Houston Chronicle

Rockets add another big man with former All-Star center Cousins.

Signing Cousins to go withWood gives Rockets convention­al look but still allows guards their space

- By Jonathan Feigen STAFF WRITER

The Rockets might not be ready to resurrect that “legacy of bigs” banner outside Toyota Center. They won’t fill their nights with post-ups andDream Shakes or their plans with visions ofTwinTowe­rs 2.0.

Small ball, however, appears to be becoming — if not as extinct as the dinosaurs traditiona­l NBA centers were thought to be — an option rather than a full-time philosophy.

The Rockets on Monday reached agreement on a one-year deal with former All-Star center DeMarcus Cousins, two individual­s with knowledge of the deal said, making the move just days after they opened free agency by landing their top target, center Christian Wood.

Coming off three major injuries that limited him to 30 games since late January 2018, Cousins will have a role to be determined. But the Rockets have reached agreement on free-agent deals with just two players with NBA experience, and both are centers, each five inches taller than 6-5 P. J. Tucker, who manned the middle for the team from last season’s midpoint onward.

Adding Cousins could be a low-risk, high-reward endeavor. He comes with a nonguarant­eed contract and a career as one of the league’s most gifted and versatile big men.

Their choice of centers to pursue could indicate the Rockets are not departing too significan­tly from their customary style, particular­ly the premium on spacing to allowRusse­llWestbroo­k and James Harden to drive.

Cousins, like Wood, has 3-point range, having made at least 35 percent of his 3s in four consecutiv­e seasons prior to his abbreviate­d comeback campaign with the Warriors. Wood in particular has shown the potential to be an outstandin­g pick-and-roll partner for Harden. Both centers have such varied skills, with Wood especially effective defensivel­y on the perimeter, they could play together in some matchups.

Christian Wood

The addition of Cousins could, however, be the strongest indication yet of the Rockets’ intention to play amore convention­al lineup and style under new general manager Rafael Stone and new coach Stephen Silas.

The delay of the 2020-21 season, with training camp to open next week and games beginning Dec. 22, was expected to allow Cousins time to be ready after he sat out the restart in the NBA bubble rather than sign as a free agent. He missed all of last season after suffering a torn anterior cruciate ligament in an August 2019 pickup game while with the Lakers. He played 30 games in the 2018-19 season with the Warriors after coming back from an Achilles injury suffered against the Rockets while he was with the Pelicans. But he was hurt again in the second game of the 2019 playoffs, going out with a quad injury.

When healthy, the 6-10, 270pound Cousins has brought a sensationa­l mix of agility for his size and sublime offensive skills as a scorer or passer. The fifth overall pick of the 2010 draft, the 30-year-old Kentucky product is one of seven players in NBA history to average 25 points, 12 rebounds and five assists in a season — which he did in a 2017-18, when hewas limited to 48 games with New Orleans — and one of just two (along with Giannis Antetokoun­mpo the past two seasons) to do it since Charles Barkley’s 1992-93 MVP season.

A six-time All-Star, Cousins has averaged 21.2 points and 10.9 rebounds in nine NBA seasons with the Kings, Pelicans and Warriors. Though unlikely to reclaim the sort of role he had as the centerpiec­e of the Kings, he worked well with Anthony Davis while with the Pelicans and enthusiast­ically assumed a smaller role with the then-reigning champion Warriors.

Even while working off the

rust after missing all of last season, Cousins, along with Wood, should help shore up the Rockets’ most glaring weakness, defensive rebounding.

Cousins ranks eighth in NBA history in defensive rebounding percentage and had been in the top10 every year since his rookie season until his comeback season with the Warriors. The Rockets last season ranked 26th in defensive rebounding percentage.

Long known for his volatility, Cousins has picked up 124 technical fouls in his nine seasons, just nine fewer than Westbrook in 12 seasons, placing both in the all-time top 20.

The Rockets, however, imagine Cousins fitting in other ways and took their latest large step in a different direction.

 ??  ?? DeMarcus Cousins
DeMarcus Cousins
 ?? Brett Coomer / Staff photograph­er ?? Due to injuries, DeMarcus Cousins, left, was limited to 30 games with theWarrior­s in the 2018-19 season and did not play last season. At his best, he is a six-time All-Star.
Brett Coomer / Staff photograph­er Due to injuries, DeMarcus Cousins, left, was limited to 30 games with theWarrior­s in the 2018-19 season and did not play last season. At his best, he is a six-time All-Star.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States