RSS Mavericks Team Notes

Three key players endorsed the acquisition of D’Angelo Russell

Dallas Mavericks v Brooklyn Nets

Photo by David L. Nemec/NBAE via Getty Images

D’Lo was the top target for Dallas this offseason and it appears that decision was influenced by players on the Mavericks roster

The Dallas Mavericks have an incredibly deep frontcourt after drafting Cooper Flagg, but addressing their backcourt remained a high priority in the wake of Kyrie Irving’s ACL injury which may keep him out of action most of next season. Dallas not only had to contend with an injured Irving, but also had to consider unrestricted free agents Spencer Dinwiddie and Dante Exum – Jaden Hardy and Brandon Williams were the only two point guards on the roster entering the offseason. The Mavericks chose to bring Exum back, but essentially swapped Dinwiddie for Russell, as they let the former walk and pursued the latter to the tune of a two-year deal.

Picking up Russell was a savvy move. He cost the Mavs nothing in terms of players or draft capital and is a capable point guard who can easily transition to a bench role upon the return of Irving. Was his acquisition the result of a clever front office, or something more than that?

Mavericks Digest cites unnamed sources who claim the acquisition of D’Lo was heavily influenced by some of the biggest names on the Mavericks’ roster, specifically Kyrie Irving, Klay Thompson and Anthony Davis. Not only that, they go on to say the arrangement came to a head a full 10 days prior to Free Agency formally opening.


Per sources; The decision to push for D’Angelo Russell came from Anthony Davis, Klay Thompson and Kyrie Irving. Irving expressed a want to play with Russell in the past, as well as Thompson and Davis having played with Russell in the past. The terms were agreed upon 10 days prior… pic.twitter.com/IOUyWC5OYK

— Mavericks Digest (@mavericksdigest) July 7, 2025

Irving, Thompson and Davis all pushed to get D’Lo to Dallas​


This alone is a ringing endorsement that any player would hope to have. Any time three NBA Champions and future Hall-of-Famers want to play with you, it’s a good thing. Beyond their accolades, all three players have some interesting cross-sections with Russell throughout their careers. Irving previously expressed a desire to play with him, though he missed the chance to do so when he joined the Nets just after Russell was traded from Brooklyn. Russell of course ended up with the Golden State Warriors – then-home to Thompson – as a result of that trade. Like Irving, Thompson also missed his chance to share court time with Russell, as he was injured for the entirety of Russell’s short stint with the Warriors. Davis did play alongside Russell during their shared time with the Los Angeles Lakers, however. Aside from Irving, the other two stars had first-hand experience with Russell and apparently liked what they saw enough to want some more.

The deal was set prior to Free Agency officially kicking off​


At this point, it’s no surprise that the Free Agency moratorium is essentially non-existent. It’s simply too easy for players and teams to speak to each other in advance of the Free Agency window opening. If sources are to be believed, the Mavs and Russell were set to join up a week-and-a-half early. That brings us back to Irving. If these reports are true, it’s easy to conclude that Irving’s contract extension – the one that made acquiring Russell possible – was tailor made to do just that. In other words, Irving put his money where his mouth is and capitalized on a contract extension that paid him a touch less per year, in order to bring Russell in. A complete win/win situation for him.

All in all, it seems like Russell has resounding support from key teammates. If he’s good enough for them, he will hopefully prove to be good enough for the fanbase. While some fans are less than thrilled with Russell’s defensive prowess and overall game, having well-regarded players vouch for him says a lot. D’Lo has every motivation and every opportunity to do big things with a talented team around him this season. We’ll soon find out if the players working a front office role results in a positive outcome on the court.

I invite you to follow me @_80MPH on X, and check back often at Mavs Moneyball for all the latest on the Dallas Mavericks.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...e-irving-ad-anthony-davis-dlo-dangelo-russell
 
3 thoughts after the Dallas Mavericks hold off the Los Angeles Lakers, 87-85

2025 NBA Summer League - Los Angeles Lakers v Dallas Mavericks


A mixed bag from Cooper Flagg, but Dallas seals the win

The Dallas Mavericks started Las Vegas Summer League with an 87-85 win over the Los Angeles Lakers Thursday night. Undrafted rookie Ryan Nembhard led Dallas with 21 points and five assists. Cole Swider scored 22 for LA in defeat. Rookie Cooper Flagg contributed 10 points, six rebounds, four assists, three steals, and a huge block, but also had a rough shooting night from the floor.

Dallas won the tip but Bronny James knocked down two contested jumpers over Flagg to start the game. Nembhard settled the Dallas offense, hitting two jumpers to keep pace with LA. Following a quiet start for Flagg, he brought the crown to it’s feet with a rim rattling dunk following a steal and a contested baseline jumper. These back-to-back possessions gave the Mavericks their first lead of the game. Flagg’s offensive aggressiveness was on display early, with seven shot attempts in the first seven minutes. But that included three made baskets, including an and-one in transition to extend the Dallas lead to three. The teams traded baskets the rest of the quarter, with the Mavericks taking a 19-17 lead after one quarter.

An actual basketball game continued into the second with the Lakers retaking the lead on two made baskets. Dallas answered right back with a run of their own. A made three by Gabe McGlothan gave the Mavericks their largest lead of the game and resulted in a Laker timeout. A Flagg steal and dish in transition extended the lead to seven. Los Angeles responded with a 19-6 run over the second half of the quarter to put the Mavericks on their heels. Flagg went coast-to-coast and scored on a tough finish to close the LA lead to four and Nembhard scored on a soft pull up with four seconds left to close it to two. DJ Steward ended the half with a floating bank shot as time expired. LA led Dallas 47-43 after twenty minutes of basketball.

Dalton Knecht got things going early for the Lakers, scoring two tough baskets. Knecht hit a three to give Los Angeles a double-digit lead for the first time all game. Dallas finally managed to take the lead down to six, and a three from Jordan Hall made it a single-possession game with just over four minutes to play. A Miles Kelly three and Jamarion Sharp’s free throw tied the game at 62 all, and a breakaway layup for Kelly gave the Mavericks their first lead since the second quarter. After being down 60-50 with 6:15 in the third, Dallas closed on an 18-2 run and took a 68-62 lead into the final period.

The two teams traded baskets in the fourth, with Los Angeles rallying back once again. Twos became threes with Dallas and LA exchanging baskets still and Dallas holding onto a two-possession lead. Flagg’s shooting woes continued into the fourth as he couldn’t buy a basket. A Laker three from Cole Swindler put Los Angeles back on top and forced a Maverick timeout with just over three minutes to play. The Lakers held the lead until a massive block of Steward by Flagg led to a Nembhard three at the one-minute mark. Dallas finished the game sloppy with another rough-looking shot from Flagg, but the Mavericks played good enough defense to force a missed shot on the Lakers final possession. Dallas starts Las Vegas Summer League 1-0 with an 87-85 win over Los Angeles.

Mixed bag for Flagg​


Flagg’s aforementioned 10 points, six boards, four assists, three steals, and a block looks good. The 5-for-21 from the floor looks bad. But I’ll tell you what, watching this guy play live was pretty remarkable. Dallas let him bring the ball up the floor regularly where he was hounded by Los Angeles pressure. He drew multiple fouls far from the basket simply by being under control and strong with the ball. His decisions as a playmaker were fun to watch and he wasn’t bothered by consistent ball pressure. Defensively he navigated screens well and knew where to be. He’s going to be fun in transition with or without the ball.

It wasn’t all great, given his shooting performance from the floor. The threes looked short and his midrange game was off-kilter all night. He seemed out of position at times for defensive rebounds and he’ll have to work harder than he did tonight on the glass in NBA games.

It was a solid, but not spectacular, debut. I’ll take it.

Wild energy from the crowd​


This is a given, considering Flagg was the number one pick. But match that with Lakerland enthusiasm for Bronny James and you have a stew going. The crowds at these events are always fun, full of sicko diehards and you could feel it the entire game. A recommended experience if you can ever get to Vegas.

Ryan Nembhard is stout and effective​


A workman-like performance from the rookie on a team that needs someone to run an offense. Dallas looked out of sorts at some points, usually when Nembard wasn’t on the floor. His play directly led to the Dallas victory and while his size may be of concern, he looked strong and like he belonged on the court. He’ll be really fun to watch this weekend and into next week.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...score-87-85-cooper-flagg-debut-duke-dallas-la
 
SB Reacts: Dallas Mavericks free agency and playoff prediction reactions

2025 NBA Summer League - Los Angeles Lakers v Dallas Mavericks

Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Fans respond to questions asked

This week’s Dallas Mavericks fan polling had two easy questions about the progression of the offseason. Since we’re all but wrapped up with the moves that matter, it seemed a good time to take the temperature of the team’s performance.

