News Mavericks Team Notes

Player Grades: Recapping a win against Brooklyn

Dallas Mavericks v Brooklyn Nets

Photo by Sarah Stier/Getty Images

That’s 2 in a row, everybody!

After roughly 3,000 losses in a row, the Mavericks now have a two-game win streak and are looking to take the western conference by storm with AD officially back in the fold and only 10 games remaining in the regular season. Truthfully, at 34-37 on the year, and still enduring severe injury hardships, inclusive of Kyrie, AD, Lively II, Gafford, Exum, et all, the Mavs are jockeying for the final spot in the WC play-in tournament. Should they advance into the first round of that, they’ll be fortunate to advance further. The team has had a lot of bad luck this year, as you well know. But they did their job today, and in the spirit of the late Bob Uecker’s character Harry Doyle in the Major League movie from 1989, let’s take a glass is half full approach (ironic, though, it may be) to passing out player grades.

PJ Washington: B+

31 Minutes/ 16 Points/ 7-12 FG/ 2 Rebounds/ 5 Assists


PJ gets the highest rank here, not only because he’s my favorite Mav (next to DLive), but also because he’s pretty much our best player at this point. He was 7-of-12 from the floor today after scoring his 5,000th career point against the Pistons on Friday. He’s had a few minor injuries over the course of the season, but his high minutes are sustainable as he is at peak conditioning level. Which is good, because we’d be screwed without him (and we’re already kind of screwed).

Kai Jones: B

28 Minutes/ 13 Points/ 5-5 FG/ 9 Rebounds


The big man brought down a team high nine boards today, helping them to secure and hold onto the lead in this one. He was 5-of-5, as well. Can’t turn your nose up at perfection. A decent showing from Jones, which is good news. And good news regarding any Mavs big man is a huge deal. Which leads us to…

AD: C+

27 Minutes/ 12 Points/ 6-9 FG/ 6 Rebounds/ 3 Assists


Alright, wtf are the Mavs thinking bringing him back so soon? He was clearly laboring and moving at about 8% of his peak ability. I’m surprised that they’d let him risk making it worse when they don’t really have anything riding on his return outside of a possible play-in spot. But he also definitely didn’t look like he was trying to overdo it out there. Good to see him, but good god…

Spencer Dinwiddie: B

29 Minutes/ 16 Points/ 7-10 FG/ 12 Assists


Spencer can be great when he’s not asked to lead a backcourt. He’s a lot of fun to watch and can be really clutch in big moments, but it’s frustrating to see the team being forced to rely on him for major results as the season comes to a close.

Klay Thompson: C-

25 Minutes/ 8 Points/ 3-9 FG/ 3 Rebounds/ 2 Assists


Poor Klay could not have expected the reality this team currently faces when he agreed to move from the beautiful west coast to the hellhole of a climate we call north Texas. But here we are.

Naji Marshall: B

27 Minutes/ 22 Points/ 9-15 FG/ 4 Rebounds/ 2 Assists


Naji continues to be one of the few success stories that fall into the domain of activities that have occurred within the Mav’s franchise this season. He hustles, he’s physical, he’s got his teammate’s backs. It’s great to have him on the team, especially from a defensive standpoint. He and PJ make an excellent pair of defensive playmakers. Here’s hoping that when everyone is healthy next season, they can help the Mavs win a championship through the strength of their defensive play, just like the Mavs brass envisioned.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/3/24/24393425/player-grades-recapping-a-win-against-brooklyn
 
3 things to watch as the Dallas Mavericks face the New York Knicks

New York Knicks v Dallas Mavericks

Photo by Glenn James/NBAE via Getty Images

Dallas wraps a back-to-back in the Big Apple

The Dallas Mavericks’ (35-37) four-game east coast road swing continues Tuesday as they face the New York Knicks (44-26) at Madison Square Garden for a 6:30pm CST tip. Dallas rides its first winning streak in over a month into this game, having beat the Nets 120-101 Monday after winning Friday against Detroit, 123-117. The game featured the return of center Anthony Davis, who buoyed team morale with 12 points on 6-of-9 shooting and strong play down the stretch.

The Knicks beat the Wizards 122-103 Saturday in their most recent action, bringing their record to a water-treading 4-4 since Jalen Brunson’s March 6 ankle injury. That setback occurred during a relatively soft stretch of their schedule, which makes their road losses to the tanking Spurs and Hornets on consecutive nights last week that much more confounding. New York holds a three-game lead on surging Indiana for the third seed in the Eastern Conference with ten games remaining in the regular season, and are hoping Brunson returns in time for the playoffs.

Big shoes​


While the Mavericks have used a short rotation lately due to lack of player availability, the practice is a longtime habit for Knicks head coach Tom Thibodeau, who usually entrusts his starters and a handful of reserves with the majority of the floor time. Saturday’s game against the Wizards marked a break in that pattern as point guard Miles McBride sat out with a groin injury and the Knicks’ comfortable early lead allowed Thibodeau to experiment with Cameron Payne, who often plays off-ball, getting his second start of the season and rookie Tyler Kolek logging a season-high 18 minutes.

Brunson’s absence has left the Knicks with a lot of offense to make up for, with several players picking up the load. McBride started the first 7 games, matching increased playing time with increased production by going 18-45 from deep over that span. Meanwhile, wing Mikal Bridges has pitched in with scoring help, averaging 21.8 points since March 6, four points more than his season average. Bridges has been especially hot from deep, sinking the game-winner in overtime March 12 against Portland, and his back-to-back-to-back triples in the third quarter against the Heat March 17 helped the Knicks create some separation in a game they spent most of the first half trailing.

The Mavericks’ point guards Spencer Dinwiddie and Brandon Williams have had their own success scoring the ball lately, as Dinwiddie shot a combined 16-of-22 from the field in the pair of wins, while Williams has made the most of his playing time with 16.9 points per game over his last eight appearances.

Bigger shoes​


Karl-Anthony Towns caught a lot of grief from Dallas fans in 2021 after declaring himself the best shooting big man of all time, but he is pretty good, shooting a career-high .425 from beyond the arc on nearly five attempts this season. Towns’ shooting often obscures how good he is near the basket, a punishing finisher through contact who also makes his foul shots. The Knicks pass well and often inside the paint, with handoffs and pocket passes off late cuts, and on all three facets of that—screening, passing, or scoring—Towns excels. Reserve center Mitchell Robinson, the longest-tenured Knick and anchor of the team’s paint defense, has been working his way back from a serious ankle injury that kept him out of action until Feb. 28.

How the Mavericks counter the Knicks will have to be done without Davis, who was on a strict minutes restriction while playing the night before this game and will sit. Against Brooklyn, the majority of the Mavs’ center minutes went to springy Kai Jones, who continued to be a pleasant surprise, leading and finishing fast breaks. Kessler Edwards, the Mavericks’ other non-Dwight Powell center, has one game of eligibility remaining this season and was held out Monday.

Wing stop​


New York does most of its best work on the offensive side, but has several versatile defenders in Bridges and forwards Josh Hart and OG Anunoby. If the Mavericks aren’t careful with the ball, you can expect to see Anunoby either causing the turnover or out in front of the break. Hart, the NBA’s leader in minutes per game, has filled the box score in many ways while his shooting touch has been streaky of late. He notched a triple double against Miami and has double-figure boards in three of the last six games. To stay competitive, the Mavericks will likely need more from Klay Thompson, who finally got going in the fourth quarter after a 1-7 start from the field against the Nets, and more of the same from Naji Marshall and P.J. Washington, who paced the club with 22 and 16.

How to watch/listen​


You can watch the game on KFAA Channel 29 or MAVS TV (streaming), or listen at 97.1 FM KEGL (English) and 99.1 FM KFZO (Español).

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...ace-new-york-knicks-preview-game-time-channel
 
Quoteboard: Dallas Mavericks CEO Rick Welts spews word salad on Luka trade, new arena in TV appearance

Los Angeles Clippers v Dallas Mavericks

Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images

The Mavericks organization will not rest until they step on every rake in America

While the Dallas Mavericks were in the middle of receiving a 128-113 beating at the hands of the New York Knicks, I know you were probably wondering what Mavs CEO Rick Welts was thinking. Well, it must’ve been our lucky day because wouldn’t you believe it, we were blessed by Welts’ presence on the Mavs broadcast for a rare appearance. However, if you were hoping for something insightful or useful from the so-called “arena czar”, the best I can do for you is the following word salad.

Rick Welts, via Mavs TV Broadcast:

“I’m listening everyday to how fans are feeling about everything, not just the [Luka Doncic] trade. I think when [the fans] get to know this ownership group and get to know what they’re all about, I really do think [fans] are going to see all the ingredients for success here and the commitment to reach that success.”

What the hell is that even supposed to mean? I’m willing to give Welts the benefit of the doubt, because he is decidedly not a basketball person. The CEO, preceded by Cynt Marshall before her retirement last December, largely manages the business side of the organization and has no input on basketball decisions. Welts is only here to begin with because of the work he did with the Golden State Warriors to get the Chase Center built. With that in mind, why is he on TV talking about basketball decisions?

But wait! There’s more word salad to come! Welts, who traveled to New York to do this interview because the Mavericks leadership group remains too cowardly to show their faces at home games, continued with this:

“The wonderful thing about our business is that these things have a scorecard. Time, wins and losses will tell whether the deal was a good deal or a bad deal. I just am going to promise to our fans right now that whatever trust we’ve lost, or whatever concerns they have, we’re going to earn it back. We’re going to do this the right way and win championships.”

The Mavericks won the Western Conference last year. Do these people hear what they’re saying? They were leading on the scorecards less than a year ago! Plus, anyone with eyes and ears knows what has to happen for them to start earning the trust of fans back. Finally, doing it the “right way” is not quite “stabbing the most beloved player since Dirk in the back in the dead of night”, either. And again, who asked for a Rick Welts TV appearance?

Lastly, the burning question every remaining Mavs fan has: What about that new arena, Ricky?

“We need to be in a new arena for the 2031-32 season. We’re on the clock.”

