The NBA playoffs opened Saturday with four Game 1s, and the Lakers headed into their matchup with the Rockets without Luka Dončić or Austin Reaves. Dončić’s hamstring was not yet healed, and Reaves’s oblique was expected to keep him out for a while yet.
Friday’s injury reports also put Kevin Durant on Houston’s list, with the 37-year-old listed as questionable because of a knee injury. That left the Rockets facing the first night of the postseason with their biggest name and best player still on the board, and Durant at the center of everything Houston wants to do.
That is the edge and the burden of playoff basketball in April. Injuries are common at this stage of the season, but they land harder now because every possession matters and every absence changes the shape of a series before it has even started.
For Houston, the question is not whether Durant matters. It is whether he can be ready to shape Game 1 on a night when the Rockets were already being asked to absorb the pressure that comes with the first round. The Lakers, meanwhile, were already trying to manage a playoff opener without two of the pieces they expected to lean on most.
The early test of the playoffs is rarely about one headline injury. It is about how much the rest of the roster can hold together when the game gets real, and Saturday night gave Houston and Los Angeles that answer before the series even settled into rhythm.