Houston Rockets Ime Udoka
Getty
Ime Udoka didn’t hold back after Houston’s loss to Chicago, calling out effort, consistency, and officiating as the Rockets fight to hold playoff position.
Houston Rockets head coach Ime Udoka didn’t mince words after Monday night’s 132-124 loss to the Chicago Bulls. His message was blunt and direct: “stop bullsh-ting.” After watching his team drop another winnable game despite elite individual performances, Udoka publicly challenged Houston’s effort, focus, and overall approach as the playoff race tightens.
The loss pushed the Rockets to 43-28 on the season, keeping them sixth in the Western Conference standings. With Houston sitting just a half-game behind the Minnesota Timberwolves and Denver Nuggets and 2.5 games behind the third-seeded Los Angeles Lakers, the margin for error is shrinking fast. That context made Monday’s result feel less like a stumble and more like a warning sign.
Udoka Calls Out Effort as Rockets Waste Big Performances
Houston had more than enough production to win. Alperen Sengun delivered a dominant 33-point triple-double, adding 13 rebounds and 10 assists while shooting an efficient 16-of-19 from the field. Kevin Durant matched that energy with 40 points, seven rebounds, and five assists on 65.2% shooting. But the game was effectively lost in the opening stretch.
“Poor start, disrespected the game, not prepared from the get-go,” Udoka said postgame. “Just non-aggressive… watching them shoot.”
Chicago erupted for 41 points in the first quarter, setting the tone early. Houston spent the rest of the night chasing the game. While the Rockets briefly surged late in the fourth quarter and even grabbed a short-lived lead, they couldn’t sustain momentum down the stretch. Udoka later doubled down on the bigger issue: inconsistency.
“It’s the NBA. You come out like that, you’re going to be inconsistent… stop bullsh-ting.”
That line captured the core problem. For a team fighting for playoff positioning with less than 15 games left in the regular season, these lapses are no longer acceptable, they’re costly.
Frustration Boils Over Into Ejection, Ref Criticism
Udoka’s frustration didn’t stay contained to the locker room. It spilled onto the court in the final moments. With just over nine seconds remaining and Houston trailing by five, Durant was called for an offensive foul off the ball, effectively sealing the game. Udoka immediately confronted officials, earning his second technical foul and an ejection. Afterward, he didn’t back off his stance.
“Flagrant was soft as hell… the techs were soft too,” Udoka said, referencing earlier calls including a flagrant foul on Amen Thompson. “I’m not about to complain about a soft crew. It is what it is.”
Still, the criticism could carry consequences. Udoka was fined $25,000 earlier this season for similar comments about officiating, making another league response possible. There’s a pattern emerging, both in Houston’s play and Udoka’s reactions. When effort dips, frustration spikes.
Now, the Rockets face a pivotal test. They head to Minnesota for the second of four straight road games, with playoff seeding hanging in the balance. If Udoka’s message lands, this loss becomes a turning point. If not, it becomes part of a trend that could define their season. The question has quickly become less about whether they Rockets are a playoff team and more about how they will fair against real contenders like the Oklahoma City Thunder and Los Angeles Lakers in a seven game series.