Yao Ming: How He Can Help the Houston Rockets This Year
I'm all for hope and optimism in the face of tragic (in the context of sports) adversity, but sometimes it makes more sense to be coldly pragmatic.
For the Houston Rockets front office, this is one of those times. In the aftermath of Yao Mingโs most recent season-ending injury, it's pretty clear that his time as a productive, full-time NBA player has all but come to an end.
Thanks to a variety of severe foot and leg injuries, Yaoโs played more than 57 games just once in the past six seasons and has now lost the entirety of each of the last two (the five games he played this year donโt really count).
Itโs a difficult realization and a heartbreaking end for a hardworking and supremely talented playerโbut unfortunately, he is a snake-bitten player with the only NBA team heโs ever known.
However, as tends to be the case in big business, matters of human interest must be placed on the back burner. Despite being unable to take the floor again this season, Yao remains one of the NBAโs most valuable financial assets.ย
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According to recent reports, GM Daryl Morey is looking into trading Yao, whose expiring contract brings with it $17.7 million in salary cap relief and $8 million in insurance savings at seasonโs end and could return some quality pieces.
After stumbling to a 3-10 start, the Rockets appear to have righted the ship and are on the ascendancy in the Western Conference. Theyโve won 13 of their last 20 games and sit just a game and a half out of a playoff spot and 3.5 out of sixth place in the West, despite having gotten a total of just 90 minutes out of 23.7 percent of their 2010-11 payroll (Yao).
It's important to realize that the Rockets have managed to get back into the playoff hunt by taking advantage of a soft patch in their schedule. Of the seven losses theyโve suffered in their last 20 games, five (at home to Miami, and on the road to Dallas, Chicago, OKC and Portland) have come against quality opposition, while the same can only be said of four of their 13 wins (home wins over OKC, the Lakers and a pair of 16-point wins over the Grizzlies) over that period.
The Rockets are about to embark upon the most brutal stretch on their schedule: Over the next two weeks (beginning tonight at 9:00 p.m. Eastern), they will play at Denver, host Portland, go to Orlando, host Utah, go to Boston, host OKC and the Hornets and travel to Atlanta. Yikes!
If the top-shelf competition doesnโt kill you, that brutal travel schedule might. And while the schedule does ease up a (tiny) bit in mid-January, the Rockets still have to host the Magic on the 22nd and kick off a four-game-in-seven-night trip to Dallas, San Antonio, L.A. (to play the Lakers) and Utah, beginning on January 27.
The Rockets have done an excellent job of banding together in the aftermath of Yaoโs injury, playing solid ball and beating less-talented teams.
Heading into what promises to be a hellish month, if the Rockets plan to continue their ascent in the Westโnot a crazy notion given the Blazersโ (1.5 games ahead) injury woes, the Hornetsโ (3.5 ahead) lackluster play after a strong start and the likelihood that the Nuggets (3.5 ahead) will be in rebuilding mode by late Februaryโtheyโre going to have to get something out of their near-$18 million investment.
The teamโs needs are clear: Defense and another big body on the inside. The time has come to trade Yao Ming and build a team around the guys that are actually on the floor.
Other than the 7โ6โ elephant in the room (I realize thatโs not a large elephant, but humor me), the Rockets have plenty of cause for optimism.
This team boasts a number of very talented pieces: an exceptional rebounder and inside scorer (Luis Scola), a two-guard with range that moves without the ball and gets to the line (Kevin Martin), a pair of solid perimeter defenders (Shane Battier and Courtney Lee) and perhaps the NBAโs best PG duo (Aaron Brooks and Kyle Lowry)โall of whom are signed to reasonable, or at least non-cap-killing, contracts.
This is a great supporting cast with (understandably) no superstar to support.
Itโs unlikely that at this point the Rockets will make a run at any of the leagueโs biggest names. However, all season, the Rockets have ranked near the bottom of the league in terms of defense: They currently rank seventhย worst (tied with the Clippers) in points allowed per 100 possessions (106.3), fourthย worst in forcing turnovers (12.7 per 100 possessions) and allow 21.8 field goal attempts per game โat the rim.โ
Also, they've been consistently lit up by opposing 2/3โs, particularly those that like to put the ball on the floor. Through nine weeks, Al Harrington (28), Manu Ginobili (28), Rudy Gay (29), Kevin Durant (32โthis oneโs not too bad), Monta Ellis (46 and 44โthese ones are), Dwyane Wade (45) and DeMar DeRozan (37, a career high) have all torched the Rockets for scoring nights well in excess of their season averages.
Given the magnitude of the financial relief Yaoโs contract will provide, the Rocketsโ front office should have little trouble parlaying the big man into an experienced defender with some offensive skills who should fit right in with the quality cast thatโs already in place.ย
I speak, of course, of Detroit Pistons veteran Tayshaun Prince, who is by all accounts a good guy (Iโm discounting his early-season squabbles with Pistons coach John Keusterโthat situation seems pretty toxic); he is a great teammate and an excellent defender whoโs got plenty of postseason experience (six trips to the conference finals, two to the Finals), where he's guarded elite wing players (Kobe Bryant, Paul Pierce, Dwyane Wade) and won a ring in 2004 as an integral part of a โsuperstar-lessโ team.
Now, I donโt want to waste a bunch of time doing a whole โPicasso of the Trade Machineโ bit, butย this deal sending Yao ($17.7 million off the books this summer, $8 million in insurance) to the Pistonsโwho are paying roughly $65 million over the next two years to Rip Hamilton, Ben Gordon and Charlie Villanueva and would welcome any reliefโin exchange for Prince (whoโs got an $11.1 million expiring contract of his own) and Jason Maxiell (owed $5 million this year and next, with a $5 million option for 2012-13) appears to make sense for both sides.
Acquiring Prince would not only provide the Rockets with a major upgrade at the defensive end against slashing wings, it would lighten the offensive load at the 3 spot, currently filled by Shane Battier (8.5 ppg) and Chase Budinger (8.2 ppg).
Prince is currently averaging 14.1 ppg while hitting 49.5 percent from the field and 46.4 percent from beyond the arc, while attempting nearly three shots per game "at the rim," which he's converted at a 77.8 percent clip.
If Prince fits in well and the Rockets decide they'd like to retain his services, theyโll likely be able to do so at a lower cost. Whatever the particulars of the new CBA, itโs almost universally agreed upon that the huge salaries bestowed upon the leagueโs second- and third-tier players (like $11 million a year for Tayshaun Prince) are things of the past.ย
If it turns out that Prince is not a good fit, the Rockets could simply let him walk and realize more than 60 percent of the cap relief theyโd have received from Yao's (post-insurance payout) expiring deal.ย
Throw in 6โ7โ, 260-lb Jason Maxiell, whoโs shown the ability to be an effective rebounder (rebound rate of at least 13.6 each of the three years prior to this one), and the Rockets have upgraded and/or added depth at two areas of need without taking on any sizable, long-term financial obligations.
Meanwhile, the Pistons, who will not be contending for anything of note in the foreseeable future, would get financial value (cap relief/insurance from Yao, shedding $5 million a year on Maxiell) in exchange for one of their big-money guys whoโs a virtual lock to walk as a free agent this summer.ย
Plus, even if such a deal were to go down, who's to say Yao doesn't wind up in the Rockets' red and white again in the not-too-distant future?
To read more NBA content that's exhaustively researched and written with care, please visitย Hardwood Hype.

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