When expectations meet reality, they can make for strange bedfellows.
As a child, you expect to be the president, or an astronaut, or, in the case of my late uncle, a donkey (true story). As an adult, you become
a policy analyst who reports to the man who reports to the woman who reports to the man who reports to the president. Or…not a donkey.
The Houston Rockets had certain expectations heading into 2025-26. At 21-11, it would be an overstatement to say they’ve failed expectations. Yet, it feels equally reductive to say they’ve met them.
These haven’t been the Rockets we envisioned. This team was going to play big wings as 2s. They were going to run the biggest lineups in NBA history. There’s been some of that, but not as much as anticipated. Perhaps there’s a simple reason:
The Rockets’ big wings haven’t been available until recently.
Rockets have received a facelift
Now, the whole crew is on board.
Forget about Saturday’s gruesome loss to the Mavericks. Alperen Sengun had to leave the game early. That’s the whole story.
Over the Rockets’ last five games, they’re 4-1. More significantly, their 109.2 Defensive Rating lands third in the NBA over that stretch.
Let’s not confuse correlation with causation. The competition has not been strong. The Rockets’ best win during that stretch came against a Lakers team whose record (21-11) far outpaces their Net Rating (-0.4).
Moreover, it would be a stretch to attribute too many wins to the presence of Dorian Finney-Smith, who’s scoring 2.4 points per game while shooting 30.8% from the field. Though one could take the other side of that argument. The Rockets’ ability to win with Finney-Smith still shaking off rust is either indicative of the strength of the roster or Finney-Smith’s ability to contribute beyond the stat sheet. Based on the eye test, I’d take the latter position: Finney-Smith defends with vigor.
Otherwise, Tari Eason has picked up an excellent season where he left off. He’s shooting 47.4% from deep over those last five contests. Eason has also returned to being a menace on defense, averaging 2.0 steals per game over that stretch.
It could be a harbinger of what’s to come.
Rockets’ real identity is being revealed
Let’s talk some more about some big lineups and some small sample sizes.
Per CleaningTheGlass, the lineup of Alperen Sengun, Jabari Smith Jr., Kevin Durant, Tari Eason, and Amen Thompson is +47.8 over 104 possessions. It’s their fourth-most used lineup, but there’s certainly still meat on that bone.
How about Steven Adams, Sengun, Durant, Eason, and Thompson? They’re +55.8 in just 15 possessions. That’s too small a sample to say much about, but it’s an intriguing group.
The broader point is that Eason, as a jumbo off-guard, seems to unlock something. With his elite catch-and-shoot numbers (51.4% on those three-point attempts this year), the Rockets don’t lose anything by playing him out of position, and gain plenty.
Conceptually, the same could hold for Finney-Smith. When Eason needs to miss time, he can plug into that role, or the Rockets can mix-and-match them at will. The Rockets finally have their full roster at their disposal, and the possibilities are exciting:
I, for one, will not bother trying to manage my expectations.