The first question asked if the Dallas Maverick did enough in free agency.



The voting fanbase is split on this topic, right down the middle. I think that’s apt too because the question was worded vaguely on purpose. If you are concerned about the Dallas guard depth you probably voted no. If you think Dallas didn’t have a lot of options, given the cap situation and free agents, you may have voted yes. Either way, this is the team Dallas has and they’ll have to see how it does this regular season.

The second question asked if the Mavericks would make the playoffs.



Fans overwhelmingly voted yes. I’m a bit surprised! But it’s the time of year where optimism flows freely. That said, I am in the minority. I think Dallas will guard well, but struggle to score. The team lacks dribble penetration and shooting, hallmarks of successful NBA offenses these days.

But! It’s July and I could be swayed to change my mind. Dallas performing better would be a welcome surprise. The team’s over/under right now is at 40.5 at FanDuel and they’re a +102 to make the playoffs (There’s also some ridiculously fun Cooper Flagg bets if that’s your thing). This is why they play the games.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...-free-agency-and-playoff-prediction-reactions
 
3 thoughts after the Dallas Mavericks fell to the San Antonio Spurs, 76-69

2025 NBA Summer League - Dallas Mavericks v San Antonio Spurs

Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Flagg plays a well-rounded game, but Dallas can’t pull past the Spurs

The Dallas Mavericks fell to 1-1 in Las Vegas Summer League, losing to the San Antonio Spurs, 76-69. David Garcia-Jones led the Spurs in scoring with 21 while number two overall draft pick Dylan Harper scored 16 with six rebounds, a pair of assists, two steals, and a block. Cooper Flagg scored 31 points and grabbed four rebounds in defeat.

Miles Kelly got things started for Dallas, connecting on a three then getting fouled shooting another and hitting all three free throws. San Antonio struggled with the length of the Mavericks in the opening minutes, with Dallas forcing the Spurs to use the full shot clock on multiple possessions. With the Mavericks effectively packing the paint, the Spurs found and made threes, taking an early lead over Dallas. Cooper Flagg finally got on the board, scoring a driving lay-up on his fourth attempt of the game, but he missed the accompanying free throw. A lack of action from Dallas on offense allowed the Spurs to hound the Mavericks into a poor shooting quarter. Free throws were the only saving grace for Dallas in the period and they trailed 21-11 after 10 minutes of Summer League.

The rookies led the way to start the second quarter with both Flagg and Dylan Harper making highlight-worthy plays. Like Los Angeles on Friday, the Spurs elected to put pressure on Dallas ball handlers in the backcourt whenever possible. Much like the first half there was a lid on the basket for Dallas for most of the second quarter. Free throws and effort kept the Mavericks in the game. Despite just five made field goals in the first 17 minutes of game action, Dallas tied the game at 25 with under three minutes remaining in the half. A sweet Jordan Hall one-footed fadeaway gave the Mavericks their first lead since the opening minutes of the game. Harper retook the lead on a fantastic drive and finish with a foul. The Spurs led 33-32 at the half.

After just eight made field goals in the first half, the Mavericks scored eight field goals in the third quarter. Unfortunately, as their offense picked up, the defense faltered. The Spurs scored early and often and built upon their halftime lead. David Jones-Garcia continued his hot scoring, scoring 18 through three quarters. San Antonio led by as many as 12 in the quarter and two late Cooper Flagg baskets helped keep Dallas within range. The Mavericks trailed by 10 entering the fourth, down 59-49.

It went from bad to worse for Dallas in the fourth, with the Spurs scoring eight easy points and forcing a Dallas timeout. The lax ball handling for the Mavericks continued and the San Antonio lead grew to as high as 17 before Dallas found some offfensive footing. The Mavericks worked the San Antonio lead down to 10 points with just under four minutes remaining, forcing a Spurs timeout. The Mavericks made a few last-gasp runs trying to make it a clutch game, but the team didn’t have enough baskets and defense in them. Dallas fell 76-69. Dallas plays the Hornets Monday afternoon for their next Vegas contest.

Can’t win if you can’t score​


The Mavericks were pressed from pillar to post against the Spurs. Rare was a possession where a given ball handler bringing the ball up the court didn’t see a defender eagerly attempting to disrupt the possession, even 60 feet away from the basket.

While this happened against Los Angeles as well, something about the nature of the physicality of the Spurs defense got Dallas off track for the entirety of the first half. Dallas hung around through free throws and grit, but the Mavericks had a hard time finding good shot attempts against a swarming Spurs defense.

The Mavericks ended the game with 24 made field goals with 16 of those coming in the second half. They shot just 37% as a team and it was much lower than that for most of the contest. Dallas connected on just six of their 26 threes and those misses doomed Dallas against a tough Spurs squad.

Flagg rising​


If you missed this game, the Flagg box score should excite you. 31 points on 20 shots along with 13 trips to the free throw line. He didn’t have many rebounds or assists, but Dallas couldn’t hit a shot on offense and sometimes the ball just doesn’t bounce your way to get boards.

I’m still not in love with how much Dallas is isolating Flagg, but he’s got the one-on-one skills and strength to bull his way to the basket or get separation for a jumper. He’s got the kind of game that silences skeptics. It simply takes watching an entire Flagg game. A few more random Flagg thoughts:

  • Watching Flagg play with an ineffective center like Jamarion Sharp is frustrating, but it leads to day dreams about seeing Flagg with Anthony Davis, Derrick Lively, and Daniel Gafford.
  • Flagg is going to need to take fewer long Kevin Garnett jumpers just inside the three-point line. He seems to like stepping into shots versus a catch-and-shoot. Maybe he could work on a side-step three?
  • Don’t take that the wrong way, he shot eight threes, making three of them, so he’s shooting plenty. I just don’t like long twos if you can make a three.
  • Flagg’s defensive awareness and side-to-side movement is really fun to watch. He seems to appear in the right place on defense sometimes.
  • Having Cooper Flagg is awesome.

Dylan Harper is ridiculous​


He’s going to be a bear to play against four times a year for the foreseeable future. He’s NBA ready right now and is really fun to watch.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...-final-score-76-69-cooper-flagg-ryan-nembhard
 
Wings Things: Dallas gets a brutal welcome to the WNBA’s Paige Bueckers vs. Caitlin Clark Era

Dallas Wings v Indiana Fever

Getty Images

The Indiana Fever beat the Wings for the second time this season, 102-83, in Indianapolis.

The spectacle of Game 1 of the WNBA’s Caitlin Clark vs. Paige Bueckers Era, fueled by the emergence of the game’s two youngest budding superstars, turned into an old-fashioned whoopin’ as the game got away from Bueckers’ Dallas Wings (6-16) in the second quarter on Sunday at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.

Turnovers mounted for the Wings in the third quarter after the Fever (11-10) raced to a huge lead with an immaculate offensive display in the second. Clark became just the second player in WNBA history to pile up 10 or more points, 10 or more assists and five or more steals multiple times in her career in the Fever’s 102-83 win.

Both Clark and Bueckers showed off their proficiency from way beyond the arc in the first quarter. Bueckers hit a 29-footer with 5:40 left in the frame to give the Wings an early 16-11 lead after Clark sunk a 27-footer on the Fever’s second possession of the game.

Clark, still on a minutes restriction (28 minutes, according to the national broadcast) in her third game back from a recent groin injury, wowed the Indianapolis crowd with a touchdown pass to a streaking Sophie Cunningham in transition after blocking a driving attempt from Dallas guard JJ Quinerly. She dropped the dime, her fourth of the game, with 6:54 left in the first half for the basket that put the Fever up 37-31 and forced a Wings timeout. Clark dished seven assists in the first half and finished with a game-high 13.

That touchdown pass was part of a 25-4 run through the middle of the second that saw Indiana’s lead grow to as big as 23 points, up 58-35 on Cunningham’s 3-pointer from the wing with 2:04 left in the first half, which came on a savvy find from Clark for her sixth assist of the game.