For Maverick fans, what a relief to know that while the front office doesn’t care about you, at least the business side of the organization also doesn’t care about you. The entire organization cares not for whether or not fans like you and me fill the arena, only that they will have a bunch of slot machines in Dallas when that is inevitably allowed. How cool!

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...v-new-arena-las-vegas-sands-luka-doncic-trade
 
Grading the Mavericks: the players care while the front office remains clueless

Dallas Mavericks v Brooklyn Nets

Photo by Sarah Stier/Getty Images

You can always tell who gets it and who doesn’t

Dallas won twice and lost five times over the last two weeks. Their record is 35-38, a half-game back of 10th place in the Western Conference. The wins came at home against Detroit (123-121) and in Brooklyn (120-101), and the losses came in San Antonio (126-116), Houston (133-96), and New York (128-113), and at home against Philadelphia (130-125) and Indiana (135-131). P.J. Washington returned from his ankle injury against the 76ers and Anthony Davis made his return against the Nets. Dereck Lively and Daniel Gafford continued to be shelved with no timetable for their return.

Grade: B-



From a fan’s perspective, what the Mavericks are trying to accomplish this season is incredibly confusing. They have a non-trivial increase in lottery odds at stake if they move down in the standings, but they have shown no signs of tanking (other than the entire team getting hurt). From the players’ perspective, winning is the only option. Players will never tank, and if you did not believe that before, the Mavericks have proved that over this weird stretch. They think they have a chance in the playoffs if they get there. True or not, that is a great mindset for a team to have.

Most of the games they had played were just basketball. Meaning, there were no real takeaways because the guys they had available did not resemble the team they would be if they ever got healthy. However, this changed when Anthony Davis came back and started at the four with Kai Jones masquerading as a center. This allowed P.J. Washington to play the three, which is what Dallas wants to do. They want to go uber-big and, although it was against Brooklyn, it looked good. Davis and Jones had a nice two-man game inside, and the vision was clear defensively.

Normally, a 2-5 half-month would warrant a grade lower than a B-. However, the team just plays its butt off every night and we finally got a pseudo-real lineup with Anthony Davis. Watching this team and how the players carry themselves makes it clear how much they care about the fans, so it is hard not to bump them a grade letter for their passion and heart.

Straight A’s: P.J. Washington


Washington has been averaging nearly 25 points and 6 rebounds per game since returning from an injury last week. Throughout the roster turnover, he has been the identity of this team. The Mavericks look different when he plays and right now he is the engine that makes them go. In his four games since returning, he is 8-for-19 on threes, which is a great sign. The shot is the aspect of his game most concerning, but when it falls, he looks like a legitimate offensive threat. This, coupled with his elite size and defensive instincts, makes him an awesome player and one that Dallas would be in its best interest to keep going forward.

Currently Failing: Organizational Hubris


Around a month ago, I wrote about how the Mavericks’ brass simply had to stop talking. With situations as fragile as the one Dallas is in, releasing weekly comments to reconcile the fan base is a move with poor judgment. The comments in March have been kept to a minimum, and although the team has been hurt and bad, rooting for the guys who played hard was a little easier. Then, during the game against the Knicks Tuesday, the Mavericks broadcast interviewed Dallas CEO Rick Welts. He had this to say:


"Time, wins & losses will tell whether it was a good or bad deal. I'm gonna promise to our fans right now whatever trust we've lost…we're gonna earn it back because we're gonna do this the right way and win championships"

–– Mavs CEO Rick Welts on the Mavs-Knicks broadcast pic.twitter.com/TVUxRv5skq

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) March 26, 2025

What the Mavericks’ authority has displayed for just under two months has proved on a deeper level than basketball that they have no idea what the city of Dallas wants. Nico Harrison was hired in 2021. Patrick Dumont bought the Mavericks in 2023, during the middle of Dallas’ best season since 2011. Dumont hired Rick Welts in 2024, bringing the total organizational experience for Dallas’ decision-makers to a total of just under six years. For reference, Luka Doncic played in a Dallas uniform longer than the time the people who traded him away have spent in Dallas combined.

I could list a million things showing the incompetence and naivety of Dumont, Welts, and Harrison over the last 60 days. However, Rick Welts, a man in a position with little to no influence on basketball operations, dares to speak from an opposing team’s arena on the Mavericks’ broadcast about winning back fans. He cites championships and “getting to know the ownership” as reasons why the fan base will eventually warm up to them. This level of ignorance is almost unprecedented. The unmitigated gall of a brass circle to let their newest member speak publicly while the people who signed off on the deal that broke the city is something I cannot wrap my head around. As an MFFL, we don’t want your explanations, we don’t want your hypothetical championship talk, and we certainly do not want to hear Rick Welts give us whatever it is you want to spew. What we wanted was Luka Doncic, so please just use your right to remain silent.

Extra Credit: Anthony Davis


Davis returned Monday night after he pushed hard to come back this season, even though getting surgery is likely his best option. For reference, Damian Lillard had a similar injury in 2021-22, got surgery in January of 2022, and then jumped from 24 to 32 points per game in 58 games the season after. Davis has maintained throughout his tenure here that he cares deeply about reconnecting the fans with the players and doing what it takes to win. It is an honorable stance, and it matters that it matters to him. The games have been bleak and the thoughts about the future are even bleaker, but at least watching Anthony Davis makes this suck a little less.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...e-front-office-remains-clueless-anthony-davis
 
3 Thoughts as Dallas continues east coast trip in Orlando

Los Angeles Lakers v Orlando Magic

Photo by Gary Bassing/NBAE via Getty Images

Orlando Magic... oooooOOOOOoooOOOooooH!

Following a 128-113 loss to the New York Knicks, the Dallas Mavericks (35-38, 11th in Western Conference) continue their road trip out east against the Orlando Magic (35-38). Orlando, winners of four out of their last five contests, are coming off a fantastic sweep of a back-to-back, with wins over Luka Doncic and the Los Angeles Lakers and the Charlotte Hornets. The Mavericks, meanwhile, just split the New York City back-to-back. This will be both Orlando’s and Dallas’ third game in four days.

Earlier this season, the Mavs defeated the Magic 108-85. However, Paolo Banchero did not play in that game and the Magic were just beginning their major injury stretch with both Paolo and Franz Wagner missing time with torn obliques. This time, Dallas will likely not be so fortunate. Let’s get into the preview.

Paolo’s proficiency​


It hasn’t been the smoothest season for Banchero, who missed a couple months after tearing his oblique early on this season. Even once he came back, it took he and the team a while to get rolling. However, recently Banchero is returning to form. Over his last 20 games, Paolo is averaging 28.9 points, 7.3 boards and 4.5 assists per contest with shooting splits of 47/36/81. That’s elite production! Against a depleted Mavs front line, even with Anthony Davis back, Banchero is set up to flourish.

Los Angeles Lakers v Orlando Magic
Photo by Gary Bassing/NBAE via Getty Images

Only Franz​


Franz Wagner at one point was viewed as someone who could be even better than the afore mentioned Banchero. However, the 3-point shot hasn’t cooperated since his rookie year and that potential hasn’t quite been realized. Even with that, Wagner is back to his productive self, averaging over 23 points per game in his last 20. Orlando, even with the poor record, can be as dangerous as anyone whenever those two guys produce. Here lately, they have, and the Magic are.

Orlando Magic v Charlotte Hornets
Photo by Brock Williams-Smith/NBAE via Getty Images

Something must give​


The Mavericks, despite the front office’s best plans, are not good at defense. In their last 15 games, the Mavericks defensive rating ranks 27th in the NBA, giving up 121.3 points per 100 possessions. Orlando, meanwhile, is scoring just 113.1 points per 100 possessions in that same time, which is 23rd in the league. The beautiful thing about this industry is that they keep score, so we’ll find out over time whether or not the Mavericks prevail.

How to watch​


Tipoff is set for 6:00p CT from Orlando. The game will be televised nationally on NBA TV (Turner Sports, the parent company for TNT, is carrying the Sweet 16 games in the NCAA Tournament tomorrow, therefore they will not have their usual Thursday night TNT games.). Do not fear, the local broadcast will be available on KFAA Channel 29 or Mavs TV.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...-continue-east-coast-trip-in-orlando-vs-magic
 
Anthony Davis returning to give teammates “a breather” highlights the human element in a league of business

NBA: Dallas Mavericks at Brooklyn Nets

Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Maybe the wise business-decision for Anthony Davis would have been to rest. But basketball is about more than business, and Davis just showed us why.

As the Dallas Mavericks season is coming to an end in not too long, Anthony Davis made a human decision in a league of business. Monday, he logged 26 minutes against the Brooklyn Nets with a stat line of 12 points, six rebounds and three assists, and helped secure the win in his return after an injury absence due to a left adductor strain.

Despite Davis clearly not playing at full capacity, jogging and playing it safe during the game, his presence made a difference - his gravity opening up the floor for his teammates - and he ended the game with a plus 12.

After the game, Davis said that it had been tough watching the team go out there every night, playing to the point of exhaustion, constantly undermanned and still giving it all they had in them.

“I just want to go out there to do as much as I can to give them a breather at least,” he said.


Anthony Davis on the last 6 weeks since suffering his adductor strain:

“It was tough seeing these guys battling every night. Winning close games. Losing close games. Blowing teams out. Getting blown out…For me, it was never a thought about if I was going to come back & play.” pic.twitter.com/2C7s1OIngc

— Mike Curtis (@MikeACurtis2) March 25, 2025

In a league where so much is explained as ‘business decisions’; trades, tanking, cuts, injury management, Anthony Davis made the human decision.

These days, when we constantly get bombarded with the message that “it’s not personal, it’s business”, everything is about money and explained in financial terms - this is a refreshing show of humanity. To see Davis make the decision to play even though it may not be beneficial to himself.

Because, yes, would it be the better investment (again, with the business lingo) to rest and let a season doomed for irrelevance pass without further ado? Yes.

