Breakdown of that 12 player trade that went down. Watching the Rox, I'm thinking is D'Antoni the offensive genius I've heard him described as by multiple players or is he just plain crazy. His line up is the ultimate test of the small ball 3 pt shooting lineup that so many here hate, I don't think they have enough horses to win it all but they should be fun to watch.
The revolution is here. Centerless basketball baby!
On a night when the Houston Rockets once again played virtually the entire game without a true big man (Isaiah Hartenstein’s three minutes were the only ones played by a player taller than 6-6), while launching 60 3-pointers in a 120-111 win over Charlotte, the front office went all-in on its unusual strategy.
The Rockets traded centers Clint Capela and Nene to Atlanta in a four-team, 12-player trade (for now – it can still get bigger!) that brought back Robert Covington and Jordan Bell from Minnesota and also sent out injured wing Gerald Green, pending his approval of the trade. We’ll talk more about the other three teams in a bit, but let’s focus on the big story first.
This is a revolution, people. Mike D’Antoni already created one with “seven seconds or less” in Phoenix, but this is next-level. In a way, Houston’s early-season struggles while playing a more traditional lineup have been liberating, paving the way for D’Antoni to experiment with P.J. Tucker at center.
And now we’re here: A full 48-minutes of five-out basketball, with nobody even remotely resembling a traditional NBA big man on the court. The Rockets will throw double teams and assorted junk defenses at the league’s elite bigs (this is you, Nikola Jokic and Anthony Davis) and bet they’ll more than make up for it at the offensive end. The hope, too, is that an open middle of the floor can further weaponize Russell Westbrook, who has played much better in January after a shaky start in Houston.
Covington has his weaknesses. He gambles a lot defensively, can’t create off the dribble and hasn’t been quite as good in Minnesota as he was in Philadelphia.
That said, you’d be hard-pressed to find a more perfect system fit for what the Rockets are trying to do. Covington cut his teeth playing this exact style for the Rockets’ G-League team in Rio Grande Valley before the Sixers scooped him up, and played in a fairly similar system in his first few seasons in Philly. (That Rio Grande Valley team, incidentally, was probably the best in G-League history until us NBA guys came in and plucked all the best players — it had Covington, James Johnson, Chris Johnson, Troy Daniels and Isaiah Canaan).
Covington launches early and often from the 3-point line, which in Houston’s system matters almost as much as whether they actually go in (he makes a solid 35.8% career). At 6-7, he’s a capable multi-positional defender with great hands and a knack for steals and doesn’t need to play with the ball in his hands. He provides another high-level 3-and-D guy for the Rockets to place around James Harden and Westbrook.
Additionally, Covington has a great contract — two years left after this one at a total of $25 million. Capela’s wasn’t bad either, but the savings of roughly $5 million a year (including incentives) matter at the margins of the tax line, where the Rockets will be operating for the foreseeable future. It could bring the full midlevel exception back into play for the Rockets this coming summer, for instance.
The only question is whether Covington can play some center. Tucker is strong enough to bang with most NBA 5s and at least fare well enough that the Rockets can make opposing bigs pay for it at the other end. It’s not clear if the wiry Covington has that kind of muscle.
Houston got Bell back from Minnesota, and he could provide a bit of a rim running and shot-blocking presence, but Bell is undersized, mistake-prone and can’t shoot. The expectation is that the Rockets will try to cover their flank by adding another true 5.
The trade wasn’t cheap. The Rockets once again surrendered their first-round pick, an expensive way to engender a swap of two players who on paper have roughly equal value, but this will be a pick in the 20s in a weak draft. Houston also softened the blow by getting back a second-round pick in 2024 from Golden State.
This being Houston, there was a financial component to the deal as well — it took Houston out of the luxury tax, and likely makes it easier for the Rockets to stay under next season as well. The Rockets cut an impressive $6 million from their cap number this season, or potentially more if Capela had earned $1.5 million in incentive bonuses. The Rockets, in fact, could add another player making $5.7 million or less into the deal and still stay below the tax line. Houston also has two open roster spots to pursue talent in the buyout market.
Houston also generated three small trade exceptions — $3,595,333 for Capela, $2,564,733 for Nene, and $1,620,564. Getting Nene off their books wipes away a rare offseason botch by the Houston front office, when the league disallowed using the contract as a $10 million trade exception.
Big picture, I have no idea if this will work. But this is the most revolutionary move that’s been made in the NBA in a long time, and it’s gonna be fun as hell to see how it turns out. Make no mistake: It could change the entire league.
As for the other three teams, it was a pretty interesting day for them as well: