1. Welcome! Please take a few seconds to create your free account to post threads, make some friends, remove a few ads while surfing and much more. ClutchFans has been bringing fans together to talk Houston Sports since 1996. Join us!

Chron.com: Rockets prep for new home, new season [Season Preview}

Discussion in 'Houston Rockets: Game Action & Roster Moves' started by codell, Oct 25, 2003.

  1. codell

    codell Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Aug 26, 2002
    Messages:
    19,312
    Likes Received:
    710
    http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/sports/bk/bkn/rox/2179731

    By JONATHAN FEIGEN
    Copyright 2003 Houston Chronicle

    Jeff Van Gundy would not pose for this picture.

    He explained that he was not trying to be difficult. He understood the concept and that he is by far the most high-profile addition to the Rockets. He might even spend the buck and a half and to check out whoever does grace the cover of this section. But no, he would not be able to pose.

    Van Gundy does not have much interest in drawing attention to himself. He does no television show, no radio show, no commercials. He will not be featured on the cover of the Rockets' media guide.

    But it was not humility that inspired his objection to playing cover model.

    Even his lament, "I'm so tired of talking about myself" did not indicate his refusal to smile and say cheese.

    Instead, he insisted, "It's not about me."

    The Rockets, he decided, will not be new and improved if the most meaningful change is the guy in the suit.

    Instead, the Rockets can only make meaningful strides if they change from within. Or -- though he would never put it this way -- most of the faces remain the same, but the time has come for the Rockets to be remade in his all-business, bottom-line image.

    "A coaching change brings no change," Van Gundy said. "Without change, there will not be a change of results. We have to change as a group. It's the same core group. It's not the coach who is going to be the catalyst of change. It's going to be the players."

    Everything around the Rockets would seem different. In addition to Van Gundy becoming the first new Rockets coach in a dozen years, there is an entirely new staff. There has been a new training camp site and practice facility. There is a new arena and arena announcer. There are new colors, uniforms and logo. Practices, procedures and rules around the team have changed. Even the charter jet that carries the Rockets to and from road games is new.

    But wearing a red, bleeding "R" probably won't intimidate the Spurs. And the Lakers have seen new arenas before.

    Though most of the changes have little to do with the coaching change, Van Gundy's influence is everywhere. But after studying all things Rockets, he became convinced that for the team to really change and break out of a four-year residence in the lottery, the change must come from within.

    The Rockets have kept their nucleus together with far greater patience -- or stubbornness, depending on one's perspective -- than most teams that have received so little in return. Steve Francis, Cuttino Mobley, Maurice Taylor, Kelvin Cato and Moochie Norris are going into their fourth season together. All but Taylor have been together longer than that, through the Rockets' lottery streak. Only Mobley remains from the Rockets' last playoff team.

    "It's not anymore about what has happened to them ... but how they deal with what happened to them," Van Gundy said. "We've been in the lottery four straight years. Now what?

    "Losing can have an unbelievably negative or positive effect. Negatively, you can become resigned to your fate. Or positively, you can become urgent and hungry to succeed. I hope we're the latter.

    "You never know which comes first, winning or the right attitude. I know there is less difference between players and teams in terms of talent. There's a much bigger difference in terms of chemistry and team spirit. Winning teams always have the right attitude. Right chemistry and right team spirit. That's harder to find in the NBA."

    That might come. For now, the Rockets' most noticeable change has been on the bench.

    "Some of these guys have been here for quite a while," center Yao Ming said. "But I don't think to have a complete makeover is the answer. What we have to work on is fixing the weak points that we have instead of changing our entire direction. We have to get better."


    Van Gundy couldn't have said it better. But that is not a coincidence. Increasingly, the Rockets have started to sound like their coach, to touch on his favorite themes. Francis in particular has begun to describe the Rockets, their strengths and weaknesses, with the same terse terms as Van Gundy.

    Van Gundy has labeled Yao and Francis his best players and said getting a team to buy into the need for change "really falls on the best players.

    "Some things are universally true," Van Gundy said. "One of the great universal truths in the NBA is that the best players and the head coach set a tone, an environment on how things are going to be, what the environment is and the culture is, a winning environment or a losing culture, a disciplined culture, a loose culture. That responsibility falls to the head coach and the best players to form a bond. You have one goal, one voice, one vision."