But just like when we used to talk about Luka Doncic and his decision to keep playing for his country, despite the fact that they probably won’t have a chance to do much these next years - and he could use the rest - we’re missing something.

The human element. The feelings, the emotions. We can’t just count on these guys to act like cold businessmen, only worried about the bottomline of their investment (their bodies) - people who will cut everything out of their lives that doesn’t optimize their ability to make as much money and be as productive as possible.

And we should be happy about that. Basketball is not a computer game, a chess board, a slew of robots making every decision with one purpose: to optimize their bodies and productivity.

What if basketball was a way to show emotions, feelings, artistic and creative output and flow - one of the last frontiers of humanity, which the automated, digital world could not reach, because it is everything the are not?

The human element, the emotions and friendships. Davis’ choice to play shows that it still plays a part in how players act and in their decision-making. And that’s exactly what makes sports and basketball worth watching. It’s what gives it an edge.

In these days of AI-generated reality creeping in on us, sports and basketball are delightfully unpredictable. No matter the parleys and betting lines, we don’t know who will have good games, who will win and whose emotions will run high. We can guess, but we’re rarely right.

And the human element of this affects everyone, from teammates to fans and commentators, excited to have the superstar back on the floor. As Naji Marshall said, having Anthony Davis back “makes everything feel so much better out there on the court.”

He was excited that the lane was easier to attack since defenders don’t want to help off Davis.


Naji Marshall said having Anthony Davis back "makes everything feel so much better out there on the court."

Marshall feels the lane is easier to attack since defenses don't want to help off Davis.

Davis' paint presence makes it easier for on-ball defenders to get into the ball. pic.twitter.com/8oyHoBzTIw

— Grant Afseth (@GrantAfseth) March 25, 2025

And as the world grows to be more influenced by AI and robots in one form or other these days, basketball will continue to give us a much needed human element. Just like Anthony Davis did Monday. It may not have been a wise business-decision, but basketball is about so much more than business. Basketball is about feelings.

Find more Beyond Basketball pieces here.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...a-breather-the-human-element-dallas-mavericks
 
Player Grades: Recapping the Mavericks’ 101-92 win at the Orlando Magic

Dallas Mavericks v Orlando Magic

Brandon Williams #10 of the Dallas Mavericks drives to the basket during the game against the Orlando Magic on March 27, 2025 at Kia Center in Orlando, Florida. | Photo by Fernando Medina/NBAE via Getty Images

The backcourt tandem of Jaden Hardy and Brandon Williams was the key in the second half.

The Dallas Mavericks (36-38) moved a half-game in front of the Phoenix Suns for 10th place in the Western Conference playoff/play-in race with their 101-92 win over the Orlando Magic (35-39) on Thursday at the Kia Center. The win could even push the Mavs all the way into ninth in the West, depending on the result of Thursday’s late game between the Sacramento Kings and Portland Trail Blazers. The first half between the Mavs and Magic was a slog to get through before Dallas connected on nine of the team’s 14 second-half 3-point attempts in the win. Meanwhile, Orlando shot just 2-of-19 from beyond the arc in the second half and a putrid 5-of-30 for the game.

Jaden Hardy led the Mavericks in scoring while Anthony Davis shot just 5-of-19 from the field as he works his way back into form after the adductor strain that had him out for 18 games before Monday’s 120-101 win over the Brooklyn Nets. Paolo Banchero led all scorers with 35 points and 10 rebounds for the Magic in the loss.

Here’s how the Mavs graded out individually in the win at the Magic.

Spencer Dinwiddie: C-​

7 Points / 4 Rebounds / 4 Assists / 2 Steals / (25 Minutes)​


Dinwiddie was a spectator throughout the first quarter before losing the ball to Caleb Houstan on his first touch of the second. He came into the game averaging better than 19 points per game in his last eight but ceded that priority as a scoring option to Cormac Karl “Max” Christie, Brandon Williams and Jaden Hardy at different points throughout the game. Dinwiddie reached the 8,000-point mark for his career on a driving bucket with 3:15 left to play in the win.

Klay Thompson: B-​

12 Points / 4 Rebounds (26 Minutes)​


Thompson hit his first attempt of the game, a perimeter jumper for the game’s first basket, then made a nice little runner in the lane to pull Dallas to within 27-24 with 8:15 left in the second. The problem is, he didn’t bring much to the table between those two scores. Thompson connected on his first 3-pointer with 7:30 left in the third, along the baseline on a nice find from Naji Marshall.

Anthony Davis: C​

15 Points / 7 Rebounds / 2 Assists / 1 Steals (29 Minutes)​

Dallas Mavericks v Orlando Magic
Photo by Fernando Medina/NBAE via Getty Images
Anthony Davis #3 of the Dallas Mavericks drives to the basket during the game against the Orlando Magic on March 27, 2025 at Kia Center in Orlando, Florida.

Davis started the game 0-for-5 from the field, shooting blanks from inside and 3-point range. His first bucket came late in the first on a tough runner in the lane to put the Mavericks up 17-15. He drove for a 3-point play on a nice find from Dinwiddie to put Dallas back in front, 40-39, with 2:30 left before the half. He went just 2-of-11 from the field in the first half.

Davis responded with a made jumper on his first touch of the third to bring Dallas to within 50-48 and a post-up over Franz Wagner the next time down to tie things up. He hit his first 3-pointer of the game on his third attempt from deep in the final minute of the third quarter to extend Dallas’ lead to 77-70 headed to the fourth. Davis shot just 4-of-14 from 2-point range against Orlando.

Naji Marshall: C-​

6 Points / 4 Rebounds / 3 Assists / 2 Steals (41 Minutes)​


Marshall was relatively quiet in the first half after his monster 38-point night in Tuesday’s 128-113 loss to the New York Knicks. He ripped away a steal and bullied his way to the rim in transition to tie the game, 37-37, with 3:17 left before the break. He had some trouble defending Paolo Banchero in the second quarter (17 points in the quarter), but so has everyone in the NBA lately. The ball slipped out of Marshall’s hands and went out of bounds on a drive through the lane in the last minute of the first half. The Magic scored five points in the half’s final 10 seconds to take a 50-43 lead.

Kai Jones: INC​

4 Points / 5 Rebounds 1 Block (7 Minutes)​


Jones flushed home an alley-oop from Dinwiddie midway through the fourth to tie the game, 6-6, then skied for another acrobatic lob dunk from Caleb Martin a minute later to give the Mavs an early lead. He landed awkwardly on his hip, though, and had to leave the game. He did not return after suffering what team officials called a left hip contusion.

Max Christie: B-​

12 Points / 3 Rebounds / 2 Assists / 2 Steals (29 Minutes)​


Christie gave a solid pump fake along the baseline, made one dribble and canned his first attempt from the mid-range to give the Mavs a 10-6 advantage, then drilled his first 3-pointer with 3:50 left in the first from the left corner to make it 13-11. Christie was quiet for long stretches before banging in a big 3-pointer from the right corner with 7:30 left to play to extend the Mavs’ lead to 85-79.

Dwight Powell: C-​

4 Points / 3 Rebounds / 2 Assists (19 Minutes)​


Powell mainly took up space in the win over Orlando, getting manhandled by Goga Bitadze a couple of times inside along the way. He was also caught napping on a wide open lop from Banchero to Wendell Carter Jr. midway through the third before missing a lob attempt inside on the offensive end. Ho hum at best.

Brandon Williams: B+​

14 Points / 2 Rebound / 6 Assists / 2 Steals (27 Minutes)​


Williams played distributor early on before connecting on his first 3-ball of the game from the left wing to bring the Mavs to within 31-27 with 6:50 to play before halftime. He attacked off a turnover to get a crafty little score inside to make it 34-31 two minutes later. Williams scooped home another couple of nice driving attempts as the third quarter wore on.

He made big plays on both ends of the court with less than seven minutes to play, sneaking a steal from Wagner before blowing past him on the way to the rack to give the Mavericks an 87-79 lead.

Jaden Hardy: A​

22 Points / 3 Rebounds (20 Minutes)​

Dallas Mavericks v Orlando Magic
Photo by Fernando Medina/NBAE via Getty Images
Anthony Davis #3 of the Dallas Mavericks drives to the basket during the game against the Orlando Magic on March 27, 2025 at Kia Center in Orlando, Florida.

Hardy connected on the Mavs’ first field goal of the second quarter as a general sense of malaise set in for both offensive units. He hit two 3-balls from the left corner as part of a 16-0 Dallas run as the Mavs battled back to a 73-68 lead late in the third. Hardy made five 3-pointers in the second half to give him his second-straight game scoring at least 15 points. He got one to bounce home as the shot clock wound down with 1:53 left to play, giving the Mavs a 97-88 lead.

Caleb Martin: C​

5 Points / 4 Rebounds / 2 Assists / 1 Steal (17 Minutes)​


Martin made a nice turnaround jumper along the baseline with five minutes to play in the second. Then he drove to the hoop, giving his defender the cold shoulder on his way to the rack to pull the Mavs to within one, down just 34-33. He was on a 15-minute restriction in his first game back following a second stint on the shelf with a nagging hip issue. Even still, the results are less than inspiring.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...the-mavericks-101-92-win-at-the-orlando-magic
 
Stats Rundown: 3 numbers to know from the Mavericks 101-92 win against the Magic

NBA: Dallas Mavericks at Orlando Magic

Jeremy Reper-Imagn Images

Dallas gets a big win against a physical Orlando team

The Dallas Mavericks beat the Orlando Magic 101-92 Thursday night in Orlando. An undersized Dallas team played really well against Orlando’s monstrous front line, and the Mavericks offense, even in this diminished state, was too much for the Magic.

Jaden Hardy led the Mavericks with 22 points off the bench, Paolo Banchero led the Magic with a game-high 35 points. It was a low-scoring, rough-and-tumble affair for most of the night, until the Mavericks offense woke up in the third quarter and built a lead too big for the Magic’s bad offense to respond to.

This win puts the Mavericks back ahead of the Suns in the play-in race. Here are the numbers to know.

