The basketball world has been buzzing since the Dallas Mavericks fired their general manager amid growing tensions with Luka Doncic, a reminder that even superstar-driven teams can crumble from bad front office decisions. Yet, as Houston fans know all too well, disastrous trades are nothing new in Texas basketball.

Over the decades, the Houston Rockets have made some of the most head-scratching deals in NBA history, sacrificing MVPs, future Hall of Famers, and young stars for questionable returns. Here are the five worst trades that still haunt the franchise.

It Wasn’t Just Luka: The 5 Worst Trades in Rockets History
1. Elvin Hayes to the Baltimore Bullets (1972)

Sometimes, a single trade can alter a franchise’s entire future. In 1972, the Rockets dealt Elvin Hayes to the Baltimore Bullets for Jack Marin and future considerations.

Hayes was already a franchise cornerstone and one of the league’s premier big men. After the trade, he went on to lead the Bullets to multiple Finals appearances and an NBA championship in 1978, solidifying his Hall of Fame legacy.

Meanwhile, Marin had a solid but unspectacular stint in Houston, leaving the Rockets with a glaring void in leadership and frontcourt dominance. In hindsight, it was a deal that handed another franchise a title while setting Houston back years.

2. Moses Malone to the Philadelphia 76ers (1982)

If one trade defines regret for the Rockets, it is this one. In 1982, Houston traded Moses Malone, then the reigning NBA MVP, to the Philadelphia 76ers for Caldwell Jones and a 1983 first-round pick.

Malone wasted no time proving his greatness. The very next season, he won another MVP award and led the Sixers to the 1983 NBA Championship. The Rockets, meanwhile, got minimal production from Jones and no lasting value from the draft pick.

This trade remains, by nearly every measure, the worst transaction in franchise history, often cited alongside the NBA’s most regrettable deals of all time.

3. The Charles Barkley Trade (1996)

In the mid-1990s, the Rockets were chasing another championship run. With Hakeem Olajuwon and Clyde Drexler already in place, Houston traded for Charles Barkley, sending Robert Horry, Sam Cassell, and a second-round pick to Phoenix.

At first glance, it looked like a power move to create a superteam. But Barkley was past his prime, and his arrival disrupted the team’s chemistry. The Rockets never returned to the NBA Finals and soon began a slow decline.

Losing Horry and Cassell, both of whom went on to win multiple titles elsewhere, only amplified the mistake. Barkley’s presence brought short-term headlines but little long-term success.

4. Nicolas Batum on Draft Night (2008)

Draft-night trades often go unnoticed until years later, and this one aged poorly for Houston. In 2008, the Rockets selected Nicolas Batum with the 25th overall pick but immediately traded him to the Portland Trail Blazers for Joey Dorsey and Donte Greene.

Batum developed into a reliable two-way wing, known for his defense and perimeter shooting. Dorsey and Greene, on the other hand, barely made an impact in Houston.

This wasn’t the kind of catastrophic move that costs championships, but it was a missed opportunity: one that typified the team’s struggles to build depth during the late 2000s.

5. Terrence Williams Trade (2010)

The Terrence Williams trade is a cautionary tale about betting on unrealized potential. In 2010, Houston acquired the athletic but inconsistent forward from the New Jersey Nets as part of a three-team deal.

The Rockets gave up a protected 2012 first-round pick in exchange, expecting Williams to blossom into a high-energy contributor. Instead, he averaged 4.5 points in just 12 games before being released.

Former general manager Daryl Morey later admitted it was one of his worst moves, acknowledging that the gamble on Williams’ upside simply didn’t work out.

From Lessons to Legacy

Every franchise has its missteps, but Houston’s most painful trades share a common thread: the loss of long-term stars for short-term returns. From Elvin Hayes to Moses Malone, the Rockets have at times traded away the very players who defined their era.

In today’s NBA, where teams like Dallas are reeling from internal problems and questionable decisions, these reminders from Houston’s past feel timely. Mistakes at the top can alter everything; not just for a season, but for generations.

Fortunately, under Ime Udoka and Rafael Stone, the modern Rockets seem to have learned from history. Their recent trades have been calculated, their young core is thriving, and their future appears secure.

Even so, Houston fans will never forget the lessons written in those trades. Because in this league, one wrong move can reflect for decades.

© Troy Taormina-Imagn Images