    In some ways, that could have been difficult for Francis and Yao, who remain loyal to former Rockets coach Rudy Tomjanovich. They have found, however, that many of Van Gundy's values are the same as Tomjanovich's.

    The Rockets have undergone changes. But none seems to be change for change's sake. The result seems to allow players to believe that Van Gundy's way will work without having to feel as if they are betraying Tomjanovich.

    "They built us the right way," Francis said. "Not to take anything away from coach Van Gundy, but they basically built the nucleus of this team over the past four or five years. We've been trained for four or five years to be in this situation. This is a good situation to show what we've learned the past four seasons and what we're learning this season and to put it together. This is the year we should make some noise."

    Francis is in many ways a fitting symbol for the Rockets' four years of sometimes-awkward rebuilding and their hopes to finally take the next step.

    Van Gundy, however, has happily given Francis the ball, then compared him to a player he loved coaching as much as any.

    "You know how people, whenever you're coming into a new situation, they're always trying to pollute your mind with the negativity?" Van Gundy said. "That's why I've learned to just wait and see. I'll go by what I see versus what I hear. I had a great experience back when I was the Knicks' coach. We traded for Larry Johnson and a couple of people called and said, `You're not going to like him.' But there was no one I enjoyed coaching more than him. No one. So I learned back then just to go with what I see, and it's been the same thing with Steve.

    "What I heard was not true. He can defend and he can make good decisions. I don't know if he's a point guard or a two guard. All I know is that his ability transcends a position, and he can be both. He's a player. A lot of guys have a position, but they can't play. But when you're a player, you can play."

    If Francis' role is not an issue, and Yao's never was, their next job is to influence their team. Yao is a part of the usual locker-room banter. But he is hardly outspoken. Francis has often tried to be more of an influence, vocal or not, with mixed results.

    "Maybe not in the traditional sense of having to be outspoken, but your best players are always your leaders," Van Gundy said. "So they're going to set the tone. People talk about leadership, and it's always in the positive sense, but sometimes it's not. Sometimes your leaders are going to lead you in a negative direction.

    "So it's up to our best players to lead us positively. Some may do it more vocally and some may do it by example. That's why it's so important for Steve, Yao, Jimmy (Jackson) and Cuttino to not only play the right way, but to practice the right way."


    As much as his best players might lead, however, Van Gundy's teams are in many ways led by Van Gundy. His voice resonates. His voice becomes his players' voice.

    "I've been letting them feel their way through what Jeff wants," Rockets assistant coach and former Knicks star Patrick Ewing said. "I think it's important they develop a very good relationship with Jeff. Somewhere down the line I see myself sitting down and talking to Steve and Cuttino and the rest of the guys."

    But this is a different team than any Van Gundy has coached. He is different, too. When he took over the Knicks during the 1995-96 season, he was roughly the same age as his players. When he started as a Knicks assistant in 1989, he was younger than many. At 41, with a wife, Kim, and 7-year-old daughter, Mattie, he not only is of a different generation than Rockets players, his life is at a different stage.

    "The group is going to be a challenging group," Van Gundy said. "It's a different group than I've ever coached. I feel like for the first time there's an age gap. I'm around younger men. I told one of them I was going to be his Father Flanagan. He looked like I had four eyes. He had no idea.

    "The guys in New York, I was either their age or near their age. They were married, had kids. It was a different environment. These guys, I really have liked. You find out different doesn't mean better or worse. It just means different."

    He also has noticed the difference in the Rockets' relationships. They might not be the fraternity brothers taking offseason vacations together any longer, but they remain pretty buddy-buddy. Van Gundy noticed, but he does not consider that quality relevant to anything else.

    "I've never cared about how they hang," he said. "It's all about team chemistry. It's how they play together on the floor, how tough they are, if they'll work and share and sacrifice. If they like each other, that's a bonus. I don't think it has anything to do with performance. Some of the best teams I've had there have been some off the court very different personalities that probably didn't see eye to eye. But on the court, they played."

    Van Gundy might be different, too. Friends and former players have advised him to try to enjoy the good times more.

    "The only thing I missed about the NBA was the competition and the camaraderie," Van Gundy said. "You can never simulate that in any other aspect of your life. I was tight with Mike (Fratello) and Marv (Albert). But it's different. But I feel really good after a year and a half (away).