5: Amount of three pointers made by Jaden Hardy, entire Magic team​


Hardy was spectacular off the bench with a game-high 22 points. He went 5-of-6 from three, including a rather fortunate final make late in the fourth quarter that bounced on the rim three times before falling home. The Magic as a team made 5-of-30 from three.

That’s 16.7 percent, which is awful. Like that’s really bad, guys. Orlando entered the night the worst three point shooting team in the league, just over 31 percent for the season and that number dropped even further after tonight’s putrid showing. There wasn’t much Dallas could do against Orlando in the paint (although the Magic only had 48 points there), but they certainly weren’t scared of the Magic from deep. Dallas easily won the three point shooting battle despite only taking 23 threes, making 11 three pointers as a team.

10: Offensive rebounds for the Magic​


Considering Orlando missed 46 total shots tonight, the fact that their huge front court could only muster 10 offensive rebounds is honestly a huge reason why the Mavericks won this game, besides the three point shooting. Orlando had every opportunity to beat Dallas up on the glass and while the Mavericks lost the rebounding battle, it wasn’t a resounding defeat.

Everyone chipped in for the Mavericks to battle on the boards. No one on the Mavericks had more than Anthony Davis’ seven, but six Mavericks had at least four rebounds, and nine had at least three, and every Maverick that played had at least two. That’s team-rebounding at its finest, and it kept the Mavericks connected throughout the game.

+21: Brandon Williams plus-minus against the Magic​


Individual box score plus-minus is a faulty stat to evaluate, but sometimes it’s obviously right — like it was for Brandon Williams tonight.

The two-way guard had 14 points and six assists off the bench in one his final games left of NBA eligibility. He was a huge factor for all 27 of his minutes, and was better than any other Magic guard tonight, including their starters. Williams energy and ability to slash into the lane was much needed and the Magic couldn’t match his tempo. Another big night for one of the Mavericks unsung heroes.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...om-the-mavericks-101-92-win-against-the-magic
 
The good news, the bad news and more before the Mavericks square off with the Chicago Bulls

Chicago Bulls v Dallas Mavericks

Josh Giddey #3 of the Chicago Bulls is defended by Naji Marshall #13 of the Dallas Mavericks \d1h at American Airlines Center on November 06, 2024 in Dallas, Texas. | Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images

Who could possibly resist stopping down for Josh Giddey, Coby White and the Bulls vs. Anthony Davis, Naji Marshall and the Mavs?

What are we to make of these Dallas Mavericks (36-38) entering Saturday’s game against the Chicago Bulls (33-40) at the United Center? The fanbase has largely thrown its collective hands in the air following the most stunning trade in NBA history, combined with a karmic bout of horrendous injury luck for the two months or so. It leaves us searching for answers to life’s big questions.

What should we be rooting for, anyway? What does it all mean?

While we stare into the abyss, the Mavericks are wrapping up a four-game eastern swing with a chance to turn the chicken shit the organization has served its fans into a tepid 3-1 chicken salad.

The Anthony Davis Era has begun in earnest, but the big man hasn’t quite rounded into form yet in two games on the floor. He was still on a minutes restriction of about 28 minutes in Thursday’s 101-92 win at the Orlando Magic.

Was it too early to bring him back from the adductor injury he suffered on Feb. 8 against the Houston Rockets? Is the fact that he’s only mustered a light jog in either of his two appearances in the past week evidence of that or is it just standard easing back into game shape? Does it matter, if the alternative to bringing him back would have been forfeiting actual NBA basketball games for not being able to field eight warm-blooded players?

As depressing as those questions are, the answers might be even worse, given the underhanded way the Mavs front office is being anonymously quoted in reference to its former superstar Luka Dončić, most notably the complete absence of general manager Nico Harrison from the public discourse amidst persisting outrage and lackluster attendance at recent home games.

There are still regular-season games to mark off the list and still, in theory, at least, goals to be pursued. To that end, there is still both a little good news and a little bad news surrounding the heaping helping of general malaise filling fans’ plates.

The good news​


The good news is that the Mavericks have already won two of three on their current four-game Eastern Conference road swing, picking up wins at the Brooklyn Nets on Monday and at the playoff-bound Orlando Magic on Thursday. The Mavs earned those wins despite even more roster instability after PJ Washington rolled an ankle against the Nets and had to miss the team’s 128-113 loss to the New York Knicks on Tuesday and Thursday’s win in Orlando. They can do no worse than 2-2, even if they lose to Chicago, before coming home for a pair of games against the Nets and Atlanta Hawks.

Dallas currently sits in 10th place in the Western Conference, ahead of the Phoenix Suns by a half-game. The Suns (35-38) meet the Minnesota Timberwolves (41-32) in Minneapolis tonight and could pull back in front of Dallas with a win, though they aren’t favored to do so.

Assuming both the Mavs and Suns lose their next game, Dallas would remain a half-game ahead with seven games left on the schedule (eight for Phoenix). The combined record for the Mavs’ opponents in their final seven games is just 254-255, while the combined record of remaining Phoenix Suns opponents in their final eight is 356-225 as of this writing. One of the teams with a winning record who the Mavs still have on their schedule is the Memphis Grizzlies, who, despite being 44-29 and sitting in fifth in the Western Conference, have lost four of their last six and have only beaten one team with a winning record since Feb. 3. That win came against your little Mavericks on Mar. 7 as Dallas was in its own tailspin.

All this assumes that a play-in appearance would, in fact, be a good thing for this Mavericks’ team. If they were to somehow get out of the play-in, the Mavs would be fed to the Oklahoma City Thunder, whose 61-12 record entering Friday is the best in the NBA. Take that for what you will and react accordingly.

The bad news​


Washington (ankle) and Kai Jones (hip contusion suffered in Thursday’s win at the Magic) were both listed as day-to-day on the Mavericks’ injury report with their respective injuries ahead of Saturday’s game at the Bulls (up-to-date as of late Friday afternoon). Leaving aside the scoring punch Washington provides, which will surely be missed if he is held out for a third straight game, if Jones can’t go, that leaves just Anthony Davis and Dwight Powell as the only available bigs on the current roster. Kessler Edwards is no longer an option, leaving Naji Marshall as the next man up to play small-ball five.

Meanwhile, the Bulls have rattled off wins in five of their last six games as they sit ninth in the East, trying to catch flailing Orlando for the eighth spot. They have also won nine of their last 11. Chicago broke the Los Angeles Lakers’ hearts on Thursday, thanks to a game-winning half-court heave from forward Josh Giddey at the buzzer to pull out the 119-1117 win.


BULLS WIN ON AN ELECTRIFYING SEQUENCE ⚡

Patrick Williams triple with 10.3 seconds left.
Coby White for the lead with 6.1 seconds left.
Austin Reaves takes the lead back with 3.3 to go.
Josh Giddey hits the #TissotBuzzerBeater.

CLUTCH BASKETBALL AT ITS FINEST! pic.twitter.com/fPwP3IiVM1

— NBA (@NBA) March 28, 2025

Giddey, for his part, might just be resurrecting a career he seemed to have wrecked in his time with the Oklahoma City Thunder. He has scored 25 or more points in five of his last six games and at least 17 points in 13 of his last 14.

Bulls’ point guard Coby White is also on a heater this year, averaging a career-best 20.4 points per game. He has led the team in scoring 12 of the Bulls’ last 14 times out and has scored 26 or more in five of the last six.

Dallas will have its hands full, as a team in steep decline facing off with a team in its ascendency, on the Bulls’ home floor on Saturday.

How to watch​


The Mavericks and the Bulls play Saturday at the United Center in Chicago. Tipoff is scheduled for 7 p.m. The game will be televised locally on KFAA Channel 29, or you can stream on MavsTV or on NBA League Pass.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...e-mavericks-square-off-with-the-chicago-bulls
 
MMBets: How to bet the Dallas Mavericks at Chicago Bulls

Dallas Mavericks v Brooklyn Nets

Photo by David L. Nemec/NBAE via Getty Images

The Mavericks are looking to bring a win streak back home

The Mavericks are in Chicago for the final game of their East Coast swing. The Bulls have been playing good basketball recently and just beat the Lakers twice. Dallas is finally getting players back instead of losing them, so it should be an entertaining game. With Anthony Davis set to play his third game back from injury, we could see a ramp-up of his production against a weaker Chicago front line. This will be a back-and-forth matchup and one Dallas needs to win if they want to keep their playoff hopes alive.

Game Details


Fixture: Dallas Mavericks at Chicago Bulls | NBA 2024-2025

Date and Time: Saturday, March 29th, 2025; 7:00 PM CST

Venue: United Center, Chicago, IL.

Outcome Odds

  • Spread: Dallas +3 (-108)
  • O/U 237.5 (-110/-110)
  • Mavs ML: +124

Odds up to date as of 3:00 PM CST from DraftKings

The Mavericks are in a great spot as underdogs. This is a favorable matchup, so take Dallas to win outright (+124).

Player Props

  • Anthony Davis to get 25+ points (+135)
  • Nikola Vucevic to hit 2+ threes (+115)

Davis has a fantastic matchup against Vucevic, who is not known for his defense. On the flip side, Vucevic can stretch the defense and always plays well against Dallas because of his shooting ability.

Play of the Day

  • Over 237.5 points (-110)

This will be a high-scoring game. There is no reason to overthink, take the over on 237.5.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...llas-mavericks-at-chicago-bulls-anthony-davis
 
3 thoughts as Dallas holds on in Chicago 120-119

Dallas Mavericks v Chicago Bulls

Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images

The Mavericks are now 4-0 with Anthony Davis in the lineup

The Dallas Mavericks outlasted the Chicago Bulls 120-119 on Saturday night. Klay Thompson lit up the United Center and led Dallas with 20 points. Matas Buzelis showed some of the promise that got him drafted 11th overall as he carried Chicago with 28 points, nine rebounds, and six assists.

