ESPN’s Brian Windhorst on the Rockets and Heat as Kevin Durant trade suitors: “I think he’s got Miami on there because he’s attracted by the city and Pat Riley. It’s certainly not the team.”
The Miami Heat and Houston Rockets appear to be the only two NBA teams who are both on Kevin Durant’s list of desired destinations and actively engaged with the Phoenix Suns to get such a deal done.
And between those two, longtime league insider Brian Windhorst thinks it’s Houston that could be the most compelling basketball fit. While the terms of a potential deal remain unknown, financial analysis from Rockets Wire suggests a package headlined by Jalen Green or a combination of Dillon Brooks and either Jabari Smith Jr. or Reed Sheppard as the most likely starting point for a trade.
Draft equity and further matching salaries would likely be a component, as well. Phoenix is reportedly underwhelmed by the current offer, though negotiations are ongoing.
In a Wednesday appearance on ESPN’s Get Up, Windhorst offered this update:
I think he’s got Miami on there because he’s attracted by the city and Pat Riley. It’s certainly not the team. So, let’s put them aside.
Let’s look at Houston and San Antonio. He would be the No. 1 offensive option on those two teams. I don’t know about best player, and I don’t know if that’s what he’s looking for at age 37. But he certainly would join those two teams and make them way more dynamic offensively. Particularly Houston, who is an elite defensive team that had difficulty getting isolation and individual scoring. He certainly believes, by looking at those two teams, that he can be a very high-level member of a contending team.
So, I’m going to listen to what he says there. That’s why I think, Houston especially, has got their eyebrow up. I’m not sure they’re willing to pay a massive price for a 37-year-old when most of the rest of their team is in its early-to-mid 20s, but I think Houston should definitely be considered still in this race. Especially if Minnesota doesn’t close.
Potential trade suitors not on that preferred-destination list (such as the Timberwolves, who Windhorst identified) are reportedly not bidding aggressively without a change in the All-Star forward’s stance.
Because Durant’s current contract expires after next season, his choice to sign (or not sign) an extension carries significant weight in these talks, since many teams won’t risk surrendering significant asset capital if they might lose him as an unrestricted free agent a year later.
With that in mind, it appears that could make the Rockets and Heat frontrunners for Durant’s services, assuming the Suns remain committed to trading him. A deal is reportedly possible at any time.
To Windhorst’s point, Houston finished 52-30 and No. 2 in the Western Conference last season, while Miami went 37-45 in the East. Thus, from a purely short-term basketball perspective, the Rockets would seemingly give Durant a better opportunity to compete at the highest level over whatever remains of his prime NBA years.