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Sources: Dwight doesn't see himself as a Rocket next year

Discussion in 'Houston Rockets: Game Action & Roster Moves' started by cyberx, Mar 21, 2016.

  1. xtruroyaltyx

    xtruroyaltyx Member
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    Dwight is probably an ok guy to hang out with.
     
  2. Pen15clubber

    Pen15clubber Member

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    Till he grabs your weenie
     
  3. treyk3

    treyk3 Member

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    http://www.usatoday.com/story/sport...rd-james-harden-daryl-morey-rockets/82083178/

    Cyber Sam Amick? I wish Dwight would quit his media tour and just focus on the year. If they Rockets don't pull a miracle then leave quietly.
     
  4. PhiSlamma15

    PhiSlamma15 Member

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    True..Kobe is an *******...Jordan is an even bigger *******, Hakeem was an *******...having said that everywhere Dwight has gone there has been a problem in the end with no Rings attached as a result and nothing learned as to how to win a championship in the end...obviously the year is not over but Dwight is already looking into next year 2017 and playing like it right now
     
  5. Victorious

    Victorious Member

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    but your name is penis clubber :grin::grin:
     
  6. colt45nyc

    colt45nyc Rookie

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    Since the last few seasons with the magic, Dwight has been not the same player he was in term of skills and his attitude. Injuries is one reason and being in the wrong teams.

    LA - He did not get along with Kobe's hard nose in your face style and now in the Rockets he's not the alpha dog.

    Time for him to look for a new home. The rockets will be better without him.
     
  7. JayGoogle

    JayGoogle Member

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    Calling it now, Dwight will go to Charlotte. They are a team on the cusp and their owner seems likely to overpay for a big name like this.
     
  8. Pen15clubber

    Pen15clubber Member

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    I mean I'm cool with it I just know some of you get weird about that king of thing
     
  9. PhiSlamma15

    PhiSlamma15 Member

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    oh I'd luv to see that handling of kid gloves with michael jordan at that top of that food chain
     
  10. J.R.

    J.R. Member

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    From treyk's article above:

    He gone.
     
    #350 J.R., Mar 22, 2016
    Last edited: Mar 22, 2016
  11. GetThatLight

    GetThatLight Member

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    Once I read that Yahoo! article about Dwight's new agent, saying that he was sold on the idea of doubling down on the "superman" branding made me think this would be a strong possibility. Realistically, he's not going to get the touches here, especially if we're targeting big names this summer.

    I say that as someone who loves Dwight. Ever since he signed here, he's stepped up to do tons of charity work and repped our city. But I've rarely seen stuff from him that made me think that he's still first-option material. I was hoping he'd go get that last contract and settle into a role. Looks like he was sold that he's still a first option.
     
  12. marky :)

    marky :) Member

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    Thought at the start of the season he "accepted" his role of not having that many post touches and would focus on dunks and defense. Guess not.
     
  13. PhiSlamma15

    PhiSlamma15 Member

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    Disclaimer: For entertainment purposes only:

    Dwight Howard says Rockets can win a title
    Sam Amick, USA TODAY Sports 10:08 a.m. EDT March 22, 2016

    James Harden Dwight Howard

    MORE
    HOUSTON – Before the click-bait carousel starts spinning, just know this: Dwight Howard is squarely focused on this task at hand with the Houston Rockets.

    With his team that reached the Western Conference Finals in 2014-15 still fighting to secure a playoff spot and every aspect of their squad being dissected at every turn, their always-compelling center had a candid chat with USA TODAY Sports about the changing NBA and how big men like him are a dying breed. And while it’s clear that he will strongly consider situations outside of Houston this summer in free agency where he might play a bigger part in the offense, Howard made this much clear in terms of the here and now: he still believes the Rockets can win it all, so long as he can click with All-Star guard James Harden.

    Yes, you read that right. Dwight Howard believes the Rockets, who are currently 35-35 and seventh in the West, can be NBA champions this season.


    USA TODAY
    Dwight Howard believes he can be dominant again

    “Regardless of how our season is going so far, regardless of the fact that we haven't played up to our expectations, I really believe that we have a championship caliber team,” Howard said. “Nobody else has to believe it, and that's fine. The whole world can be against us. But if those 15 guys in the locker room believe that we can win, then we will win. There's no doubt about it. We had a great season last year, and the reason why we were able to come in the playoffs and do what we did is because we believed.”