The Mavericks came out stagnant, with Anthony Davis taking a long two and Klay Thompson barely hitting the rim on a floater in two of their first four possessions. Chicago took advantage and controlled the pace early, jumping out to a 12-5 lead. Dallas took a timeout, allowed Anthony Davis to rest, and quickly climbed back into the game with an 8-4 burst, led by Spencer Dinwiddie. After a few minutes of back-and-forth, Brandon Williams reached deep in his bag to spearhead an 11-1 run before Chicago leveled things out to end the quarter. Dallas trailed 34-30 after one.

After finishing the first quarter strong, Chicago hit the gas early in the second frame to open a 10-point lead just over two minutes in. This became 12 just over halfway through the quarter before the Mavericks finally answered with an 11-0 run that featured three pretty left-wing threes from Klay Thompson. Chicago took a timeout, but the Mavericks kept pushing until they took the lead back after scoring 15 in a row. Unlike the first quarter, the Mavericks were able to hold on and take a 58-55 advantage into the half.

Chicago took the game back with two quick buckets in the third, but Dallas put a Chicago run on hold by reclaiming their own six-point lead via a Thompson three and two Mavericks layups. Offense was aplenty for both teams while Anthony Davis found his shot in the midsection of the third quarter, and the theme of see-saw runs continued as Dallas gave up their lead just as quickly as they obtained it. Naji Marshall and Brandon Williams steadied the ship as the period concluded and Dallas carried an 89-87 edge into the fourth quarter.

Quickly in the fourth, the Mavericks had an excellent high-low sequence where Anthony Davis hit Kai Jones on a superb bounce pass for a dunk. As is the case often, this “layup” gave Dallas the confidence they needed to defend and build a nine-point lead in the first three-and-a-half minutes. But, once again, the Bulls climbed back into the game and cut the deficit to three before Klay Thompson and Spencer Dinwiddie hit back-to-back threes to restore the nine-point advantage. The Mavericks never squandered this lead (although they tried their hardest) and beat Chicago 120-119 for their 37th win of the season.

Dallas got solid games from P.J. Washington (19 points), Naji Marshall (14 points), and Spencer Dinwiddie (14 points, 11 assists), while Chicago got 22 points from Nikola Vucevic and 25 points and 11 rebounds from Coby White.

Anthony Davis is not healthy​


Davis now has three games under his belt since returning from injury and it is clear that he is not himself. His first shot, a (roughly) 20-footer, set the tone for his night. He avoided chest-to-chest contact at every corner: rebounding, driving, and trying to finish on the interior. This led to another poor shooting night and some concerning falls that had me holding my breath. It is honorable that he is playing, but the offense picked up when he went out of the game. Other than being an elite weak-side shot-blocker, I am not sure what Davis provides this team in his current form.

Defend and run​


The Mavericks turned Chicago over 19 times and scored 27 points off those turnovers. Eight blocks and nine steals allowed Dallas to get out and control the pace of the game, which made it much easier to respond to the runs Chicago went on. The Mavericks pride themselves on defending and although the Bulls’ point total was high, the Mavericks got a lot of key stops and stops that led directly to scores.

Brandon Williams and Kai Jones: NBA players​


Williams finished the game with 12 points and three assists. Jones grabbed seven rebounds, had four steals and two blocks, and contributed 15 points as well. The sample size for both of these guys is now large enough that I can confidently say they are bonafide role players. Jones has incredible instincts and athleticism and Williams has a feel for the game that not many guys have. Dallas would be unwise to not bring them back on NBA deals next year. Both pass the eye test, both have produced in games, and both would not cost the Mavericks an arm and a leg.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...119-anthony-davis-matas-buzelis-klay-thompson
 
Player Grades – Recapping the Mavericks vs. Bulls

Dallas Mavericks v Orlando Magic

Photo by Gary Bassing/NBAE via Getty Images

Assigning Grades for the Mavericks in their 120–119 win over the Bulls

The Dallas Mavericks came to The Windy City with a three-game winning streak against the Chicago Bulls, including an early November victory. Quite a lot has changed since then, but fortunately the outcome of the game remained the same, as the Mavs won 120-119. The ending was not without drama, as the Bulls reeled off an 11-2 run before Spencer Dinwiddie put an end to it with a nice drive and finish. After a quick score to cut the Mavericks lead to 3, Chicago got a stop and had a chance to tie with 10.4 seconds remaining but Dallas played the foul card to great effect, as the Bulls split a pair of free throws instead of even attempting a three. From there, Klay Thompson iced it at the free throw line, moving the Mavs up to the 9th Seed in the Western Conference with the win! Let’s get to the grades!

Spencer Dinwiddie: A​

14 Points / 8 Rebounds / 11 Assists / 0 Steals / 1 Block (36 Minutes)​


Dinwiddie was posturing for a good grade despite not looking to score early on, instead dishing and get his teammates involved. Then the fourth quarter rolled around and he stepped up big, dropping in 11 points, including a bucket with 36.1 remaining in the game to push the lead to five while the Bulls were in the midst of a big run. He badly flubbed another shot a few seconds later, but a near triple-double effort with a big fourth quarter was badly needed to get another road win, pushing the Mavericks record to 3-1 in the four game roady.

Klay Thompson: A-​

20 Points / 1 Rebound / 1 Assist / 0 Steals / 0 Blocks (30 Minutes)​


Thompson’s has shown a tendency to take a rhythm dribble after receiving a pass. On the surface, there is nothing wrong with that, however he seems to do it when he’s open in the first place. He got up a healthy number of shots in the first half alone (11) but his efficiency was sub-par. Then he got hot and ended up going 6-for-13 overall and 5-for-10 from three. As nice as that was, his two biggest buckets were two free throws that iced the game.

P.J. Washington: B+​

19 Points / 7 Rebounds / 2 Assists / 0 Steals / 2 Blocks (32 Minutes)​


Washington got off to a hot start, scoring Dallas’ first bucket and proving to be the offensive go-to early on. At one point in the first quarter, Washington was 3-for-4 from the floor, while the rest of the team was a combined 2-for-7. He struggled from three (1-for-5) but the rest of his game, especially his defensive effort, was key to getting the win.

Anthony Davis: B-​

18 Points / 7 Rebounds / 5 Assists / 1 Steal / 2 Blocks (30 Minutes)​


Davis continues to round into form after a lengthy absence. While he barely eclipsed 30% shooting from the floor on a whopping 23 shots, he was still solid if not efficient. He also registered his 1,800th block (second most of all active players) as a nice highlight on an otherwise shaky night.

Kai Jones: A-​

15 Points / 7 Rebounds / 3 Assists / 4 Steals / 2 Blocks (31 Minutes)​


This guy is hard not to like. What started as a “who is Kai Jones” for a lot of people has turned into something of a Cinderella story. Jones was picked up after getting released by the Clippers and provides the Mavs much-needed size. He played big minutes and hit a highly effective 7-for-8 from the floor with four of his rebounds on the offensive end. His four steals also led the team by far. It’s sometimes difficult to imagine this season going worse in many ways, but if Jones wasn’t here, the Mavs probably don’t win four of their last five.

Naji Marshall: B+​

14 Points / 7 Rebounds / 2 Assists / 1 Steal / 1 Block (27 Minutes)​


Naji wasn’t in career high mode like he has been of late, but had himself a solid game in relatively low minutes. While he didn’t necessarily light up the box score, he made a big impact on the game despite playing just shy of 27 minutes.

Brandon Williams: B​

12 Points / 1 Rebound / 3 Assists / 1 Steal / 0 Blocks (16 Minutes)​


Tonight we bid adieu to Williams, at least for the remainder of this season – maybe. As a player on a two-way contract, Williams could only be active for 50 games at the NBA level, a limit he met Saturday. However, the Mavs could soon convert his contract such that he would be able to play the last two games of the season. In the meantime, Williams made the most of somewhat limited minutes, especially at the free throw line where he was a perfect 6-for-6

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/3/30/24396888/mavericks-vs-bulls-recap-120-119-giddey-half-court
 
3 Thoughts before the Dallas Mavericks host the Brooklyn Nets

Dallas Mavericks v Orlando Magic

Photo by Fernando Medina/NBAE via Getty Images

Should the Mavs risk injuries to secure a play-in spot?

With only seven games left in the regular season, the Dallas Mavericks are currently the 9th seed in the Western Conference with their 37-38 record. Anthony Davis is back in the lineup, playing 30 minutes in Saturday’s one-point victory over the Chicago Bulls. He’s clearly still limited due to his adductor injury, but Dallas is all about rolling the dice this year, apparently, and there are several other teams jockeying for the play-in. With Kyrie Irving gone for the season, it seems extremely unlikely that the Mavs could potentially make much noise in the playoffs, even with the imminent return of both Daniel Gafford and Dereck Lively II. Here are three things to watch for as Dallas suits up against the Nets at home on Monday.

What version of Anthony Davis will we get?​


When healthy, he’s obviously a terror to be dealt with. But he currently seems very much not healthy. The adductor strain is still an issue. It’s great to see him suit up and try to help the team get a W, but you’ve got to wonder how much of a risk it might be deploying him in critical minutes, both for himself and for the team. Every game counts at this point, but as mentioned above, it’s hard to envision the Mavs making a significant push in the playoffs should the remain at the 9th spot and secure a play-in position. It almost seems like a better strategy on such a huge investment to shelve Davis for the season and ensure that he doesn’t reinjure himself for no good reason. He did put up 18 points last game, but as mentioned after the Bulls game, the offensive seemed to pick up speed when he wasn’t on the court.

Daniel Gafford and Dereck Lively​


Will either return? Should either return. I feel pretty much the same about them as I do with AD. Why risk anything at this point in the season when you know you’re not going anywhere? I’m certainly not a player and I do understand that they’re likely itching to get back onto the court, but who’s in charge here? Oh, right, the people Patrick Dumont and Nico Harrison. Great.