Bueckers’ second 3-ball (another deep one, from 31 feet away) of the game halted the run that saw Indiana shooting 15-for-18 in the first eight minutes of the second quarter, but only temporarily. Clark responded with her second from the left wing with 48 seconds to play before halftime and shouted to pump up the home crowd on her way back up the floor. At full strength, that’s just the kind of team the Fever are. You’re running with them, then you look up, and all of a sudden, they’re up 20 on you. They wield lethal firepower up and down the roster and the big shots come from every direction, inside and out.

Dallas Wings v Indiana Fever
Photo by Michael Hickey/Getty Images
Caitlin Clark #22 of the Indiana Fever shoots the ball against Paige Bueckers #5 of the Dallas Wings during the first half at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on July 13, 2025 in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Clark went down in a heap after Bueckers forced a miss with a rallying contest on Clark’s drive in transition with 5:45 left in the second quarter. Clark grimaced in discomfort on the Fever’s next offensive possession and exited the game midway through the second, still on schedule with her minutes restriction. She came back in late in the second.

Clark filled the stat sheet with 10 points, seven assists and three steals in the first half, while Bueckers tallied 10 points on 4-of-6 shooting for Dallas. Kelsey Mitchell and Natasha Howard quietly led all scorers in the first half with 13 points apiece on 12-of-14 shooting between them as the Fever sprinted to a 64-42 lead at the break. The Fever outscored the Wings 36-15 in the second, and their 64 points were the most scored by any team in any half this season.

The Clark-Bueckers 1-on-1 matchup never really materialized on the floor, as Clark worked over the defensive efforts of Quinerly and Aziaha James and got the ball out of her hands quickly when open teammates presented themselves. Sophie Cunningham and Lexie Hull hounded Bueckers as primary defenders on the other end.

Bueckers and Clark exchanged tough jumpers in the third quarter, but Indiana was already up by 25 points at that point. Clark scored 14 points, dished 13 assists and took away a career-high tying five steals in the rout, while Bueckers finished her 35 minutes with 21 points on 9-of-15 shooting for the Wings in the loss. Bueckers also turned the ball over four times on Sunday, after going off for 27 points in the teams’ first meeting of the season on June 27.

The objective spectator would have to score Round 1 of Clark-Bueckers in Clark’s favor, but another thing Sunday’s game underscored was that the Fever have a much more complete team around their superstar than the Wings have at this point. Aliyah Boston (17 points, 7-of-11 shooting) is a force to be reckoned with on the interior, Mitchell (20 points, 8-of-12 shooting) and Howard (18 points, 8-of-9 shooting) attacked the Dallas defense to shoot 16-of-21 from the field in the win, and sharpshooters Cunningham (13 points, five rebounds, 2-of-3 3-point shooting) and Hull (3 points) are always waiting along the wing for their open looks that come as a result of an offense that just doesn’t quit.

Wings’ guard Arike Ogunbowale went 0-for-10 from the field in her first game back from a thumb injury. Quinerly, who has recently emerged as the team’s starting point guard, was looked at for a potential rib injury in the third quarter but ultimately checked back into the game late in the frame. Li Yueru chipped in 16 points and five rebounds for the Wings, one game after piling up 18 points and 10 boards in Wednesday’s 87-76 loss at the Chicago Sky.

Bueckers, Clark, the Wings and the Fever will meet once more this season, on Aug. 1, in a game that was recently moved to American Airlines Center. The two teams’ first meeting of the year drew a Wings franchise record 20,409 attendance, though Clark sat out the matchup with her groin injury. Dallas returns home to face former Wing NaLyssa Smith and the Las Vegas Aces (10-11) on Wednesday at Arlington’s College Park Center.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...indiana-fever-paige-bueckers-vs-caitlin-clark
 
Dallas Mavericks vs San Antonio Spurs Preview: An old rivalry with new faces

2025 NBA Summer League - Los Angeles Lakers v Dallas Mavericks

Photo by Ian Maule/Getty Images

Another national tv Dallas NBA Summer League game

The Dallas Mavericks play their second Las Vegas Summer League game, this time against the San Antonio Spurs. It’s on ESPN again and features the number one and number two picks from June’s NBA Draft, Cooper Flagg and Dylan Harper. The first game was shockingly good from Dallas against the Lakers, we’ll see if they can find a way to pull through again.

  • WHO: Dallas Mavericks vs San Antonio Spurs
  • WHAT: The first game of Las Vegas Summer League for the Dallas Mavericks
  • WHERE: Thomas & Mack Center, Las Vegas, Nevada
  • WHEN: 3:00 p.m. CST
  • HOW: ESPN

The injury report isn’t a thing again but Dylan Harper is on a minutes restriction. Cooper Flagg did play a lot on Friday, 31+ minutes, so we’lll see how many he plays today. It’s unclear if this is his last game in Vegas or if we’ll get to see one more.

It’s worth paying close attention to Miles Kelly and Ryan Nembhard again, each were stand outs in the Friday game. Flagg’s shot volume and ball handling will also be something to keep an eye out for. But remember not to overreact too much and try to enjoy the game. Flagg is only going to get better.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...art-time-tv-stream-injury-report-how-to-watch
 
2025 NBA Cup set, Mavericks grouped with Lakers

NBA: New Orleans Pelicans at Dallas Mavericks

Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

Cooper Flagg’s Mavericks will face Luka Doncic among others, in the league’s third iteration of the in-season tournament.

The NBA released groupings for the 2025 NBA Cup this week, the in-season tournament that takes place in the fall and culminates in a semifinal and final Dec. 13 and 16 in Las Vegas. The Dallas Mavericks will participate in West Group B alongside the Los Angeles Lakers, Los Angeles Clippers, Memphis Grizzlies, and New Orleans Pelicans, facing each team in a round robin format. Group stage games kick-off Oct. 31, and lasts until Nov. 28.

The NBA Cup in its third year sees the 30 league teams split into six groups (three groups per conference). Each team will play four games, two home and two away, with eight teams advancing to the quarterfinals — the six group winners with an added wildcard winner from each conference based on cup record. In addition to group play, the quarterfinals and semifinals will count toward regular season record. For those that don’t advance to the knockout stages, substitute games will be added to fill out regular season schedules.

While it’s a stated random draw, the league put their randomizer to work and paired Cooper Flagg and the Mavericks with Luka Doncic and the Lakers. Expect the spotlight to lean in on that game. All things considered Dallas has a lighter group compared to West Group C which features: Houston Rockets, Denver Nuggets, Golden State Warriors, Portland Trail Blazers, and San Antonio Spurs.

The Mavericks improved from the inaugural cup, where they were eliminated in group play, by advancing to the quarterfinals. That round saw them face the eventual cup runner-up Oklahoma City Thunder, losing 118-104. Last year’s eventual winner was the Milwaukee Bucks.

Full schedules, which games will be home or road, and set dates will be announced in the future. Cooper Flagg can set his sights first on a summer league trophy before turning his attention to trophies elsewhere.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...cooper-flagg-luka-doncic-in-season-tournament
 
Mavericks center Dereck Lively II has foot surgery

NBA: Play-In-Dallas Mavericks at Memphis Grizzlies

Petre Thomas-Imagn Images

The young center is expected to be healthy for the start of next season

Dallas Mavericks center Dereck Lively II underwent a successful foot surgery this week, according to reports by ESPN’s Shams Charania and NBA insider Marc Stein, to remove bone spurs from his foot. The 21-year old big man entering his third season with the Mavericks is expected to be healthy and recovered in time for training camp in a couple months.

After a productive rookie season that saw him play an impactful role in the team’s run to the NBA Finals, Lively battled injury in hi sophomore campaign. Limited to just 36 games last season, Lively was still a key player in the roller-coaster ride of last season while averaging 8.7 points, 7.5 rebounds, 2.4 assists, and 1.6 blocks in 23 minutes per game.

His season was derailed by an injury the Mavericks reported as a right ankle stress fracture that forced him to miss over two months. With the season already lost Lively returned in April to appear in four games where he posted averages of just 5.5 points and 4.8 rebounds in 15 minutes per game.

Lively’s injury was one in an avalanche of injuries the team sustained in 2025, all in the midst of turmoil related to the team’s strength and conditioning and athletic training staff. The team has already made moves this offseason to change some of that personnel and will certainly be under the microscope heading into next season while fans eagerly await the return of Kyrie Irving in the back half of the regular season.

