The Rockets' Game 2 Outlook Hinges on Durant’s Uncertain Return

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The Rockets' Game 2 Outlook Hinges on Durant’s Uncertain Return

Without Durant, the Rockets' offense loses its engine. His potential return ignites crucial adjustments, or a repeat Game 1 struggle.

The Rockets' Game 2 Outlook Hinges on Durant’s Uncertain Return

Without Durant, the Rockets' offense loses its engine. His potential return ignites crucial adjustments, or a repeat Game 1 struggle.

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Kevin Durant being “up in the air” for Game 2 doesn’t just change the rotation. It changes everything about how the Rockets function- hopefully unlike the unfortunate offensive performance we saw on Saturday night.

If Game 1 showed us anything, it’s that Houston without Durant isn’t just missing a scorer- they’re missing their late-clock solution.

The offense never really settled in. It felt rushed one possession, then stagnant the next. There were stretches where the ball moved, sure, but it didn’t lead anywhere. Too many late-clock decisions and far too many possessions ending in someone trying to figure it out on the fly.

There’s three things for certain in this life, and that’s death, taxes, and a middy from Durant,

He’s put up 26.0 points, 5.5 rebounds, and 4.8 assists across 78 games this season, efficiently. His presence is stabilizing, because he doesn’t just get you buckets- he gives your offense a center of gravity. KD slows it down, gets to his spot, and forces the defense to react.

Not only that, but Sengun’s game becomes a lot more dangerous when defenses can’t load up on him without consequence. Game 1 never got to that point.

Houston spent long stretches leaning on Amen Thompson and Reed Sheppard to create. Both had flashes, both made plays, but asking them to carry that kind of offensive responsibility in a playoff setting is a completely different conversation when the game tightens and every possession matters.

The tricky part is the injury itself. A deep bruise around the patellar tendon (jumper’s knee) isn’t nothing, especially when it already kept him out of Game 1 after trying to give it a go earlier in the day. “Nothing major” sounds great until you realize how easily something like that can linger.

And even if he does go, it’s hard to imagine him coming back without some kind of minutes restriction, which adds another layer to how Houston has to manage this.

So now it sits right where nobody wants it: uncertain.

If he’s unavailable for Game 2, there’s a good chance Tuesday’s going to look a lot like Game 1 all over again, unless Udoka is extremely calculated with rotation and game plan adjustments. This is definitely not a place the Rockets want to live for long.

Either way, we’re about to find out how much of this series really hinges on one player… and how quickly things can swing when he steps back on the floor.

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