The X-Factor or a main character​


PJ Washington continues to look like the Mav’s alpha player with Luka gone and Kyrie out for the season. He returned from a two-game absence (ankle sprain) on Saturday to help the team eek past the Bulls, notching 7 rebounds, 2 assists, and 19 points in 32 minutes of play. His rebounds were always going to increase after Luka left, but with both Gaff and DLive out, PJ is often one of (if not the) tallest Mavs on the court). He continues to get it done on defense, as well. He’s probably happy to be posting such solid numbers, and probably also enjoys feeling like the best player on the team. Being the 9th seed with no real shot at going far in the playoffs? He’s probably not enjoying that as much.

How to watch​


The game starts at 7:30 on KFAA.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/3/30/24397383/game-preview-dallas-mavericks-vs-brooklyn-nets
 
MMBets: How to bet the Dallas Mavericks vs Brooklyn Nets

Dallas Mavericks v Chicago Bulls

Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images

The Mavericks are getting healthier and the Nets are still very sad

The Mavericks are back home after their road trip to face the Nets for the second time in the last week. Daniel Gafford will return tonight after missing 21 games, reinforcing Dallas’ frontline that has been ravaged by injuries. The Nets are a broken team, and the Mavericks just disposed of them in Brooklyn seven days ago. With Dallas getting healthier, this game should be a blowout in the Mavericks’ favor. It will be fun to see the guys that have missed time, but the basketball could get ugly down the stretch.

Game Details


Fixture: Dallas Mavericks vs Brooklyn Nets | NBA 2024-2025

Date and Time: Monday, March 31st, 2025; 7:30 PM CST

Venue: American Airlines Center, Dallas, TX.

Outcome Odds

  • Spread: Dallas -9 (-112)
  • O/U 216.5 (-112/-108)
  • Mavs ML: -410

Odds up to date as of 11:30 AM CST from DraftKings

The game total in this game surely factors in the Mavericks’ expected defensive output now that they have a lot of size. Regardless, that will only matter while the game is within reach, which should not be for long. Take Dallas to cover -9 (-112).

Player Props

  • Anthony Davis under 24.5 points (-120)
  • Max Christie to score 10+ points (+115)

Davis has not gone over this line since he has returned and with heavy blowout potential, he should not have a chance to go over this tonight. Christie should see a lot of garbage time minutes and if he can hit his shots, this should be a good wallet booster.

Play of the Day

  • Over 216.5 points (-112)

As previously mentioned, the game total is a product of the Mavericks’ injury report. Regardless, this line is simply too low. Take the over on 216.5 points (-112) and expect Dallas to carry the load on this.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...s-vs-brooklyn-nets-anthony-davis-max-christie
 
Player Grades: Recapping Mavericks vs. Nets

Brooklyn Nets v Dallas Mavericks

Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images

Assigning grades for the Mavericks in their 113-109 loss to the Nets

The Dallas Mavericks took on the Brooklyn Nets for the second Monday in a row, but the result was different that last week as they lost 113-109. This was a tale of two teams playing two different styles all night. The Nets hoisted threes every chance they got, while the Mavs pounded the paint throughout the game. The long-awaited return of Daniel Gafford contributed to Dallas’ efforts down low, but even if he hadn’t helped much, it was just nice to see him back on the floor. To further articulate the point of how the two squads played, the Nets attempted 37 three-pointers by the halfway mark of the third quarter, with the Mavericks shooting 55.8% on 52 two-pointers at the same point in the game. This was a game the Mavericks had to win, and instead they let it slip, specifically in the fourth quarter. Let’s get to the grades!

Spencer Dinwiddie: B​

11 Points / 5 Rebounds / 8 Assists / 1 Steal / 0 Blocks (31 Minutes)​


Dinwiddie continues to play solid ball for the Mavs and probably doesn’t get quite as much credit as he deserves. Yes, he sometimes pounds the air out of the ball and ends up forcing shots, but I maintain at least some of that is a result of a stagnant offense and teammates tossing him the ball for a bailout. Whatever the case, he does a bit of everything. The biggest mark against him tonight was a horrible foul that basically cost the Mavs the game. He was put out of position, but fouling on a wide-open layup resulted in the three-point play and a four-point deficit that proved too much to overcome.

Klay Thompson: C​

13 Points / 3 Rebounds / 4 Assists / 1 Steal / 1 Blocks (28 Minutes)​


Klay didn’t have a great shooting night, and the worst of it came at the worst possible time. He missed a shot on three straight Maverick possessions in the fourth quarter, which instantly resulted in the Mavs lead turning into a two-point deficit. While that one sequence doesn’t account for his entire game (nor was the entire exchange his fault), even hitting one of those shots would have been huge. Overall, even another made shot or two from beyond the arc would have been a huge help — the double-clutch miss in the closing seconds is the glaring example of his shooting night.

P.J. Washington: B-​

13 Points / 5 Rebounds / 2 Assists / 0 Steals / 0 Blocks (31 Minutes)​


Washington had a nice game, shooting efficiently and playing solid defense throughout. However, for leading the team in minutes, it’s reasonable to expect more from him, especially against a sub-par team that is far from full strength.

Anthony Davis: B​

12 Points / 7 Rebounds / 5 Assists / 0 Steals / 1 Block (28 Minutes)​


Davis had a nice game, but left us hungry for what he will be at his best when he’s fully healthy. There isn’t much to complain about, other than maybe just needing more of what he did bring and seeing him at full speed more consistently. His grade under the circumstances is tricky — he is clearly capable of much more, but his limited minutes coming off of injury can’t be overlooked.

Daniel Gafford: A-​

17 Points / 7 Rebounds / 2 Assists / 0 Steals / 0 Blocks (19 Minutes)​


Gafford did a little bit of everything in his comeback game. While not necessarily one of his monster games, I don’t know that it’s realistic to have expected much more from a guy who has lived on the injury report for weeks. He looked like he hardly missed a beat, and although that was likely helped by limited minutes, he was highly effective in the time he did play. A huge dunk and buzzer-beating jumper in the closing minutes were critical. Under the collective circumstances, he gets a well-deserved grade boost.

Naji Marshall: B-​

8 Points / 8 Rebounds / 3 Assists / 1 Steal / 0 Blocks (27 Minutes)​


Marshall was in foul trouble most of the night which limited his minutes and production, yet he still had an impact. In what has now become something of a trademark, he nailed one of his crazy floaters to beat the shot-clock in the fourth quarter to put the Mavs up by 10 at that point. He shot well overall and played intelligently, scoring at close range instead of tossing up threes.

Kai Jones: B+​

7 Points / 5 Rebounds / 2 Assists / 0 Steals / 0 Blocks (16 Minutes)​


Jones did what he has been doing, but just a little less of it since Gafford got the starting nod and took up some center minutes. He converted at a high clip, grabbed a few offensive rebounds and even dished some dimes.

Max Christie: B+​

12 Points / 3 Rebounds / 0 Assists / 1 Steal / 0 Blocks (20 Minutes)​


Oh Cormac, where art thou? In fairness, Christie had a relatively solid outing, but some of his misses were everything but in, and one can’t help but wonder how nice he is going to look when he once again finds the groove he had immediately following his arrival in Dallas.

Jaden Hardy: C​

9 Points / 0 Rebounds / 1 Assist / 0 Steals / 0 Blocks (19 Minutes)​


Something has to give with Hardy. He either has to learn to be something he currently is not, or Jason Kidd needs to stop having him orchestrate the offense. When he plays the point guard role, it generally does not go well. He often has his pocket picked or just registers unforced turnovers. When he’s playing more to his strengths, things go well. It’s almost that binary at this point. Whatever the case, this was not a good game, as you can see by the box score. A nice three to end the third quarter broke a tie and showed what Hardy should be doing a bit more of. About a minute later, he caught a pass, took a quick dribble and stroked another three. There’s gold in them thar hills…

Caleb Martin: B-​

7 Points / 6 Rebounds / 2 Assists / 0 Steals / 1 Block (21 Minutes)​


Martin was once again somewhat anonymous. To his credit, he looked more active (healthy?) and in sync tonight, but didn’t really impact the game in a jump-off-the-page way. He soared for a couple of rebounds and even got on the floor at one point, so he did contribute some intangibles, while not doing anything especially damaging. He had a strong drive and score midway through the fourth quarter and even helped run the offense a bit down the stretch.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...avericks-vs-nets-recap-daniel-gafford-113-109
 
The Dallas Mavericks fanbase is fractured into three pieces

NBA: Sacramento Kings at Dallas Mavericks

Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

Until the end of the Harrison/Kidd/Dumont era, the fault lines of fandom are set.

At the start of this season, I wrote about my mental health struggles. My hope that another season covering the Dallas Mavericks at MavsMoneyBall would lift my spirits turned out to be a mixed bag. While I respect and adore my colleagues (our Slack chats are legendary), there was more to my optimism than writing posts for the site.

The Mavs were coming off a run to the NBA Finals (or “the championship games” if you prefer). It was not farfetched to think this team had a legitimate shot to make a return to the biggest stage in the basketball world. They had crafted a legitimate title contender around Luka Doncic, who was entering his seventh season and would not turn 26 until the playoffs were again in sight. The front office had made upgrades to the roster to address the team’s weaknesses in perimeter shooting and secondary playmaking with Klay Thompson, Naji Marshall, and Quentin Grimes.

Fast-forward to the present moment, and the season feels like a cruel April Fool’s Day joke stretched out over an entire regular season. Doncic is gone to forever wear purple and gold all the way to the Naismith. Grimes is the best player on the Sixers. Kyrie Irving is on a long road to recovery and somehow has more leverage than ever over Dallas despite his return to star-level play being a glaring uncertainty.

Anthony Davis is a great player, a Hall-of-Fame player. Yet Monday night’s 113-109 home loss to the woeful Brooklyn Nets showed how vulnerable this roster now is to shooting variance - no longer having a pair of the best offensive engines the game has ever seen. The last possession with the game still on the line spoke volumes, a pump fake three in the corner from Klay Thompson and a long ranger from Spencer Dinwiddie that nearly went in. No mismatch was created because the two gravitational forces - Doncic and Irving - that dictated terms during key possessions are now playing elsewhere and sidelined, respectively.

