| Houston Rockets |
|
|
| Conference |
Western Conference |
| Division |
Southwest Division |
| Founded |
1967 |
| History |
Houston Rockets
1967-present |
| Arena |
Toyota Center |
| City |
Houston, Texas |
| Team Colors |
Red, White, and Silver |
| Owner |
Leslie Alexander |
| General Manager |
Daryl Morey |
| Head Coach |
Rick Adelman |
| NBA D-League Affiliate |
Rio Grande Valley Vipers |
| Championships |
2 (1994, 1995) |
| Conference Titles |
4 (1981, 1986, 1994,
1995) |
| Division Titles |
4 (1977, 1986, 1993,
1994) |
The Houston Rockets are an American professional basketball team based in
Houston, Texas. They play in the National Basketball Association (NBA).
Franchise history
San Diego Rockets old logo
The Rockets, along with the Seattle SuperSonics, entered the NBA in
1967 as an expansion team based in San Diego. They
selected Pat Riley with their first draft pick in
1967. They went on to produce a then-NBA record 67-loss season.
San Diego Rockets
In 1968 the Rockets won the coin toss versus the Baltimore Bullets, giving them
the first overall pick in the 1968 NBA Draft. They selected Elvin "the Big E" Hayes from the University of Houston. Hayes
led the team to the franchise's first ever playoff appearance in 1969. The Rockets
lost in the Western divisional semi-final to the Atlanta Hawks two games to four in a best-of-seven series.
The 1970 NBA Draft brought Calvin Murphy and
Rudy Tomjanovich to the Rockets - both significant to the franchise during and after
their playing careers were over.
Coached by Jack McMahon and Alex Hannum, the
Rockets tallied a 119-209 record over their tenure in San Diego.
Move to Houston
In 1971, real estate broker Wayne Duddleston and banker
Billy Goldberg bought the franchise for $5.6 million and relocated the team from
San Diego, where fans were more disposed to the Los Angeles Lakers than the Rockets.
The Rockets originally had been named for San Diego slogan, "A City in Motion," but with the move to Houston their name took on
even greater relevance. Houston is home to the Lyndon B. Johnson Space
Center and Mission Control, which received national attention during
Project Apollo. Houston's major league baseball team, the Astros,were similarly named,
and their stadium was the Astrodome, all with a futuristic theme. Furthermore, Houston's WNBA team would be named the
Houston Comets, in part tribute and association with the Rockets. They would go on to win
four straight championships.
1970s
Houston Rockets old logo (1971-1995)
The Rockets began playing at various venues in Houston, including the Astrodome,
AstroHall, and Hofheinz Pavilion. They also
played games at HemisFair Arena in San
Antonio and in Waco. However, fan support was weak in the football and baseball-dominated city, and the Rockets averaged less
than 5000 fans per game during their first Houston season. It was mused that the local churches in Waco drew more attendance than
the Rockets.
Before the start of the 1971 season, Coach Alex Hannum left for the Denver Nuggets of the American Basketball Association. Tex Winter was
hired as the new coach shortly before the team was sold. Coach Winter applied a triple-post offensive system that contrasted with
the offensive style to which Hayes was accustomed. Houston soon traded Hayes to the Baltimore Bullets for Jack Marin. Lack of success did
little to capture the city's attention, and in the Spring of 1973, following the Rockets 10th straight loss, Winter was relieved
of his duties.
In 1975 the Rockets moved into their posh new home, The Summit, which they would
call home for the next 28 years. The Summit represented a lavish new breed of sports arena, replete with amenities, that would
help the NBA grow from a second-tier professional sport into the multi-billion dollar entertainment industry that it is
today.
With Coach Johnny Egan's guidance and Tomjanovich, Murphy, and Mike Newlin leading the way, the Rockets made their first appearance in
the playoffs since arriving in Houston. The Rockets defeated the New York Knicks
(led by Walt Frazier and Earl Monroe) in the first
round, but lost to the Boston Celtics in the Eastern Conference Semi-finals.