    "I wasn't very good (as a television analyst), but I did like it. That was the biggest thing I learned. I can enjoy my life without coaching. That was the biggest thing. It ends for everybody. How long I stay in Houston will be directly determined by how we play, as it should be. It feels good to not have that added pressure. There is enough pressure. It feels good."


    As much as coaches and players have always said that the real pressure is the pressure they put on themselves, in Van Gundy's case, it really seems true. He said in his first news conference that he missed "the misery." He has said he will see the negatives when they are there and when they're not there.

    But the Rockets desperately needed to improve their attention to detail. As important, they finally seem to know it.

    "It wasn't about our coach," Mobley said. "It was about us being professional and our attention to detail, things such as that. There were things Rudy told us to do and as a team we forgot it or did this or that instead. As a team, we learned from that. Being together for four years, our fifth year now with me and Steve, Cato, Mo, Moochie, we have to represent.

    "Like coach said, we have to believe like him. Think big. That's our whole (motto.) I'm excited. I'm ready for us to have a really good season because we owe Houston that."

    Perhaps Van Gundy won't have to be the face of the Rockets. Perhaps he is just another change around them.

    Instead of getting the Rockets to look at him, Van Gundy has tried to get them to look at themselves, then make the changes that really matter.

    "We have the pieces," Norris said. "We have the tools to get it done. We have the same players. We have to make it happen. We have to get it done. We have to take care of business. We haven't been in the playoffs. I want to see that next level.

    "It's going to be up to us. We can't look anywhere but in the mirror."
     
  2. codell

    codell Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Aug 26, 2002
    Messages:
    19,312
    Likes Received:
    710
    Chronicle Writers' Picks


    FRAN BLINEBURY

    MIDWEST Spurs
    PACIFIC Lakers
    CENTRAL Pistons
    ATLANTIC Pistons
    WEST CHAMP Lakers
    EAST CHAMP Nets
    NBA CHAMP Lakers

    JOHN P. LOPEZ

    MIDWEST Spurs
    PACIFIC Lakers
    CENTRAL Pistons
    ATLANTIC Nets
    WEST CHAMP Spurs
    EAST CHAMP Pistons
    NBA CHAMP Spurs

    JONATHAN FEIGEN

    MIDWEST Mavericks
    PACIFIC Lakers
    CENTRAL Pistons
    ATLANTIC Nets
    WEST CHAMP Lakers
    EAST CHAMP Pistons
    NBA CHAMP Lakers

    MICHAEL MURPHY

    MIDWEST Spurs
    PACIFIC Lakers
    CENTRAL Pacers
    ATLANTIC Nets
    WEST CHAMP Lakers
    EAST CHAMP Pacers
    NBA CHAMP Lakers


    Apparently, Fran thinks the Pistons are good enough to win TWO different divisions. Heh. :)
     
  3. Texas Stoke

    Texas Stoke Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Aug 16, 2002
    Messages:
    5,743
    Likes Received:
    18
    i clicked on this thread and covered my eyes and scrolled down.

    i want to read this rocket preview on a beautiful sunday morning when im on the most comfortable seat in the house. 'flush...flush...hold on i'll be out in a minute" you know what im saying.
     
  4. SoSoDef76

    SoSoDef76 Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Jul 8, 2002
    Messages:
    655
    Likes Received:
    20
  5. Just B

    Just B Member

    Joined:
    Dec 28, 2002
    Messages:
    1,111
    Likes Received:
    0
    Good to hear that everyone sounds like they're starting to grow on each other. JVG and Steve are on the same page, "the guards" and Yao are on the same page.....looks like we're finally getting everything together.:)
     
  6. acrophobia98

    acrophobia98 Member

    Joined:
    Jun 30, 2002
    Messages:
    1,155
    Likes Received:
    0
    I agree. Mind you, I am not sure whether I am too sensitive or not. Mobley did not include Yao in his comment, "Being together for four years, our fifth year now with me and Steve, Cato, Mo, Moochie, we have to represent."

    I don't know what he was thinking then while I have no big problem with the way Mobley played in the last few games. My assessment was, he just came off injury and not well fit into the system. I hope I read that correctly and his acceptance of going inside. (In fact, I recalled he made a couple of good post pass to Yao in the Spur game.)

