Pelicans vs Rockets Preview

The 44-win Rockets are rolling through a playoff chase while the Pelicans are in free fall—this game is about separation for Houston and survival for New Orleans. For one, a road win cements contender status; for the other, it’s a matter of pride and a glimpse at next year’s puzzle pieces.

Houston Rockets

Houston Rockets

VS
New Orleans Pelicans

New Orleans Pelicans

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Win Probability (BAC Model)

67%

33%

Strong Favorite

Competitiveness

5/10

Average Game

Viewing Value

6.1

Check the Highlights

HEAD-TO-HEAD COMPARISON
Rockets
Pelicans
116.3

ORtg

113.3
112.3

DRtg

117.3
96.9

Pace

101.0
4.0

Net Rtg

-4.0
60.3

Win%

33.3
3.7

TQS

-3.7
WWLLW
Last 5
LLLLW
1 day rest (road 4 of 4)
Rest
1 day rest
Stat visualization


Record 44-29 25-50 Viewing Value 6.1 — Check the Highlights Game Competitiveness 5/10

Matchup Overview

Houston enters on the final leg of a road trip, sitting at 44-29 with a top-10 net rating and a legit postseason ceiling. The Pelicans, at 25-50, are patching together lineups through injuries and a string of losses. The BAC Model hands Houston a 67% win probability—not a blowout, but a stiff endorsement. If New Orleans wants hope, they’ll need to shake off both health concerns and recent defensive lapses fast.

Stats Corner

  • Houston’s net rating: +4 — anchored by an efficient 116.3 ORtg and a stingy 112.3 DRtg.
  • Pelicans allow 119.3 points per game and own a grim -3.74 Team Quality Score.
  • The Rockets dominate the glass: 38.9% offensive rebounding rate and 69.9% defensive rebounding rate lead this matchup.
  • Houston’s recent form: 3-2 in their last 5, including a blowout over Atlanta (117-95).
  • Pelicans: four losses in five, their only W an outlier against the Clippers (105-99).
  • Both teams play at a middling-to-slow pace (Houston 96.9, New Orleans 101.0), but only the Rockets lock in defensively.

The Edge & What Could Break It

BAC Model pick: Houston Rockets. Why? They’re simply better—sharper on defense, deeper, and far more stable, even as they wrap up a tough road swing.

  • Kevin Durant’s efficiency (26.0 PPG, 58.5 eFG%) and Houston’s inside presence (top-3 in OREB%) give the Pels’ shaky defense nowhere to hide.
  • Houston’s depth and rebounding edge (especially against New Orleans’ patchwork frontcourt) will generate extra possessions and second-chance points.
  • New Orleans’ recent injuries—Dejounte Murray and Trey Murphy III questionable, plus frontcourt shuffling—cripple their shot creation and lineup stability.

Risks:
– Houston is playing its fourth straight road game; late-trip fatigue is real and has punished similar teams this month.
– If both Murray and Murphy III suit up and outperform their norms, New Orleans suddenly gets enough scoring/playmaking to threaten.

Confidence Tag: High. 67/33 split. Houston’s advantages are too substantial to ignore unless the Pelicans get full health and a bench eruption.

The Bottom Line

Houston closes its trip with the same formula: dominate the glass, play through Durant, and run their disciplined sets. The Pelicans, with half a roster and zero margin for error, just can’t summon the firepower or stops to flip the script. Rockets by 8+, playoff engine humming. Skip the drama—the numbers don’t lie.