At the start of the 1977 season, the Rockets negotiated a trade with the Buffalo Braves to acquire Moses Malone, who as a high school
star made the unprecedented decision of bypassing college basketball to sign on as a professional with the Utah Stars of the ABA in 1974. The Rockets defeated the Washington
Bullets in the 1977 Eastern Conference semi-final, but lost to the Philadelphia
76ers in the Conference Finals. Malone made an impressive showing against Washington's Elvin Hayes and waning star
Wes Unseld.
On December 9, 1977, in a game against the Los
Angeles Lakers, Kevin Kunnert got into a fight with the Lakers' Kermit Washington. As Tomjanovich approached the altercation, Washington turned and threw a punch,
landing squarely in the face of an approaching Tomjanovich, causing extensive structural damage to his cranium. The shocking scene became the defining moment of the Rockets' 1977-78 season as well as the playing careers of Tomjanovich and Washington. Tomjanovich spent the
next five months in rehabilitation and returned to appear in the 1978 All-Star Game. A book by John Feinstein recording the events surrounding this event and the different paths that Tomjanovich and
Washington have taken since that day is entitled "The Punch".
Malone received the 1979 MVP Award. Not
exceptionally big or quick, he used footwork and positioning to become a successful center in the NBA. Malone, Murphy, and
Tomjanovich all played in the 1979 NBA All-Star Game. Rick Barry was signed for the 1979
season from the Golden State Warriors in exchange for John Lucas. Barry averaged a
modest 13.5 points and set a new NBA record, posting a .947 free-throw percentage for the season. He would play one more year for
the Rockets before retiring in 1980.
The Rockets went 47-35 in 1978-79, Nissalke's last season as coach. They finished second in the Central Division, losing two
straight to Atlanta in a best-of-three first-round series.
Del Harris replaced Nissalke as coach for the 1979-80
campaign. The Rockets finished the year at 41-41, tying the San Antonio Spurs
for second place in the Central Division. After beating the Spurs, two games to one, in the first-round playoff series, they were swept by the Boston Celtics in the Eastern Conference
Semi-finals.
1980s
For the 1980-81 season, the arrival of a third NBA team in Texas, the
Dallas Mavericks, caused the NBA to restructure the conferences and sent Houston to the
Midwest Division of the Western Conference, which also included San Antonio,
Kansas City, Denver, Utah, and Dallas.
Houston tied with Kansas City for second place in the Midwest Division behind San
Antonio with a 40-42 record, barely qualifying for the playoffs.
Houston's playoff run began with a draw with the defending NBA Champion Lakers in the first round. The Rockets upset Los
Angeles two games to one, then defeated George Gervin's Spurs four games to three in the
Western Conference semifinals. This resulted in an unlikely conference finals matchup with Kansas City. The Kings, led by
Otis Birdsong, Scott Wedman, and Phil Ford fell to the Rockets in five games. The championship series with Boston lasted six games with Boston claiming the championship.
During the season, Murphy, the shortest player in the league, set two NBA records, sinking 78 consecutive free throws to break
Rick Barry's mark of 60 set in 1976 and achieving a free-throw percentage of .958, breaking Barry's record set with the Rockets
in 1979. Other members of the 1980-81 team were Rudy Tomjanovich, Moses Malone, Robert Reid, Mike Dunleavy, Sr., Allen Leavell, Billy Paultz, Bill Willoughby, Calvin
Garrett, Tom Henderson and Major Jones.
The following season, the Rockets improved their regular season mark to 46-36 but
were eliminated in the first round of the playoffs. The bright spot during the 1981-82 season was that Moses Malone won the league's Most Valuable Player award.