    :(
     
  7. keep_rudy

    keep_rudy Member

    Joined:
    May 23, 2003
    Messages:
    156
    Likes Received:
    0
    You need to read the words in context. When Cat mentioned these players, he was talking about they played together for 4 years and haven't been in playoffs. Yao is just in his 2nd year.
     
  8. codell

    codell Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Aug 26, 2002
    Messages:
    19,312
    Likes Received:
    710
    This was not on the Chronicle' website, but was in the kickass preview section this morning (awesome preview section this year by the Chronicle. Kudos to them):

    Michael Murphy's Predictions:

    1. Lakers
    2. Spurs
    3. Mavericks
    4. Kings
    5. Timberwolves
    6. Trail Blazers
    7. Suns
    8. Seattle
    9. Houston Rockets

    Coach:
    Jeff Van Gundy (first season with Rockets, 248-172 in six seasons overall).

    Last year: 43-39, fifth in Midwest Division.

    What's new: 6-10 C John Amaechi (trade, 2.0 ppg, 1.5 rpg with Utah); 6-6 SG/SF Jim Jackson (FA, 7.7 ppg, 4.2 rpg with Sacramento); 6-6 SG Eric Piatkowski (FA 9.7 ppg with LA Clippers); 6-5 SF Adrian Griffin (FA, 4.4 ppg, 3.6 rpg with Dallas).

    What's improved: Van Gundy's approach is to feature Yao Ming much more, which has to be a better idea than what's been happening the last few years. Yao is the most skilled big man in the league, and his passing and rebounding will only help everyone else. Steve Francis and Cuttino Mobley are talents, but they're going to chafe under the new regimer.

    Bottom line: Van Gundy brings a meticulous and deliberate game plan, and you have to wonder how his discipline-challenged players will react. The Rockets reloaded, but did they do enough to stay competitive in the West?

    Prediction: Fourth in Midwest Division.

    10. Clippers
    11. Grizzlies
    12. Warriors
    13. Jazz
    14. Nuggets

    ----------------------------------------------------------

    Im slightly suprised that Murphy has us picked to finish 9th, seeing as how we finished 1 game out of the 8th spot, with a much stronger Utah team making the playoffs. Seattle passing us up?? Based on what Murph??
     
  9. codell

    codell Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Aug 26, 2002
    Messages:
    19,312
    Likes Received:
    710
    Schedule Analysis
    by Jonathan Feigen


    Other than the clothes they wear and the arena they call home, this season's Rockets do not look much different from last season's Rockets.

    This makes sense, since Jeff Van Gundy said they only real change must be made by the players, and a few of the players have changed. Of the additions, Erick Piatkowski and Adrian Griffin have been hurt for most or all of the preseason.

    With that in mind, there should be little suprise that the prognostication for this season, 44-38, is almost identical to last season's expected and eventual finish, 43-39. That would have been good enough for a playoff spot last season and might be this season.

    The Rockets, however, have reached the point that predicting their season is particularly dicey. There are stil some young players, particularly Yao Ming, with ample potential yet to be fully realized.

    That is enough reason for Rockets fans to hope for growth. But their greatest need has been consistency, from quarter to quarter and game to game. Last season, they were capable of incredible highs and franchise record-setting lows. As much as they might be addressing the technical details, they might be able to improe their record most by just growing into a more dependable team. That, however, could be the most difficult step to predict.

    October/November: On the road again

    16 games (6 home, 10 road)

    The Rockets were an awful road team last season and will test their improvement in that area quickly. The season's longest road trip, a five-game West swing, will end November, but if the Rockets can take care of their first games in Toyota Center, there are enough wins on the road to start well enough.

    Predicted record: 8-8

    December: Back-to-back attack

    15 games (8 home, 7 road)

    The Rockets will get a pretty good idea what contenders really look like with consecutive games against the Spurs and the ABC season debut against the Lakers on Christmas Day. They also will face East contenders Philadelphia and Detroit. But the measure of the month could be three back-to-backs. They play teams they should beat in two of the back-to-backs, Cleveland and Denver, but will be in trouble if they let the schedule beat tem.

    Predicted record: 8-7 Overall: 16-15

    January: Gardent party

    15 games (7 home, 8 road)

    Jeff Van Gundy will return to Madison Square Garden. But like his first trip back to the New York area, November's journey to New Jersey, there won't be much time to visit on the second half of a back-to-back. The Rockets play three back-to-backs, with all six games on the road. If that will not test them enough, the month ends with the Kings and Nets at Toyota Center.

