Houston Rockets Dominate Suns in Physical Showdown, Even Without Durant and Win 114-92
The air in the Footprint Center was thick with anticipation, but it wasn’t just about basketball. Kevin Durant, the superstar traded to the Houston Rockets in a blockbuster offseason deal, was a ghost, absent for personal reasons. The Phoenix faithful, ready to shower their former hero with a mix of cheers and jeers, were left with a void. The final score, a lopsided 114-92 victory for Houston, doesn’t even begin to tell the story of the grit, the physicality, and the sheer will that the Houston Rockets imposed on a stunned Suns squad.
Amen Thompson’s Breakout Performance
If you were looking for a star, you found one in Amen Thompson. He played with the poise of a ten-year veteran and the explosive energy of a supernova. Every time he touched the ball, the court seemed to tilt in his favor. He sliced through the Suns’ defense like it was made of paper, either finishing at the rim with authority or dishing to open teammates with surgical precision.
His stat line was nothing short of brilliant: 28 points, 8 assists, and 7 rebounds. But the numbers don’t capture the swagger, the control, and the statement he made. This was Amen Thompson announcing his arrival not just as a player, but as a leader who can carry this team on his shoulders.
While Thompson was the conductor, Aaron Holiday was the lightning. Matching his career-high with six scorching three-pointers, Holiday was the perfect release valve, punishing the Suns every time they dared to double-team one of his teammates. His 22 points were a dagger in the heart of any comeback Phoenix tried to mount.
Suns’ Frustration Boils Over in Gritty Contest
For the Phoenix Suns, the night was a long, frustrating crawl through mud. They were outmatched, outhustled, and outplayed. Their offense, usually a well-oiled machine, sputtered and stalled, coughing up 20 turnovers that the Houston Rockets gleefully converted into 26 points. It was a season-low 92 points for Phoenix, a testament to the suffocating, relentless defense Houston brought to the desert.
The physicality of the game clearly got under the Suns’ skin. Dillon Brooks, who led Phoenix with a hard-fought 29 points, couldn’t hide his frustration afterward. “I’ve never seen so many flops being rewarded on the other side,” he fumed.
His words painted a picture of a team that felt the game slipping away, not just on the scoreboard, but in the trenches. The Houston Rockets were holding, grabbing, and fighting for every inch, and it paid off. This was a win forged in the old-school principles of basketball: defense, hustle, and sheer intimidation.
A Decisive Victory for the Houston Rockets
The game was never really in doubt. After a tight opening, the Houston Rockets seized control and never looked back. They took a comfortable 84-75 lead into the final quarter and simply slammed the door shut. The Suns never got closer than six points, their hopes extinguished by a relentless Rockets onslaught.
This proved they can dominate a quality opponent on the road, even without one of the greatest scorers of all time. It showed the league that their success isn’t a fluke; it’s built on a foundation of tough defense, unselfish play, and the brilliant emergence of a new star in Amen Thompson.
While the story heading into the night was about the player who wasn’t there, the story leaving Phoenix was all about the team that was. The Houston Rockets are physical, they are deep, and they are playing with a chip on their shoulder. And for the rest of the NBA, that should be a very scary thought.

