To truly become the NBA's new dynamic duo, Tracy McGrady and Yao Ming
will need a lot more help in Houston.
That much was obvious during an up-and-down season that ended with the
worst Game 7 defeat in league history, a 40-point loss to the Dallas
Mavericks that showed just how far away the Rockets are from making a
serious title run.
"Our team had played well all year," Rockets coach Jeff Van Gundy said.
"To crack like that in the biggest game of the year is disappointing."
But it shouldn't have been totally surprising, considering the
shortcomings McGrady and Yao were able to disguise until the Rockets were
confronted with a younger, faster, more athletic team in the playoffs.
Outside of its two All-Stars, Houston couldn't count on anyone else to
create their own offense or stop any of the Mavericks' talented perimeter
players. As the league's oldest and most experienced team, the Rockets too
often looked feeble and slow.
Game 7 was a microcosm of a season-long problem: Yao led Houston with
33 points, McGrady had 27 and the Rockets got just 16 points from the rest
of the team.
"When you don't have a third guy every night that you count on ... that
third guy can be any one of a number of guys," Van Gundy said. "I really
do believe that if our chemistry hadn't been as strong as it developed
into, we would have had a lot less of a year."
The Rockets brought McGrady to Houston in a trade with Orlando hoping
that he could mesh with Yao in a way that high-scoring but erratic guards
Steve Francis and Cuttino Mobley could not in their first-round exit last
year.
The new union didn't click immediately, however, as Houston got off to
a 6-11 start that had McGrady complaining about Van Gundy's rigid offense,
Yao wondering about the direction of the team and fans calling for the
ouster of the irascible coach from New York.
Van Gundy responded by loosening some of his control over the offense,
and the Rockets made three midseason trades that netted veterans Jon
Barry, David Wesley and Mike James. The changes sparked the Rockets over
the second half of the season en route to a 51-31 finish and the No. 5
seed in the West.
"It took a lot to get this team going ... we made a lot of changes,"
Rockets general manager Carroll Dawson said. "It's hard to take a team
that far and count on it blending that fast."

The adjustments continued into the final month of the season after
starting power forward Juwan Howard was placed on the injured list with a
sprained right knee.
Lacking few other options, Van Gundy went with journeymen forwards
Clarence Weatherspoon, Ryan Bowen and Scott Padgett. That underwhelming
trio combined for an average of 6.2 points and 4.7 rebounds in the
playoffs, essentially forcing Houston to play four-on-five offensively
against the loaded Mavericks.
The power forward spot will probably be where the Rockets focus most of
their efforts in the offseason. Houston will look for someone who can take
some of the rebounding load off Yao and can reliably defend the top big
men in the West.
Otherwise, Houston should return most of its nucleus. The Rockets have
only two free agents, center Dikembe Mutombo and guard Jon Barry, and a $2
million team option for point guard Charlie Ward.
Expect Mutombo, the NBA's second-highest paid player at $18.7 million
this season (New Jersey covered $14.2 million of that), and Barry to
return at reasonable prices.
Van Gundy can only hope he has a quiet summer after drawing a $100,000
fine - the largest ever assessed against a coach - for accusing officials
of targeting Yao this postseason. NBA commissioner David Stern said the
fine was only "an intermediary step" and said an investigation will
continue.
Perhaps anticipating a stiffer punishment, Van Gundy has softened his
stance and apologized for the remarks in recent days.
"I couldn't be more contrite about being sorry for those things," Van
Gundy said. "I never meant to impugn the integrity of anybody, certainly
not the NBA."
And McGrady, who fell to 0-for-5 in the postseason, plans to use his
latest playoff failure - and the accompanying criticism that he's not a
winner - as fuel for next season.
"All of this will make me stronger, and I love it, every bit of it
because I will have the last laugh," McGrady said. "I think with Yao and
me and the supporting cast we have, it's only going to get better for us."
(Agencies)