The Brooklyn Nets are considering signing Houston Rockets restricted free agent Donatas Motiejunas to an offer sheet after having him visit their facilities for a physical, according to The Vertical's Adrian Wojnarowski.

Houston had previously rescinded their latest offer to the Lithuanian international after months of pointless negotiating, given that Motiejunas and his agent insisted he was worth more than his league-wide value indicated despite not drawing any offers from any teams.

The 7-footer has an admirable set of skills for his size, as he can rebound, score from the post and be a threat from deep — but his inconsistency and history of health concerns has kept the Rockets among most other teams from making a multi-year offer on him.

Motiejunas is seen mostly as a high-risk, high-reward gamble at this stage in his career. The contention rests in the illusion that he is a Kristaps Porzingis/Karl-Anthony Towns type of player, where he is at best a poor man's version of them at the moment.

His skill set can grow to become one among them, but he'd need to see consistent minutes in the thirties to be able to prove he is among the rare new breed of versatile 7-footers that a team can run an offense through.

If Motiejunas passes the physical and the Nets somehow make an offer he can't refuse, they could be in for a treat to add to the team or a lasting nightmare if he's signed to a multi-year deal and has a recurring history problem. Only time will tell.

Prior to an injury-riddled 2015-16 season, Donatas Motiejunas averaged 12 points and 5.9 rebounds per game while shooting 37 percent from deep during the 2014-15 season.