SACRAMENTO, Calif. – A dancing Dwight Howard loudly sang Beyoncé's hit, "Drunk In Love," after the Houston Rockets' 129-103 blowout win over the Sacramento Kings on Tuesday night. Shortly after, James Harden arrived to his locker coincidentally singing the same song.

On the court, Harden and newcomer Howard have been in tune for the Rockets, too, as they combined for 63 points on this night and have led the franchise to an 8-1 record in February and an NBA-best 18-5 record in 2014. And suddenly Howard's proclaimed title aspirations upon arrival don't sound like a song and dance with Houston anymore either.

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"Myself and James have been to the [NBA] Finals," Howard said. "I've been in the league for a while and I understand the importance of winning. Not just regular-season winning, but winning when it counts which is in the playoffs. I just have total faith in this team.

"I told them it wouldn't be easy. But we got a shot. We can't say we want to wait a year to gel and be ready. We want to win right away."

While Rockets fans definitely listened, Howard's words proclaiming that he was joining a championship-caliber team primarily went on deaf ears when he bolted to Houston from the Los Angeles Lakers last offseason. Keep in mind that the Harden-led Rockets were 45-37 last season and lost in the first round of the playoffs to the Oklahoma City Thunder. Even with Howard, a title would be a major jump the next season in the tough and deep Western Conference.

Harden was for the most part scoring in volume per usual at season's start. But at times he deferred to Howard in hopes of getting him going. Howard appeared to have a Lakers hangover his first month with the Rockets averaging just 16.7 points in November. Houston opened with a 5-4 record before improving to a 13-5 mark by November's end.

"Sometimes you start off a season slow," said Howard, who is now averaging 18.9 points and 12.6 rebounds per game. "We did. We stayed patient. We lost some games we shouldn't have lost. But we stayed patient and stayed focused."

Said Rockets forward Chandler Parsons: "We knew when we got together it was going to be a process and it wasn't going to happen overnight and we would have to go through some battles together."

Howard's eventual comfort level didn't take long to arrive thanks to the help of Rockets past and present.

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Howard said ex-Rockets general manager Carroll Dawson aided him with the mental aspects of his post game. Howard worked on his post game in the gym on off nights. The Rockets worked hard on 2-on-2 offensive drills in practice that centered on guards throwing the ball into the post.

Howard appeared to reach "a level of trust" between himself and his teammates in December. He said he improved in the post by allowing the game to come to him from reading the defense. He also eventually grew comfortable implementing post moves taught by former Rockets great Hakeem Olajuwon and coach Kevin McHale. Howard had tips for his teammates, too.

"We talked about it. We watched film," Howard said. "I've been telling guys all season that instead of throwing bounce passes to me just throw it by the rim. It's an easy assist for those guys. Nine times out of 10 they are not going to foul me above the rim. They are getting a lot better at it."

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