RSS Mavericks Team Notes

Stats Rundown: 3 numbers to know from a Mavericks win over the Nets

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The Dallas Mavericks defeated the Brooklyn Nets 119-111 Friday night in Dallas. The win is the Mavericks’ fifth in the last six games and is a great way to get back into action after five days off. They’ll head to Utah to face the Jazz on Monday and try to keep playing winning basketball.

Michael Porter Jr. led all scorers with 34 points, but he had several crucial turnovers and bad plays down the stretch that led to the Nets’ loss. He shot 6-of-10 from deep. Anthony Davis led the Mavericks in scoring with 24 points and added 14 rebounds. Cooper Flagg scored 22 points, and Max Christie had 15 points off the bench.

Here are three numbers to know from the game:

66: Mavericks’ paint points​


The Nets outshot the Mavericks from behind the arc tonight, but it didn’t matter, because Dallas owned the paint. They outscored Brooklyn by 22 points in the paint. With Davis, Flagg, and P.J. Washington, the Mavericks have a pretty big front court. They’re skilled, too. The Nets big men couldn’t match the output from the Mavericks, and couldn’t put up any defense near the rim. It’s a big reason the Mavericks won the game.

8: Cooper Flagg assists​


Flagg led all players with eight assists in the game. That’s a great sign for the Mavericks. Flagg is only 18 years old, yet seems to be able to process the floor just about as well as the vets he’s playing with every night. He’ll only get better as the season goes along, and who knows what his playmaking ability will look like two or three years from now.

There can be some frustration from Mavericks fans who want to see him score, but it’s more important for him to get reps making the right play at this point. Especially considering where this Mavericks’ season will likely lead. The scoring will always be there, but it’s fun to see Flagg making passes that lead to buckets, too.

24: Mavericks’ fast break scoring​


This Dallas team likes to get out and run. They outscored the Nets by eight points on fast breaks, and that just happened to be the final margin of victory. The way this team is constructed makes it tough to score against set defenses in the half court, so any easy buckets they can pick up on the run are important. And they’ve got the personnel to get it done. Brandon Williams, Ryan Nembhard, Flagg, Christie, and Washington, can get up the floor fast. More importantly, they want to run. Not only does it get Dallas some baskets they desperately need, it’s just plain fun to watch. Hopefully that’s something that remains all year.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...rs-to-know-from-a-mavericks-win-over-the-nets
 
Cooper Flagg makes history again

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The Dallas Mavericks have put together a nice run over the past two weeks, winning five of their last six games. While a few of those games were against sub-par teams, the Mavs got wins over the second and third best teams in the Western Conference (the Denver Nuggets and Houston Rockets, respectively) as well.

There are a number of factors that play into the Mavs’ recent success, including the emergence of Ryan Nembhard, the return of Anthony Davis from injury and Naji Marshall quietly playing some excellent basketball. Of course, Cooper Flagg plays a huge role in the mix as well. Flagg continues to improve night after night, with another solid effort in Friday’s win over the Brooklyn Nets. In fact, his 22 points and 8 rebounds earned him a piece of NBA history. Flagg is now the only player to record two games of 20+ points, 5+ assists and 0 turnovers at the age of 18 (the first game was a 21 point, 5 assist, 0 turnover affair on November 16th in an overtime win over the Portland Trailblazers).

Cooper Flagg tonight:

22 PTS | 8 AST | 0 TO

It's his 2nd-career game with 20+ PTS, 5+ AST, and 0 TO…

Those are the ONLY such games by an 18-year-old in NBA history 🤯 https://t.co/yl22Mi6b3q pic.twitter.com/CIvvqnXrmk

— NBA (@NBA) December 13, 2025

Flagg currently averages 17.5 points, 6.3 rebounds and 3.4 assists per game. Those numbers are brought down by the puzzling decision to start him at point guard early in the season. His numbers have only improved since he slotted back in at his customary position as a forward.

What Flagg is doing this season, especially of late, is quite impressive. He has shown major strides since opening night, quickly becoming a go-to guy for the team, as he lives in the upper echelon of players for minutes played and points scored in the clutch (games within five points with five or fewer minutes left in the game).

While some may argue a stat like this pulls from a small sample size – there are relatively few players in NBA history who were in the league while they were 18 years old – that small sample size really makes the point of how remarkable such a thing is. Had Flagg not fast-tracked his life around basketball, he could easily be a college freshman right now, instead of making history at the NBA level. Being here is one thing, but 26 games into his career, Flagg is proving how special he is after winning West Rookie of the Month while pulling off a bit of history along the way.

