Kevin Durant Sinks Former Team as Houston Rockets Edge Suns in Thriller 100-97
There are scripts you write, and then there are moments that basketball simply gifts you. Monday night at the Toyota Center was the latter. In a game defined by gritty defense, a bizarre scoreboard malfunction, and a palpable playoff atmosphere in January, it all came down to one man staring down his past.
Kevin Durant, wearing the red of the Houston Rockets, looked at the Phoenix Suns jersey he used to wear just months ago, pulled up from 27 feet, and ended it.
Durant’s 3-pointer with 1.1 seconds remaining didn’t just break a 97-97 tie; it broke the hearts of a Suns team that had fought tooth and nail to claw back into the game. The 100-97 victory wasn’t just another notch in the win column—it was a statement.
A Blockbuster Trade Payoff for the Rockets
This was the vision when the Rockets’ front office pulled the trigger on the blockbuster deal this summer. Sending young, electric talent like Jalen Green and the defensive intensity of Dillon Brooks to the desert was a massive gamble. It changed the DNA of the franchise. But when you acquire a player often called “The Slim Reaper,” you aren’t paying for potential; you are paying for the harvest in crunch time.
Durant finished the night with a team-high 26 points, 10 rebounds, and 4 assists. With the game tied and the clock winding down, the play wasn’t complicated. It didn’t need to be. It was simply: give the ball to the Hall of Famer and get out of the way.
“Being an opposing player being booed [in Phoenix], you know it feels good,” Durant might say, but doing it for Houston against the team that traded him adds a layer of narrative satisfaction that you can’t quantify with analytics.
The Collapse and the Resurgence
It wasn’t a pretty walk to the finish line for the Rockets. In fact, for a few agonizing minutes in the fourth quarter, it looked like a collapse was imminent. Houston held a comfortable seven-point lead with less than five minutes to play, only to watch it evaporate in the heat of a Phoenix run.
Devin Booker, refusing to let his old teammate have the spotlight easily, fueled a blistering 10-0 run for the Suns. Booker dropped 27 points on the night, and his eight points in that critical stretch seemed to seal Houston’s fate. The Rockets went cold—ice cold—going nearly four and a half minutes without a field goal. The Toyota Center grew tense. The momentum had shifted entirely.
But resilience has been the trademark of this new-look Houston squad. They didn’t fold. They dug their heels in defensively and found a way to stop the bleeding.
Young Core Steps Up Without Sengun
What makes this win even more impressive for the Rockets is who wasn’t on the floor. With star center Alperen Sengun sidelined due to a sprained ankle, expected to keep him out for two weeks, the onus fell on the young supporting cast to battle in the paint.
They answered the call.
Amen Thompson was electric, pouring in 17 points and grabbing 7 rebounds. It was his grit that kept Houston alive during the drought. His crucial three-point play to tie the game at 97 was the lifeline Houston desperately needed before Durant’s heroics. Jabari Smith Jr. matched him with 17 points of his own, providing the spacing and defensive versatility necessary to keep the game within reach against a potent Suns offense. Tari Eason chipped in a gritty 12 points and 8 rebounds off the bench, proving that the Rockets have depth that goes beyond their superstars.
A Bizarre Night at the Toyota Center
The drama wasn’t limited to the play on the court. The game had a surreal quality in the second quarter due to a complete malfunction of the clocks and scoreboard. For a stretch, the arena relied on the public address announcer to vocalize the time remaining on the shot clock—a throwback to a bygone era of basketball that added a layer of strange tension to an already tight contest.
Play resumed without working clocks, disjointing the rhythm for both teams. Yet, the Rockets managed to navigate the chaos, maintaining their composure when the technology failed them, just as they did when their offense failed them in the fourth.
Looking Ahead for the Rockets
This victory cements the Rockets’ current identity as a team that finds a way to win. They have now won five of their last six games, building real momentum in a crowded Western Conference.
Beating a contender like Phoenix, especially with former Rockets Dillon Brooks (15 points) and the traded Jalen Green on the other side, serves as emotional closure for the summer’s roster shakeup. The Rockets are no longer rebuilding; they have arrived.
Up next, the Rockets will look to carry this energy into a back-to-back set against Portland, but for tonight, Houston sleeps well knowing they have the ultimate closer on their side.