    Despite all the obvious challenges relating to how Harden plays the game and how Howard prefers it to be played, and the personality differences that are obvious to anyone who pays attention, the two have done great things before. The question from now until season’s end, of course, is whether or not they can do it again.

    “People feel ... like we hate each other,” Howard said. “I have no hate in my blood for this man, you know? For what? He came from nothing. We both came from nothing. And we're doing something that we love. We grew up playing this game for fun, and we had big dreams of making it to the NBA. So I would never hate this man because I know what it took for me to get here, and he made it. So I want him to succeed. I want us to succeed. I just - before coming here - I watched endless hours of YouTube videos on James Harden, before he had the beard. I watched all that stuff, because I'm like, 'Dang, this boy, he's got so much talent.'

    “I know where he's at, because I've been there, as far as everybody looking at you and they expect so much from you. And you're one of the best players in the league. All that stuff, I've been there ,you know what I'm saying?”


    USA TODAY
    NBA All-Star Game going to L.A. in 2018

    The trick now, he made clear, is to join forces in the kind of way that has been tough to come by this season.

    “We both have to figure out how we're going to make this thing work,” Howard said. “It's on us. We've got the rest of the season, and the playoffs, and we can do it. It's a mindset. It's a mentality. And the whole team will fall in line when me and him are on that same page and the team sees that we're strong together.”

    “If we just come together like we're supposed to - and it takes time, you know. It takes time. If we can just come together like we're supposed to and like we want to, then I'm telling you, we can win a championship
     
  14. sabesque

    sabesque Member

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    On one hand he talks about how all 15 guys in the locker room need to be on the same page, on the other hand he gives an interview panning the rockets style of play. Hm.
     
  15. AirBud#10

    AirBud#10 Member

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    Why does Dwight continue to compare himself to Shaq and Kareem?
     
  16. marky :)

    marky :) Member

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    Yeah makes sense. He wants the the 15 guys in the locker room to be on HIS page.
     
  17. zeeshan2

    zeeshan2 Member

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    <blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Dwight still saying he, Harden need to get on &quot;same page&quot; after two seasons, 70 games into third with <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Rockets?src=hash">#Rockets</a>. Would be funny if not so sad</p>&mdash; Brian T. Smith (@ChronBrianSmith) <a href="https://twitter.com/ChronBrianSmith/status/712290326765895680">March 22, 2016</a></blockquote>
    <script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
     
  18. PhiSlamma15

    PhiSlamma15 Member

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    Dwight Howard believes he can be dominant again
    Sam Amick, USA TODAY Sports 1:54 a.m. EDT March 22, 2016
    NBA: Atlanta Hawks at Houston Rockets
    (Photo: Troy Taormina, USA TODAY Sports)
    168
    CONNECT
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    HOUSTON – If a picture is truly worth a thousand words, then the cell phone shots that Dwight Howard took with adoring Houston Rockets fans at Rudy’s Country Store & BBQ last week might have been a tad deceiving.

    Howard, who stopped into one of his favorite spots on the 28-mile drive from the team’s Toyota Center arena to his palatial home in the suburb of Richmond, flashed that Texas-sized smile in between bites for each supporter who came his way in search of a selfie. The fact that he was getting fed for once surely helped his jovial mood considering, well, it doesn’t happen much for big men like him these days.

    “The way the (NBA) game is played (now), it’s all outside-in, it’s threes, it’s super-fast,” Howard told USA TODAY Sports. “It’s really like we’re dinosaurs, and they’re trying to extinct us. But the Ice Age will not come, and we will not be extinct.

    “You watch a guy like Shaq (O’Neal) or Kareem (Abdul-Jabbar) and all these guys, and I don’t know if they would want to just play with guys shooting threes and stuff like that. They want to be fed, but it’s the evolution of the game. And the way you stay relevant is trying to find ways to play without focusing on not getting the ball … I think it’s all just a mindset. Some teams are better at it than others.”