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

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/maver...20-point-5-assist-0-turnover-game-age-18again
 
3 Things From a Dallas Mavericks Disgusting Win Over the Brooklyn Nets, 119-111

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The Dallas Mavericks pulled out an ugly victory at home against the Brooklyn Nets on Friday night, winning 119-111. The Mavs were led by Anthony Davis, who had a monster 24-point, 14-rebound, 3-assist, 3-steal, 3-block performance in 32 minutes. Cooper Flagg also had 22 points, five rebounds and a career high of eight assists. Max Christie and Naji Marhsall had 15 and 17 points, respectively. Michael Porter Jr. led the way for the Nets with 34 points and six threes.

Dallas spent the first quarter absorbing punches and firing right back, never allowing Brooklyn to turn short bursts into sustained control. The Mavericks set the tone by leaning into physicality, choosing rim pressure and interior defense over a jump-shooting contest, and that approach consistently swung momentum back in their favor. Flagg drove the early energy, repeatedly getting downhill for tough finishes and punctuating a Nets push with a transition dunk that flipped the feel of the game.

On the other end, Dwight Powell’s presence in the lane created several of the quarter’s most significant momentum shifts, as his timely blocks and contests erased Brooklyn possessions and turned stops into quick Dallas offense. Whenever the Nets tried to stretch the floor and regain rhythm, Dallas answered, most notably through Klay Thompson’s timely three-point shooting that punished help defense and steadied the offense. The score stayed tight at the end of the quarter. Still, the theme was unmistakable: the Mavericks controlled the flow by winning the paint, responding to every Nets run, and consistently reclaiming momentum through physical, connected play.

Dallas followed its first-quarter tone with a second period that was just as physical and just as volatile, but one where the Mavericks gradually began to assert control through persistence rather than separation. Brooklyn leaned on shot-making from Porter Jr., who repeatedly answered Dallas runs with difficult threes and free throws. Still, the Mavericks refused to let those shots flip the game. Flagg remained the engine, continuing to score by cutting, running the floor, and getting to the line. At the same time, Davis quietly stabilized the middle of the game with free throws, rebounds, and timely interior finishes that kept Dallas from slipping when Brooklyn briefly drew even.

Dallas’ most significant momentum swing came at the nine-minute mark. It started with Christie blocking Noa Traoré at the rim, which immediately turned into a sprint the other way, with P.J. Washington and Klay Thompson filling lanes before Thompson dropped off an alley-oop for Washington at the rim. On the very next possession, Washington stayed aggressive, jumping the inbound pass and pitching it ahead to a wide-open Thompson for a wide-open three. Dallas closed the half with similar poise, as Anthony Davis delivered back-to-back assists, first finding Flagg on a well-timed cut for a tough finish, then kicking the ball out to a wide-open Christie, whose jumper nudged the Mavericks ahead and sent them into the locker room with a narrow lead and the game firmly under control. By halftime, Dallas led 65–61.

The third quarter never settled, turning into a stretch defined by constant swings and slight separation. Dallas stayed afloat by leaning on defense and paint play, with Christie’s early block setting off another transition push and keeping the Mavericks steady when Brooklyn tried to surge. Davis and Powell protected the rim and finished inside, while Flagg continued to score through traffic to answer the Nets’ runs. Brooklyn kept firing back, but Dallas repeatedly found just enough, a stop here, a cut or second-chance finish there, to prevent the game from tipping. By the end of the quarter, the Mavericks had survived the chaos and carried a 104–101 lead into the fourth, momentum intact but the outcome still very much in play.

The game finally tilted for good in the final five minutes as Dallas turned a narrow edge into control by winning possessions and staying composed. Brooklyn briefly threatened behind Porter Jr.’s finishing. Still, the Mavericks answered through Davis on the glass, where he stayed with a sequence long enough to tip in a second-chance bucket that settled the moment. From there, Dallas began to separate by stacking small wins. Brandon Williams knocked down a deep three off a Flagg kickout, Davis erased a Porter drive on the other end, and Washington continued to pressure the defense by scoring inside and drawing fouls. Each Nets miss was met with a Dallas rebound, and each push was answered with a patient possession that bled clock and nudged the lead further out. By the final minute, Washington’s trips to the line and Davis’s rebounding had closed the door, turning a tight finish into a controlled close and sealing a 119–111 win that reflected how comfortably Dallas handled the moment when the game was there to be decided.

Here are three thoughts from the game:

Cooper Flagg and Anthony Davis have some chemistry.​


Dallas won this one, riding the growing connection between its two former number one picks, Davis and Flagg, a partnership that has quietly become the Mavericks’ offensive backbone. As Kyrie Irving remains sidelined, the offense has increasingly flowed through that pairing, and against Brooklyn, it showed again. In an uneven home win that rarely felt comfortable, Davis and Flagg were among the few consistent sources of clarity, repeatedly finding each other for finishes that kept Dallas steady when the game drifted. The two combined to connect for five assisted baskets, serving as the engine of the offense through the middle of the night, particularly in the second and third quarters when scoring was at a premium. For long stretches, the Mavericks’ attack was simply those two reading and reacting off one another, leaning on timing and trust rather than structure. If Dallas is going to keep stacking wins in the short term, that chemistry will have to keep accelerating. Whether that formula is sustainable, or even desirable, over the long run is a question that can wait.

