Kevin Durant Just Found His ‘Baby Jokic’ — and the West Has a Problem

The Kevin Durant to Houston Rockets experiment is off to a scorching start, and former All-Star guard Jeff Teague is already weighing in on the big question: are they real title contenders?

On a recent episode of “520 in the Morning”, a clip that raced to more than 119,000 views in under 24 hours, Teague and the crew broke down Durant’s fit, Alperen Sengun’s leap and whether this version of Houston can actually get through Oklahoma City and Denver in the West.

The Rockets entered Friday at 10-3, sitting first in the Southwest Division and near the top of the Western Conference after a five-game win streak. Durant is averaging 25.5 points on just under 50% shooting, while Sengun is putting up a Jokic-lite line at 23.4 points, 10.4 rebounds and 7.4 assists per game.

Teague’s verdict: the formula is real, but the Rockets still have one huge test to pass.


Jeff Teague: Rockets Have a Formula With KD & ‘Baby Jokic’

Teague’s breakdown came right after Houston’s 114-104 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers, where Sengun went for 28-11-7 and Durant added 20 points in a bruising road victory.

On the pod, Teague and the crew gushed over Sengun, even calling him “baby Joker” and saying if he lives in the 24-10-7 range, that’s All-NBA territory. In their words, if Nikola Jokic is an A+, Sengun is already pushing A-minus.

They also highlighted how Amen Thompson has unlocked another gear as a dunker spot finisher and secondary ballhandler, instead of being forced into a full-time point guard role. With Durant drawing doubles and playmaking from the elbows, Thompson’s cutting and athleticism have made him “untradeable” in their eyes.

The recent numbers back up the eye test. Durant and Sengun have already piled up multiple monster games together, including a win over Orlando where Durant dropped 35 points and Sengun added 30 points, 12 boards and 8 assists in overtime.

Add in Houston’s improved spacing and physical front line, and Teague was comfortable saying the Rockets have clearly “figured something out” with Durant at the helm.


The Big Question: Can This Style Beat OKC and Denver?

But Teague stopped short of crowning them West favorites.

He circled one major concern: late-game creation and ballhandling against elite defenses. On the show, Teague pointed out that a lot of Houston’s offense right now flows through Sengun bringing the ball up and initiating — great against most teams, but a potential problem versus the Thunder or Nuggets over a seven-game series.

In Teague’s view, teams with tough point-of-attack defenders are going to blitz Sengun and blow up those sets, forcing someone else to consistently create off the dribble. Without injured Fred VanVleet and with a thin guard room after the Durant trade, that’s still an open question.

“Can you beat OKC? Can you beat Denver?” became the refrain. Teague’s answer felt like: “Not with this guard play yet.”


What It Means for Durant & the Rockets’ Ceiling

On paper, the resume is already contender-level:

  • 10-3 record and best Rockets start since the Hakeem days.

  • A top-tier duo in Durant and Sengun, both averaging over 23 points with strong efficiency.

  • Multiple statement wins, including blowouts and a gritty road victory in Cleveland.

Teague’s take lands in the middle lane fans usually hate: yes, they’re contenders, but not untouchable.

Until Houston proves it can survive the pressure of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s Thunder and Jokic’s Nuggets in a playoff setting, Teague isn’t ready to put them above the defending champs. But with Durant looking comfortable, Sengun pushing into All-NBA conversation, and a formula that clearly works against most of the league, the Rockets are firmly in the title picture, and everyone, from Jeff Teague to Bill Simmons, is now treating them that way.

If this is just the early version of the KD–Sengun partnership, Teague’s “baby Jokic” line might end up underselling how loud Houston’s window really is.

Like Heavy Sports’s content? Be sure to follow us.

This article was originally published on Heavy Sports

The post Kevin Durant Just Found His ‘Baby Jokic’ — and the West Has a Problem appeared first on Heavy Sports.

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *