Rafael Stone has earned plenty of credit for the way he’s handled the Rockets, but there’s one area where the pattern is getting hard to ignore: Houston keeps treating second-round picks like loose change.
That was on display again in the Dorian Finney-Smith dump, when Stone sent the Hornets three second-round picks just to take on his contract, even though it expires via a Team Option next summer. There are possible explanations.
Maybe the Rockets were trying to duck the second apron. Maybe they wanted to avoid the repeater tax before Amen Thompson was extended.
Maybe they’re expecting a Traded Player Exception to come out of it, and if they use that exception, the move will look a lot better in hindsight.
But even with those possibilities on the table, the larger trend is still there. This wasn’t the first time Stone has used second-round capital to clean up a mess.
He also sent second-round picks to dump Usman Garuba and TyTy Washington. And that raises a real question about how Houston values the back half of the draft.
Stone’s track record suggests he trusts the top of the draft more than the margins. Tari Eason came at 17, and Alperen Sengun at 16, and those are the kinds of picks that can shape a franchise.
But since then, Houston hasn’t really found a player late in the first round or early in the second who has changed the team’s outlook. Josh Christopher, as the article puts it, felt tied to his relationship with Jalen Green, while TyTy Washington looked like a choice made when the options ran thin.
Garuba, by contrast, was an inspired swing that just didn’t hit.
That’s part of why the second-round issue stands out. Stone’s reputation leans heavily on finding Eason and Sengun in the middle of the first round, and that matters.
But it would help a lot if Houston had gotten even one meaningful hit at the end of the first or the start of the second. The article even notes that this is what was meant by saying Stone needed Bruce Thornton to work out, though that was an overstatement.
Still, the point remains: a second-round success would change the perception around him in a big way.
The Rockets have also spent heavily in other places. Stone gave up five second-round picks for Kevin Durant, and he shed three more in the five-team deal that brought Dillon Brooks to Houston.
Those moves can be defended on their own terms. Maybe they had to happen.
But it’s still frustrating to watch second-rounders disappear in deals that move bad contracts or clear space, while other teams use those picks to add real value.
That’s the heart of the complaint. Not that Stone is a bad general manager - far from it.
He signed Tari Eason below market this summer and did the same for Marcus Smart, and he’s shown real skill in negotiations. He’s still in good standing overall.
But if the Rockets are going to keep spending second-round picks, they need to start valuing them like assets instead of afterthoughts.
The draft’s second round is a gamble, sure. But if you’re going to take the shot, why not take the best one available?
In Other News...
Rockets Just Sent A Strong Message About Bruce Thornton
Bruce Thorntons path to Houston has moved from draft-night asset to signed rookie, with the Rockets using the second-round pick exception to lock in the former Ohio State standout on a four-year NBA contract. It is another small but meaningful sign that the team values the guard it acquired in a draft-day trade with the Knicks, a move that helped Houston climb into position to bring him aboard.
The structure of the deal leaves room for the Rockets to keep Thornton on a development track while preserving flexibility, and his next stop will be Summer League in Las Vegas. For a player who arrived with a strong college rsum and a reputation for production, the real question now is how quickly he can turn that momentum into a role worth protecting in a crowded Houston backcourt. [Read more 🡒]