Being dominant in the paint is the key to success​


Dallas won this one by owning the paint from start to finish, turning the game into a battle that Brooklyn never truly solved. The Mavericks controlled the interior in every quarter, consistently beating the Nets to spots around the rim and finishing through contact, which showed up clearly in a 66–44 advantage in paint scoring. That dominance was driven just as much by defense as offense.

Dallas finished with 19 total stocks as a team, six of them from Davis alone, repeatedly forcing misses that turned into transition chances the other way. Those stops fueled a 24–16 edge in fast-break points and kept the Mavericks in rhythm even when perimeter shots weren’t falling. Brooklyn managed to shoot just 50 percent in the paint for the night and went 4-for-11 there in the fourth quarter, never able to generate easy looks when the game tightened. In a night where Dallas was outshot from three by a wide margin and played a nearly even turnover game against one of the league’s weakest teams, the Mavericks showed they could still dictate the outcome by leaning into physicality and control inside, pulling themselves out of a messy game by winning where it mattered most.

The Mavericks are too inconsistent not to tank eventually.​


For all the positives that could be pulled from Friday night at the American Airlines Center, the larger picture was far less flattering. Much of the game was ugly from a Dallas perspective, marked by porous defense, uneven rebounding, careless fouls, and far too many possessions that ended in rushed or ill-advised shots. More concerning than any single mistake was the ease with which the worst team in basketball was allowed to hang around deep into the night, turning what should have been a routine home win into something far more uncomfortable. In that sense, the game served as a reminder of the Mavericks’ reality. This is a flawed team, one whose lack of guard depth and limited offensive creativity caps its margin for error and leaves its floor among the lowest in the league.

Between that and a depleted frontcourt that cannot realistically be expected to hold up, it becomes even harder to project consistency. With Derrick Lively now out for the season and Davis carrying his well-documented fragility, Dallas is operating with little margin for physical error as the schedule tightens and the wear accumulates. The Mavericks have now won five of six games since their final NBA Cup group-play loss and sit 10th in the Western Conference, a position that raises more questions than answers.

With control of only one pick across the next four drafts, including this year’s talent-rich class, and an aging Irving eager to return and compete, the organization is being pulled in opposite directions. The ceiling still exists on nights when things click against teams like Houston or Denver, but the floor remains uncomfortably low, hovering closer to Brooklyn or Washington than a contender should tolerate. That tension has made the direction of this season more complicated than ever, and nights like Friday only sharpen the dilemma.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...ap-mavs-nets-3-things-from-mavs-win-over-nets
 
The Dallas Mavericks trade tiers

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The Dallas Mavericks is a team in flux, and they’re entering a critical moment in planning their future. Dec. 15 is the unofficial kick-off to trade season on the NBA calendar, where nearly 90-percent of the league’s players become trade eligible after signing contracts in the offseason. With the ability for team’s to now cast their widest net, all the conjecture turns to realistic conversations, where contenders start positioning themselves for finishing moves, stars start throwing their weight around, and teams looking to hit a reset button start offering their roster upgrade services.

Fewer teams have a murkier strategy at this point than the Dallas Mavericks. The team, not just former general manager Nico Harrison, sold the fanbase a contender campaign last spring and through the offseason. But the product on the floor told the truth. And while the team has begun to find their footing over the last several weeks, it is obvious the future roster moves should primarily be in service of building around rookie Cooper Flagg.

Reports around the league have shown both sides of the coin for Dallas. The cleanest strategy would be to move off the veterans of the roster, repair the stock of assets in the process, and move past the most tumultuous year in the team’s history. But questions linger about whether the team is ready to do that, or might they want to see how this roster plays the year out and wait until the offseason to make final decisions.

In the meantime, with league chatter getting louder, it’s worth assessing the roster itself. Which players factor into that future, which players should absolutely be moved, and which players are worth debating over. This isn’t purely trade value, but value to the new machinery of this team in the Flagg era. Let’s tier this out.


The Untouchable​

Cooper Flagg​


No debates. Flagg has been everything advertised. His high motor, defensive instincts, and relentless pursuit of the basket have been on display. And after what was a slow start to the season, where he was forced into an unfamiliar role, the picture of where this team goes becomes clearer.

He is the only untouchable player on this roster, where phone numbers even trying should be blocked.