This team never gave up this season amid the hardship of injuries, illness, and unprecedented levels of drama, which is commendable. It is also true that the franchise faces uncertainty, and the fanbase is fractured in a way that not even a title dropping out of the sky could fully heal. If you are a Dallas Mavericks fan, you probably sit in one of three categories. Your personality, your relationship with fandom generally, and a host of other factors have caused one of these three reactions. It will take at least a generation to fully galvanize what was a united throng of global fans, until just a few weeks ago.

Done with this team​


When news of the Doncic trade broke, you could quickly see the fault lines emerging. A portion of the fanbase died on the vine - season ticket holders cancelled, fans switched allegiances from Maverick blue to Laker gold, while others have given up on the NBA altogether.

Will they ever return? While a small portion may find their way back when the franchise sees brighter days, it is reasonable to postulate that fans who began to root for Dallas when Luka Doncic arrived have little reason to ever consider giving this organization a second chance, even after it has a new front office and even a new owner.

The era of “loyalty never fades away” ended on February 1st in the early morning hours. The unbridled empowerment of Nico Harrison tore that culture asunder in the eyes of those who are never coming back. Comments made by Harrison, Dumont, and Welts parrot a similar framing. To paraphrase, we are going to win back your trust by winning championships. Hogwash.

2011 taught us how rare and special winning a title truly is. What if the comeback in Game 2 falls short? What if Jet’s dagger three over LeBron clanks off the rim? A thousand what-ifs going the Mavericks' way during that run keeps the organization from still searching for their first Larry O’Brien trophy to this day. Franchises aim for contention, for relevance, and then simply hope. Winning a championship is not something you can order at the drive-thru window like getting your fries animal style. More importantly, dangling the idea of a championship to curry favor with your fanbase is beyond tone deaf given the roster, salary cap, and draft capital realities.

Even if Dumont and Harrison could snap their fingers and plop a title banner onto midcourt at the AAC, the former fans in this category would not return and couldn't care less.

Move on already​


This second faction staked out their ideological territory in the opening hours after the Shams bomb was heard around the world. Luka was gone and good riddance, some were saying. Davis is going to make the Mavericks' defense elite. If you listened carefully to these voices, the Mavericks low-key won the trade. Nico is a sneaky genius, they murmured.

There is little doubt that if Anthony Davis and Kyrie Irving had both stayed healthy and Dallas was in contention for a top-six seed, these voices would be far louder at this point. Even still, a quick trip to social media is replete with exasperation from the “move on already” brigade. Unable to define the trade as a positive as easily as expected, this lot now settles for chastising others for lamenting a trade that cannot be undone. They see the constant languishing as a maudlin and fruitless exercise.

“You have to move on eventually,” they proclaim - a mere two months after a franchise-defining decision widely regarded as the worst trade in league history. If you are in this camp, it may not be that you like the move but you detest what you perceive as “wallowing in it” and you are just ready to move on - even if that means moving into an uncertain number of years in basketball wilderness once the Nico Harrison era ends - likely before the end of the decade. The team projects to be in an asset-barren rebuild as they prepare to move into a new arena. Insert Picard facepalm meme here. Yikes.

Driving with the Brakes On​


There was a time when I thought CDs would be forever on my shelf and not in boxes down in my garage. I spent an embarrassing amount of money as a teenager and into my twenties experiencing new music by buying CDs every week in an array of genres. The best part of popping that silver disc into the dash was discovering the deeper tracks that radio never played.

Around thirty years ago, Del Amitri had their biggest hit with Roll to Me - a syrupy sweet, upbeat love note that was perfect for radio play ad nauseam at a nifty 2:13 runtime. Deeper on that album was a song that has stuck with me for thirty years. “Driving with the Brakes On” is an ode to the conflicted nature of a love embroiled in such wrenching chaos that you want to stay and leave at once with near equal desire. “When you’re driving with the brakes on, when you’re swimming with your boots on, It’s hard to say you love someone and it’s hard to say you don’t.”

For this third group of Mavericks fandom - myself among them - we have not left the building, but we understand the Fire Nico chants even if we aren’t the ones yelling it as a meme at venues around DFW.

“When you’re driving with the brakes on, when you’re swimming with your boots on, It’s hard to say you love someone and it’s hard to say you don’t”- Driving with the Brakes on | Del Amitri | album: Twisted, 1995

The phrase MFFL - Mavs Fan for Life - first came into the consciousness shortly after Mark Cuban bought the team. It was a clunky but ultimately endearing bit of marketing that propped up the idea that loyalty to a then floundering franchise was something worth cultivating and clutching tightly even during the rough times.

For those of us driving with the brakes on, our status as MFFLs has never been quite so strained. There are players on this team we still have fondness for, and there may be a playoff series or two to enjoy before it all flies apart in a twister of inevitable karmic blowback. Yet there is a reason we are not done with this team and an equally powerful reason we are unable to simply move on from this trade.

I have been a Dallas Mavericks fan since 1980 when I was five years old and I will be damned if a shoe salesman who Peter Princple’d his way into the front office and basketball neophyte owner are going to rob me of my Mavericks fandom.

Equally powerful is the reality before us. The Game of Thrones concept of “The Long Night” is just a season or two away. Kidd and Harrison will not be around for the near barren cupboard desolation that will follow their almost certainly doomed experiment. Cooper Flagg is not coming to save Dallas in this year’s draft, nor does the team control its first-round picks from 2027 to 2030. The price for Harrison’s blunder and Dumont’s gullibility will be paid in years of losing long after they are gone. That is why those of us driving with the brakes on cannot simply move on from our fixation with the trade and its fallout.

No matter which of these three groups you most closely identify with, I have nothing but love for you because you are coping with all of this the best you can and responding to it all authentically. I would simply ask you to keep in mind that there are fans in the other two groups experiencing something just as valid.

The song from Del Amitri ultimately makes a declaration once it hits the thumper of a bridge. “But unless the moon falls tonight | Unless continents collide | Nothing’s gonna make me break from her side.”

I remain a fan of the Dallas Mavericks and a proud member of the MavsMoneyBall staff. I also yearn for the day when Nico Harrison, Jason Kidd, and Patrick Dumont’s era is shuffled into the dustbin of franchise history. Those two things are both true because - at least for now - some of us are driving with the brakes on.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/maver...ericks-fanbase-is-fractured-into-three-pieces
 
In Gafford’s return the Mavericks are left with questions for the offseason

Brooklyn Nets v Dallas Mavericks

Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images

Dallas has little time left to judge its new roster

Dallas Mavericks center Daniel Gafford returned to the lineup after missing the previous 21 games due to injury, starting alongside Anthony Davis in a 113-109 loss to the Brooklyn Nets at home on Monday night. For his part Gafford brought the same effort, athleticism, and intensity that he offers every time he steps on the floor, posting 17 points and seven rebounds in just 19 minutes.

In what’s felt like a never ending feedback loop that only results in injury, Gafford looked banged up in the final moments of the game, though he told reporters after he is fine and was able to walk it off. Still, Monday’s showing was a microcosm of where Dallas is now and what they face heading into the offseason.

Since the Feb. 1 trade that sent Luka Doncic to Los Angeles and sent this franchise into tailspin the Mavericks have lacked direction. Some of this is obviously self-imposed and the rest feels nothing short of karmic retribution. Davis suffered prolonged injury sustained in his Feb. 8 debut, only for Gafford to go down days later. They’ve collectively missed 40 games in that time. This doesn’t account for the 36 straight games Dereck Lively II has missed since January, the 15 games PJ Washington has missed since the trade, and Kyrie Irving’s catastrophic injury in early March that will see him out deep into next season.

Looking past a trade that is devoid of logic, how do the Mavericks even know what they have? Full credit is given to the players and its staff for not punting the season at several forks in the road the last month, even if one could argue it was already too late. But with so few games remaining, plus one or two play-in games, the front office has little time to make assessments or form a direction.

Monday’s game presented two very distinct storylines of this team’s future. There were moments where the size, length and athleticism of Dallas’ front court was overwhelming Brooklyn — a clear path for a healthy version of this team, if that is ever possible. Of the 109 Mavericks points, 56 were in the paint. And the inverse of that was the Nets spread the Mavericks’ defense out, neutralized their size and length, and buried them under a barrage of threes. Brooklyn, who is 27th this season in three-point percentage, shot 40-percent from three and hit 20 on their way to outscoring the Mavericks 60-30 from the perimeter.

“This was just a low energy and effort game,” Kidd stated after the game when asked if three-point defense will be a challenge when playing two bigs like they did Monday. “That’s the two things we talked about before, is our effort and energy. Our energy, we got to pick that up.”

Kidd is right in the sense that defensive impact, especially in rotation on the perimeter, is largely effort and energy. But few things should be investigated closer going forward than whether or not the Mavericks can slow down opponent three-point shooting with this new look. The sample sizes are ultra-small, but so far the two-man defensive rating of Davis and Gafford together is a stale 139.5 (just 21 minutes in two games). If you add in Washington, that three-man lineup in 14 minutes over two games has a 124.1 defensive rating.

The Mavericks have six regular season games left, and currently cling to one of the final two play-in spots. Lively is likely on his way back, soon filling out this version of the Mavericks before the offseason. Without Irving we’ll not see them fully whole before entering what is the most important offseason in Nico Harrison’s general manager career. But he gets a handful of games to see what the team is right now, and what they need this summer to fill in the gaps through the draft of free agency.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...s-for-the-offseason-anthony-davis-free-agency
 
Mavericks vs. Hawks Recap: 3 things from Dallas’ 120-118 win against Atlanta

NBA: Atlanta Hawks at Dallas Mavericks

Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

Anthony Davis’ game-winner gives Dallas a big win

The Dallas Mavericks defeated the Atlanta Hawks 120-118 Wednesday night in Dallas in a thrilling game that came down to the final possession for both teams.

Anthony Davis hit a floater on the move with 3.4 seconds remaining to give Dallas the final lead, before then defending Trae Young on the ensuing possession to secure the win. It was a big win for Dallas, since the Sacramento Kings lost to the Washington Wizards earlier today. The Mavericks win now gives them a game-and-a-half lead for the ninth seed.

