Kawhi Leonard had 8 points going into the fourth quarter and the Los Angeles Clippers only trailed the Houston Rockets by six. Why were the Rockets only up by six when the Clippers best player had been put in check for three quarters? In large part it was the fact that going into the fourth quarter the Rockets had already committed 15 turnovers and had zero fast break points.
The Rockets would go on to finish the game with 21 turnovers that lead to 23 Clippers points. The Clippers also had 22 points in transition
to the Rockets 2 fast break points. Oh, by the way, Kawhi Leonard finished the game with 27 points on 9-of-20 shooting, 19 of those points coming in the fourth. Though the Rockets led at one point by 15 points, their sloppy play allowed the Clippers to hang around while Kawhi was not playing well.
The Rockets flipped the script from the previous game against the Clippers just the night before. In that game they struggled early and picked it up in the second half. On Wednesday, the Rockets looked fantastic in the first half. Ball movement was crisp, they were making the extra pass, giving up the good shots for great ones, and pounding the Clippers on the boards. It was the typical formula the Rockets depend on when they are playing well and winning. Then in the third quarter the formula that comes back to bite them kicked in and it cost them.
The Rockets only scored 46 points in the second half, while giving up 59 to the Clips. Kevin Durant struggled for much of the game as the Los Angeles stayed crowded around them both. Early on it looked as if Reed Sheppard would be that spark off the bench that would push the Rockets over the top. However, after scoring 14 points in the first half, Sheppard finished the game with 17 points on 6-of-13 shooting in 25 minutes on the floor. Kevin Durant and Alperen Sengun finished with 21 points and 16 points respectively.
Jabari Smith had a strong stat line with 16 points and 12 rebounds on 6-of-12 shooting, but he missed two critical shots in the fourth quarter, one of them a wide open three-pointer from the corner in front of his own bench. Amen Thompson played 40 minutes and scored 12 points on eight shots and added 6 rebounds and 5 assists.
It was ultimately, once again, the Rockets inability to handle full or half court pressure and get into their offensive sets that cost them. Too many turnovers leading to too many points in the opposite direction and not enough opportunities to score themselves down the stretch, giving up 6 of their 21 turnovers in the fourth quarter. There is no doubt that until the Rockets figure this part out, their lack of movement before the trade deadline to add a veteran ball-handler will loom large.
All things being said, the Houston Rockets will head into the All-Star break with the fourth best record in the Western Conference. They boast two of the top 25 players in the league, and they do have a young core that is still developing and still learning how to play together and how to play with one of the greatest scorers of all-time in Kevin Durant.
I know that Rockets fans want more from this team. In fact, many of us expect more. Putting things in perspective though, the Rockets are in a good place and can still continue to improve and control their own destiny. Hopefully, this all-star break will give everyone time to step back, look at the big picture and realize that we are truly fortunate to not only have NBA basketball in H-Town but to have a team that is relevant and that garners our high- expectations. Enjoy the break TDS faithful! Let’s cheer hard for Reed in the Rising Stars game, and cheer for Alpi and KD in the all-star game. Let’s get everyone back healthy and get things in gear for a strong second half.









