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ROCKETS DROP A BOMBSHELL! The $50M Legend Predicted To Secure His 12th All-NBA Selection

Kevin Durant has been everything the Houston Rockets hoped for — and then some — in the first half of the 2025-26 NBA season. At 37 years old, he’s not just staving off Father Time; he’s making him look like a rookie. In a league where regression whispers follow every veteran superstar, Durant has silenced the doubters with a performance that screams “I’m still that guy.”

Feb 5, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant (7) warms up prior to a game against the Charlotte Hornets at Toyota Center. Mandatory Credit: Erik Williams-Imagn Images
Feb 5, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant (7) warms up prior to a game against the Charlotte Hornets at Toyota Center. Mandatory Credit: Erik Williams-Imagn Images

Durant’s Dominance in Clutch City

The Rockets (31-18, No. 4 in the West) knew they were getting a bucket-getter when they traded for Durant last summer, but his seamless integration has elevated the entire offense. Stepping up as a playmaking hub in the absence of injured point guard Fred VanVleet (torn ACL), Durant has averaged:

  • 25.9 PPG (17th consecutive 25+ PPG season — an absurd streak of consistency)
  • 5.4 RPG
  • 4.5 APG
  • 50.8% FG / 39.9% 3PT / 88.9% FT
  • 60% true shooting (14th consecutive season, 15th overall — efficiency that defies logic at his age)

As Nekias Duncan (Yahoo Sports / Dunker Spot podcast) aptly put it:

“Durant continues to climb up the record books, one silky-smooth jumper at a time. He’s been as advertised in his first season as a Rocket, his bucket-getting raising the floor and ceiling of an offense that desperately needed his skill set. He shape-shifts into whatever is needed — a spacer, iso threat, post hub, screener (he’s been hitting folks, lowkey) — and forces defenses to think hard about how they want to handle him and whatever action surrounds him.”

Durant’s ability to adapt — from isolation scoring to off-ball spacing to even setting bone-crushing screens — has been the glue holding Houston’s sometimes stagnant half-court sets together. He missed his first game of the season on Monday due to a minor ankle issue (a win over Indiana), but his impact is undeniable: the Rockets are +12.5 points per 100 possessions with him on the floor.

All-NBA Prediction & Historical Context

Duncan predicts Durant will land on the All-NBA Second Team — his 12th career selection and just his 6th on the second team. That would mark the first All-NBA honor for a Rockets player since James Harden (First Team) and Russell Westbrook (Second Team) in 2019-20 — their lone season together in Houston.

Harden holds the franchise record for All-NBA nods during his Rockets tenure with 7 — second only to Hakeem Olajuwon‘s 12. Durant earning one in his debut season would be a fitting nod to his enduring excellence.

 
 
Player All-NBA Selections with Rockets
Hakeem Olajuwon 12
James Harden 7
Moses Malone 2
Tracy McGrady 2
Yao Ming 2
Ralph Sampson 1
Elvin Hayes 1
 

(Note: Durant would tie for 7th with one selection if named in 2026.)

Addressing the Preseason Doubts

When the Rockets traded Dillon Brooks (who has since emerged as an All-Star candidate in his new home) for Durant, skeptics questioned whether Houston was getting a diminished version of the two-time champion. Durant was coming off a solid but injury-marred stint in Phoenix, and at 37, the whispers of decline were loud.

Those concerns? Obliterated. Durant’s efficiency (60% TS) and versatility have been the perfect complement to Alperen Şengün‘s inside dominance and Amen Thompson‘s transition wizardry. The Rockets’ offense ranks top-5 in the league when Durant is on the floor, and his leadership has helped the young core navigate VanVleet’s absence.

What’s Next for Durant & the Rockets

Houston didn’t make moves at the deadline — a vote of confidence in the current group. With Durant locked in through 2026-27 (player option), the focus shifts to the playoffs, where his Finals experience (2 rings, 2 Finals MVPs) could be the X-factor in a loaded West.

If Durant makes All-NBA Second Team as predicted, it would be a massive validation — and a reminder that even in Year 18, he’s not just hanging on; he’s still one of the league’s best.

Rockets fans — has Durant exceeded your expectations? Does an All-NBA nod feel like a lock, or is the West too stacked with guards/wings? And how far do you think this team can go in the playoffs? Drop your thoughts below — Clutch City is buzzing!