In the 1982-83 NBA season, after trading restricted free-agent Malone to the
76ers, the Rockets fell to a league worst 14-68. In an attempt to improve the franchise's performance, Bill Fitch was hired as coach to replace Del Harris, and with the first
pick of the 1983 NBA Draft, the Rockets selected Ralph
Sampson from the University of Virginia. The following season was a marked
improvement on the previous year. A minor footnote to this season is that Houston allegedly lost its last few games of the season
intentionally in order to have a better chance to secure the #1 overall pick [1]. This was the last season of the coin-flip process as the NBA installed the Draft Lottery for the next draft to prevent teams from deliberately losing. Ralph Sampson came away with the NBA Rookie of the
Year award. [citation needed]
With the first pick of the 1984 NBA Draft the Rockets selected Hakeem Olajuwon from
the University of Houston. The same season, Olajuwon finished second to
Michael Jordan in NBA Rookie of the Year balloting.[citation needed] With two dynamic All-Star big men,
the Rockets enjoyed great success in the 1986 season, winning the Western Conference Championship in five games over the
Los Angeles Lakers and competing in the 1986 NBA
Finals for only the second time in team history. However, the Celtics defeated the Rockets four games to two.
In the 1987-88 NBA season, the Rockets lost in the first round of the playoffs.
Don Chaney replaced Fitch as head coach. The 1988-89 and 1989-90 seasons saw the addition of
Otis Thorpe and Vernon Maxwell, but two more
first-round exits from the playoffs. [citation needed]
The 1990s
Between 1987 and 1992, the Rockets had winning records, but they never got past the 2nd round of the playoffs. With new coach
Rudy Tomjanovich leading the way, the Rockets won 55 games in 1992-93, but the Seattle
SuperSonics knocked them off in the Conference Semifinals.
The championship years
On July 30, 1993, Leslie Alexander purchased the Rockets. In Tomjanovich's second
full year as head coach, the Rockets began the 1993-94 season with an NBA record
start of 15-0. With Hakeem Olajuwon as their center, the Rockets defeated the
New York Knicks in seven games to win the championship. After being down three games to
two in the 1994 NBA Finals, the Rockets won the last two games on their home court,
thanks to a clutch play by Olajuwon. In the waning seconds of the fourth quarter of game 6 the Rockets clung to a 2 point lead
when hot shooting guard John Starks, who had scored 27 points up until then,
pulled up for a game winning shot.Olajuwon had slipped coming around a screen but recovered to block the shot and preserve the
lead as time expired. This is often considered one of the greatest clutch defensive plays in NBA History.
The Rockets struggled in the first half of the 1994-95 season. In a midseason
trade with Portland, the Rockets obtained star guard Clyde Drexler, who had played alongside Olajuwon at the University
of Houston, in exchange for Otis Thorpe. Houston entered the playoffs as the sixth seed in the Western Conference and were underdogs against the 60-22
Utah Jazz in the first round, the 59-23 Phoenix Suns in
the second round (who led the Rockets 3-1 before losing three straight), and the 62-20 San
Antonio Spurs in the conference finals. In the second game of the San Antonio series, Olajuwon gave a career performance.
After a pregame MVP award ceremony honoring David Robinson, Olajuwon
dominated the game, outscoring Robinson 42-22 in a Rockets win. Houston won all three series to reach the Finals against the Orlando Magic, whose headline players were
Shaquille O'Neal and Penny Hardaway. Houston
swept the series in four straight games. The Rockets became the first team in NBA history to win the championship as a sixth
seed. They also became only the second team in NBA history to overcome a 3-1 series deficit without homecourt advantage. In
addition, the team became the first in NBA history to beat four 50-win teams in a single postseason en route to the
championship.
Post-championship
Rockets logo from 1996-2003.
After an injury riddled 1995-96 campaign, the Rockets beat the Lakers in the first round of the playoffs but were swept by the
Seattle Supersonics in the second round. Houston's aging roster and the emergence of
the Chicago Bulls drove the Rockets to make a dramatic trade with the Phoenix Suns that swapped Sam Cassell, Chucky Brown, Mark Bryant and Robert Horry for Charles Barkley. The resulting "Big Three" of Olajuwon, Drexler, and Barkley led the Rockets to a 57-25
record, with a franchise-best 27 road wins. Houston swept Minnesota in the first round
and, in a heated 7 game battle, defeated Seattle. The Rockets then fell in the Western Conference Finals to the Utah Jazz, a team they had beaten on their way to championships in '94 and '95.
