Rockets Just Made A Telling Tari Eason Decision

With key qualifying offers on the table, the Rockets and Nuggets are positioning to secure their rising talents, Tari Eason and Spencer Jones, for future seasons.

In the world of NBA roster moves, the Houston Rockets are making a strategic play by planning to extend a qualifying offer to forward Tari Eason. According to league insiders, this move will officially set Eason up as a restricted free agent just before other teams can start vying for his talents on June 30 at 5:00 pm CT.

What does this mean for the Rockets? Essentially, they hold the power to match any offer that Eason might receive from other teams, keeping him within their ranks if they choose.

Now, let's break down the financials. Eason's qualifying offer is pegged at $8,014,182, a one-year deal that comes with an implied no-trade clause.

While his cap hold is a sizable $17,027,298, it doesn't pose much of an issue since the Rockets are already projected to be well over the salary cap. This move is more about strategic positioning than financial maneuvering.

Eason, the 17th pick from the 2022 draft, has shown his worth on the court. Over the 2025/26 season, he posted solid numbers: averaging 10.5 points, 6.3 rebounds, and 1.2 steals per game.

He shot .416 from the field, .358 from beyond the arc, and .776 from the free-throw line. With 60 regular season appearances, including 34 starts, Eason logged 25.8 minutes per game, demonstrating his value as a reliable contributor.

Meanwhile, in Denver, the Nuggets are making their own moves. They plan to issue a qualifying offer to Spencer Jones, a player who found his stride amidst a flurry of injuries last season.

Jones, initially undrafted, became a key rotation player for the Nuggets, averaging 5.5 points and 3.3 rebounds per game. His shooting from long range was particularly impressive, hitting 39.6% from deep across 64 games, playing 22.7 minutes per contest.

Denver seems confident in retaining Jones, offering him a qualifying deal worth $2.65 million, which matches his cap hold. It's a savvy move to keep a dependable shooter in their rotation, especially one who has proven his ability to step up when the team needed him most.

Both the Rockets and the Nuggets are making calculated decisions to maintain and potentially enhance their rosters, setting the stage for an intriguing offseason as teams jockey for talent and position.

In Other News...

Nuggets May Be Losing A Shooting Fix They Can't Afford To Replace

Tim Hardaway Jr. gave Denver the kind of perimeter pop the roster has been short on in recent years, and his fit was obvious during a strong season in Nuggets colors. But even with that value, the franchises financial picture makes a clean retention plan tough, which is exactly the problem when a useful shooting specialist hits free agency.

The squeeze gets tighter if Denver decides it needs to move Cam Johnson for cap relief, a step that would chip away at the teams three-point depth even further. If those moves come to pass, the Nuggets would be leaning harder on internal volume from Peyton Watson, Christian Braun, Aaron Gordon and Nikola Jokic to keep the floor spaced, and that is a lot to ask when the roster already looks thin in the one area it can least afford to lose. [Read more 🡒]

Nuggets Just Sent A Surprising Message About Jalen Pickett's Future

Jalen Picketts place in Denver has taken a sharp turn after a brief but meaningful run with the Nuggets. The 32nd pick in the 2023 draft has appeared in 126 games for the team, a sign that the organization saw enough in him to keep developing him as a backcourt piece, even if his role never fully settled into something permanent.

Now the Nuggets are signaling a different direction as they sort through their guard rotation and look ahead to the offseason. Moving on from Pickett opens another question in a backcourt that already needs more handling and depth, and it leaves Denver weighing how to fill those minutes as it continues reshaping the roster around its core. [Read more 🡒]

Nuggets Pursuit Of Jaylen Brown Just Hit A Brutal Reality Check

Denvers interest in Jaylen Brown has been real enough to keep the idea alive, but the market around him has quickly made the conversation more theoretical than practical. Bostons stance has already put a heavy price tag on any potential deal, and for a Nuggets team built around contending now, the challenge is figuring out whether a swing that big still makes sense.

The bigger picture in Denver is still centered on Nikola Jokic, who remains the franchises anchor and, according to reports, is committed to staying despite the contract uncertainty hanging over the situation. With that as the priority, the Brown pursuit has cooled, and for the moment a move that once sounded intriguing now looks increasingly out of reach. [Read more 🡒]