Hold On​

Kyrie Irving, Max Christie, Ryan Nembhard​


It isn’t a secret that the team began righting the ship once the rookie Nembhard played a prominent role. It’s not just his ball-handling, though that ability made the deficit elsewhere obvious. It’s also not his no-fear scoring ability, considering his size. It’s the efficiency with each possession. Nembhard has a 3.6 to 1 assist-to-turnover ratio (totals of 62 assists and 17 turnovers in 13 games) that has kept each possession safe when he’s managing the offense.

Christie’s growth as a shooter this season is of note — 46.5 percent from three on the season, on a team with zero consistent shooters outside of Klay Thompson. His on-ball defense is an even greater bonus. If Nembhard continues to have a role, this season or in the future, having someone next to him like Christie will be key. The Mavericks at least having young pieces to play around with right now in Flagg, Christie, and Nembhard are the exact moves you want in a rebuild. Let the course of the season develop to measure future impact from this backcourt.

Fans are dying to see this team playing with Irving, whose return remains unclear. Unless Irving wants out, which there have been indications, the Mavericks need to keep his leadership around. Shepherding these other two plus Flagg. Watch a healthy Kyrie playing off Flagg will be a sight to behold. Until that happens we’re holding tight.

Let’s Talk​

PJ Washington, Brandon Williams, Moussa Cisse, Dwight Powell​


Of this group Washington is the only one that possesses true trade value. I’m pro-Washington and will defend him until my dying day. But if someone is just dying to have him and would give the Mavericks future value I’m at least staying on the line.

The others are fringe players at best. But Williams and Cisse are the kind of players you could tack onto a larger deal, who show enough flashes of potential to make a trade palatable for the other side.

Powell is never leaving and that is A-OK with me. But, like, what if Rick Carlisle is just itching to have his ride-or-die back and the Mavericks could trick them into a move? Let’s talk.

Trade When Ready​

Klay Thompson, Anthony Davis, Daniel Gafford, Naji Marshall, D’Angelo Russell​


One has to assume at least three of these players will not be Mavericks by spring. They are all valuable to a competitive Mavericks team this season. But they are also all veterans who either A) want to play for real playoff contenders, or B) could garner enough value back as the Mavericks change eras that you absolutely have to make the move. Short term competitiveness this season is not the name of the game. The Mavericks staying competitive while building the future is a bonus.

Of this group I’d prioritize moving Thompson, Davis, and Russell first. Klay has been a trooper after arriving in Dallas with much different intentions. His season has started taking shape, and his shooting has proved vital in this recent win streak. But one has to assume he’d like to play for a contender while he has the juice. The Mavericks should honor that and hopefully gain something in return.

Davis is the big question. I wouldn’t be shocked if the interim front office opted to let the season play out and wait to deal Davis in the summer. But the variable is the longer he plays in a season the more likely it becomes he suffers another injury. Will the Mavericks make that gamble? And while recent reports have suggested the Mavericks have considered an extension for the big man, I refuse to believe that and would not suggest it.

Gafford and Marshall are solid players who would help just about every team that’s currently in the top-six looking to make a push for a conference finals run, and while their contracts and status wouldn’t hurt the Mavericks rebuild around Flagg going forward, it would be hard to turn down quality draft capital if teams called.

Whoever Asks First Gets Them​

Jaden Hardy, Caleb Martin​


Quite frankly I can’t believe we have to have conversations in this tier. Hardy just never found a role beyond catch-and-shoot threat, or racking up stats in garbage time. Other players that pass through consistently outplay him and contribute in more ways.

If it wasn’t for the Luka trade the Quentin Grimes-Caleb Martin deal would have gone down as the worst deadline move this calendar year. Find new destinations for this duo, but don’t expect anything in return. In fact, the Mavericks would likely have to add some draft sweetener to move these contracts.

RIP​

Dereck Lively II, Dante Exum​


Boy oh boy. It feels like just months ago both Lively and Exum were key contributors on a team that eventually was in the Finals. Now both have had several surgeries and procedures as the injuries rack up. Exum doesn’t provide trade value and depending on what else happens by January, could possibly be stretched to sign Nembhard to a full deal.

Lively is a conundrum. The Mavericks still have him on reasonable salary, and long term he still can be a starting level center. Given his recent injury bug he’d provide no true value on the trade market, and the Mavericks shouldn’t look to move him. But it’s unclear if he can really be part of future core plans the way we all dreamed just a few seasons ago. Hopefully this long-term rehab the rest of this season brings a rejuvenated Lively to a retooled Mavericks team.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/maver...llas-mavericks-trade-tiers-nba-trade-deadline
 
Mavericks vs Jazz Preview and Injury Update: On the road again

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The Dallas Mavericks (10-16) face off against the Utah Jazz (9-15) on Monday night. It’s one of the many road games Dallas has to close out the calendar year 2025. Dallas won their first game out of the weird mini-break, defeating the Brooklyn Nets on Friday. Utah held off the Memphis Grizzlies in a high scoring affair on Friday.

