HomeNBAWhy the Rockets are the NBA's most surprising contender

Why the Rockets are the NBA’s most surprising contender


MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - NOVEMBER 26: Head coach Ime Udoka interacts with Dillon Brooks #9 of the Houston Rockets in the third quarter against the Minnesota Timberwolves during the Emirates NBA Cup at Target Center on November 26, 2024 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Rockets defeated the Timberwolves 117-111 in overtime. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images)

The Rockets are second in the West, thanks to a balanced attack. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images)

The Rockets’ attempt to become a serious outfit began in earnest last season on the defensive end. It’s no shock that their attempt to take the next step this season — from serious to scary, from also-ran to contender — has started there, too.

“Every team that’s won a championship is usually a top-five ranked defense,” Rockets head coach Ime Udoka recently told Michael Pina of The Ringer. “That’s a non-negotiable for me.”

Building a top-flight defense — which Udoka and Co. have done, as Houston enters Thursday’s matchup with the Warriors ranked second in defensive efficiency, according to Cleaning the Glass — establishes a high floor. In the age of pace, space and unfettered 3-point bombing, though, it’s the other end of the court that often determines a team’s ceiling.

Twenty of the last 21 NBA champions featured a top-10 offense. The one that didn’t, the 2021-22 Warriors, had Stephen Curry … which, y’know, is basically the same thing. Those Dubs also scored 116.4 points per 100 possessions outside of garbage time in the playoffs; that would’ve been the second-best offense in the league during the regular season.

These Rockets aren’t built around a single megawatt offensive force on the order of Curry, Giannis Antetokounmpo, a healthy Kawhi Leonard or Nikola Jokić. They’re not built around an armada of shooters like the Celtics team that Udoka used to coach, or an overwhelming tandem like the LeBron James/Anthony Davis duo that led the Lakers to the 2020 title. Fourth-year center Alperen Şengün provides about as compelling a Joker impersonation as there is in the game, but he’s seen his shooting efficiency decline both inside and outside the arc. After five straight 20-plus-point performances to open the season, former No. 2 overall pick Jalen Green has once again waned, shooting a career-worst 47% on 2-pointers and 33.1% on 3s with a barely positive assist-to-turnover ratio. Fred VanVleet remains a rock-solid table-setter, but he’s missing more than two-thirds of his triples.

Houston’s off to a fantastic start at 15-7, a game and a half out of first place in the Western Conference. But that lack of firepower could wind up being the contender-or-pretender dividing line for Udoka’s club, which ranks 26th in team field-goal percentage and 3-point percentage, dead last in assist rate and just ninth in offensive efficiency.

… Wait a second. What?

That’s right: Despite having only one rotation player shooting 50% from the field (Amen Thompson) and one rotation player shooting above league-average from 3-point land (Dillon Brooks), and despite sitting in the bottom four in both effective field-goal percentage (which accounts for 3-pointers being worth more than 2-pointers) and true shooting percentage (which factors in 2-point, 3-point and free-throw accuracy), Houston is scoring 115.1 points per 100 possessions outside of garbage time this season — which is tied with the resurgent Bucks for ninth in offense, according to Cleaning the Glass.

Which, given those shooting numbers, raises a question: Um, how?

The first step to building a top-tier offense without top-tier shooting, it turns out: relying on your top-tier defense.

Led by All-Defensive teamer Brooks and newly dubbed “Terror Twins” Thompson and Tari Eason, the Rockets’ rotation overflows with long-armed, athletic, mean-spirited and magnet-handed wings. They don’t just get stops; they rupture offensive trips, ranking seventh in blocks, 10th in steals, 11th in deflections and 12th in opponent turnover rate. They also prioritize putting periods at the end of their defensive possessions, ranking 10th in defensive rebounding rate.

And once they’ve got the ball back, the Rockets launch:

Houston scores just 92 points per 100 possessions in half-court settings — 25th in the NBA. Out in transition, though, when you’re either ahead of the defense or have it backpedaling and unsettled? That rises to 127.6 points-per-100 — and 140.3 points-per-100 after a steal. When you’ve got a way to boost your offense from terrible to awesome, it’s a good idea to do it as often as possible; in a related story, only four teams attack in transition more frequently than Udoka’s Rockets, and only Denver scores more fast-break points per game.

Even when you prioritize pushing the pace, though, you’re still going to spend at least three-quarters of your offensive possessions playing in the half-court, against set defenses — which, as we just noted, is not exactly the forte of a Rockets offense that struggles to shoot straight. A good second step to building that top-tier offense, then: getting lots and lots of shots up.

Houston leads the NBA in field-goal attempts per game, thanks partly to elite turnover avoidance — after finishing dead last in turnover rate in the two seasons before Fred VanVleet showed up, they’ve ranked sixth and fourth since the sure-handed lead guard’s arrival — and partly to absolutely ravenous marauding of the offensive glass:

All of Houston’s centers — Şengün, Steven Adams and Jock Landale — can either root themselves in front of the rim or bulldoze would-be box-out artists under it to get their preferred position. All of Houston’s tarantula-armed, quick-twitch forwards and swingmen — Thompson,…



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