    As the 30-year-old Howard nears free agency this summer, the inherent problem with his current situation is that he plays for a team that’s at the forefront of these changing times. The Rockets, with analytics guru Daryl Morey as their general manager and All-Star guard James Harden as the long-distance leader, ranked first in three points attempts last season (32.7 per game) and are second behind Stephen Curry and his Golden State Warriors this season (31).


    The key difference this time around, one that has made things a tad tense in Houston these days and might very well lead to his departure, is that the strategy isn’t working. The Rockets, whose second place finish in the brutal West last season was followed by their first conference finals appearance since 1997, are 35-35 and just one game away from being out playoff position. Howard, who averaged 13.4 attempts per game from 2010-12 during the peak of his post dominance, is at a career-low 8.8 per, with only his rookie season – 8.3 per – lower. In a recent stretch, Howard had a combined 22 shots against Memphis, the Clippers, Minnesota and Atlanta and the team went 2-2.

    And while Howard – as was revealed in recent days – is the one who uses Stickum spray on his hands during games to help with his grip, it’s Harden whose penchant for holding the ball is worthy of an Elmer’s Glue sponsorship. Harden’s usage rate, which calculates the percentage of a team’s offensive possessions that a player uses, leads all perimeter players in the NBA at 32.8.

    Naturally, and perhaps tellingly, Howard now finds himself longing for the days when things were different.

    “Since I’ve been in the NBA, especially when we (were) in Orlando and (then-coach) Stan (Van Gundy) got there, he made a big emphasis on playing inside-out, and really just playing a bully-type style of basketball,” said Howard, who plans on declining his $23.2 million player option for next season. “And we did pick and rolls too, so it was kind of like a mixture. That’s what threw teams off. It wasn’t (just) me getting post-ups so I can always score, but it was doing that to free up our shooters, to give them more space (and) to really shoot the ball.

    “I feel like that’s a very successful way of playing. I know (the Rockets) have their opinions or whatever. (But) for the rest of the season, I’m going to make it an effort just to do what they need me to do offensively and defensively, and not focus on what happened back in Orlando (and) what happened in LA (with the Lakers) and just put my mind to finishing this season on a real high note.”


    USA TODAY
    Dwight Howard won't be penalized for using Stickum

    Problem for today’s bigs

    With big men fast becoming NBA relics, the question of what that means for players like Howard on the open market remains unresolved. Even with the forthcoming salary cap spike (from $67 million to an estimated $92 million), teams will have to decide how many, if any, of the available centers are worth a maximum-salary deal that could cost a combined $145 million over five years. The free agency field of centers is rich, with Howard, Andre Drummond, Joakim Noah, Hassan Whiteside, and Al Jefferson among the group, but how rich they will be remains to be seen.

    This much is clear as it relates to Howard: he cares greatly about getting one last long-term max deal before his twilight years arrive, and he’s not about to accept the rationale that his recent healthy history means he should take a discount. Only time will tell if Howard was delusional or prophetic about his own future.

    He wants to play until he’s 40, to channel his inner Kevin Willis (who played until he was 44) or Abdul-Jabbar (41) while eventually transitioning from high-level NBA player to sage veteran voice. He wants to be “Superman” again and be known as one of the most dominant bigs in the game, even if he’s the first to admit that it’s harder than ever to get off the ground like he used to as a youngster. There is a chorus of cynicism surrounding the idea that he can do either, but Howard – agree with him or not – sees hope in some relevant places.

    He sees the renaissance of his former Lakers teammate, Pau Gasol, the 35-year-old who returned to All-Star form when he signed with Chicago two summers ago.

    “Everybody thought a couple years ago that Pau couldn’t play,” said Howard, who is averaging 14.5 points (on 61.5% shooting), 12.1 rebounds, and 1.5 blocks per game. “He gets to Chicago, and it’s just a different situation, a different offense, a different scheme. And he was able to thrive. So I think players thrive in the situations that they may be put in.”


    USA TODAY
    Dwight Howard not worried by criticism of agent change

    He sees the beneath-the-surface stats that paint a compelling picture, offering evidence that he might still be a force if given the chance.