    Predicted record: 8-7 Overall: 24-22

    Febuary: Homeward bound

    13 games (9 home, 4 road)

    If the Rockets can master their home court, they can begin to build a cusion on .500. The Lakers and Spurs are in Houston before the All-Star break, which is just as well considering the Rockets always seems to lose interest on the days before the break, a problem the schedule should prevent. The back-to-backs again include games they must win, with two finishing against the Hawks and one against the Cavaliers.

    Predicted record: 8-5 Overall: 32-27

    March: Best of the West

    14 games (7 home, 7 road)

    The Rockets begin the month against three of the five expected Western Conference leaders, the Lakers, Mavericks and Timberwolves. But the key could be a give-game homestand, the longest of the season. The Rockets might have to build a running start for the rest of the season with that homestand. After playing the Suns on March 15 at Toyota Center, they get three days off before playing 11 of the season's remaining 16 games on the road.

    Predicted record: 7-7 Overall: 39-34

    April: Down the stretch

    9 games (3 home, 6 road)

    When the schedule came out, the Rockets first noticed the road games on Thanksgiving and Christmas. But soon after, attention was drawn to a brutal stretch run, almost entirely on the road before finising with a home game against the loaded Mavericks. Thre are two back-to-backs, with all four games on the road. But if some of the teams fighting for playoff spots - the Clippers, Warriors and Sonics - have fallen off by then, the season's finish might not be as tough as it now seems.

    Predicted record: 5-4

    Overall: 44-38
     
  10. Visagial

    Visagial Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Nov 16, 2002
    Messages:
    1,462
    Likes Received:
    29
    Pretty sound schedule analysis. Until we can show that we can play with the big boys, it's hard to argue our record is going to be much better than that.
     
  11. Troy McClure

    Troy McClure Member

    Joined:
    Jan 13, 2003
    Messages:
    655
    Likes Received:
    0
    Was there a poster?
     
  12. rockets-#1

    rockets-#1 Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Jul 22, 2002
    Messages:
    3,895
    Likes Received:
    9
    That prediction by Michael Murphy really pisses me off. He is a f*cking idiot!
     
  13. DavidS

    DavidS Contributing Member

    Joined:
    May 17, 2000
    Messages:
    8,605
    Likes Received:
    0
    There's something about that Laker predictions from all these writers that makes me think otherwise. Just because of Malone and Payton's past performance doesn't automatically mean that they can play at the same level. They are just looking at the "HOFer names" and then just giving the title to them? What's wrong with this picture?

    Here's what we can expect...
    All teams that play against the Lakers will NOT take them for granted. The Lakers will get every teams BEST effort. With that best effort, can the old legs of Malone, Shaq and Payton keep up with the young legs of the Spurs, Mavs, Suns, Wolves, and Rox? Defensively, they WILL have a problem. And offensively, there's only ONE ball, and Malone and Payton aren't the same players they were in the past.

    Kobe will have distractions.

    I expect a few fights with the Lakers (ego fights if they start a losing streak). Malone is the hot head of the bunch. Payton is close. Kobe is the king of the "ego."

    It's going to be a pleasure to watch these guys loose. They are trying to hold on by buying the services of the "old greats."

    I wouldn't be surprized if LA tries to make a play for LeBron in a few years. "Come to LA! Be a star! Bling, bling!" Yada, yada, yada...
     
  14. king911

    king911 Member

    Joined:
    Sep 29, 2003
    Messages:
    91
    Likes Received:
    0
    When hasn't Kobe been distracted? With the whole supposed Shaq-Kobe "feud".

    Please tell me when Malone has gotten in a fight with teammates. He won't be fighting anyone if LA is winning. Hence, the whole reason he went to LA. Malone isn't really a hot head. When has he ever gone nuts? Yes, he cheap shots people from time to time, but he doesn't do it with a pyscho look on his face ala Ron Artest. You seem to just make assumptions out of your ass, and claim them to be fact.

    The Lakers might "loose", but I don't think they will LOSE that often.
     
