The Houston Astros are getting all of the attention in H-Town these days, and deservedly so. With no question, I’m getting into it as much as anyone. In fact, I was lucky enough to attend last week’s classic 18-inning thriller where the Astros came back from a 6-1 deficit to beat the Braves in one of the most amazing come-from-behind baseball playoff games in history. And then this weekend, I have a ticket to the National League Championship Series games in Houston between the Astros and St. Louis Cardinals. So I definitely have AstroMania.
As a result, it would have been very tempting for me to blow off doing a report for the Rockets-Spurs game on Saturday night. After all, it was a preseason game that didn’t mean anything, and it’s hard to concentrate on anything else other than the Astros after their victory over the Cardinals at electric Minute Maid Park on Saturday afternoon.
But when I started watching the Rockets-Spurs game on television after coming down from my Astronomical high, I quickly was able to change gears and snap into a basketball mindset. It was much easier to get into after the Rockets game after they came back from an early 9-2 deficit, started playing well, and continued the good play for a third straight game. By the end of the game, the Rockets played well enough to win 95-87 in San Antonio’s SBC Center.
Unfortunately, Yao did not play because his big left toenail fell off, so the Rockets were cautious and wanted to rest him for a game (that’s why there is no photo of Yao from this game). I can only imagine how much more impressive the Rockets would have been if Yao had been in the lineup. Dikembe Mutombo started in his place, and as always, he was more than adequate. Mutombo grabbed 11 rebounds, scored 7 points and blocked 3 shots in 29 minutes of play.
But Deke wasn’t alone on the front line. We finally got a glimpse of new power forward Stromile Swift, who was held out of the first two preseason games because of a bruised arm. What a debut it was!
In the first half, Stromile scored on a couple of strong moves to the basket, like a dunk from an assist down low, and a whirling-dirvish move on Tim Duncan to score on a powerful move to the rack. He also had a nice, soft jumper that hit the rim and bounced through the basket for a score. Nice shooter’s bounce! No way did I think he would score 11 points in the first half of his first game as a Rocket. I thought he would need more time to get accustomed to his new teammates. Stromile finished with 15 points overall on 6-of-10 shooting. I love those high field goal shooting percentages!

Stromile Swift gave fits to opposing power forward Tim Duncan. Swift held his own with 15 points in his Rockets debut.
Click here for more photos from the game.
Stromile also had 2-3 very impressive blocks that quickly make you realize that the Rockets front-line defense is going to be even more intimidating this year. We should start thinking right now of a new nickname for Yao, Stromile, and Dikembe, and how difficult it will be for opposing offenses to score on them. Any ideas?
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