The Houston Rockets’ 2024 trade with the Brooklyn Nets has transformed from a debated move into a draft capital windfall, with the 2026 lottery delivering a No. 6 pick to Brooklyn—a selection Houston already traded away—while the Rockets secure three future first-rounders from struggling franchises and a pick swap option for 2027.
What was once a polarizing, complex transaction has crystallized into a clear victory for the Houston Rockets. The June 2024 trade with the Brooklyn Nets, which sent two of Houston’s own first-round picks to Brooklyn in exchange for four selections from other teams, has aged exceptionally well following the 2026 NBA draft lottery results.
The core structure of the deal was layered: the Rockets conveyed their 2025 and 2026 first-round picks to the Nets. In return, they acquired four unprotected first-round picks from other franchises—a 2025 selection, a 2027 selection, and two picks in 2029. Three of those incoming assets originated from the Phoenix Suns, who had previously sent them to Brooklyn in the February 2023 Kevin Durant trade. The fourth 2029 pick came from the Dallas Mavericks.
The 2025 draft order, as confirmed by NBA.com, saw the two picks involved land at No. 8 (now with the Nets) and No. 10 (now with the Suns). That marginal difference meant Houston likely would have used either selection in its subsequent Kevin Durant trade, minimizing the perceived loss.
From Houston’s perspective, the transaction effectively became a three-for-one swap: the Nets’ 2026 pick (now at No. 6 overall after Sunday’s lottery, per NBA.com’s draft order) in exchange for three future first-rounders—the Suns’ 2027 and 2029 picks, plus the Mavericks’ 2029 pick. Crucially, neither Phoenix nor Dallas currently projects as a title contender, meaning those selections carry high draft lottery value.
The Durant trade connection is pivotal. Houston’s acquisition of the superstar forward likely would have consumed one of the 2025 picks regardless of its exact position, rendering the difference between No. 8 and No. 10 largely academic. The true asset accumulation came from the future selections, which now project as high-lottery picks given the Suns’ and Mavericks’ current trajectories.
Even if one factors in potential incentives—Brooklyn might have tanked less aggressively had it retained its 2026 pick—the final placement of that selection at No. 6 underscores the Rockets’ shrewdness. They exchanged a pick that landed just outside the top five for three picks that, barring a dramatic reversal of fortune for Phoenix or Dallas, will almost certainly hold greater combined value.
The cherry on top for Houston is a lingering pick swap right for the 2027 draft. This asset, also stemming from the original James Harden trade, allows the Rockets to exchange their 2027 first-round pick with the Nets’. Given Brooklyn’s 20-62 record in 2025-26 compared to Houston’s 52-30 mark, that swap could yield a significantly higher selection. Even with potential NBA lottery reform discussed by ESPN, the Rockets’ superior record makes them heavy favorites to exercise this option and land another premium pick.
The immediate downside for Houston is the absence of its own 2026 first-round pick, which belongs to the Oklahoma City Thunder as the final piece of the ill-fated July 2019 Chris Paul-Russell Westbrook trade, as detailed by ESPN. This summer, the Rockets will only draft with two second-round selections (No. 39 and No. 53).
However, by 2027, Houston will have all its own first-round equity restored, supplemented by the three incoming high-value picks and the pick swap option. This pipeline of assets arrives as the Rockets navigate a second consecutive first-round playoff exit, offering a tangible path back to contention through the draft.
For the Nets, the outcome is grim. They surrendered three future first-rounders (including the 2029 picks) and a pick swap, only to receive a 2026 selection that landed at No. 6—a solid but not transformative asset. Worse, their poor 2025-26 season (20-62) means they are likely to convey an even worse pick to Houston in 2027 via the swap, further depleting their asset pool as they attempt to rebuild.
Time will tell the exact value of the Suns’ and Mavericks’ 2027 and 2029 selections, which could be traded or used to draft impact players. But the current trajectory suggests General Manager Rafael Stone engineered a heist: converting one mid-lottery pick into a bundle of future high-lottery assets, all while the Nets’ own pick swap looms as a recurring headache. In the calculus of franchise-building, this trade already looks like a monumental win for Houston.
More: Explaining the complex draft deal between the Rockets, Nets
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