The 1997-98 season was also marked by injuries, and the team finished 41-41 with
the 8th seed in the Western Conference. Houston once again faced the Jazz and lost the series 3-2. Drexler retired after the
season and the Rockets made another bold trade to bring in Scottie Pippen to take his
place in the Big Three. While Pippen continued to play good defense, he struggled to fit into Houston's offensive system, which
was dominated by Barkley and Olajuwon. As a result, the Rockets often struggled. The Rockets lost to the Lakers in the first
round 3-1 of the 1999 NBA Playoffs, and during the summer Barkley and Pippen publicly
displayed their dislike for each other.
Throughout the post-championship years one of the Rockets main weaknesses was the point guard position. The Rockets had signed
Brent Price as the answer at the 1, but he had been severely limited by injuries. That
summer the Rockets attempted to address their point guard situation by trading Price, Antoine
Carr, Michael Dickerson, Othella
Harrington, and a future first round pick to the Vancouver Grizzlies for
Steve Francis and Tony Massenburg. Two months
later the Rockets dealt the disgruntled Pippen to the Portland Trailblazers in
exchange for Walt Williams, Stacey Augmon,
Ed Gray, Carlos Rogers, Brian Shaw, and Kelvin Cato. The trade replenished the depth given up to
obtain Francis from Vancouver.
Early in the 2000 season Barkley ruptured the quadriceps tendon in his left knee in a game against Philadelphia. When
considering his career-ending injury, Barkley displayed his trademark wit by observing, "I'm just what America needs - another
unemployed black man." Barkley would go on to rehab and make a token appearance towards the end of the season. With injuries
to Barkley and Olajuwon, the rebuilt Rockets went 34-48 and missed the playoffs.
21st century
In 2001, the Rockets worked their way to a 45-37 record and swept every Central Division team, but still did not make the
playoffs. An older, waning Olajuwon was traded to the Toronto Raptors in
2001 which left Steve Francis and Cuttino Mobley to fill leadership roles. The following season was unremarkable, as the team was mostly
made up of rookies and journeymen. Injuries to star player Steve Francis forced him to miss many games. The first season without
Hakeem in almost 20 years was a disappointing 28-54.
The abysmal 2002 season had its silver lining, as the Rockets were awarded the first overall pick in the 2002 NBA Draft. The Rockets selected Yao Ming, a 7 foot and 6 inch
Chinese center, who played for the Shanghai Sharks. The
2002-03 basketball season saw marked improvement for the Rockets, with the trio of
Yao, Francis, and Mobley leading the team to a 43-39 record.
With a 2003-04 regular season record of 45-37, the Rockets earned their
first playoff berth since their first round exit to the Lakers in 1999. However, the
Lakers again handed the Rockets a loss in the first round. The offseason saw major changes in the roster and dynamic of the team
as Steve Francis, Cuttino Mobley and Kelvin Cato were traded to the Orlando Magic in
exchange for Tracy McGrady, Juwan Howard,
Tyronn Lue and Reece Gaines.
McGrady and Yao led the Rockets to their best record in 10 years, finishing at 51-31 and seeded 5th in the Western Conference
Playoffs. Their season ended in the first round of the playoffs as they lost to their
in-state rival, the Dallas Mavericks four games to three. During the 2005 offseason the
Rockets obtained Stromile Swift and Derek
Anderson. They also traded Mike James to the Toronto
Raptors for Rafer Alston.
Injuries plagued the 2005-06 season. Bob Sura had surgery on his knee the summer
prior, Tracy McGrady fought an injured back throughout the season, Yao Ming required surgery to treat an infection in his toe,
and David Wesley even fractured a rib falling into a courtside cameraman near the end of
the season. With Yao and McGrady rarely on the court at the same time, the Rockets floundered. The team was much more successful
during the few portions of the season when its players were relatively healthy. However Jeff Van
Gundy and his team frequently expressed the need to play beyond injuries and to not use bad luck as an excuse for losing.
By the end of the season, the Rockets led the league in most games missed by players on the roster. The team finished with a
34-48 record.
