Houston will not extend a maximum contract offer to Amen Thompson this summer, according to an insider report published Thursday. The 2023 fourth overall pick becomes extension-eligible in October but is now tracking toward restricted free agency in July 2026, when the Rockets retain matching rights.
Thompson's rookie deal pays him $10.1M in 2025-26. A maximum rookie-scale extension would start at roughly $42M annually over four years—$179M total—based on the projected $155M salary cap for 2025-26. Houston is signaling that figure exceeds Thompson's current market value, despite his 1.9 steals per game this season ranking fourth in the NBA and his defensive versatility anchoring lineups with Alperen Şengün and Jabari Smith Jr. The Rockets are 41-19, third in the Western Conference, but front-office discipline remains the theme: no player on the roster earns more than $40M annually, and general manager Rafael Stone has structured the books to preserve cap flexibility through 2027.
The decision matters for three groups. First, Thompson's representation—he signed with CAA in June 2023—now prepares for a restricted free agency process where Houston can match any offer sheet but loses the cost certainty of a locked-in extension. Second, rival teams sizing restricted free agents for 2026 just gained a high-upside wing defender with no extension floor. Phoenix, Milwaukee, and the Lakers all have expiring mid-level deals that summer and could force Houston into a matching decision if Thompson's defensive metrics continue trending upward. Third, the Rockets' own cap architecture shifts: they preserve $63M in room under the second apron for 2026-27, the summer Şengün's $185M extension begins and Jalen Green's $106M extension kicks into year two. Stone is operating as though playoff success this season does not override the longer build.
Thompson's statistical profile complicates the valuation. He shoots 32.1% from three on 2.3 attempts per game, well below the 36.5% league average for wings. His 63.8% free-throw percentage suggests limited shooting upside. But his 6.8 rebounds and 3.6 assists per game at the forward spot, combined with switchable defense across four positions, mirror the skill set that earned Derrick White $125.9M over four years from Boston in 2023. White shot 31.8% from three in his contract year. The Rockets are betting Thompson's shooting does not improve fast enough to justify max money by October, but they are not betting it never improves.
Agents around the league are watching the Rockets' extension behavior closely. Houston declined to extend Kevin Porter Jr. in 2023 before trading him, let Christian Wood walk without an offer in 2022, and signed Şengün only after he filed for restricted free agency. The pattern suggests Stone views rookie-scale extensions as call options: exercise only when the upside is certain, otherwise let the market set the price. That approach works when the team controls matching rights but assumes restricted free agency does not sour player relationships. Thompson has made no public statements about extension expectations, and his camp declined comment Thursday.
Watch three things. First, whether Thompson's three-point volume increases after the All-Star break—he is shooting 37.2% on corner threes this season, and Houston's offense generates the third-most corner attempts in the league. Second, whether Stone extends Cam Whitmore, the 2023 twentieth pick, whose timeline and role overlap with Thompson's. Third, the Rockets' playoff performance: a conference finals appearance does not guarantee Thompson gets paid this summer, but a first-round exit likely cements the wait-and-see approach. Restricted free agency begins July 1, 2026, sixteen months from now.
Thompson's agent will spend that time building the case that Boston, Phoenix, or Orlando should force Houston's hand with an offer sheet north of $30M annually. The Rockets will spend it hoping his shooting stays flat and his defensive value stays high—but not max-contract high.
The takeaway
Houston declines Amen Thompson max talk, banking on restricted free agency leverage in 2026 while preserving cap room around Şengün and Green.
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