Here’s the main things you need to know before the game kicks off.

  • WHO: Dallas Mavericks at Utah Jazz
  • WHAT: Road trip!
  • WHERE: Delta Center, Salt Lake City, Utah
  • WHEN: 8:00 p.m. CST
  • HOW: KFAA Channel 29, MavsTV streaming, NBA League Pass

You’ll never guess who is out again due to a calf issue: that’s right Anthony Davis. It’s not entirely a surprise after he showed up on the initial injury report earlier today. He was there for shootaround but the Mavericks want to be careful with anything soft tissue. He joins Kyrie Irving, Dante Exum, and Dereck Lively. Oh, there’s also D’Angelo Russell who is out with an illness. Whoops, there’s one more guy out: Brandon Williams, who is experiencing some Achilles issues. At least Daniel Gafford is available to play! The Jazz have a few guys out, but it shouldn’t change the game in a material way.

This should be a good, fun game. The Jazz play fast and hard and have one of the best scorers in the NBA: Lauri Markkanen. With Davis out, it will be harder for Dallas to defend, but Cooper Flagg and PJ Washington still exist. Seeing how Nembhard recovers from a rough shooting performance is also worth watching.

Consider joining Josh and I on Pod Maverick live after the game on YouTube, we should start around 10:15 pm. Thanks so much for spending time with us here at Mavs Moneyball. Let’s go Mavs!

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/maver...art-time-tv-stream-injury-report-how-to-watch
 
3 notes after Dallas drops an overtime game to Utah, 140-133

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The Utah Jazz came back to defeat the Dallas Mavericks in overtime, 140-133.

The Mavericks got things started quickly, to the tune of a season-high 43-point first quarter, powered by an impressive 14-point outpouring from Cooper Flagg, whose shooting touch and ability to finish around the rim are improving at a blistering pace.

Dallas, despite leading nearly the entirety of the second half after battling back from an early 10-point hole, let Utah claw their way back, and actually required some pretty remarkable free-throw shenanigans just to earn the right to get to overtime. Then, despite all the clutch minutes this team has played, things just sort of went flat. The offense couldn’t produce, and the defense got gassed. A consequence of having your two leading offensive initiators be rookies.

Cooper Flagg led all scorers and set a new Maverick rookie scoring record with 42 points in the loss. For Utah, Keyonte George was on quite a heater of his own. He led the Jazz with 37 points, and Lauri Markkanen finished just behind him with 33.

Sputtered to a halt​


After Flagg skillfully missing a free throw that led to two free throws for Max Christie, which then culminated in an overtime appearance, Dallas was only able to score a meager four points. Two from Flagg and another pair from PJ Washington. Dallas made just one of their nine shots in the period, while Utah totalled 11 in the frame.

It was an unfortunate end to a game where, obviously, Flagg looked like he was already playing at an all-star level, and Dallas’ offense had some semblance of cohesion. Dallas has played more clutch time minutes than any other team this season, but overtime is a different beast. It’s a length of time that demands shotmaking, and Dallas is still a work in progress on that front. Klay Thompson took and missed two three-pointers in overtime, PJ was one of three, and Flagg’s two points came at the line after he went 0-for-two from the floor. Both teams attempted nine shots, but Utah, coming off a 37-point fourth quarter, simply had the hotter hand.

Playing to their strengths​


After such a long stretch of the season where Dallas looked not just bad, but historically awful on offense, they seem to have flipped the script. Things still aren’t perfect, but the jump from nearly-unwatchable to competent and improving has really done wonders for the team’s performance (and the people watching the games).

Handing the reins of the offense to Ryan Nembhard, an actual point guard, has done wonders, but so has the team’s overall approach. Kidd has an established MO to start seasons; he likes to fiddle with things. Try things. Let his guys go out there and see what they’ve got. Then, he begins to rein things in. Now, it appears that a couple of mandates are emerging. Unless your name is Klay Thompson, Max Christie, or Ryan Nembhard, taking a three should not be your first option. If your name is Cooper Flagg, you can shoot however much you want.

After rarely getting into the paint, shooting sub-30 % from deep, and leading the league in turnovers, Dallas has made a drastic 180, letting their players do what they do best and cutting out the low-percentage plays that were dragging the offense through the mud.

Cooper is getting what he wants​


For most rookies, the hope is that they can contribute positively somewhere. Great rookies are able to step into a starting role immediately and contribute meaningful minutes of winning basketball. But you think about the ability to lead a team and really take over a game – that’s something that is usually reserved for not just vets, but proven NBA stars.

