Kevin Durant’s status has become the biggest question hanging over the Houston Rockets’ first-round series against the Los Angeles Lakers.
After Durant was ruled out of Game 1 roughly 90 minutes before tipoff because of a bruised right knee, ESPN’s Brian Windhorst said on “First Take” on April 20 that the situation was “the most relevant thing that’s gone on in the first weekend of the NBA playoffs.” That alone would have been notable. What made Windhorst’s take hit harder was the rest of his explanation: Durant is not typically a player who sits out a playoff game unless something is genuinely bothering him.
That is why this is more than a routine injury report item for Houston.
The Rockets lost Game 1, 107-98, after Durant’s late scratch, and the offensive difference was obvious. Houston did not have a 20-point scorer, shot just 37.6% from the field, and struggled to find the kind of shot-making stability Durant normally provides. The Lakers, by contrast, got 27 points from Luke Kennard and a controlled all-around game from LeBron James, who finished with 19 points and 13 assists.
Why Brian Windhorst’s Kevin Durant point stands out
Windhorst’s main point was not just that Durant missed the opener. It was the type of player involved.
On the ESPN segment, Windhorst said Durant has played through pain before and is not someone who “shrinks away from playing a playoff game.” So in his view, if Durant felt he was too injured to go, that is what makes the update worrisome from Houston’s side.
That matches the timeline around the injury. Durant appeared on the official NBA injury report as questionable with a right knee contusion before later being downgraded to out ahead of Game 1. ESPN also reported that Durant suffered the injury during practice in the days leading into the series, though the Rockets were said to be optimistic it would not become a major long-term issue.
So there are really two tracks here for the Rockets. The optimistic read is that this is a short-term pain issue and Durant can get back quickly. The more concerning read is the one Windhorst raised: if Durant himself decided he could not safely or effectively play in a playoff opener, Houston has to treat that seriously.
Rockets’ offense looks different without Kevin Durant
This is the part that matters most for Rockets fans.
Windhorst said Durant’s absence changes the dynamic of the whole series, and Game 1 backed that up. Houston still created extra chances with offensive rebounds, but the Rockets lacked the efficient half-court scorer who can calm possessions, punish defensive switches and keep the offense from getting bogged down.
That showed up in the numbers. The Rockets had plenty of opportunities, but without Durant they could not turn enough of them into clean offense. AP’s recap noted that no Houston player topped 19 points and most of the roster shot below 50% from the field.
That is the real series-level issue. A split without Durant might have felt manageable. Falling behind while trying to rediscover offensive rhythm makes Game 2 feel much more important.
Will Kevin Durant play in Game 2?
There still has not been a definitive public answer in the material available so far, which is why pregame matters so much.
Windhorst pointed directly to Durant’s pregame warmup as a major checkpoint, essentially calling it the moment that could swing the outlook for the series. That lines up with the broader uncertainty around the injury: Houston may not know for sure how the knee responds until Durant ramps up close to game time.
The good news for the Rockets is that ESPN’s reporting suggested the team does not believe the knee contusion is a major long-term issue. The bad news is that Game 1 already showed how thin the margin becomes when Durant is unavailable.
For now, that is why Windhorst’s wording matters. “Worrisome” is not the same as “catastrophic,” but it is stronger than the kind of language usually attached to a day-to-day playoff injury update.
And for Houston, the stakes are simple: if Durant cannot go — or is clearly limited — the Rockets’ offense and the shape of this series both start to look very different.
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