  15. SLA

    SLA Member

    Joined:
    Dec 19, 2002
    Messages:
    3,021
    Likes Received:
    0
    Why did they put us at #9?!?!? We are hometown...uhh..it will be very disappointing if we don't make the playoffs..

    And Nuggets are last in West? Why? I think they're better than the Jazz at least...maybe better than the Warriors too.

    I like this preview! ;)

    JVG is da man!
     
  16. DavidS

    DavidS Contributing Member

    Joined:
    May 17, 2000
    Messages:
    8,605
    Likes Received:
    0
    Alleged rape charge distractions are different than Shaq-Kobe "feuds."
     
  17. DavidS

    DavidS Contributing Member

    Joined:
    May 17, 2000
    Messages:
    8,605
    Likes Received:
    0
    I'm not taking about teammates. I'm takling about altercations with oppoents. And I'm not talking about all-out brawls, either.

    It will be understandable with the expecations of the Lakers being so high, with so much "talnet." I mean, geeesh. The expecations have them winning the title already.
     
  18. declan32001

    declan32001 Member

    Joined:
    Aug 25, 2002
    Messages:
    2,455
    Likes Received:
    17
    I can't believe this preview hasn't been deemed worthy of a response. Feigen's usually been spot on and few ever bother to point out when Blinebury's been right.

    It's the ESPN guys that get to the guys here I guess. Hmm...

    Well I, for one, am quite ready to e-mail Mr. Feigen and thank him. In a way I think the Rocket's preview is a testimonial for Rudy and Van Gundy contributed with class.

    One problem though. Feigen's really screwed the pooch here. Murphy hedges the Chronicle's bets placing Yao the third player most likely to bust out - well behind King James. Hmm...

    Years of watching ugly basketball have taken it's toll and the Chronicle is preaching to a shrunken choir. And no one here speaks?

    Well I think it does mean something when the hometown paper puts you ninth in your conference. I doubt the NY Times would do that even if the Knicks could rank anywhere in the WC. It's bad juju.

    You'd think a foreign center couldn't blindside us again, right? Bill Fitch called Akeem "his hound dog" and we were just always happy with that young guy - eager-beaver that he was.

    We knew him better than anyone, but when people talk about "sky's the limit" potential, nobody expects what's never been done before. Dream exceded expectations on a galactic scale. No one I know in Houston was right about Olajuwon.

    If Yao's to be great, and I think he's still not ready, Feigen get's a reprieve of sorts. But I doubt him and myself.

    And I strongly disagree about 43 wins. Because of Yao. We still don't know him except he gets tired too quickly - and his added strength seems to have helped a little.

    There was some bs about Yao here last year that would have made great fodder for the talking heads after his first (scoreless) game, but they weren't looking for ammunition: 7'5", Chinese guy in the NBA was enough.

    Again, I think Yao's not ready, but I think he's more ready than we are. Damn, hook shot, drop-step, Dreamshake, soft j and he may be the best passing center in history now - but we still don't know...

    The basketball gods put this kid in the right place, his standards seem to match our own seemingly impossible ones.

    I go with this kid, here and now. 50 wins and I wish the dread I heard last and read around the country could diminish Rockets' hardcore fans anxiety.

    But even if you're giddy, I think Yao surprises us period.

    Feigen, Yao's going to laugh in your face, please be kind enough to print the quip. For the record I'll probably deserve it too.
     
  19. DavidS

    DavidS Contributing Member

    Joined:
    May 17, 2000
    Messages:
    8,605
    Likes Received:
    0
    I think the changes in the system alone is good enough for 5-7 wins. Add a 2nd year Yao and an "almost full" training camp improves our chances even more for a play-off brith...wereever that may place us (8th, 7th, 6th...whatever).
     
  20. SmeggySmeg

    SmeggySmeg Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Feb 23, 1999
    Messages:
    14,875
    Likes Received:
    119
    anyone know if the rocket shop is finished at the stadium???
     

Share This Page

  • About ClutchFans

    Since 1996, ClutchFans has been loud and proud covering the Houston Rockets, helping set an industry standard for team fan sites. The forums have been a home for Houston sports fans as well as basketball fanatics around the globe.

  • Support ClutchFans!

    If you find that ClutchFans is a valuable resource for you, please consider becoming a Supporting Member. Supporting Members can upload photos and attachments directly to their posts, customize their user title and more. Gold Supporters see zero ads!


    Upgrade Now