    “(For people to) assume that I can’t play anymore because of what they look at, you know it upsets me,” said Howard, who has averaged 22.4 points and 14.4 rebounds in the 12 games where he had at least 12 shots. “I think that’s what sometimes messes with my head during games. I get frustrated, and then I allow what is being said (about the state of his game) to affect me in a way where I can’t be who I am every single night, and who my teammates need me to be.”

    Yet Howard’s production has been on the decline since the back surgery in the summer of 2012 that cost him in his time with the Lakers. There were knee issues that cost him significant time last season (he played 41 regular season games) and back issues sidelined him leading into this one (he missed all of training camp and all but one game of the preseason). That hasn’t helped reputation as an injury-prone player.

    Along the way, his string of eight consecutive All-Star appearances that ran from 2007 to 2014 has segued into a two-year absence.

    “That bothered me a lot,” said Howard, who spent the All-Star break on a personal retreat of sorts in Scottsdale, Ariz. “I really wanted to be at All-Star weekend. I really wanted to be a part of everything, but I felt like I needed to get myself together (in Scottsdale). You have those moments in life, where you really just have to get away from everything to really get the big picture.”

    Next season, he vows, he’ll be back.

    “This situation won’t happen again (where) I’m not there,” he declared.

    The declaration alone is enough to convince you his Rockets days are numbered.


    USA TODAY
    Postseason push: Will Houston Rockets make playoffs?

    On the move again?

    If Howard is to remain with the Rockets, it will likely take this unlikely scenario: he fails to find the max money he desires elsewhere, not to mention the scoring role he had before. He would have to resist the urge to change teams yet again while taking a less-than-max deal. It’s merely one of many factors, but Howard is aware of his reputation as a deserter.

    “It’s always a factor, because I’m a people person,” said Howard, who was lambasted after his trade demand in Orlando sent him to the Lakers and roundly criticized yet again when he left Los Angeles three summers ago. “Each city that I’ve been in, I’ve really tried to get into the community. When you build relationships with people that’s beyond basketball, and you have to leave, it really hurts. That’s something that does hurt me when people say, ‘Oh, he’s selfish’ and all that stuff. It affects me.

    “Leaving Orlando, it affected me to the point where there were times where we were playing (with the Lakers) and I was like, ‘Man, these people don’t understand how much love I have for this city. It’s bigger than just basketball.”

    But the basketball, as he's well aware, will have everything to do with what happens next. And therein lies the problem.

    When Howard signed with the Rockets in the summer of 2013, their “Legacy of Bigs” – as the poster that’s plastered on the Toyota Center parking garage still reads – was an attractive part of the franchise’s history. The image, with Howard up top and Yao Ming, Hakeem Olajuwon, Ralph Sampson, Elvin Hayes and Moses Malone below, was supposed to be a foreshadowing of greatness to come.

    Instead, even Olajuwon admits he’s not sure if Howard’s days in Houston are about to come to an end.

    “I know he loves Houston, and he wants to be here,” Olajuwon told USA TODAY Sports. “(He’s) trying to find his identity again. I think for a big man like Dwight, more of the frustration is not being utilized. He can do much more. All the big men always feel that way. That’s natural. But what I try to tell him is get more in the flow of the game.”

    “There are some intangibles (that are important). It’s not ‘I want the points. I want the rebounds.’ (It’s) intimidation, fighting for position, and (making it so) his man can’t leave him and that creates more room for James to (roam), and where if you leave him it’s a lob … There are other intangibles to bring to the team. Just win games. Don’t worry about it. Just win.”


    USA TODAY
    Pelicans center Anthony Davis ruled out for the season

    Hard times with Harden

    There’s an inverse relationship between sacrifice and success, though, and the lack of winning this season has clearly made it harder for Howard to accept his minimized role. What’s more, it has sparked season-long questions about whether the Harden-Howard pairing can still work.

    Those who see them side by side every day say this is hardly Kobe-Shaq, Part II, that both players consistently try to fix what’s broken and even occasionally go to dinner together to discuss such matters. But they clearly have trust issues on the floor, and the smallest little thing – a blown screen by Howard, a missed pass on the roll by Harden – can derail their chemistry on any given night.

