Los Angeles Times

Westbrook traded for Rockets’ Paul

Former MVP and triple-double king will join Harden in a potent backcourt.

- By Austin Knoblauch and Broderick Turner

NBA’s summer of big deals continues as the Thunder star will join Harden in Houston.

The Oklahoma City Thunder have agreed to trade former NBA MVP Russell Westbrook to the Houston Rockets for Chris Paul and two first-round draft picks, a person with knowledge of the situation told The Times.

The Thunder will receive the Rockets’ first-round picks in 2024 and 2026 and the two teams will swap picks in 2021 and 2025.

The deal reunites Westbrook and James Harden, who played three seasons together on the Thunder from 2009 to 2012.

“We’re excited to have Russell Westbrook,” Rockets owner Tilman Fertitta said in a statement. “I would watch him play for Oklahoma City and he’s so athletic. At the same time this franchise just had the two years with the most wins it’s ever had in consecutiv­e years and we wouldn’t have accomplish­ed that without Chris Paul.

“Chris Paul is unbelievab­le and he’s gonna be sadly missed.”

The deal marks the fourth blockbuste­r trade since the start of NBA free agency. The Lakers acquired Anthony Davis from the New Orleans Pelicans, the Clippers landed Paul George from Oklahoma City in a deal that helped them sign Kawhi Leonard, and Kevin Durant went from Golden State to Brooklyn.

Westbrook, 30, has averaged 23 points over his 11-year career in Oklahoma City following two years at UCLA. He has averaged a triple-double the last three seasons, a feat not accomplish­ed in one season since Oscar Robertson in 1961-62.

Westbrook, who was named the league’s MVP for the 2016-17 season, is owed $171 million over the next four years.

Paul, 34, played for the Rockets the last two seasons, helping them finish first in the Western Conference in 2018 before losing to Golden State in the conference finals. Paul, who played six seasons with the Clippers before being traded to the Rockets in June 2017, has averaged 18.5 points and is owed close to $125 million over the remaining three years of his contract.

Houston lost in the conference semifinals to the Warriors last season, but the addition of Westbrook gives the Rockets one of the NBA’s most potent scoring tandems. Harden is the league’s two-time reigning scoring champion, averaging 36.1 points last season.

Westbrook and Harden last played together on the Thunder at the end of the 201112 season, when Oklahoma City fell to LeBron James and the Miami Heat in the NBA Finals.

Paul joins a Thunder team that will have its focus clearly on the future. The Thunder acquired seven first-round picks from the two trades, and are the only NBA team with first-round picks in the next five drafts.

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