The hope would be this procedure clears up any remaining hindrances for Lively — though it is worth noting that back in April team general manager Nico Harrison stated he did not believe Lively would need any future surgeries related to the ankle injury. We now find ourselves a few months later with this report.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...-ii-has-foot-surgery-kyrie-irving-injury-news
 
Dallas Mavericks vs Los Angeles Lakers Preview and Game Thread: So it begins

2025 NBA Summer League - Los Angeles Lakers v Dallas Mavericks


Cooper Flagg’s first game as a Dallas Maverick

Basketball is finally back for fans of the Dallas Mavericks as the team faces off in a primetime game Thursday evening against the Los Angeles Lakers. It’s the debut of Cooper Flagg, the recent number one overall draft pick. Dallas last saw the court as part of the NBA Play-In where they were waxed by the Memphis Grizzlies. The Lakers last saw the court against the Minnesota Timberwolves. Though the players are different, this matchup should provide fireworks for all involved.

  • WHO: Dallas Mavericks vs Los Angeles Lakers
  • WHAT: The first game of Las Vegas Summer League for the Dallas Mavericks
  • WHERE: Thomas & Mack Center, Las Vegas, Nevada
  • WHEN: 7:00 p.m. CST
  • HOW: ESPN

The injury report... well, there isn’t one. It’s Summer League. But, as far as we know, everyone we’re interested in playing should suit up and get minutes. As far as what we’re looking for, you can read Tyler Edsel’s power ranking of Dallas players. David Trink also has this post here about three players he wants to see this weekend.

Having Ryan Nembhard as point is going to make a big difference in the quality of the game, but seeing Flagg as the play initiator is worth paying close attention to. I’m pretty excited about seeing Dallas basketball again; anything resembling good play will be a bonus.

Josh and I will have a live show shortly after the game and I’ll be writing a recap. We’re bound to have other content too, so check back with Mavs Moneyball tonight and tomorrow. Thanks for hanging out, let’s go Mavericks. hanks for hangin

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...art-time-tv-stream-injury-report-how-to-watch
 
NBA Draft 2026: Players to watch in the ACC

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The once proud basketball conference that is the ACC has taken a bit of a nosedive in recent years. It was just a few short years ago that saw Final Four’s filled with the likes of North Carolina, Miami, Virginia and Louisville. Now, only the Duke Blue Devils have been the constant for this conference. 2025-26 on the surface seems better for this league, as the overall talent level has gone up with the additions of some quality coaches and transfer portal classes. But who are the players to watch in this conference?

Ten players to watch​

10. Nikolas Khamenia​

6’8” Forward, Duke


One thing about Duke is that they are not afraid to sign and rely on freshmen, even in this portal era. Khamenia is the first of two Devils that you’ll see here, as the true freshman was the number 15 prospect in the country, per 247 sports. Expect him to contribute right away.

9. Markus Burton​

5’11” Guard, Notre Dame


Do you like buckets? If so, I have the player for you to watch. Burton is a bucket getter, scoring 21 points per game on nearly 38% shooting from deep as a sophomore last year. The thing that will hold him back in NBA conversations is his size, as he is very undersized. However, I would highly recommend watching him play at least once.

8. J’Vonne Hadley​

6’6” Guard, Louisville


Louisville coach Pat Kelsey did a nice job keeping Hadley around for a fifth year in college. Hadley is a bruising guard, who at 6’6” and nearly 220 pounds, is built more like a wide receiver than a guard. He plays that way as well, with over seven boards per game last year and a field goal percentage of 52%. It’s reminiscent of Jalen Pickett from Penn State, which was good enough to get him to the league. It should be good enough for Hadley, too.

7. Isaac McKneely​

6’4” Guard, Louisville


Yet another Cardinal, and it won’t be the last either. Louisville hit the portal to bring in McKneely, who was one of the best three-point shooters in the ACC last season at Virginia. Whether he comes off the bench or lands in the starting five, expect a heavy dose of McKneely to help Louisville space the floor. He projects to have NBA-ready shooting.

6. Naithan George​

6’3” Guard, Syracuse


George is potentially the best true point guard in the country, having led the ACC in assists last year at Georgia Tech. George is an all-around player, averaging over 12 points per contest to go along with his assist total. With highly touted freshmen Kiyan Anthony and Sadiq White (more on them later) flanking him, expect those numbers to increase in 2025-26.

5. Darrion Williams​

6’6” Forward, North Carolina State


Former LSU Head Coach Will Wade has successfully cleaned his image while down at McNeese State, and his return to the big leagues brought with it a major investment into the basketball program at NC State. Williams, the headliner of the portal additions, excelled at Texas Tech, to the point where many thought he’d be in the 2025 Draft. By going back to school, NC State will look to feature him in route to making it back to March Madness.

4. Sadiq White​

6’8” Forward, Syracuse


The first of the two highly touted freshmen that Cuse brought in is Sadiq White, a forward out of IMG Academy. White decided to go to Syracuse over the likes of Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois and Tennessee, among others. White will immediately provide vertical spacing for the Orange, as his bounce and explosiveness is near the top of his class.

3. Kiyan Anthony​

6’5” Guard, Syracuse


I mean, come on, who isn’t excited to watch Carmelo’s kid play at Carmelo’s alma mater in a year that will define where this storied program is in this new era? Kiyan is a tough shot taker and maker, much like Carmelo. However, Kiyan has developed a nice floor game that should continue to develop I college. You can tell when watching him that he learned how to play from a pro. I can’t wait to see him play.

2. Mikel Brown​

6’3” Guard, Louisville


Mikel Brown might already be the most skilled guard in the ACC and he hasn’t played a minute of ball yet. With Team USA over the summer, Brown averaged 15 points and six rebounds per game in route to winning Gold at the FIBA U19 World Cup. There’s no ceiling here for Brown, especially if he can grow into his frame while in college. He could be the number one pick in the Draft if things go right.

1. Cam Boozer​

6’9” Forward, Duke


Remember what I said about Duke’s propensity to start and rely on freshmen? On this side of Cooper Flagg, there might not be a bigger lock in this class than Cam Boozer. Already 235 pounds, he’s got the frame to play any type of game that Duke needs him to. He’s an elite passer for his position, and he rebounds the ball at a high level. If the shot translates, he’s going to be beyond special.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/maver...in-the-acc-basketball-duke-boozer-mikel-kiyan
 
Not even 44 points from Paige Bueckers was enough to lift the Wings to a win in Los Angeles

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Boy, Paige Bueckers and Kelsey Plum sure do bring out the best in each other. Less than a week after they scored 29 and 28, respectively, in the Los Angeles Sparks’ 97-96 win over the Dallas Wings (9-27), Plum hit a buzzer-beating game winner on Wednesday to lift the Sparks (17-18) over the Wings, 81-80, at Crypto.com Arena. Bueckers’ 44 points in the loss was the highest-scoring game by any WNBA player this season.

The first-year superstar took her game to the stratosphere in the third quarter against the Sparks. With her 44-point explosion, Bueckers now has the third-longest streak of double-digit scoring games (29) by a rookie in WNBA history and became one of just 14 players ever to have more than one 30-plus point game in her rookie year. She shot an absurd 17-of-21 from the field and hit all four of her 3-point attempts in the loss.

The Sparks opened the second quarter on a 15-4 run fueled by Dearica Hamby and Julie Vanloo. Vanloo hit a 3-pointer then a pair of free throws when Bueckers was called for a take foul the next time down. Kelsey Plum’s first 3-ball of the game came three minutes later with Bueckers’ hand in her face, too, and gave Plum a Sparks’ franchise record 81 long balls for the season.

But on the other end, Bueckers gave the Wings everything they needed to stay in the game. She scored 16 points in the first half on 6-of-8 shooting, including a nifty move putting the ball behind her back on her way to the basket to pull the Wings to within 34-23 midway through the second. She pulled up for a smooth mid-range jumper with 21 seconds left in the first half to close the LA lead to seven, 44-37.

Rickea Jackson, who made four of her five 3-point attempts in the half, led all scorers at the break with 17.

Got 99 problems but a defender ain't one 🙂 pic.twitter.com/A75tfZtAWs

— Dallas Wings (@DallasWings) August 21, 2025

Bueckers schooled fellow former UConn Husky Azura Stevens with an up-and-under move to the rack midway through the third to bring Dallas to within 52-48. After the ensuing free throw on the 3-point play, Bueckers was up to 19 points. The next time down, she stole the ball on an errant pass from Cameron Brink and cruised the other way for a breakaway layup to give the rookie her 14th 20-point game. The next time down, she created a driving lane where there was none and scooped home a touch little leaner to give her seven straight points, 23 for the game and keep the Wings in the game, 54-52, with 3:48 left in the third.