    Howard understands Harden’s current place. Harden is an MVP-caliber talent with a franchise on his back, just like Howard was in the Orlando days.

    “People feel ... like we hate each other,” Howard said. “I have no hate in my blood for this man, you know? For what? He came from nothing. We both came from nothing. And we’re doing something that we love. We grew up playing this game for fun, and we had big dreams of making it to the NBA.

    “So I would never hate this man because I know what it took for me to get here, and he made it. So I want him to succeed. I want us to succeed. Before coming here, I watched endless hours of YouTube videos on James Harden, before he had the beard. I watched all that stuff, because I’m like, ‘Dang, this boy, he’s got so much talent.’

    “We both have to figure out how we’re going to make this thing work. It’s on us. We’ve got the rest of the season, and the playoffs, and we can do it. It’s a mindset. It’s a mentality. And the whole team will fall in line when me and him are on that same page and the team sees that we’re strong together. ... Collectively, if we just come together like we’re supposed to…”

    He pauses.

    “It takes time, you know?” he said. “It takes time. If we can just come together like we’re supposed to and like we want to, then I’m telling you, we can win a championship.”

    But time – in this season and perhaps Howard’s run with the Rockets – is running out. And the picture being painted in Houston, at least for now, isn’t nearly as joyful as those selfies he posed for back at Rudy’s.
     
  19. PhiSlamma15

    PhiSlamma15 Member

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    oops left out my Disclaimer: For Entertainment Purposes Only

    Dwight Howard believes he can be dominant again
    Sam Amick, USA TODAY Sports 1:54 a.m. EDT March 22, 2016

    NBA: Atlanta Hawks at Houston Rockets
    (Photo: Troy Taormina, USA TODAY Sports)

    HOUSTON – If a picture is truly worth a thousand words, then the cell phone shots that Dwight Howard took with adoring Houston Rockets fans at Rudy’s Country Store & BBQ last week might have been a tad deceiving.

    Howard, who stopped into one of his favorite spots on the 28-mile drive from the team’s Toyota Center arena to his palatial home in the suburb of Richmond, flashed that Texas-sized smile in between bites for each supporter who came his way in search of a selfie. The fact that he was getting fed for once surely helped his jovial mood considering, well, it doesn’t happen much for big men like him these days.

    “The way the (NBA) game is played (now), it’s all outside-in, it’s threes, it’s super-fast,” Howard told USA TODAY Sports. “It’s really like we’re dinosaurs, and they’re trying to extinct us. But the Ice Age will not come, and we will not be extinct.

    “You watch a guy like Shaq (O’Neal) or Kareem (Abdul-Jabbar) and all these guys, and I don’t know if they would want to just play with guys shooting threes and stuff like that. They want to be fed, but it’s the evolution of the game. And the way you stay relevant is trying to find ways to play without focusing on not getting the ball … I think it’s all just a mindset. Some teams are better at it than others.”

    As the 30-year-old Howard nears free agency this summer, the inherent problem with his current situation is that he plays for a team that’s at the forefront of these changing times. The Rockets, with analytics guru Daryl Morey as their general manager and All-Star guard James Harden as the long-distance leader, ranked first in three points attempts last season (32.7 per game) and are second behind Stephen Curry and his Golden State Warriors this season (31).


    The key difference this time around, one that has made things a tad tense in Houston these days and might very well lead to his departure, is that the strategy isn’t working. The Rockets, whose second place finish in the brutal West last season was followed by their first conference finals appearance since 1997, are 35-35 and just one game away from being out playoff position. Howard, who averaged 13.4 attempts per game from 2010-12 during the peak of his post dominance, is at a career-low 8.8 per, with only his rookie season – 8.3 per – lower. In a recent stretch, Howard had a combined 22 shots against Memphis, the Clippers, Minnesota and Atlanta and the team went 2-2.

    And while Howard – as was revealed in recent days – is the one who uses Stickum spray on his hands during games to help with his grip, it’s Harden whose penchant for holding the ball is worthy of an Elmer’s Glue sponsorship. Harden’s usage rate, which calculates the percentage of a team’s offensive possessions that a player uses, leads all perimeter players in the NBA at 32.8.

    Naturally, and perhaps tellingly, Howard now finds himself longing for the days when things were different.