2006-2007
The Rockets drafted Rudy Gay of the University
of Connecticut with the 8th pick of the first round in the 2006 NBA Draft. Gay was
dealt to the Memphis Grizzlies along with Stromile Swift in exchange for
Shane Battier. Many fans were upset at losing the young prospect in Gay. The Rockets also
acquired Kirk Snyder from the New Orleans
Hornets for cash consideration, and an exchange of 2nd round draft picks. They also signed Vassilis Spanoulis, a 2004 draft pick from Greece; Steve Novak a 2006 second-round draft pick from Marquette
University; and summer league stand-out John Lucas III. Near the end of the
offseason, the Rockets made their biggest offseason acquisition and signed Bonzi Wells for a
2-year, $5 million deal with the second year being a player option.
In the 2006-07 NBA season, the Rockets suffered familiar injuries to both
superstars: an injured back for McGrady and a fractured right tibia bone for Yao. Fortunately for the Rockets though, McGrady
returned just after Yao was injured and had six consecutive games of at least 30 points. Yao missed 32 games but returned to
action March 6 with the Rockets in solid playoff position. On March 26, the Rockets officially qualified for the first round of
the NBA playoffs with a win against the Milwaukee Bucks. On April 16th, The Rockets
defeated the Phoenix Suns 120-117 and clinched homecourt advantage for their first-round series with the Utah Jazz. The tandem of
Yao and McGrady one-upped its previous regular season best, finishing 52-30 on the year. However, once again, the Houston Rockets
were unable to pull out of the first round, losing in Game 7 to Utah 103-99. Head Coach Jeff Van
Gundy was fired on May 18th, 2007[1].
2007-2008
- Main articles: 2007-08 Houston Rockets season
Houston will begin the 2007-08 season with recently hired Rick Adelman as the team's
11th head coach.[2].
On June 14, the Rockets traded Juwan Howard to the
Minnesota Timberwolves for Mike James and
Justin Reed.[3].
In the 2007 NBA Draft, with the 26th pick, the Houston Rockets selected PG
Aaron Brooks, from Oregon, traded with the SuperSonics to receive Pick #31 PF
Carl Landry from Purdue, and with the 54th overall pick selected SG Brad Newley from Australia.
On July 12, guard Vassilis Spanoulis was traded
to the San Antonio Spurs along with the rights for the 2009 second-round draft pick.
In return, the Rockets received center Jackie Butler and the rights to Luis Scola, a 2002 second-round draft pick yet to play in the NBA. 24 hours after this deal was made, Scola
came to a "Basic Agreement" which could see him playing for the Rockets next season.[4] Less than a week later, Scola signed with the
Rockets.[5]
On July 20 guard Steve Francis signed a 2 year deal
with the Rockets, ten days after he accepted a buyout of the last two seasons of his $30 million contract with the
Portland Trail Blazers. He is expected to compete for a starting job with
Mike James and Rafer Alston. [6]
On September 7, it was also announced that the Rockets will debut a new court design for
the 2007-08 season. The court design includes a lighter varnished wood inside the three point area, similar to the
Seattle Supersonics, while the rest are dark varnished wood. The color
red will remain on the Rockets logo, and the script. This court design is similar to the
Phoenix Suns, Cleveland Cavaliers and
New Orleans Hornets, in which most of the hardwood is exposed.[7]
Other facts
Arena history
San Diego Rockets
San Diego Sports Arena (1967-1971)
Houston Rockets
Hofheinz Pavilion (1971-1975)
HemisFair Arena (San Antonio) (1972-1973)
Houston Summit (1975-2003) (later re-named the Compaq Center)
Toyota Center (2003-present)
Logos and uniforms
Logos
In 2003 the Rockets acquired a new look and new logos. The logo changed from the Rocket orbiting a basketball to a launching
'R' with the script "Houston Rockets". The Rockets alternate logo is that of a launching 'R' without the teams name.
Uniforms
Upon the opening of the Toyota Center, the Rockets decided to re-brand themselves with a new uniform. The Rockets changed from
the authentic blue shooting star striped uniform to a modern red and white that accommodated their new logo.