After Maddie Siegrist hit her second 3-pointer of the game, Paige delivered her toughest bucket yet, though. She rose up and faded away along the baseline through a Julie Allemand foul and canned the jumper to silence the Los Angeles crowd and send the Dallas bench into an uproar as the Wings took the lead, 58-57. She made easy work of getting past Brink one more time after the Sparks took the lead back to put Dallas back in front, 60-59.

Bueckers was a one-woman wrecking crew in the third quarter. She was transcendent. She followed Luisa Geiselsoder’s 3-ball from the top of the key with one of her own after her defender overplayed the passing lane with 1:13 left in the third. Bueckers went 6-for-6 from the field in the third, and that last 3-pointer extended the Dallas run to 21-7 and the team’s lead to 66-59 heading into the fourth.

The one, not the two ☝️ https://t.co/I6GAo5ZX27 pic.twitter.com/AIh6Yu9zyD

— Dallas Wings (@DallasWings) August 21, 2025

Fellow Wings rookie guard JJ Quinerly had to be helped off the floor after losing her footing while guarding Plum on her way to the basket. It appeared to be yet another leg injury for this team, which has recently lost Li Yueru for the remainder of the season with a sprained left ACL before it was announced that Arike Ogunbowale had been diagnosed with tendonitis in her right knee.

So Bueckers went back to work down the stretch. She put the team on her back and made her next four field goal attempts down the stretch as the Wings and Sparks traded the lead in clutch time. Bueckers hit two more 3-pointers to briefly give Dallas a 75-73 lead, then responded twice more after that to pull the Wings back in front, 77-76, with 2:50 to play.

Jackson was called for a technical foul with 1:03 left after throwing the ball at Grace Berger following a tough battle for a rebound with Geiselsoder. Bueckers made the free throw to give her 44 points and the Wings yet another one-point lead, 80-79. Myisha Hines-Allen lost the ball out of bounds after the Wings won the ensuing jump ball, and the Wings would have to get a stop or two to pull out the upset.

They got one when Geiselsoder stuck a hand in Plum’s face on a 3-pointer from the right wing, but Aziaha James missed a corner 3-pointer on the other end, and Plum drove past Geiselsoder in the game’s final seconds and no one stepped up to challenge her in the lane. Her wide open leaner in the lane banked home at the buzzer to lift the Sparks to the 81-80 win. Plum scored 20 for the Sparks in the win, while Jackson led LA with 25.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...ngs-loss-los-angeles-sparks-final-score-81-80
 
MMB Lounge: At last

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Well guys, I finally did it. I created the lounge post for you all.

I’m really sorry it took so long. A few things happened all at once. First, I flat out forgot to post a new one back on the old page design. Then no one asked me directly. After that, I basically thought “you know what I’ll do one when the season begins or when I’m asked to”.

Then we changed to this new formatting via WordPress. It’s a good system, but it’s taken me a while to learn. You all who come here enough to want this know that in season, we’re IN season. We publish stuff regularly, we react to news, we’re generally on top of things. Not this offseason. Not most off-seasons, to be honest, but this one was extra because we knew this system change is coming and it’s hard to learn something new when we’re all doing this as a side hobby. And, because anyone who’s been part of a product rollout knows, there are issues. And we’ve had issues! They’re starting to resolve.

The Feed in particular has caused some consternation but I think the feedback I’ve seen, particularly about the commenting system, is being taken to heart by my managers and design team. They want you spending time here and we do to, so being able to share an X post, an Instagram story, a piece of news, something, that will keep you here! So hopefully these things get ironed out.

Anyway, what I’d love to happen is have someone email me once the comments get to like 500 or something and the posts start to become unmanageable. I can make a new one pretty easily. Once I’m in the zone with MMB content, I swear doing easy posts like this is fine with me. You’re also not bothering me by reaching out. At the heart of content like this is a customer service experience. I want you all to be happy even if I will sometimes tell specifically jerky people they are being such. It’s the life.

So, enjoy your comment section here. I will read it as I can. Go Mavs.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/general/49751/mmb-lounge-at-last
 
Dereck Lively seems to be the Mavs’ social media strategy

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Dallas Mavericks center Dereck Lively visiting with family, working out, talking about dinosaurs. Lively at his camp, hanging out with kids, Lively working out again, Lively dinosaur picture used as a meme. And that is just the last week.

When you get the final schedule the night before Schedule Release 💀@ticketmaster // #MFFL pic.twitter.com/3oHycRVPv7

— Dallas Mavericks (@dallasmavs) August 14, 2025

The Mavs social media strategy these days seems to be Dereck Lively. We see him working out more than once. We understand that he spent a lot of time with his kids’ camp in Philadelphia (multiple posts):

D-Live came home to Philly & wanted ALL the smoke 🙅‍♂️@DereckLively // #MFFL pic.twitter.com/4El1LCyTTw

— Dallas Mavericks (@dallasmavs) August 16, 2025

Not only does he seem to feature in the most posts recently, they also seem to use him the most for the content they produce themselves. Here, about dinosaurs from last week. It’s like the dinosaur hobby never gets old.

D-Live goes BACK to the Dinosaur Park… Or so we thought? 🎬🗓️@ticketmaster // #MFFL pic.twitter.com/Yz4siaEJaz

— Dallas Mavericks (@dallasmavs) August 14, 2025

And this is clearly a very deliberate choice from the social media team and marketing and PR machine. The family and kids aspect of how they often use Lively is a strategy, and it seems to fit his personality, as well. And that is not a bad idea.

With the Dallas Mavericks going through a lot of turmoil and being subject to a lot of anger from the fanbase after the Luka trade, Dereck Lively is a safe choice. A wholesome choice. Everybody likes Lively.

It’s like he is somewhat protected from the negativity surrounding the team, both because of his carefree, down to earth, funny personality, as well as his ease being in front of the camera. But also because he in some ways grew up on the Mavs in front of our eyes. In his time with the team, especially his rookie year last season when the Mavericks went to the Finals, he performed above and beyond what anyone had expected of him. On the court, he looked like a much more experienced player, and he always carried himself with poise. Fans don’t forget that.

Going through the tragic experience of losing his mom just before the playoffs in 2024 had the fanbase huddling around him, protecting him from negativity. And Lively has a broad appeal to both kids, who relate to him because of his dinosaur and Lego interests, and his work with children and the local community. He is a unifying character on a team led by divisive people, making divisive decisions.

So putting the focus on Lively a lot during an uncertain off-season with a lot of injuries plaguing the roster and no really good stories to tell from the past season, makes a lot of sense from a marketing and PR standpoint. If the strategy is to reach out to a fanbase that may be lukewarm at best or have left already, Lively might be the best bet.

Until either Anthony Davis proves he can lift the heavy burden left by Luka Doncic and unify the fanbase once again, or Cooper Flagg creates the same type of excitement as Dallas was used to, Lively is the guy calming the seas.

Speaking of seas, the captain (I will not call him the Cap) could be someone else to look at featuring more. His popularity with the fanbase seems to be on the rise as he is having what seems like a great summer, making his relationship with Meghan Thee Stallion public, and sharing a lot of very heartwarming content. Here’s just one of many fun posts from the couple since July:

"It's the best thing I've ever tasted."

Klay Thompson on Meg Thee Stallion's catfish and spaghetti 😭🔥

(Via @theestallion) pic.twitter.com/S6AS2YBaAK

— Bleacher Report (@BleacherReport) August 19, 2025

Klay Thompson may not want the spotlight quite as much, but when he’s in it, he is authentic, which is key to creating good content and connection. Hopefully we’re in for more Klay content in the future.

Find more Beyond Basketball pieces here.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/beyon...ly-seems-to-be-the-mavs-social-media-strategy
 
Which young Wings players should be part of the Paige Bueckers era?

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For the second straight year, the Dallas Wings are running out the string on a non-contending season. With eight games remaining, Dallas has been eliminated from playoff contention after wasting a generational performance from Paige Bueckers. The organizational focus will now shift to securing top lottery odds and continuing to develop the bevy of young talent surrounding their superstar rookie guard. It’s been a trying season, but not one without encouraging moments.

Between numerous injuries, two massive trades, and several hardship players cycling through the organization, there has been little in the way of continuity for this Wings group. As a result of this roster turmoil (and poor roster construction), Dallas has been mostly relying on young, unproven players. The Wings are the youngest team in the WNBA, and four out of their top six players in games played and total minutes are rookies. Though competitive in most games, the Wings have lacked the poise, maturity, and cavalry to deliver wins.