It wasn’t a pretty game, with the Hawks being on the second night of a back-to-back, and Dallas’ defense looking suspect for most of the game, but a win is a win.

Here’s what we noticed.

Anthony Davis balls out​


There hasn’t been a lot of fun moments in Dallas since Anthony Davis arrived after the Luka Doncic trade, but Wednesday night was definitely fun. Davis had by far his best game as a Maverick, with 34 points, 15 rebounds, and five blocks.

Obviously there was no bigger play for Davis then his game-winning floater with 3.4 seconds left. Dallas got the ball to Davis, cleared the floor and let him go to work quickly and Davis delivered.

Davis was everywhere, scoring buckets down low, in the midrange, and he even made two three pointers. Atlanta guarded him straight up, so Davis used his face-up game from the mid-post to either quickly get into the paint or make comfortable mid-range jumpers. Once Atlanta decided to double, Davis wasn’t as effective, but his teammates consistently made shots for most of the night even if Davis didn’t have a big assist game.

He was also really fun in transition, punctuated by an awesome lob finish from Davis after a beautiful setup from the freshly returned Dereck Lively. It wasn’t a perfect night (Davis still doesn’t seem completely healthy, and doesn’t want to play much defense outside the paint, which the Hawks took advantage of a few times), but Davis is finally starting to look like himself after the long injury layoff.

Dereck Lively is back​


After suffering a stress fracture in his ankle in January, Mavericks center Dereck Lively finally made his return against Atlanta on Wednesday. Lively had a pretty strict minutes restriction, only playing 16 minutes, but it was good to see him on the court.

Lively started next to Davis, and it was a pretty fun pairing, especially when Lively found Davis for a lob in the third quarter. Lively didn’t do too much in his time, with just four points and five rebounds, but he moved well and didn’t get hurt again. Which honestly, that’s all Mavs fans can hope for right now.

It’s easy to win games when you make all your shots​


The Atlanta Hawks stink, especially their defense. Dallas could not afford a rough offensive game against this team, and thankfully they delivered. Dallas’ offense threw in just about everything they put up tonight, shooting 53.5 percent from the floor and 45.5 from three.

Atlanta had no answers for Davis, clearly, but they also didn’t really have answers for anyone else. Trae Young’s size causes a lot of cascading issues for Atlanta defensively, and you can see that by scanning the box score and seeing how well Dallas’ perimeter players operated: Dallas starting guards, Spencer Dinwiddie and Klay Thompson, combined for 31 points on 7-of-14 shooting from three. Thompson’s three pointer with under a minute remaining tied the game and kept Dallas connected enough for Davis’ heroics in the final seconds.

This wasn’t a clean game for the Mavericks, as their defense was Swiss cheese for most of the night, and their fourth quarter offense got goofy and allowed the Hawks back in it. With the Hawks on the second night of a back-to-back and Dallas at home, this really should have been a more comfortable win for the Mavericks. But with how things have been going lately, any win is a good win. Dallas moves on.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...hings-from-dallas-120-118-win-against-atlanta
 
The Dallas Mavericks are making basketball fun again in Dallas

Houston Rockets v Dallas Mavericks

Photo by Logan Riely/NBAE via Getty Images

Facing perhaps the most extreme culture shift in modern basketball history, the Dallas Mavericks have found ways to make lemonade out of the lemons handed to them — and it’s been inspiring to watch.

With just over seven seconds remaining in a tie game against the Atlanta Hawks, Anthony Davis caught the ball at the top of the key and drove left. As he released his off-hand floater, Davis crashed to the court, sliding out of bounds as his shot hung in the air with 20,000 fans in American Airlines Center frozen in place.

When the ball fell through the bottom of the net, the crowd exploded. Davis was helped to his feet and, moments later, contested a three-point shot by Atlanta’s Trae Young that would’ve given the Hawks a stunning victory. The shot fell short and Davis was mobbed by his teammates and coaches for his offensive and defensive superhuman efforts to carry Dallas across the finish line.

His final statline of 34 points, 15 rebounds, and five blocks flashed across the bottom of the screen as he fielded questions from TV reporter Jeff Skin Wade. Dereck Lively II and Daniel Gafford continued the postgame celebration as Davis prepared for the interview, cheering into the camera and hyping up their teammate.

Dallas has won five of its last seven to give itself some breathing room in the race for play-in seeding. The Mavericks currently sit at 38-39, two and a half games ahead of the 11th-seeded Phoenix Suns and one and a half games clear of the 10th-seeded Sacramento Kings with five games to go.

As Davis and his teammates exited the court to continue the party in the locker room, I reflected on the last eight weeks for this Mavericks team. For the first time since the Luka Dončić trade, I felt a sense of pride watching this team play basketball.

Two weeks ago, all three of these guys were on the bench with injuries. About two weeks before that, Kyrie Irving went down with a torn ACL. Dallas played multiple games with only eight eligible players — the league-required minimum to play a game — and there were a few games where guys that probably should’ve sat suited up to help the Mavericks reach that minimum number. It would’ve been easy to throw in the towel and tank the rest of the season. Full transparency, I’ve been in support of that idea ever since the trade — lose as many games as you can, get a talented young guy and try to run it back next season. But man, if you don’t like watching these Mavericks fight for every loose ball, hustle after every shot, and hype each other up after each big play, you may not like NBA basketball.

This group of guys had every reason to quit. Fans were angry — not at them, but some players felt slighted by the chants fans would start during games — and the season seemed lost. But they just kept going. They didn’t care about the outside noise. They stuck together and they put together enough wins to stay competitive for a play-in spot, where they’ll likely host a playoff-atmosphere game as the No. 9 seed. And damn it, they’ve suckered me back into loving this team again.

That never-say-die attitude is what I love most about sports. Screw the oddsmakers, ignore the pundits and block out the outside noise: when you step on that court, it’s your five against their five for 48 minutes. Those are the only numbers that matter. Dallas’ standing has dropped since the trade. After all, I don’t think there’s a team in any sport in any league that could survive trading away a generational talent AND their two all-star players suffering injuries, but they’ve prevented the season from turning into a free fall.

It’s inspiring to watch them salvage a season few thought they could. Life, a controversial general manager, and enough injuries to last a team a decade, has thrown obstacles at the Mavericks that could’ve gotten them down, but they laced up their shoes and they just kept fighting. It’s the story of Rocky Balboa. There’s a reason America loves that story. People love to root for an underdog, and Dallas’ scrappy form of basketball resembles that of Balboa. You may think he’s overmatched against the bigger fighter, but he’s going to go in that ring and give ‘em hell. The Mavericks have survived the early rounds of the fight. They’ve taken the haymakers from the heavyweight, and now they’re fighting back.

Unfortunately for Dallas, it appears the season will end much like the first Rocky movie: a heartwarming comeback story that ends in defeat, but that doesn’t mean we can’t enjoy the ride while they fight back. We’ve got at least two weeks left, and I’m ready to cheer them on as they take on the world.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...cks-are-making-basketball-fun-again-in-dallas
 
3 Things to watch as the Dallas Mavericks face the Los Angeles Clippers

Dallas Mavericks v Los Angeles Clippers

Photo by Jim Poorten/NBAE via Getty Images

Back where this whole thing began

Following a closer than it needed to be 120-118 victory over the Atlanta Hawks, the Dallas Mavericks (38-39, 9th in the Western Conference) head out to Tinseltown to square off with the Los Angeles Clippers (44-32, 7th in the Western Conference). This is the third of four meetings between the two teams. Interestingly enough, the first two meetings also happened as a baseball style series in Dallas, with the teams splitting those meetings in late December.

If you can believe it, as this feels like it was lifetimes ago, the Mavs faced off against these Clippers in the first game in the Toilet Bowl’s Intuit Dome history during the preseason. Ah, the simpler times. If only we knew back then what we knew now! However, now is not the time to look back, as we’ve got two games to play in 24 hours. Here’s a few things to know.

Davis’ delicate dispersion​


Fresh off his best game as a Maverick, Anthony Davis arrives into this contest with a bit more momentum at his back. However, given the fact that he is so talented, why does Davis not have more of these explosive games? Better yet, how do we end up with so many clunkers? Well, AD is no longer the spry young center that he once was and he’s lost maybe a half step. However, that half step is a big difference in getting all the way to the rim or settling for 18-footers.

Per the guru’s at NBA.com, AD in 2019-20 (his first season with the Los Angeles Lakers) took just 48% of his shots on the floor from 10 feet and out. This year? That number is up to over half of his shots at 53%. He’s much more jumper reliant than he used to be, so naturally he’s going to be prone to variance. Davis is shooting just 39.7% from the floor this season on shots outside of 5 feet, compared to 70% inside of 5 feet. In order to be his best self on a consistent basis, Davis is going to have to get inside more often.

Containing Kawhi and Harden​


The Mavs will have their work cut out for them in containing the Clippers tandem on the outside. Dallas will have PJ Washington back to throw at one of the pair, presumably Kawhi Leonard. However, that leaves Harden with one of Spencer Dinwiddie or Klay Thompson. Neither of them are regarded as great defenders at this point in their careers, so there will be a lot of pressure on the Mavs’ bigs to both contain Ivica Zubac and cut off drives from up top.

Who plays?​


This is the front end of a back-to-back and with the Mavericks balancing a lot of guys on minutes limits and injuries, it will be interesting to see who plays in which game. So far for Friday night’s tilt, Dereck Lively is out while Anthony Davis is questionable. If both miss, the Mavericks will be forced to go small once again with Daniel Gafford and Dwight Powell as their only available bigs.

How to watch​


This 9:30p CT tipoff from the Intuit Dome will be available on KFAA Channel 29 or Mavs TV here locally. If you’re in Los Angeles, try to sneak in and join the legion of fans standing at “The Wall”.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/2025/...ppers-april-4-2025-anthony-davis-kawhi-harden
 
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