Before the Rockets left town for their west coast road trip, Jason Friedman fired a few questions toward Rockets GM Daryl Morey. Among the topics discussed: the teamโs streaky start, sketchy point guard play, and struggles down the stretch of close games. You know, all the things fans and critics have been complaining about since the beginning of the season (if not longer).
JCF: There are a lot of ways to look at the Rockets roller coaster start to the season, how do you view it?
DM: Overall, I guess Iโd say itโs not good enough. I just see a lot of areas [that need] improvement. We need to beat the top teams at home. Weโre still adjusting to the offense. Weโre not as far along there as weโd like to be.
JCF: Do you feel as if the team is stuck in a bit of a limbo stage, where theyโre not playing the defense they did a year ago, while simultaneously failing to show the hoped for improvement on the offensive end?
DM: Well, I think except for transition, our defense has actually been pretty good. I think weโre 7th in the league, while facing the hardest schedule. So the defense has been pretty good, thatโs been focused on too much. In transition, weโve had issues, but those are things weโre working on. Offense is where weโve struggled quite a bit more, both with our shooting and in terms of running the system.
JCF: When youโre going through a stretch like you guys just came out ofโฆ
DM: Weโre not out of it yet [laughs].
JCF: Well, thatโs true, but at least you can say youโre not in the midst of a losing streak anymore.
DM: Yeah, thatโs helpful.
JCF: [laughs] All right, sarcasm aside, when the team is going through a stretch like that, most fans are out there howling for change. A lot of people treat it like their fantasy team. Now I know itโs your job to preach patience, especially considering this early stage of the season, but at what point do you have to start seriously thinking about making changes because the status quo just isnโt working, and may never work?
DM: Well, I think weโre a playoff team, so weโre focused on whatโs going to help us win in April. I think what weโre constantly assessing is notโat least for meโthe nightly wins and losses, itโs whoโs the right players and the right approach to bet on to win in April. I think some of our play from the point guard spot has not been good enough to win. So overall, thatโs the spot we need to have better answers at than we have right now.
JCF: I know this is a difficult question to answer, but do you feel like youโve got the guys on your roster right now who can give you what you need at that position?
DM: Um, I think everythingโs sort of taking a bet on whatโs the right players, or combination of players, and thereโs a chance thatโs going to be the right option. There are certainly options on our roster that could be good enough. And if none of those options areโand we have to have better play thereโthen itโs gonna have to come one way or the other.
JCF: Thereโs been a ton of talk centered on the Rocketsโs inability to win close games. I know thatโs not a major focus of yours since youโre more concerned with blowing teams out since point differential is the best indicator of future success. Still, the Rocketsโs recent trouble in tight games is a tad alarming. Do you think this team has a bit of a mental block or confidence issue when it finds itself in those situations?
DM: Iโd say itโs a false focus. The good teams arenโt in close games. So we just need to get back to being up by ten or so going into the final stretch and continue to expand the lead. The good teams donโt win close games [because] theyโre not in them. And right now, weโre in too many and weโre not playing good enough.
JCF: Before I let you go, Iโve got to ask you about your old team. How about the Celtics amazing start?
DM: Yeah, itโs awesome and great to see. Itโs exactly how I planned it out all along [laughs]. But no, itโs awesome to see, Iโm excited. Great coaching, great players. Things just came together at the right time for those guys who have been wanting to win for some time and all are hungry in terms of Ray, and Paul and Kevin. I think itโs going to carry them into the Eastern Conference Finals and I hope weโre there to face them [if they advance to the NBA Finals].
POSTSCRIPT
For fans driven insane by the Rocketsโs unholy trinity of point guards (a.k.a. Rafer, Mike and Steve), rest assured the team is well aware of the problem at that position. Moreyโs not-so-ringing endorsement should remove any lingering doubt on the subject.
The problem for this season, of course, lies in the dearth of realistic, adequate solutions. Whoโs available and, more importantly, who can help? Peruse the leagueโs depth charts (most likely you already have many times over), and youโre likely to find either untouchables or mere flotsam and jetsam. It will take all of Moreyโs reputed geniusโand then someโto pull off a deal that sufficiently upgrades Houstonโs chances of prolonged postseason success in 2008.
For the more immediate future, itโs incumbent upon the team to carve out some sort of identity. Right now, they are neither suffocating defensively, nor particularly explosive on the offensive end. Of course, knocking down some open jumpers for once would be a nice start.
Talking to players in the locker room after the last couple of home games, I quickly got the sense that this is very much a work in progress, and no one is entirely sure what the end result will look like. There is hope, but not certainty. Not yet, anyway.
โI think we are starting to understand when we struggle, why we struggle,โ says Shane Battier. โThatโs a lesson some teams never learn in the course of the season. So I think if we can identify those sort of things, we can limit those times when we struggle and maximize this teamโs potential.
โThis is going to be a very educational year. Itโs gonna be almost like a Master’s course in the NBA. Itโs gonna take a long time for this team to really, really understand who we are. That doesnโt mean we canโt win along the way, but weโre gonna be learning well past the All-Star break. And as long as we continue to improve, thatโs the most important thing.โ
Now that the agonizing six-game losing streak is in their rear view mirror, the Rockets get rewarded by heading West for the next four games, including what figures to be a torturous back-to-back against Phoenix and Golden State in the middle of the week.
โIn this Western Conference, nothingโs going to come easy,โ says Chuck Hayes. โWe just hit a bad stretch early. Thank God it came early rather than late. We can always make up ground, but weโre gonna have to play our butts off the next two months until All-Star weekend.โ
For what itโs worth, Iโm still on the bandwagon preaching patience, too. Over the last few years, this team has proven to be a consistent regular season winner as long as Yao and T-Mac stay healthy. And I think itโs safe to assume everyone, fans included, cares much more about how you finish than you how you start.
Undoubtedly, the growing pains will continue, as will the questions surrounding the point guard position. Every team needs a hot-button topic, and this has been Houstonโs cause cรฉlรจbre for years. The fans are watching, ready to dissect every move and misstep.
So, too, is Daryl Morey. โ Jason Friedman
This article appears in Nov 22-28, 2007.
