If I’ve tried to make anything clear during my time as a Houston Rockets writer, it’s this:
I love Tari Eason.
This has not been a secret. Eason is the prototype “player you want”. He’s the guy that, when
you look back at a championship roster, you say, “Sure, he averaged 12 and 6, but they don’t get that chip without that dude”. Star creators reign supreme, but the next tier of players could be succinctly summarized as “Tari Easons”.
That’s why his recent oblique tear is egregiously terrible.
Rockets lose essential role player in Eason
Before we get into the implications of (another) Eason injury, let’s talk a bit more about how good Eason is – for my mental health, if nothing else.
In 2024-25, Eason’s 3.3% Steal Percentage would have ranked third in the NBA if he’d played enough games to qualify for the leaderboard. His 9.4% Offensive Rebound Percentage would have tied for 14th. Here’s a list of players who landed in the Top 15 in each of these statistical categories:
NBA Players who Ranked Top-15 in Steal Percentage and Offensive Rebound Percentage in 2024-25
- Tari Eason
Look at that! We’re already done.
That’s not an arbitrary grouping of stats. In tandem, they establish Eason as the NBA’s foremost extra-possession monster. If there’s a way to get the ball, Eason is going to get the ball. Trying to keep him from the orange sphere is like trying to stop the sun from rising. Eason likely has a recurring nightmare where a member of another NBA team has possession of the basketball.
Granted, he’s been a different player in 2025-26. His Steal Percentage (1.7) and Offensive Rebound Percentage (7.3) have dropped considerably. Eason has offset those declines by shooting a casual 50.9% from deep, up from 34.2%.
Those numbers will all likely normalize as the season wears on. Here’s the sadder likelihood: Eason probably won’t qualify for leaderboards this year, either.
That’s the problem.
Rockets’ Tari Eason is officially injury-prone
A more cynical person may say that following this injury, Eason’s contract negotiations could be favorable for the team.
It’s a forever-icky component of sports. Injuries can be beneficial in a myriad of ways. Surely, we can all agree that a speedy recovery is the best-case scenario here.
Still, it’s undeniable that Eason’s relentless injuries will factor into negotiations. That could mean the Rockets get him at a discounted rate, but it also raises an uncomfortable question:
How much should the Rockets commit to Eason?
In the end, any commitment is going to be a gamble. The margins may be relatively thin. If Eason will settle for $20 million (dear God, new NBA money is vulgar), the Rockets should rush to find a pen. What if he wants $30 million?
That’s a sizeable sum if he’s going to miss time every year. The Rockets have also created a labyrinth of cap considerations moving forward. They need to keep space on the books for Amen Thompson, and now, it looks like Reed Sheppard should be earmarked for a substantial share too.
The head spins trying to get a handle on the long-term cap situation. I won’t get granular – frankly, out of a sense of journalistic responsibility to be accurate. It does feel reasonable to say that the Rockets have a lot of mouths to feed, and that Eason’s place at the table is tenous if he can’t stay on the floor.
I just lost a little piece of my soul. There’s no disputing Eason’s on-court value. It’s just a moot point during every second that he’s on the injury list. If Eason gets hurt again this year, the Rockets have to start thinking about how much money they’re willing to commit to him:
I say that with love.