Now, as the season winds down, General Manager Curt Miller must prepare to make difficult decisions about the non-Bueckers players on this roster. The WNBA will hold two expansion drafts this offseason— while the league hasn’t stated how many players each team will be permitted to protect, last year that number was six. That number could be less this year to accommodate two new franchises and a landscape where almost every veteran player is a free agent.

With so many cost-controlled young players on the books, Miller faces a tall task here. There are certain to be intriguing young players exposed. Who should the organization prioritize? That question is what the rest of the season is all about. Let’s take a closer look at the Wings’ youth (age 25 and younger) and try to put ourselves in the GM’s chair.

The Rookies​

Aziaha James​


It’s been an up-and-down season for James. The 12th overall pick in the 2025 draft struggled to break into the rotation early but eventually earned big-time minutes as the Wings battled injuries and underperformance. During a nine-game stretch from June 20th through July 13th, James averaged 14.4 points and 2.9 assists per game, shooting 42% from the floor and 39% from three (4.2 attempts per game).

James may have hit the “rookie wall” after that, and Arike Ogunbowale’s return from injury and improved play pushed James to the fringes of the rotation, and the team has cited inconsistencies on defense as a primary reason for this. Indeed, James needs to work on her defensive positioning and recognition, but her plus athleticism and motor should allow her to hold her own on that end.

I’ve been very impressed with James’s polish on offense. In the W, she’s showcased the smooth handle, pull-up shooting, and rim finishing ability that made her a first-round pick. Apart from that, her passing and processing on the offensive end have been a welcome surprise. James has executed some really high-level reads; she’s patient with the ball in her hands and sees the floor well.

The big swing skill on offense is her spot-up three-point shooting. James was better on pull-ups than catch-and-shoot attempts in college, and she’s struggled with spot-ups as a pro. To be an effective spacer and open up her tremendous off-the-bounce game, James needs to be able to knock down open threes.

James has done enough (and has the draft pedigree) to warrant expansion draft protection. She likely won’t ever reach All-Star level, but she has a relatively comfortable floor as a microwave scorer.

JJ Quinerly​


Last month, I wrote a piece about Quinerly’s emergence and unprecedented production for a third-round rookie. She hasn’t been perfect by any stretch of the imagination, but given her limitations, it’s amazing what she’s done for Dallas in year one. Quinerly sustained a nasty-looking knee injury on Wednesday night, and the severity of that is not yet known. It’s a huge bummer for a player who’s been a real bright spot this year.

Quinerly plays with an unteachable tenacity on both ends of the floor. She is aggressive at the point of attack on defense, generates steals and deflections, and never stops competing. On offense, she is a walking paint touch, providing an element of rim pressure that is unique to this Wings roster. As a bonus, she’s been a very good spot-up three-point shooter and is shooting a team-best 39% from distance. Throw in some solid mid-range creation, and you can see the vision as an energy bench guard.

Two things are holding Quinerly back right now: her size and her decision-making. Though Quinerly isn’t likely to grow three inches overnight, she should improve her floor game as she continues to adjust to life in the WNBA. Coach Chris Koclanes has asked her to do a lot as a point guard, a role she didn’t really play at all in college. That’s resulted in a lot of bumps and bruises and plenty of unsightly turnovers. But Quinerly’s ball handling and rim pressure have opened up Paige Bueckers’ transcendent off-ball game and alleviated some of the pressure she’s faced. Overall, I’m thrilled with Quinerly’s season; in a league short on playmaking guards, she’s someone the organization should keep around.

Luisa Geiselsöder​


Geiselsöder isn’t your typical WNBA rookie. After being drafted in the second round out of Germany by the Wings in 2020, Geiselsöder spent the last four years in Europe, playing in the French and German leagues and developing as a prospect. She came over in late May for her WNBA debut and played her way into a starting lineup spot that she’s held for most of the season.

The sell for Geiselsöder is simple: she’s a 6’4” stretch big with mobility. Players with these attributes are rare in the WNBA, and Geiselsöder represents a very valuable archetype. The issue with her is that at this point, she is a bit more of a concept than a reality. While there have been moments, it hasn’t led to consistent impact. Her 33.3% mark from three on 3.3 attempts is solid for her position but not defense-breaking. Geiselsöder is also miscast as a primary rim protector, where her lack of strength and athleticism acts as a hindrance; she is much more impactful as a weak-side help defender.

Geiselsöder came to the Wings as a godsend, seizing the starting five spot from a woefully ineffective duo of Teaira McCowan and Myisha Hines-Allen. She’s also been good playing the four alongside Li Yueru. Is she worth protecting over some of the other Wings’ young players? It’s hard to say right now. I’d like to see some improved connective passing and rim protection over the last eight games to give me more confidence that she has another level to go to.

The 2023 Draft Crew​

Maddy Siegrist​


I’ll keep this one short and sweet: Maddy Siegrist is a part of the Dallas Wings’ future. The third overall pick in the 2023 draft has been sensational since returning from a two-month absence due to a knee injury. In her seven games back, she’s averaging 15.7 points per game on absurd 58% shooting from the field and 40% from three. Between this run and her strong sophomore campaign a season ago, Siegrist has proven that she belongs in the organization’s long-term outlook.

Siegrist is one of the most efficient inside-the-arc scorers in the league. She’s an exceptional cutter, never turns the ball over, and can bully smaller defenders in the mid-post area. Like I’ve been saying since she was drafted, everything hinges on the three-point shooting. If she can take and make them, she’ll be a winning player on a good team. There are questions on defense, where her slower foot speed hurts her against WNBA wings, but the offense should be more than enough to make up for that. I’d be shocked if Dallas doesn’t protect Siegrist from expansion; now, I’d like to see more threes go in to wind down the season.

Haley Jones​


In late July, I wrote about Jones’s instant impact for Dallas and how the coaching staff finally unlocked her game by placing her in the ideal role. Since then, Jones’s production and impact have waned a bit, but she’s still providing the Wings with solid defense, connective passing, and strong screen setting.

The big question for Jones is whether she has an offensive skill that defenses have to worry about. Her connection with Paige Bueckers in screening action and playmaking ability in the short roll has been great, but what happens when the defense dares Jones to beat them? Though she’s flashed some solid driving and fishing chops, she can’t shoot from anywhere on the floor. If you put her in the corner or on the wing spotting up, she’s generally ignored. Sometimes, she tries to create her own shot and ends up throwing up a tough contested jumper because she can’t beat players one-on-one.

All that said, Jones brings a level of processing, paint defense, and screening that the Wings have desperately needed. She’s been a resounding success on a hardship deal. I think she’s worth keeping around, but she might be the first one out when push comes to shove.

Diamond Miller​


Miller’s career has been in free fall since a strong rookie campaign. The second overall pick in the 2023 class fell out of favor in Minnesota, and there was hope she’d be a good change-of-scenery candidate for the Wings after coming over in the DiJonai Carrington deal. Thus far, Miller hasn’t shown a whole lot in limited playing time.

When I watch Miller play, it’s hard to discern what exactly her ideal role should be. She’s shot threes well this year (46.9%), but on a very small sample. She’s not a playmaker, she’s not a big despite her 6’3” frame, and she isn’t really a “3&D” player. And while the one-on-one defense is decent, her spatial awareness is poor, and she falls asleep off-ball a ton.

Overall, I’m not sure what to do with Diamond Miller. It’s clear the Wings’ coaching staff isn’t, either. However, they’d be wise to use these last eight games to give her free rein to let her cook. At this point, unless we see a lot down the stretch, I don’t think I’d protect her in the expansion drafts.

Wild Card: Awak Kuier​


People forget about Awak Kuier! Since she was drafted four years ago and hasn’t played for Dallas since 2023, it’s easy to forget that Kuier just turned 24 years old (yesterday, in fact!). Kuier came over from Finland as an ultra-raw 19-year-old in 2021, and she clearly wasn’t ready for the WNBA. She struggled mightily, though there were several flashes of the talent that made her a top draft choice.

Kuier has been playing very well overseas since we last saw her in the W. Last year in the Italian league, she averaged 14.1 points, 5.8 rebounds, and 1.1 blocks per game on 54/32/69 shooting splits. Playing in the 2025 European Championships for Finland, Kuier was dominant with a 21/8/3 line on 53/40/59 splits.

I’d be very hesitant to give up on Kuier now, even though it’s been years since she played in the W. Curt Miller recently spoke about her, too, and his comments were indicative of someone who views her as a future piece. I have to think that if she were left unprotected from expansion, Toronto or Portland would snatch her up. Bigs with her length, mobility, and shooting potential don’t come along very often.