    “Since I’ve been in the NBA, especially when we (were) in Orlando and (then-coach) Stan (Van Gundy) got there, he made a big emphasis on playing inside-out, and really just playing a bully-type style of basketball,” said Howard, who plans on declining his $23.2 million player option for next season. “And we did pick and rolls too, so it was kind of like a mixture. That’s what threw teams off. It wasn’t (just) me getting post-ups so I can always score, but it was doing that to free up our shooters, to give them more space (and) to really shoot the ball.

    “I feel like that’s a very successful way of playing. I know (the Rockets) have their opinions or whatever. (But) for the rest of the season, I’m going to make it an effort just to do what they need me to do offensively and defensively, and not focus on what happened back in Orlando (and) what happened in LA (with the Lakers) and just put my mind to finishing this season on a real high note.”


    USA TODAY
    Dwight Howard won't be penalized for using Stickum

    Problem for today’s bigs

    With big men fast becoming NBA relics, the question of what that means for players like Howard on the open market remains unresolved. Even with the forthcoming salary cap spike (from $67 million to an estimated $92 million), teams will have to decide how many, if any, of the available centers are worth a maximum-salary deal that could cost a combined $145 million over five years. The free agency field of centers is rich, with Howard, Andre Drummond, Joakim Noah, Hassan Whiteside, and Al Jefferson among the group, but how rich they will be remains to be seen.

    This much is clear as it relates to Howard: he cares greatly about getting one last long-term max deal before his twilight years arrive, and he’s not about to accept the rationale that his recent healthy history means he should take a discount. Only time will tell if Howard was delusional or prophetic about his own future.

    He wants to play until he’s 40, to channel his inner Kevin Willis (who played until he was 44) or Abdul-Jabbar (41) while eventually transitioning from high-level NBA player to sage veteran voice. He wants to be “Superman” again and be known as one of the most dominant bigs in the game, even if he’s the first to admit that it’s harder than ever to get off the ground like he used to as a youngster. There is a chorus of cynicism surrounding the idea that he can do either, but Howard – agree with him or not – sees hope in some relevant places.

    He sees the renaissance of his former Lakers teammate, Pau Gasol, the 35-year-old who returned to All-Star form when he signed with Chicago two summers ago.

    “Everybody thought a couple years ago that Pau couldn’t play,” said Howard, who is averaging 14.5 points (on 61.5% shooting), 12.1 rebounds, and 1.5 blocks per game. “He gets to Chicago, and it’s just a different situation, a different offense, a different scheme. And he was able to thrive. So I think players thrive in the situations that they may be put in.”


    USA TODAY
    Dwight Howard not worried by criticism of agent change

    He sees the beneath-the-surface stats that paint a compelling picture, offering evidence that he might still be a force if given the chance.

    “(For people to) assume that I can’t play anymore because of what they look at, you know it upsets me,” said Howard, who has averaged 22.4 points and 14.4 rebounds in the 12 games where he had at least 12 shots. “I think that’s what sometimes messes with my head during games. I get frustrated, and then I allow what is being said (about the state of his game) to affect me in a way where I can’t be who I am every single night, and who my teammates need me to be.”

    Yet Howard’s production has been on the decline since the back surgery in the summer of 2012 that cost him in his time with the Lakers. There were knee issues that cost him significant time last season (he played 41 regular season games) and back issues sidelined him leading into this one (he missed all of training camp and all but one game of the preseason). That hasn’t helped reputation as an injury-prone player.

    Along the way, his string of eight consecutive All-Star appearances that ran from 2007 to 2014 has segued into a two-year absence.

    “That bothered me a lot,” said Howard, who spent the All-Star break on a personal retreat of sorts in Scottsdale, Ariz. “I really wanted to be at All-Star weekend. I really wanted to be a part of everything, but I felt like I needed to get myself together (in Scottsdale). You have those moments in life, where you really just have to get away from everything to really get the big picture.”

    Next season, he vows, he’ll be back.

    “This situation won’t happen again (where) I’m not there,” he declared.

    The declaration alone is enough to convince you his Rockets days are numbered.


    USA TODAY
    Postseason push: Will Houston Rockets make playoffs?

