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Thursday, June 28, 2012

Houston Rockets take Lamb, White and Jones in 1st round - Washington Post

HOUSTON â€" About 1,000 Houston Rockets fans showed up at the Toyota Center on Thursday night to watch the NBA draft on a giant screen, poised to celebrate a franchise-changing move.

It didn’t come.

The Rockets drafted Connecticut guard Jeremy Lamb, Iowa State forward Royce White and Kentucky forward Terrence Jones in the first round, but didn’t make the blockbuster deal many anticipated after a week of rumors and speculation. Houston had no second-round picks.

Houston was the most active team leading up to the draft, trading swingman Chase Budinger and center Samuel Dalembert to acquire two picks in the first round. The Rockets were reportedly building a package to offer a team in exchange for a superstar, possibly Orlando’s Dwight Howard.

Something big could still happen after free agency begins on July 1. It just didn’t on Thursday night.

“We tried,” director of scouting Arturas Karnisovas said. “We had three picks. We very carefully selected these players and we think those were the best selections for those picks.”

Houston went 34-32 last season and missed the playoffs for the third straight season.

Rockets general manager Daryl Morey started this week with the 14th and 16th picks, then traded Budinger to Minnesota to acquire the 18th pick. On Wednesday, Houston dealt Dalembert and the 14th pick to the Bucks for the 12th pick, a future second-round pick and three players.

Houston has lacked a formidable inside presence since former top overall pick Yao Ming started having leg and foot injuries and finally retired last summer. Before last season, the Rockets were ready to trade forward Luis Scola, shooting guard Kevin Martin and point guard Goran Dragic for the Lakers’ Pau Gasol, but Commissioner David Stern nixed the trade on behalf of the league-owned New Orleans Hornets.

North Carolina big men John Henson and Tyler Zeller were still available when Houston made its first pick, but the Rockets took the 6-foot-5 Lamb at No. 12. Lamb entered the draft after just two college seasons. He averaged 17.7 points and 4.9 rebounds for the Huskies last year and became just the sixth sophomore in Connecticut history to score 1,000 career points (1,060).

Houston took the 6-8, 270-pound White with the 16th pick. White initially enrolled at Minnesota, then left the program last year and eventually transferred to Iowa State after pleading guilty to theft and disorderly conduct in an incident at the Mall of America. White, who suffers from bouts of anxiety and obsessive compulsive disorder, averaged 13.4 points, 9.3 rebounds and five assists per game last season.

The 6-9, 252-pound Jones was the Rockets’ third pick, at No. 18. Jones played only two college seasons, and averaged 12.3 points and 7.2 rebounds last year, helping the Wildcats win the NCAA championship in the spring. Houston added two more forwards in the draft after taking Kentucky’s Patrick Patterson in 2010 (14th pick) and Kansas’ Marcus Morris in 2011 (14th pick).

Kyle Lowry remained a Rocket amid reports that the team was gauging other teams’ interest in him leading up to the draft. Dragic is an unrestricted free agent and said after last season that he’d like a more permanent starting role in the NBA.

Lowry missed 19 games, mostly due to a bacterial infection that required hospitalization, and he reportedly developed a rift with first-year coach Kevin McHale. Dragic played well in Lowry’s place, averaging 18 points and 8.4 assists in 28 starts.

Houston picked up point guard Shaun Livingston and forwards Jon Brockman and Jon Leuer in the trade with the Bucks. The 6-foot-7 Livingston sustained a catastrophic left knee injury in February 2007 and couldn’t resume basketball activities for more than a year. He played in 58 games for Milwaukee (27 starts) last season, averaging 5.5 points and 2.1 assists per game.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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