel TV, longtime NBA insider Shams Charania (The Athletic, Stadium) said this week:

The Rockets went after Mikal Bridges last season. They’ve already shown this desire to get a top-flight player at the wing position. But Jalen Green, the way he emerged in the second half of the season, clearly they have a burgeoning star in him. Alperen Sengun, look at the numbers he put up.

To me the question is going to be, what type of extensions do you give both of them? Do you give them both max deals? Are they both worthy of max deals? Do you look to trade one of them and go get a star player? That’s the question in Houston.

They’re going to be active on the market, they’re gonna listen. But what they end up doing… it’s either going to be paying these guys either just shy of the max or maxes, or you’re going to have to trade one of them.

Regarding a top-flight wing player, Houston is reportedly monitoring the status of All-Star guard Donovan Mitchell in Cleveland.

As for extensions, by waiting until 2025, the Rockets could include another season’s worth of data when determining a potential offer. In Sengun’s case, as the No. 16 overall pick from the 2021 draft, they could also take advantage of a relatively low “cap hold” on their 2025 salary books — as compared to a maximum-contract deal.

But if either Sengun or Green is willing to give something of a discount for the sake of getting their financial security a year early, it could make sense for the Rockets to act in 2024.

On the other hand, if the Rockets aren’t confident in eventually reaching what they view as a fair contract agreement, general manager Rafael Stone could have more leverage via trade talks in 2024 — as opposed to waiting until restricted free agency in 2025.

The 2024 deadline to extend players on rookie-scale contracts is just prior to October’s opening day of the 2024-25 regular-season, which could act as something of an inflection point. Stay tuned!

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Jalen Green sees Rockets advancing to 2025 NBA playoffs

“Playoffs gonna be crackin’ with Houston in it next year,” Jalen Green posted to Instagram to kick off Memorial Day weekend.

With third-year guard (and one-time Western Conference Player of the Week) Jalen Green taking on a starring role, the Houston Rockets had an 11-game winning streak during a 13-2 month of March.

At one point, the streaking Rockets came within a half-game of the Golden State Warriors for the final spot in the Western Conference play-in tournament to qualify for the 2023-24 playoffs.

Though Houston (41-41) couldn’t finish the job, they did post a 19-game improvement relative to the previous season, which was the most of any NBA team. With that in mind, in the 2024-25 season, Green and the Rockets are looking to kick in that postseason door.

In an Instagram story, Green posted on Friday:

Playoffs gonna be crackin’ with Houston in it next year

At a high level, the goal of 2023-24 for the Rockets was to get back to relevance, and they generally achieved that. For 2024-25, it seems they’re not shy on stating a higher goal.

As for Green, he’s eligible for a contract extension this offseason, though it could benefit the Rockets to delay those talks until 2025. More success at a team level would only help his cause.

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To keep or to trade? After landing No. 3 draft pick, Rafael Stone excited by Houston’s options

“The possibility of adding another young talented player in the draft or through a trade, we’re excited about that possibility,” Rafael Stone says.

Known for his strategic thinking, Rockets general manager Rafael Stone found himself in an unfamiliar position on Sunday after the NBA’s 2024 draft lottery. The annual event determines where teams pick in the first round, which takes place this year on June 26.

For the past three years, Stones selected players out of necessity in Houston’s rebuilding phase, which was brought on after James Harden’s departure. So, when the Rockets surprisingly secured the No. 3 pick in 2024, Stone was left with a strategic choice: keep the pick or trade it in a package for a veteran player or future assets. The decision could significantly shape the team’s future.

With Houston’s existing young core of rotation players, it might seem unlikely it would add another young player who would compete for minutes. However, that is not necessarily the case.

“The possibility of adding another young talented player in the draft or through a trade, we’re excited about that possibility,” Stone said in a post-lottery press conference. He had just arrived at the draft combine in Chicago after scouting prospects in France in recent days.

That seemed an unlikely scenario after the emergence of Amen Thompson and Cam Whitmore, who played key roles as rookies in helping the Rockets go 41-41 last season. Add in the developmental leaps made by shooting guard Jalen Green and center Alperen Sengun in their third seasons — and promise shown by second-year forward Jabari Smith Jr. — and Houston has the blueprint to be a special team.  

“The guys we have in the locker room today, we’re excited to bring back,” Stone said at his end-of-season press conference last month. “We’ll look at things, but, again, I don’t view our roster as, ‘We’re missing X; we need to go find it.’ It’s not like we have a gaping hole.”

Many college and NBA analysts believe this draft class is weaker than in most years. The consensus is that many top-10 players in this class are outstanding role players, rather than superstars. If Houston keeps the pick, it could help them in the future by allowing their selection to develop with the Rio Grande Valley Vipers, the Rockets’ G League affiliate. 

“I think last year’s draft was a different draft than we’ve seen in a while, just because there was so much attention focused on just one guy (Victor Wembanyama), Stone said. “That wasn’t the case in the two drafts before it, and I don’t think it’ll be the case this year.”

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ESPN’s Bobby Marks proposes new Jalen Green contract in Houston

ESPN’s Bobby Marks explains why a five-year, $160-million contract extension could be doable for both Jalen Green and the Houston Rockets.

Entering their fourth NBA seasons, the Houston Rockets have two promising prospects in Jalen Green and Alperen Sengun who are eligible for contract extensions during the preceding 2024 offseason.

But to maximize financial flexibility relative to the NBA’s salary cap, the Rockets could be incentivized to wait until 2025. If Green and Sengun are each seeking a maximum-salary deal, there isn’t much upside to signing a contract a year early, since Houston would have matching rights in restricted free agency and lower cap-hold figures.

The calculus could change, however, if either player would do a deal below the max. That could incentivize the team to strike a deal early, since it would protect them from scenarios where a strong 2024-25 season pushes that player to a more expensive contract.

Between Green and Sengun, Green could be more likely to offer a slight discount in 2024, since he has yet to consistently play at an All-Star level (which Sengun drew consideration for).

With that in mind, Bobby Marks — formerly an NBA executive, and currently a league insider and salary cap guru for ESPN — recently proposed a five-year, $160-million deal for Green. That comes in below the “max” of a $225-million contract over five years.

Here’s the case from Marks (complete video segment):

I’m not writing [Green] a five-year, $225-million extension check. Five years, $160 million, that’s fair.

More than Devin Vassell [who recently signed a five-year, $146-million extension in San Antonio], certainly fair.

Better player [Green], upside is probably higher. He’s closer to an All-Star year.

Should Green demand the outright max or something close to it, Marks advised waiting until restricted free agency in 2025.

Time will tell as to whether Green and the Rockets are both open to a reduced arrangement. But on paper, there is a plausible rationale that would make sense for both sides. To Green, it would be getting a lifetime’s worth of financial security a year early and minimizing any risks from an injury or subpar performance in 2024-25.

To the Rockets, the upside would be a potentially lower annual salary, relative to a scenario where Green waits until 2025 and plays at a maximum-salary level in the preceding 2024-25 campaign.

Stay tuned!

Over the final 40 games of 2023-24, Green led Houston in scoring with averages of 22.3 points (44.4% FG, 34.2% on 3-pointers), 5.8 rebounds, and 3.9 assists. His true-shooting percentage was 56.0%, and the Rockets had a +2.1 differential with Green on the floor.

The Rockets (41-41) were 21-19 in those games, including a 13-2 month of March that featured an 11-game winning streak.

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