Durant, Rockets Survive 119-113 Thriller Against Bulls to Snap Skid
Tuesday night inside the Toyota Center wasn’t about style points. For the Houston Rockets, it was purely about survival.
Coming off a frustrating three-game losing streak where energy and attention to detail had waned, Houston found itself locked in a dizzying, back-and-forth prize fight with the Chicago Bulls. It took a vintage performance from Kevin Durant and a collective sigh of relief in the final ninety seconds to finally put the game away, 119-113.
The tension in the building was palpable. This wasn’t a game where one team dominated; it was a seesaw battle featuring a staggering 35 lead changes. Neither squad could gain separation, trading baskets and defensive lapses for 44 minutes. But when the game hung in the balance, the Rockets finally found the “juice” and toughness head coach Ime Udoka had been begging for.
Rockets Find Clutch Gene in Final Minutes
With 3:30 remaining in the fourth quarter, Houston trailed by a point. The crowd was anxious, perhaps sensing another disappointing finish like the recent loss in Sacramento. Thatโs when the stars took over.
Kevin Durant, who finished with a team-high 28 points, sparked a critical 7-2 run that finally gave the Rockets breathing room. He hammered home a dunk that woke up the arena, followed immediately by a massive 3-pointer from Jabari Smith Jr.
Smith Jr. was instrumental down the stretch, shaking off any sophomore slumps to pour in 10 of his 18 points in the final frame. His shot-making from the top of the key extended the lead to 115-108 with ninety seconds left, serving as the dagger that Chicago couldn’t pull out.
Sengun and Thompson Stuff the Stat Sheet
While Durant provided the closing scoring punch, Alperen Sengun was the engine keeping the offense moving. Returning to form after some recent struggles, Sengun was masterful, orchestrating the offense from the high post. He tallied 23 points and dished out 11 assists, slicing up the Bulls’ interior defense and finding shooters when Chicago collapsed the paint.
Perhaps the most surprising contribution came from Amen Thompson. Known more for his athletic finishing than his shooting touch, Thompson stepped up with 23 points of his own. Crucially, when the Rockets were struggling from deep (shooting just 4-of-20 from 3-point range at one point), Thompson knocked down a massive triple to reclaim the lead late in the fourth. It was the kind of confident play Houston has been looking for from their young core.
Bulls Fight Hard Behind Career Night from Jones
You have to give credit to Chicago. Despite dropping their fourth game in five outings, they refused to roll over. They were led by an absolute heater from Tre Jones, who exploded for a career-high 34 points. Jones seemed to have an answer every time Houston tried to pull away, piercing the lane for layups and hitting timely jumpers.
The Bulls briefly reclaimed the lead midway through the fourth behind 3-pointers from Isaac Okoro and Ayo Dosunmu, looking poised to steal one on the road. Matas Buzelis also chipped in with clutch buckets, keeping the pressure on until the final buzzer. But ultimately, Chicago couldn’t withstand the barrage of execution from Houstonโs veterans in the final two minutes.
Moving Forward: Houston Regroups
This win does more than just add a tally to the win column; it stops the bleeding. After the game against Sacramento, there was talk in the locker room about a lack of confidence and mental fatigue from a heavy road schedule. Returning home to familiar rimsโand grinding out a win in a game that could have easily gone the other wayโis exactly the remedy the doctor ordered.
Improving to 23-14, the Rockets solidify their standing in the Southwest Division. They don’t have much time to celebrate, however. They host the Oklahoma City Thunder on Thursday night in what promises to be a heavyweight clash of Western Conference contenders.
For now, Houston can breathe. The skid is over, the stars showed up, and the team proved they can execute when the pressure is highest.