Flagg’s ability to move downhill and finish at the rim is showing signs of his “takeover-ability.” To be a guy who says, “I’m just going to go score,” and means it. He managed to get his career high 42 points by making just a single three-pointer. His assistance at moving towards the rim has meant not only does he get to utilize his excellent finishing ability, he’s also drawing more fouls. His rush to the rim with under a minute to go, down by three, earned him and an and-1 bucket (but he unfortunately missed the tying free throw.) He went to the line for 20 free throws tonight, making 15 to go along with a 13-of-27 shooting night from the floor. And all of that offense is coming online as he’s still putting up six assists, seven rebounds, and two blocks.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...zz-final-score-140-133-dallas-loss-utah-recap
 
Grading the Mavericks: Cooper Flagg has ascended

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The Mavericks were 1-1 this past week and now sit in 10th place in the West. They beat Brooklyn (119-111) at home on Friday before going to Utah and losing a heartbreaker to the Jazz (140-133). Cooper Flagg led the team in scoring during these two games with 32 points per game. Daniel Gafford (ankle) returned to action, while Dereck Lively (foot/knee) was unfortunately ruled out for the season after it was announced he was undergoing foot surgery. Kyrie Irving (knee) remained out, and Anthony Davis (calf) and Brandon Williams (Achilles) missed Monday’s game.

Grade: B-

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The Mavericks are still a very fun basketball team. They have been really good at generating points in the paint (65 per game this week) and have made it a point to be aggressive, taking 63 free throws in their last two games. The new starting lineup that features Cooper Flagg, Naji Marshall, and P.J. Washington allows the Mavericks to have three big, switchable wings that can guard multiple positions on defense and slash defenses on offense. Ryan Nembhard, although he did not play well against Brooklyn, continues to be the point guard the team needs to stay fluid on offense. His three games with 10-plus assists are as many as all other rookies have combined this season.

This was an A- or A week had Dallas not blown their lead against the Jazz. They played a great offensive game until 3:30 left in the fourth quarter, when they were up 124-116. Utah closed 13-5 in regulation and then outscored Dallas 11-4 in overtime to secure a Mavericks loss. The team clearly ran out of gas as the offense stalled and the defense was porous in the final eight-plus minutes. Still, they deserve a solid grade for playing nearly two full games of good basketball and not losing a step with guys in and out.

Straight A’s: Cooper Flagg


There is an inflexion point early on in every star’s career where the cool games they have cease to be exciting glimpses into the future and start to be what they are going forward. The game noticeably slows down for them, and they start getting to their spots consistently. Flagg has turned this corner undoubtedly. In the two games this week, he scored 64 points on a remarkable 23-of-43 shooting (53 percent!). He gets downhill at will; every time he puts the ball on the floor, it feels like the defense is at his mercy, regardless of the defender. He goes left a lot and utilizes his left hand in really creative ways for finishing. There was no better display of this than his clutch bucket against Utah that sent him to the line to tie the game:

Cooper Flagg had a chance to tie it and reach 40 points but was unable to get the free throw to fall. He made an impressive left-hand layup to create the opportunity. pic.twitter.com/FBXCl3V3Gh

— Grant Afseth (@GrantAfseth) December 16, 2025

He is toeing the line between pure brilliance and showing clear areas of improvement wonderfully. His bread-and-butter is inside 10 feet, where he is shooting almost 62 percent. Pure dominance getting to the basket has made him a lethal scorer, while the lack of a jump shot makes you daydream at the concept of what he could turn into. His strength at such a young age is remarkable, and his skill that allows him to navigate tight lanes is the stuff that veterans get praised for. The first 20-or-so games, he was passive and out of position and trying to get his feet wet. Now, Flagg is aggressive and assertive, and the sky is the limit for what he can become.

Currently Failing: The training staff


The incompetence of the previous training staff is well-documented. They nearly sent Dereck Lively out in a game with a stress fracture, and looked over one of the most injury-ravaged seasons in the NBA last year. There were some freak injuries, like Kyrie Irving’s ACL tear, but there were also a lot of chronic issues. Even after cleaning house in that department in May, Dallas has still missed a lot of time from key players this season. Maybe it is a player issue; the Mavericks notably built their team around guys with injury histories. It could be a reporting disconnect where the injuries listed are not indicative of how serious the issues are. But I have to think that if there was some higher level of competence from the medical staff, a P.J. Washington or Daniel Gafford ankle sprain, or a Brandon Williams Achilles issue would not be something that keeps these guys off the floor for as much as it has. Former Mavericks head trainer Casey Smith had all five starters on New York play 65-plus games at 35 minutes a night last season. Maybe Dallas is getting very unlucky, but given what has happened in the organization over the last two years, I am not ready to give them the benefit of the doubt.

