Marcus Smart has agreed to a two-year, $13 million contract with the Houston Rockets that includes a player option for the second season, choosing to reunite with head coach Ime Udoka after turning down a smaller option to remain with the Los Angeles Lakers.
The deal was finalized Wednesday morning and gives Houston a proven defensive presence in its backcourt, adding a former NBA Defensive Player of the Year to a team that already has familiarity with what Smart can do after facing him directly in last season’s playoffs.
A Lakers revival that raised his market value
Smart had signed a two-year, $10.5 million deal with Los Angeles featuring a player option and spent last season rebuilding the reputation that had been damaged during two difficult years with other franchises. He started 54 of the 62 regular-season games he played and averaged 9.3 points, 3.0 assists, 2.8 rebounds, and 1.4 steals, but his most impactful contribution was measured in the team’s performance when he was on the floor. The Lakers outscored opponents by 256 points in his minutes, the best plus-minus on the team.
His best individual performance of the season came at the most important moment. In the first round of the playoffs against Houston, with two of the Lakers’ primary offensive weapons sidelined, Smart delivered 21 points, 10 assists, and five steals, including a critical late steal that enabled a comeback and forced overtime. His 2.4 steals per game ranked among the top figures in the entire 2026 postseason.
Why Houston was the destination
The connection between Smart and Udoka is a significant factor in the deal. The two had a working relationship previously in their careers, giving Smart comfort with the coaching style and system he would be entering. Reuniting with a head coach who knows his strengths and how to use them was clearly a factor in choosing Houston over staying with the Lakers under their existing option.
The Rockets have been building systematically and made the postseason last year, giving Smart a competitive environment rather than a rebuilding situation. His presence in the backcourt addresses a genuine need for a defender and secondary ball-handler who can absorb responsibility when primary players are unavailable, a role he demonstrated he could fill under pressure during the playoff run with Los Angeles.
What Smart brings to Houston
Smart’s value has always been most apparent to coaches and teammates who see how he affects games beyond the box score. The plus-minus figures and his defensive disruption as a ball-hawker reflect the kind of contributions that are difficult to quantify statistically but meaningful in determining outcomes of close games and contested possessions.
At 32, Smart is in the portion of his career where efficiency and intelligence matter more than athleticism, and his Lakers season suggested he has adjusted well to that reality. He was not asked to be a primary scorer but to execute at a high level within a defined role, which he did effectively enough to earn a better contract than the option he declined.
The two-year structure with a player option in the second year gives Smart leverage to reassess his situation after one season if the Rockets environment develops in directions he did not anticipate, while giving Houston reasonable cost certainty for a player who proved last season that he can still impact games at a meaningful level when healthy and properly deployed.

