The biggest names already to move this NBA offseason have nudged the market in a direction Houston should be watching closely. LaMelo Ball is gone.
Giannis Antetokounmpo is gone. And if the New Orleans Pelicans ever decide Trey Murphy is next, the Rockets ought to be ready to pounce.
What makes Murphy so interesting is not just the player himself, but the way the trade landscape seems to be shifting around him. The draft compensation in both recent blockbuster deals went back to the Hornets and Bucks in large bundles, but those packages still fell short of what has been seen in past years for players like Mikal Bridges, Desmond Bane, and in the Kevin Durant-to-Phoenix deal. The newest NBA CBA appears to have tilted the board toward cheap, productive players and away from massive contracts, and that matters here.
That matters especially because New Orleans was reportedly asking for four first-round picks for Murphy at the past trade deadline. After Ball and Giannis both failed to command four outright first-rounders, the Pelicans may have to come down from that number. If they do, Houston has a clean path to making the kind of aggressive move that could change its wing rotation in a hurry.
A deal built around Reed Sheppard and two first-round picks should be on the table if that’s enough to get it done. Even if another first-rounder is needed to beat out competing offers, the Rockets should be willing to go there.
It would not be a light decision to part with Sheppard, but Murphy brings the kind of package that makes the pain easier to stomach. He checks the boxes Houston wants: a defender Ime Udoka would trust in major minutes, plus a polished three-level scorer who can space the floor. Last season, Murphy shot 37.9% from three on 8.6 attempts per game, the sort of volume and accuracy that plays anywhere, and especially in Houston.
The fit with Amen Thompson jumps out immediately. Murphy and Thompson would give the Rockets an inside-outside punch on the wings offensively, while also forming a nasty defensive duo on the perimeter. And with Alperen Sengun working from the inside as a playmaker, Murphy would have a creator who can help unlock even more of what he does best.
For now, it’s only a hypothetical. New Orleans might hold firm on its price even as the market changes around it. But if the Pelicans really do soften their stance, Houston should not hesitate.
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