Extra Credit: Naji Marshall

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One of the key factors behind Dallas’ recent success has been the insertion of Naji Marshall into the starting lineup. He has started the last seven games, with Dallas going 5-2 in those contests. Marshall is one of my favorite players, and I have been all in on him since the Mavericks signed him last summer. In this stretch, he has scored nearly 16 points, dished out 3.1 assists, grabbed 3.9 rebounds, and stolen the ball more than once per game. This is all while shooting better than 64 percent from the field in over 32 minutes a night. His nickname “The Knife” is a tribute to the fact that he is a Swiss Army Knife of a player. That is, he does a little bit of everything on the floor. This has been on full display during Dallas’ recent run.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/maver...ricks-cooper-flagg-has-ascended-naji-marshall
 
Cooper Flagg sets another NBA record

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The Dallas Mavericks have been playing their best basketball of the season of late, though they did fall short in a 140-133 OT loss to the Jazz Monday night. In what was a fun high octane game even though Dallas couldn’t pull off the win, Cooper Flagg left Mavs’ fans with a silver lining with his performance.

His game high 42 points were accompanied by seven rebounds, six assists, a steal and two blocks. In and of itself, it was a terrific performance to behold. Wrapped inside that performance are a number of noteworthy findings, including some record-tying and record setting numbers.

His 24 first-half points were his personal career best for any half, and it was clear at halftime that something special was likely taking place. Sure enough, when the final buzzer sounded, he had tallied a new career high in scoring with 42 points. That offensive burst puts him in exclusive company in Mavericks history. Flagg is now only the fourth Maverick rookie to have a 40-point game, joining Mark Aguirre (1981), Jay Vincent (1982; he did it twice) and Rodrigue Beaubois (2010).

Beyond personal achievements and team achievements, Flagg also made NBA history (again).

Cooper Flagg makes history as the youngest player ever to score 40+ points in an NBA game. pic.twitter.com/VAtGUI8ADf

— New Balance (@newbalance) December 16, 2025

Flagg is now the youngest player in NBA history, and the first 18-year-old, to score 40 points in an NBA game. Perhaps cooler still, Flagg didn’t need the OT period to reach 40 points, as he had that locked down in Regulation, chipping in two more in OT before all was said and done.

Somehow the Flagg-as-point-guard experiment seems like a hallucinatory dream in some far off reality. We are now witness to a player who looks like he has been in the league for well more than just a few months and who is not only comfortable taking on a key role, but growing and improving every time out. If Flagg can keep this up, he has every chance to do bigger and better things still, perhaps sooner than anyone could have expected.

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

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/maver...ets-nba-record-scoring-youngest-40-point-game
 
Four things you should know before the Mavericks host the Pistons

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With the NBA Cup out of the way, we are now back to our regularly scheduled programming of Dallas Mavericks basketball. The Mavericks (10-17) managed a split of their freshly assigned NBA Cup games, beating the Brooklyn Nets by eight before falling to the Utah Jazz on Monday by a 140-133 final. Awaiting the Mavericks to kick off their holiday stretch run is none other than the best team in the Eastern Conference, the Detroit Pistons (21-5).

What can the Mavericks do to combat the best team in the East? Here’s a few things you should know before tipoff.

Lessons learned?​


The Mavericks played Detroit in Mexico City earlier this year, losing by the final of 122-110. Detroit outscored Dallas by eighteen in the fourth quarter of that game to pull away, led by Jalen Duren’s monster 33 point, 11 rebound performance to compliment DFW’s own Cade Cunningham, who had 21 points, six boards and eighteen (!!) assists. The Mavericks defense has not gotten any better since then, but the potential return of Anthony Davis could help neutralize Duren. As for Cunningham…

Cade Cunningham has taken the next step​

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The Bowie High School (That’s Arlington’s Bowie High, for those out of the DFW Area) product has taken the leap that you would’ve hoped he would have by now. Last year was a coming out party for Cade, who was finally surrounded by real shooters for the first time in his career. He paid that off by getting the Pistons into the NBA Playoffs for the first time in a long time, pushing the Knicks to the brink before falling in six games. With a new supporting cast in tow, Cunningham has only carried Detroit to the best record in the East by averaging 27 points, six boards and over nine assists per contest. He’s not quite in the Luka Doncic zip code on stats, but he’s at least in the ballpark of what Doncic has done for his career. Detroit’s success is a testament to the work Cunningham has done and the job that their front office and coach JB Bickerstaff have done to surround him with complimentary pieces.

Cooper’s here​

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Rookie sensation Cooper Flagg is absolutely hauling the load for the Mavericks these days. Ever since the insertion of fellow rookie Ryan Nembhard into the starting unit, Flagg has been freed up to play his game. It’s paying off to the tune of an eight game average of 24.1 points per game, along with six boards and nearly five helpers per game. Just a reminder, folks: This is the worst it’s ever going to look. And to think some of you were panicking over his start to the season.