The Wings cannot keep all of these young players around. With Bueckers and Ogunbowale virtually certain to be protected from expansion drafts, one or two of this group will certainly be poached. Additionally, the Wings will be adding another lottery pick and possible free agents to their roster next year. There will be too many cooks in the kitchen. If I had to choose four players from this group to prioritize alongside Bueckers and Ogunbowale, I’d select James, Quinerly, Siegrist, and Kuier. But I wouldn’t feel good about exposing Geiselsöder. These are tough decisions, and these last eight games could be the deciding factor on some razor-thin margins.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...yers-should-be-part-of-the-paige-bueckers-era
 
Stick a fork in the Wings after Friday’s 95-60 loss to the Seattle Storm

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ARLINGTON, TX — When your season gets to the point where “playing spoiler” seems like a valid form of motivation, let’s face it, you’re reached the Bad Place.

Wings head coach Chris Koclanes said in his pre-game comments that playing spoiler is “all we’re talking about here down the stretch, with [Wednesday’s loss at ] LA, you got Seattle then you got Golden State — all these teams scratching and clawing for [the seventh and eighth WNBA playoff berths].”

The Dallas Wings (9-28) have trudged through Injury Hell early, often and down the stretch this year, and when you combine bad injury luck with woeful roster construction and a first-year head coach who is learning on the job just as much as the youngest roster in the WNBA under his tutelage, that’s usually an express ticket to sports irrelevance.

The Wings, who lost 95-60 to the Seattle Storm at College Park Center on Friday, have a trump card against irrelevance in rookie superstar Paige Bueckers. What the 2025 season and Friday’s loss have shown over and over again, though, is that one special talent, even a generational one, is not enough to get over the hump and out of the cellar in this league. Without key players Arike Ogunbowale, Li Yueru and JJ Quinerly available on Friday, the Dallas offense never found any semblance of rhythm in the loss to Seattle.

Bueckers, who played just 22 minutes in the loss, woke up the sleepy home crowd with a leaning 3-pointer near the top of the key with 3:30 left in the first quarter that brought the Wings to within 14-10 after a sluggish start for the team that included two blown layups and several defensive lapses on the other end. The next time down, Bueckers pulled up for a smooth mid-range jumper to make it 16-12. But Seattle outscored Dallas 12-4 in the final 2:30 of the first quarter to take a 28-16 lead after one.

Bueckers scored half of the Wings’ points in the first quarter after scoring 44 of the team’s 80 points in Wednesday’s 81-80 loss at the Los Angeles Sparks. In case you were wondering, this is not a good trend, but it’s also indicative of the injury attrition the Wings are dealing with here at the tail end of the season. Maddie Siegrist is the only other dependable scorer available for the Wings at this point. It’s all this team can do to field a rotation of game-ready players at this point, much less create and seize on matchup advantages at this point in the season.

Bueckers and Siegrist accounted for 21 of Dallas’ 34 points in the first half as the Storm extended their lead to 48-34 at the break. Siegriest scored the Wings’ first bucket of the third quarter with 6:45 left in the frame to, but by that time the Seattle lead has grown to 17, 53-36, and Dallas was hanging on for dear life. There’s just nothing to cling to when no one on the court can score the basketball.

But the missed layups, foul trouble and inopportune turnovers mounted, and the game got away from the Wings as the second half wore on. The only good thing that came out of the second half was the rest Koclanes was able to give Bueckers as the result of this one became clear early in the third quarter. Bueckers did not come back into the game in the fourth, sporting her back-warming brace on the bench while the horror unfolded on the court.

Seattle rookie project Dominique Malonga led all scorers with 22 points. Siegriest led the Wings, who managed just 26 points in the second half, with 12 in the loss. This one was as ugly as it gets — a confluence of ugly circumstances that ended in grisly results.

Let me know if you’ve heard this one before, basketball fans — but the disaster-class we’re witnessing lies at the feet of the Wings’ front office. The 2025 Dallas Wings were never equipped to win, and what’s worse, is that in sticking this thing together with bubble gum, spit and duct tape, the front office assured themselves that this team would be unable to take any kind of meaningful step forward from a dismal 2024 season to what has devolved into a dreadful 2025.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...ngs-lose-seattle-storm-95-60-blowout-bad-loss
 
Hank Hill weighs in on the Dallas Mavericks

During an AMA on Reddit promoting the revival of King of the Hill, the account being used by the character of Hank Hill was asked about the current state of the Dallas Mavericks and the decision by GM Nico Harrison to trade Luka Doncic to the Lakers.

ICYMI: Hank Hill did an AMA a little while ago and answered this question pertaining to the Mavs pic.twitter.com/kHmOHXlKGD

— r/Mavericks (@redditmavericks) August 21, 2025

His reply is in line with the kind of level-headed, every-man-adjacent, reasonableness that we’ve come to expect from the fictional Texan over the show’s initial 13 season run. It, regretfully, doesn’t quite meet the moment head on. There is something admirable about a man who can stick to his ideals even as the sports landscape changes around him, but in the end it’s Bobby Hill, of all people, who provides the morally righteous and ultimately correct response, having his father relay a simple “Fire Nico” message. Thus, in the end, it is Bobby, based, who comes to embody the position of maximum moral clarity that is too often withheld for those willing to equivocate to evil and incompetence.

Hank Hill is a good man who by his own admission is much more interested in football than basketball, but that shouldn’t preclude him from recognizing when a bridge has been burned. As long as Nico Harrison is associated with the team, his presence will continue to add nothing but negativity to anything that bears his fingerprints. It’s not a simple matter of a man making a mistake, as the elder Hill frames it.

While Hank has the correct read that the trade was one made possible by unchecked power and a complete disregard for the larger public interest, I think with time, and a potentially lackluster season from Anthony Davis and the Mavericks as a whole, Hank could be made to see that Harrison’s decision was one that warrants not only his firing, but his blacklisting from the sport of basketball indefinitely.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/mavericks-news/49761/hank-hill-weighs-in-on-the-dallas-mavericks
 
The Dallas Wings have dropped 16 of 19 after 90-81 loss to Golden State Valkyries

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ARLINGTON, TX — Paige Bueckers’ rookie-season stretch of 30 straight games of double-digit scoring finally came to an end in the Dallas Wings’ 90-81 loss to the Golden State Valkyries (19-18) at College Park Center. Bueckers shot just 3-of-11 from the field, but she did dish nine assists, in the Wings’ 16th loss in their last 19 games since that June stretch of five wins in seven games. Remember that?

Dallas (9-29) found spurts of offense from some unexpected faces, but the Wings couldn’t sustain much of anything until yet another frantic fourth-quarter comeback attempt came up predictably short against Golden State. The Valkyries outscored Dallas 48-29 in the first and third quarters and shot 16-of-38 (42.1%) from 3-point range on their way to a win that keeps them in the hunt for one of the last spots in the WNBA Playoffs.

“We weren’t really good at the point of attack,” forward Myisha Hines-Allen said after the loss. “Credit to them — we knew what they wanted to do and we were just unable to take it away for a whole game.”

The Wings missed their first seven attempts from the field before Hines-Allen grabbed the loose ball when Aziaha James’ 3-point attempt was blocked midway through the first quarter. She made a little space for herself inside and put an end to the Valkyries’ 12-2 run to open the game. The next time down, Hines-Allen used her position inside for another easy bucket, this time from Paige Bueckers, to keep Dallas within eight again. The Wings couldn’t manufacture scoring opportunities with ball movement within an offensive system. They scored mainly from the free throw line or on broken plays early on.

The latest rash of injuries, including season-enders for Li Yueru and JJ Quinerly and the recent tendonitis diagnosis for Arike Ogunbowale, have left the Wings searching for answers in shot creation and playmaking. As head coach Chris Koclanes opts to give Bueckers more and more rest as the season winds down (and rightfully so), it’s not always going to be pretty down the stretch run.

Just hours before Sunday’s game, the team announced that rookie guard JJ Quinerly suffered a sprained ACL in Wednesday’s 81-80 loss at the Los Angeles Sparks and would miss the last seven games of the season.

Dallas Wings guard JJ Quinerly will miss the remainder of the 2025 season due to an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) sprain in her left knee. Quinerly sustained the injury in the Los Angeles Sparks game on Aug. 20.