Season-by-season records
Note: W = Wins, L = Losses, % = Win-Loss %
| Season |
W |
L |
% |
Playoffs |
Results |
| San Diego Rockets |
| 1967-68 |
15 |
67 |
.183 |
|
|
| 1968-69 |
37 |
45 |
.451 |
Lost Division Semifinals |
Atlanta 4, San Diego 2 |
| 1969-70 |
27 |
55 |
.329 |
|
|
| 1970-71 |
40 |
42 |
.488 |
|
|
| Houston Rockets |
| 1971-72 |
34 |
48 |
.415 |
|
|
| 1972-73 |
33 |
49 |
.402 |
|
|
| 1973-74 |
32 |
50 |
.390 |
|
|
| 1974-75 |
41 |
41 |
.500 |
Won First Round
Lost Conference Semifinals |
Houston 2, New York 1
Philadelphia 4, Houston 1 |
| 1975-76 |
40 |
42 |
.488 |
|
|
| 1976-77 |
49 |
33 |
.598 |
Won Conference Semifinals
Lost Conference Finals |
Houston 4, Washington 2
Philadelphia 4, Houston 2 |
| 1977-78 |
28 |
54 |
.341 |
|
|
| 1978-79 |
47 |
35 |
.573 |
Lost First Round |
Atlanta 2, Houston 0 |
| 1979-80 |
41 |
41 |
.500 |
Won First Round
Lost Conference Semifinals |
Houston 2, San Antonio 1
Boston 4, Houston 0 |
| 1980-81 |
40 |
42 |
.488 |
Won First Round
Won Conference Semifinals
Won Conference Finals
Lost NBA Finals |
Houston 2, LA Lakers 1
Houston 4, San Antonio 3
Houston 4, Kansas City 1
Boston 4, Houston 2 |
| 1981-82 |
46 |
36 |
.561 |
Lost First Round |
Seattle 2, Houston 1 |
| 1982-83 |
14 |
68 |
.171 |
|
|
| 1983-84 |
29 |
53 |
.354 |
|
|
| 1984-85 |
48 |
34 |
.585 |
Lost First Round |
Utah 3, Houston 2 |
| 1985-86 |
51 |
31 |
.622 |
Won First Round
Won Conference Semifinals
Won Conference Finals
Lost NBA Finals |
Houston 3, Sacramento 0
Houston 4, Denver 2
Houston 4, LA Lakers 1
Boston 4, Houston 2 |
| 1986-87 |
42 |
40 |
.512 |
Won First Round
Lost Conference Semifinals |
Houston 3, Portland 1
Seattle 4, Houston 2 |
| 1987-88 |
46 |
36 |
.561 |
Lost First Round |
Dallas 3, Houston 1 |
| 1988-89 |
45 |
37 |
.549 |
Lost First Round |
Seattle 3, Houston 1 |
| 1989-90 |
41 |
41 |
.500 |
Lost First Round |
LA Lakers 3, Houston 0 |
| 1990-91 |
52 |
30 |
.634 |
Lost First Round |
LA Lakers 3, Houston 1 |
| 1991-92 |
42 |
40 |
.512 |
|
|
| 1992-93 |
55 |
27 |
.671 |
Won First Round
Lost Conference Semifinals |
Houston 3, LA Clippers 2
Seattle 4, Houston 3 |
| 1993-94 |
58 |
24 |
.707 |
Won First Round
Won Conference Semifinals
Won Conference Finals
Won NBA Finals |
Houston 3, Portland 1
Houston 4, Phoenix 3
Houston 4, Utah 1
Houston 4, New York 3 |
| 1994-95 |
47 |
35 |
.573 |
Won First Round
Won Conference Semifinals
Won Conference Finals
Won NBA Finals |
Houston 3, Utah 2
Houston 4, Phoenix 3
Houston 4, San Antonio 2
Houston 4, Orlando 0 |
| 1995-96 |
48 |
34 |
.585 |
Won First Round
Lost Conference Semifinals |
Houston 3, LA Lakers 1
Seattle 4, Houston 0 |
| 1996-97 |
57 |
25 |
.695 |
Won First Round
Won Conference Semifinals
Lost Conference Finals |
Houston 3, Minnesota 0
Houston 4, Seattle 3
Utah 4, Houston 2 |
| 1997-98 |
41 |
41 |
.500 |
Lost First Round |
Utah 3, Houston 2 |
| 1998-99 |
31 |
19 |
.620 |
Lost First Round |
LA Lakers 3, Houston 1 |
| 1999-2000 |
34 |
48 |
.415 |
|
|
| 2000-01 |
45 |
37 |
.550 |
|
|
| 2001-02 |
28 |
54 |
.341 |
|
|
| 2002-03 |
43 |
39 |
.524 |
|
|
| 2003-04 |
45 |
37 |
.550 |
Lost First Round |
LA Lakers 4, Houston 1 |
| 2004-05 |
51 |
31 |
.622 |
Lost First Round |
Dallas 4, Houston 3 |
| 2005-06 |
34 |
48 |
.415 |
|
|
| 2006-07 |
52 |
30 |
.634 |
Lost First Round |
Utah 4, Houston 3 |
| 2007-08 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
|
|
| Totals |
1629 |
1619 |
.502 |
|
|
| Playoffs |
107 |
111 |
.491 |
2 Championships |
Players of note
For a list of all-time Rockets players, see Houston Rockets all-time
roster.
