(Sports Network) - Every team debuts its new-look squad on Opening Day.
The same is true when the Detroit Pistons host the Houston Rockets Wednesday
night, but the Rockets will have the newest look in all of the NBA.
On Saturday, the Rockets acquired reigning Sixth Man of the Year, James
Harden, from the Oklahoma City Thunder in exchange for Kevin Martin, Jeremy
Lamb, two first-round picks and a second-rounder.
Harden, a U.S. Olympian this past summer, wasn't going to get the kind of
extension he wanted from the Thunder. Oklahoma City knew they couldn't make
him happy, so they found a deal they liked and Harden is now part of the
upstart Rockets.
"We can grow here and be something special," Harden said at his introductory
press conference on Monday. "It's a new journey for me, a great opportunity."
Houston moved heaven and earth to try and land Dwight Howard in the offseason,
but failed. They signed the flavor of the season in 2011-12, Jeremy Lin, to an
offer sheet and the New York Knicks didn't match.
So the backcourt for the next few seasons for the Rockets will be Lin and
Harden.
"I think he's always been an easy player to play with," said Lin. "I wasn't
shocked. We heard about it possibly happening. I was pretty excited. James can
really score the ball."
The rest of the roster is a crapshoot for head coach Kevin McHale. It will be
a constant mixing and matching trying to find combinations that will get the
Rockets some victories. Two newcomers, free agent center Omar Asik and first-
round draft choice Royce White, will play big roles. White's story became
well-known this offseason. He suffers from an anxiety disorder and has a
horrible fear of flying.
The Pistons, like the Rockets, missed the playoffs last season, but they
finished strong. After a 4-20 start in the 2011-12 season, Detroit finished
21-21, so there's cause for some positive thinking for a team that hasn't made
the playoffs in the last three seasons.
Greg Monroe emerged as a top-flight young big man. Brandon Knight showed signs
of brilliance in his rookie season and Andre Drummond, the Pistons' first-
round pick this past summer, played impressively in the preseason.
"The great thing about Andre, why we have such huge faith in what he's going
to be, is that he's a phenomenal young man," said Pistons head coach Lawrence
Frank. "He's as coachable of a guy as we have. So anything that he struggles
with, we have unbelievable faith that he's going to get it, because of the
strength of his character."
Neither team seems to be a playoff contender this season no matter what they
say publicly.
But both squads will be tough beats night in and night out.
Houston has beaten Detroit in eight of the last 10, six of the last seven and
three in a row, including last season's lone matchup in Houston.
The Sports Network