Amen Thompson‘s value to the Rockets goes beyond his statistics and his intense defensive presence, writes Jonathan Feigen of The Houston Chronicle. Thompson is officially listed as a small forward, but he seems to fit in well wherever the team needs him. He replaced Dillon Brooks in the starting lineup in Monday’s win at Charlotte, and Feigen points out that he also filled in when center Alperen Sengun was injured last season and when point guard Fred VanVleet has missed time.
“He can play every position on the court,” VanVleet said. “He’s a Swiss Army knife. He can play one through five. He can screen-and-roll. He’s shooting the three now. He can score. He can guard. He’s just a plug-able guy. You can put him anywhere on the court and be successful. He stepped right in for D.B. and we didn’t lose a step.”
Outside shooting was the main concern about Thompson heading into the 2023 draft, but he shown some progress in that area, improving from 13.8% from beyond the arc as a rookie to 29.7% so far this season. The rest of his game is solid and he has been especially effective as a starter, averaging 18 points and nine rebounds while shooting 53.3% from the floor in the three games he has started this year. Feigen notes that the Rockets are scoring 127 points per 100 possessions with him in that role, which would give them the most productive offense in the league.
“You can put him on a bunch of different people, switched and made it tough on (LaMelo) Ball early,” coach Ime Udoka said. “I think it was a whole team effort when you hold a team to 31 in the first half. Amen kind of spearheaded that. On both sides of the ball. He can guard one through five. We’re comfortable with that. Then, offensively, he’s played on ball at times as a backup point guard, or on the wing, and at the four last year. We can plug him into all those situations on both sides. It’s a luxury for sure.”
There’s more from Houston:
- Tari Eason has missed three straight games due to left lower leg injury management, but the Rockets don’t believe it’s a long-term concern, Feigen adds in a separate story. Eason is a valuable member of the bench unit, leading all NBA reserves in steals and ranking fourth in blocks. “He had some soreness come up in the same leg,” Udoka said. “So, just wanted to give him some days. Obviously, we had the time off (after) the in-season tournament. I think at times, being a little bit stagnant is worse than actually playing, and it stiffened up a little bit.”
- Cam Whitmore wasn’t discouraged after being sent to the G League early in the season, according to Danielle Lerner of The Houston Chronicle. The second-year forward has been getting an opportunity with the Rockets since being recalled recently, scoring 11 points in 14 minutes on Sunday and 17 points in 27 minutes on Monday. “To go kill ’em,” he said of his approach to the G League. “Whatever’s in front of me, I’m gonna be lights out. I’m on assignment, so I’m just gonna go down there, I’m gonna keep grinding every day, keep getting better — better human being and a better basketball player.”
- Kelly Iko of The Athletic examines VanVleet’s prolonged shooting slump to determine why the veteran guard has been missing shots that he typically makes. A career 37.5% three-point shooter entering this season, VanVleet has connected on just 29.8% of his tries from beyond the arc through 27 games.