Quinerly is expected to make a full recovery. Additional… pic.twitter.com/QOJIAR5pez

— Dallas Wings (@DallasWings) August 24, 2025

Somebody’s got to put the ball in the bucket — anyone. The Wings, at different points this season, have welcomed emergency assistance from new faces, mid-season signees and even hardship contract players along the way. Haley Jones and Grace Berger have worked their way into starting roles after initially signing hardship contracts with the Wings, but on Sunday it was Amy Okonkwo, who played at nearby TCU in college and has found success at the international level for her home country Nigeria, who finally provided Dallas a spark when she entered the game with 1:55 left in the first.

Okonwko drove to the hoop on a nice find from Berger to make it 20-12 with 43 seconds left in the first before knocking down two 3-pointers early in the second. Then Hines-Allen scored seven more points, including a 3-pointer from near the top of the key, in the first three-plus minutes of the second quarter to keep the Dallas bench momentum going. Later in the second, Berger and Maddie Siegrist chimed in to pull the Wings’ MASH unit ahead. Siegrist scored on back-to-back trips down the floor with four minutes to play before halftime to give Dallas a brief 34-32 lead.

Bueckers found Okonkwo along the baseline on the final possession of the first half as the seconds ticked down. She gave her defender a pump fake and spun to the basket to score the final bucket of the half and put the Wings back up, 38-36, with a scooping lay-in that fell just as time expired. Hines-Allen led Dallas with 13 points at the break, while Okonkwo added 10 more in just her second game with the team. To continue with the theme of finding offense from unexpected sources, former Dallas Wing Kaila Charles, who played on three seven-day hardship contracts with the Valkyries before signing a rest-of-season deal with the team on Friday, led Golden State with nine points at the half. The Wings released Charles as a corresponding move after trading NaLyssa Smith to the Las Vegas Aces on June 30.

Bueckers finally made it into the scoring column when her teardrop in the lane bounced home on the Wings’ first possession of the third quarter. She’s always allowed the game to come to her, but she’s also been dealing with a sore back for the last handful of games, and with Dallas missing more and more key offensive pieces recently, opposing defenses have been able to stay at home on her more than ever lately. Bueckers scored just 11 points in Friday’s 95-60 blowout loss to the Seattle Storm, playing just 22 minutes before sitting the entire fourth quarter. She was back to her usual load of playing time against the Valkyries but was bothered by the varied matchups and physical treatment Golden State gave her on Sunday.

“It was extremely physical out there,” Koclanes said. “When she’s attacking the rim and playing in the paint downhill like she was [on Sunday], for her to only go to the free throw line two times — something’s off there. With all the fouls in the game and all the physicality, for her to only go two times, I don’t agree with that. Credit to Paige for continuing to stick with it. She just has a next-play mentality.”

Koclanes came all the way out onto the court early in the fourth quarter to argue a non-call when Bueckers was shoved while battling for rebounding position and was called for a technical foul, his first of the year.

Jones scored on back-to-back drives to the bucket midway through the third. She picked up a steal along the Golden State baseline and took it coast to coast with only Janelle Salaun between her and a fastbreak hoop. Salaun collided with Jones mid-air, but Jones scooped the ball home anyway while falling away from the contact to put the Wings up 47-45 and create a 3-point opportunity with 5:53 left in the third.

Golden State outscored Dallas 16-6 to end the third quarter to take a 61-55 lead into the fourth. Another little 8-2 spurt to open the fourth was all the Valks needed to put enough space between themselves and the ailing Wings to secure the win. Dallas just isn’t equipped for big comebacks as the Wings limp toward the end of the season.

Charles tied her career-high scoring mark of 16 points for the Valkyries in the win, while Veronica Burton led all scorers with 25 points, 13 assists and four blocked shots for Golden State. Siegrist led the Wings’ half-hearted comeback attempt in the fourth and led the team with 16 points, five rebounds and three steals in the loss. Hines-Allen and Jones each chipped in 15.

“We have a great group of women in the locker room and coaches around us that continue to pour into us and give us energy,” Hines-Allen said. “We could hate coming into work because things aren’t going our way, but there are people in that locker room that care for one another. We want to see each other do well. We want more wins, but we have to start somewhere.”

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...den-state-valkyries-90-81-wnba-paige-bueckers
 
SB Reacts: The Maverick off the bench

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NBA. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Mavericks fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.


This is a good one to think about in the coming weeks and months. I can see head coach Jason Kidd trying a number of different lineup combinations early, in an attempt to see what he has and to placate various players who prefer starting to coming off the bench. I don’t have any idea who it might be, because I can see an argument for any of these three starting the season on the bench. We’ll have results later in the week!

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/mavericks-roster/49817/sb-reacts-the-maverick-off-the-bench
 
Podcast: PJ Washington extension chatter, Stephen A. Smith and the Mavericks, and more remembering some guys

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Right before Josh and I went to record Monday evening, it occurred to me that PJ Washington is eligible to sign an extension real soon. So we led the show talking about that, what Washington means to the Mavericks, why signing an extension might make more sense for him than going to free agency, and more chatter about the Dallas roster construction.

After that, I told Josh about Stephen A. Smith’s incredible Top 5 Players to Watch in the NBA this season featuring Kyrie Irving and Anthony Davis. Kyrie might not even play, so it was a hilarious segment.


We record a postgame show after every Dallas game live on YouTube! Click and subscribe!

After a short break, I talk to Josh about a video I did for Offsides about the transactions the Dallas Mavericks almost made under previous owner Mark Cuban.

We end the show with our now recurring segment, remembering some guys. I went with Dorian Finney-Smith, who isn’t really someone we’ve forgotten but it was an audience request. I think DFS’s path to his current contract and team situation is pretty amazing. Josh opted to talk about the brief but impactful stint from Antawn Jamison as a Dallas Maverick. His time in Dallas was brief but he played well then Dallas flipped him into what became Devin Harris as well as Jerry Stackhouse. Both those players would become keys to the 2006 Finals run.

You can listen to our latest podcast episode in the player embedded below, and to make sure you don’t miss a single one moving forward, subscribe to the Pod Maverick podcast feed on Apple, Spotify, Pandora, Pocketcasts, YouTube, YouTube Podcasts, Amazon Music, Castbox.


You can check out our After Dark Recap podcasts, YouTube Live recordings, and guest shows on the Pod Maverick Podcast feed. Please subscribe, rate, and review.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/pod-m...-washington-extension-stephen-smith-mavericks
 
Texas Legends to host 3rd annual HBCU Classic at Paul Quinn College

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The Texas Legends will once again host the Thrivent Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) Classic at Paul Quinn College in Dallas, Texas this year. The event will take place on November 1st, 2025. It will be the third time the Legends have hosted the HBCU Classic. The Legends are the Dallas Mavericks’ G-League affiliate.

The Legends will tip-off against the Austin Spurs at 1 p.m. on Paul Quinn College’s beautiful court.

After the Legends-Spurs matchup, the Paul Quinn College women’s basketball team will take the court at 3 p.m., with the men’s team wrapping up the day at 5 p.m. The day-long celebration will feature a tailgate, food, music, and fan activities as part of PQC’s annual homecoming celebration.

“This event continues to grow each year, and we’re proud to be back at Paul Quinn for a third straight season,” said Texas Legends President Malcolm Farmer. “The partnership with Thrivent and Paul Quinn reflects our shared commitment to youth, education, and community impact.”

The Legends were selected as Franchise of the Year by the G-League last season, and events like this are a big reason why. They are routinely one of the league leaders in attendance, a result of being active in the DFW community.

“The Thrivent HBCU Classic is more than a basketball showcase – it’s a celebration of tradition, opportunity, and progress,” said Liz Mikel, manager of engagement at Thrivent. “We’re proud to partner again in uplifting the next generation of leaders through this meaningful event.”

Maurice West, Dean of Paul Quinn College, added: “The continued partnership with the Texas Legends and Thrivent demonstrates our mission in action – uniting the community around a shared purpose. We’re excited to welcome fans, families, and future leaders to campus for this special day.”

Tickets will be available at the door and are subject to availability. Fans are encouraged to arrive early to take part in the full day of events and secure their seats.

The collaboration between the Legends, Paul Quinn College, and Thrivent illustrates the opportunities to grow the basketball community in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. There’s a genuine enthusiasm for the sport throughout the region, despite the turbulent nature of the Mavericks. The HBCU Classic is just one example of that excitement and basketball joy.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/texas...3rd-annual-hbcu-classic-at-paul-quinn-college
 
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