    On the move again?

    If Howard is to remain with the Rockets, it will likely take this unlikely scenario: he fails to find the max money he desires elsewhere, not to mention the scoring role he had before. He would have to resist the urge to change teams yet again while taking a less-than-max deal. It’s merely one of many factors, but Howard is aware of his reputation as a deserter.

    “It’s always a factor, because I’m a people person,” said Howard, who was lambasted after his trade demand in Orlando sent him to the Lakers and roundly criticized yet again when he left Los Angeles three summers ago. “Each city that I’ve been in, I’ve really tried to get into the community. When you build relationships with people that’s beyond basketball, and you have to leave, it really hurts. That’s something that does hurt me when people say, ‘Oh, he’s selfish’ and all that stuff. It affects me.

    “Leaving Orlando, it affected me to the point where there were times where we were playing (with the Lakers) and I was like, ‘Man, these people don’t understand how much love I have for this city. It’s bigger than just basketball.”

    But the basketball, as he's well aware, will have everything to do with what happens next. And therein lies the problem.

    When Howard signed with the Rockets in the summer of 2013, their “Legacy of Bigs” – as the poster that’s plastered on the Toyota Center parking garage still reads – was an attractive part of the franchise’s history. The image, with Howard up top and Yao Ming, Hakeem Olajuwon, Ralph Sampson, Elvin Hayes and Moses Malone below, was supposed to be a foreshadowing of greatness to come.

    Instead, even Olajuwon admits he’s not sure if Howard’s days in Houston are about to come to an end.

    “I know he loves Houston, and he wants to be here,” Olajuwon told USA TODAY Sports. “(He’s) trying to find his identity again. I think for a big man like Dwight, more of the frustration is not being utilized. He can do much more. All the big men always feel that way. That’s natural. But what I try to tell him is get more in the flow of the game.”

    “There are some intangibles (that are important). It’s not ‘I want the points. I want the rebounds.’ (It’s) intimidation, fighting for position, and (making it so) his man can’t leave him and that creates more room for James to (roam), and where if you leave him it’s a lob … There are other intangibles to bring to the team. Just win games. Don’t worry about it. Just win.”


    USA TODAY
    Pelicans center Anthony Davis ruled out for the season

    Hard times with Harden

    There’s an inverse relationship between sacrifice and success, though, and the lack of winning this season has clearly made it harder for Howard to accept his minimized role. What’s more, it has sparked season-long questions about whether the Harden-Howard pairing can still work.

    Those who see them side by side every day say this is hardly Kobe-Shaq, Part II, that both players consistently try to fix what’s broken and even occasionally go to dinner together to discuss such matters. But they clearly have trust issues on the floor, and the smallest little thing – a blown screen by Howard, a missed pass on the roll by Harden – can derail their chemistry on any given night.

    Howard understands Harden’s current place. Harden is an MVP-caliber talent with a franchise on his back, just like Howard was in the Orlando days.

    “People feel ... like we hate each other,” Howard said. “I have no hate in my blood for this man, you know? For what? He came from nothing. We both came from nothing. And we’re doing something that we love. We grew up playing this game for fun, and we had big dreams of making it to the NBA.

    “So I would never hate this man because I know what it took for me to get here, and he made it. So I want him to succeed. I want us to succeed. Before coming here, I watched endless hours of YouTube videos on James Harden, before he had the beard. I watched all that stuff, because I’m like, ‘Dang, this boy, he’s got so much talent.’

    “We both have to figure out how we’re going to make this thing work. It’s on us. We’ve got the rest of the season, and the playoffs, and we can do it. It’s a mindset. It’s a mentality. And the whole team will fall in line when me and him are on that same page and the team sees that we’re strong together. ... Collectively, if we just come together like we’re supposed to…”

    He pauses.

    “It takes time, you know?” he said. “It takes time. If we can just come together like we’re supposed to and like we want to, then I’m telling you, we can win a championship.”

    But time – in this season and perhaps Howard’s run with the Rockets – is running out. And the picture being painted in Houston, at least for now, isn’t nearly as joyful as those selfies he posed for back at Rudy’s.
     
  20. HtownRock

    HtownRock Member

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