Retired numbers
- 22 Clyde Drexler, G, 1995-98; also Houston
native and University of Houston star and former head coach, currently Houston
Rockets broadcaster
- 23 Calvin Murphy, G, 1970-83 (including last season in San Diego); also Broadcaster
- 24 Moses Malone, C, 1976-82
- 34 Hakeem Olajuwon, C, 1984-2001
- 45 Rudy Tomjanovich, F, 1970-81; Head Coach, 1991-2003
- CD Carroll Dawson Assistant coach, General Manager 1979-2007. As Dawson did not play
for the Rockets, the team used his initials in memoriam.
Current roster
|
Houston Rockets roster
|
| Players |
Coaches |
| Pos. |
# |
Nat. |
Name |
Ht. |
Wt. |
From |
| 1.0 PG |
12 |
USA  |
Alston, Rafer |
74
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Cal State-Fresno |
| 3.0 SF |
31 |
USA  |
Battier, Shane |
80
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Duke |
| 1.0 PG |
0 |
USA  |
Brooks, Aaron |
72
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Oregon |
| 5.0 C |
40 |
USA  |
Butler, Jackie |
82
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Coastal Christian Academy |
| 1.0 PG |
3 |
USA  |
Francis, Steve |
75
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Maryland, College Park* |
| 3.0 SF |
19 |
USA  |
Harris, Mike |
78
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Rice |
| 4.0 PF |
44 |
USA  |
Hayes, Chuck |
78
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Kentucky |
| 2.0 SG |
2 |
USA  |
Head, Luther |
75
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Illinois |
| 1.0 PG |
7 |
USA  |
James, Mike |
74
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Duquesne |
| 4.0 PF |
14 |
USA  |
Landry, Carl |
80
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Purdue |
| 1.0 PG |
15 |
USA  |
Lucas, John III |
71
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Oklahoma State |
| 2.0 SG |
1 |
USA  |
McGrady, Tracy (C) |
80
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Mt. Zion Christian Academy |
| 5.0 C |
55 |
COD  |
Mutombo, Dikembe |
86
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Georgetown |
| 3.0 SF |
20 |
USA  |
Novak, Steve |
82
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Marquette |
| 3.0 SF |
9 |
USA  |
Reed, Justin |
80
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Mississippi |
| 4.0 PF |
4 |
ARG  |
Scola, Luis |
81
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Argentina |
| 2.0 SG |
13 |
USA  |
Snyder, Kirk |
78
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Nevada |
| 1.0 PG |
|
USA  |
Sura, Bob |
77
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Florida State |
| 3.0 SF |
6 |
USA  |
Wells, Bonzi |
77
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
Ball State |
| 5.0 C |
11 |
CHN  |
Yao Ming (C) |
90
ft in ( m) |
lb ( kg) |
China |
|
- Head coach
- Assistant coach(es)
- Legend
- (C) Team captain
- (DP) Draft pick
- (FA) Free agent
Injured
Roster •
Transactions • updated
2007-09-30
|
Current depth chart
Unsigned Draft Picks