HOUSTON — Years of losing and intentional asset accumulation put the Rockets in position to make the calculated gamble, but the franchise considers landing their missing piece more reward than risk.
Kevin Durant was there for the taking.
Houston would need to make a hard right and veer off what was becoming a well-worn path, giving its youthful roster clearance for organic growth and development. The group ascended to the second-best record in the Western Conference, finally ended a multiyear playoff drought, and played their way into contention well ahead of schedule.
But the Rockets decided the cost of acquiring Durant from the Phoenix Suns was worth the price, even if it meant parting with one of their primary contributors to a promising future.
When the Rockets completed their daring midsummer trade for Durant, it caused reverberations throughout the league. Durant brings to Houston an unassailable reputation as a generational scorer, an indefatigable worker, and a committed professional. The Rockets were a few pegs below the Oklahoma City Thunder in the West before Durant arrived, and while a gap remains between the two franchises, his addition narrows that margin and provides the Rockets a puncher’s chance to pose a threat to the Thunder and the conference’s other title contenders.
“I never talk about championships on any team I’ve been on,” said Durant said, who won two rings with the Golden State Warriors. “You just put your head down and work every single day.
“I feel we’ve got bits and pieces of all of those (championship) attributes on our team now, and it’s just all about how we cook it all up and come together and form who we want to be and our identity as we go forward. And that may take time. Who knows how long it will take? But actually putting in the work and trying to figure it out is the fun part. I’m looking forward to it.”
Acquiring Durant cost the Rockets 23-year-old guard Jalen Green, the second overall pick of the 2021 draft, and defensive hound Dillon Brooks. Houston moved on from 21-year-old forward Cam Whitmore later during the offseason, cutting deeper into the youthful core becoming the envy of rebuilding franchises.
But Rockets GM Rafael Stone didn’t make a decision on Durant overnight.
He said talks with Phoenix were in Year 2 when the deal finally went down. The Cliff’s Notes answer to the question: “What Took so Long?” is don’t doubt Stone’s patience. After watching his young core mature since he was hired in 2020, he knew what he would — and wouldn’t — be willing to trade in any scenario. He also wasn’t afraid to become Durant’s
“He’s Kevin Durant,” Stone said. “He’s obviously not 30 anymore, but he hasn’t really fallen off. And we just think he has a chance to really be impactful for us.”
Giving up Green, the team’s top scorer last season, was still difficult. But what remains around the 15-time All-Star from the years of asset collection tantalizes.
All-Star center Alperen Sengun, 23, excelled for Turkey during EuroBasket 2025. Wing Amen Thompson, 22, enjoyed a meteoric rise during his second NBA season. Forward Jabari Smith Jr., 22, stands to gain the most from Durant’s presence. Reserves Tari Eason, 24, and Reed Sheppard, 21, have displayed ample promise.
Durant brings a proven linchpin Stone believes can tie it all together, a go-to scorer the team lacked when it fell to the Warriors in the first round of the playoffs last season. Durant averaged 26.6 points per game in his final season in Phoenix, and he doesn’t have to guess how he’ll fit in Houston. He’s known Rockets coach Ime Udoka since they played regularly as opponents in the league more than a decade ago, before the current coach, XX, joined the Spurs and tried helping San Antonio bring the former University of Texas All-American back to the state.
As the 2024-25 season ended for the Suns with Durant entering the final year of his contract, he admits now to spending time trying to “canvass” the NBA for his next opportunity.
“I wanted to go back to Texas,” he said.
Durant turned 37 on Sept. 29 and has visions of sticking around beyond his current deal if Houston will have him.
He doesn’t fit the Rockets’ timeline, but his experience and expertise offer a golden opportunity for Houston to immediately pry open its championship window.
Short-term, Durant should fill the gaps exposed by the Warriors last postseason. He has morphed into a hired gun at this stage of his brilliant career – he ranks eighth in NBA history with 30,571 career points — but should Durant confirm the Rockets’ belief that he is the final piece of a title-winning puzzle, his legacy will be burnished.
“The definition of the word (legacy) has gotten confusing over the last few years to me,” Durant said. “To me, it’s just always about impacting and building good relationships within the organization. I feel like every place that I’ve been from the outside looking in, it may have been a tough breakup from each team that I’ve gone to, but behind the scenes, I’ve built so many great relationships with people, lifelong friendships that have been born from playing in these organizations.
“So I’m looking forward to doing that and building upon that every single day.”