The 1997–98 NBA season was the Rockets' 31st season in the National Basketball Association, and 27th season in Houston.[1] After a slow 3–5 start to the season, the Rockets went on a nine-game winning streak winning 12 of their first 17 games. The team traveled to Mexico City, Mexico, where they defeated the Dallas Mavericks 108–106 on December 6, 1997, which was the first NBA regular season game played in Mexico.[2] However, as the season progressed, they began to slip under .500, showing their age and the wear and tear of long playoff runs as they played mediocre basketball all season. Hakeem Olajuwon missed most of the first half of the season with a knee injury, only playing just 47 games.[3] Without their star center, Kevin Willis would step into the lineup, averaging 16.1 points and 8.4 rebounds per game.[4] Olajuwon would eventually return as the Rockets finished fourth in the Midwest Division with a 41–41 record, and qualified the playoffs as the #8 seed in the Western Conference.[5]
Clyde Drexler led the team with 18.4 points, 5.5 assists and 1.8 steals per game, while Olajuwon averaged 16.4 points, 9.8 rebounds, 1.8 steals and 2.0 blocks per game, and Charles Barkley provided the team with 15.2 points and 11.7 rebounds per game, and played half of the season off the bench as the team’s sixth man.[6] In addition, second-year guard and three-point specialist Matt Maloney provided with 8.6 points per game, and Mario Elie and Eddie Johnson both contributed 8.4 points per game each.[4]
In the Western Conference First Round of the playoffs, in a rematch of last season's Western Conference Finals, the Rockets took a 2–1 series lead over the top-seeded Utah Jazz.[7] However, they would lose the series in five games. Barkley sat out Game 5 with a torn triceps muscle as the Jazz defeated the Rockets 84–70.[8] It was the first time the Rockets lost in the opening round of the playoffs since 1991.
This marked the final season for Drexler, who received a standing ovation after the Rockets' Game 5 loss to the Jazz at the Delta Center. He then retired to take over the head coaching job at the University of Houston, where he had played college basketball along with Olajuwon, ending his fifteen-year career in the NBA.[9] Drexler also won the 2Ball competition along with Cynthia Cooper of the WNBA’s Houston Comets during the All-Star Weekend.[10] Also following the season, Willis was traded to the Toronto Raptors,[11] and Elie signed as a free agent with the San Antonio Spurs.[12]