Performing as an underdog​


The Mavericks are 12-7 against the spread as underdogs this season, with six outright wins. As the season has progressed, it seems the Mavericks are very liable to play up and down to their competition. They have won games against Houston and Denver, something not many teams have to their name. They’ve also lost to the Wizards, Pelicans and Clippers, also something not many teams are able to say! We’ll see if that trend holds against the Pistons.

How to watch​


The game will tip just after 7:30p CT on Mavs TV, KFAA Channel 29 or NBA League Pass from the American Airlines Center.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...host-detroit-pistons-december-18-game-preview
 
MMBets Game of the Week: Dallas looks to upset the East’s finest

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The Mavericks face the Pistons Thursday night for the second time this season, but the first time on U.S. soil. The home game for the Mavericks will be their third in the last four games, where they have won the other two. The Pistons have the best record in the East coming in, while the Mavericks sit a game out of 10th place in the West. At the time of writing, it is uncertain if Naji Marshall or Anthony Davis will play, but it seems as though the books have a Davis absence baked in. If that is the case, the Mavericks will need another monster performance from their sensational rookie to have a chance.

Before getting into our picks, here is how we stand so far:

Last week’s results


Tyler: 2-2 (-$34)

David: 3-1 (+$211)

Season to date


Tyler: 11-17-0 (-$536)

David: 14-13-0 (+$262)

I am carrying the load right now, but that just means Tyler is due.

Game Details


Fixture: Dallas Mavericks vs Detroit Pistons | NBA 2025-2026

Date and Time: Thursday, December 18th, 2025; 7:40 PM CST

Venue: American Airlines Center, Dallas, TX.

Odds up to date as of 12:00 PM CST from FanDuel

Game Lines


Spread Mavericks +7.5 (-112)

Total O/U 228.5 (-108/-112)

Moneyline Mavericks +215

Tyler’s Plays

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  • Cooper Flagg under 22.5 P+R+A (-110)
  • Pistons -1.5 in the second quarter (-115)
  • Cade Cunningham triple-double (+1000)
  • Jaden Ivey to get 10+ points (+116)

Not many people are brave enough to stand in front of the Cooper Flagg freight train. I am! Detroit has the bodies and structure to contain him. Secondly, Detroit’s second quarter net rating is +11. Dallas? -8. I’ll ride with Detroit pre-flop. Next, Cade is coming home and just had his number retired by Arlington Bowie. Expect a massive game. Finally, Jaden Ivey is healthy and will have ideal matchups against a porous Dallas defense. Double-digit scoring is in the cards tonight.

David’s Plays

  • Cooper Flagg over 19.5 points (+102)
  • P.J. Washington to get 15+ points (+106)
  • Cade Cunningham over 26.5 points (-118)
  • Pistons over 117.5 points (-106)

I disagree with Tyler about the Pistons’ ability to lock Flagg down. If he can get 35 points against Kawhi Leonard, 20 at home should be doable. Washington is a 15-point-a-game guy and plus-money for this is a steal. Cunningham is coming home, as Tyler stated, and has an incredible matchup against the Mavericks’ undersized guards. I think he will lead Detroit to a high-scoring night where the Mavericks may struggle to keep up.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...e-week-dallas-looks-to-upset-the-easts-finest
 
Player Grades: Recapping Mavericks’ 116-114 win over Pistons

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The Dallas Mavericks scratched and clawed their way to a 116-114 overtime victory over the Detroit Pistons on Thursday night at American Airlines Center to pick up their sixth win in eight games. Dallas now sits at 11-17, having won six of its last eight games.

Let’s get to the grades!

Anthony Davis: C+​

15 PTS / 14 REB / 2 AST / 0 STL / 3 BLK – 37 MIN​


Davis’ grade would be higher if this were only focusing on his second half where he finished multiple clutch-time baskets to help lead Dallas to this win, but starting 0-8 from the field lowers his grade from what would be probably a B to a C+. Davis still has what it takes to be a top-20 to top-25 player in the league but we need to see it for all 48 minutes.

Cooper Flagg: A​

23 PTS / 10 REB / 4 AST / 1 STL / 3 BLK – 40 MIN​


This kid is truly something else. Flagg continues to impress every time he steps on the court with excellent plays on both sides of the ball and tonight was no different. He struggled with the Pistons’ physicality at times but never let it take him out of the game mentally and found ways to get the Mavericks baskets and stops down the stretch in a close win over a quality opponent.

Daniel Gaff0rd: C​

9 PTS / 6 REB / 1 AST / 0 STL / 3 BLK – 16 MIN​


The counting stats aren’t awful, but Gafford’s five turnovers were a big reason he didn’t see much playing time down the stretch in this game. He made some good defensive plays and gave Dallas an offensive boost in the first half, but Dallas will need better ball security and rebounding from its big men as the season progresses.

Naji Marshall: B+​

16 PTS / 3 REB / 1 AST / 0 STL / 0 BLK – 33 MIN​


Marshall continues to do whatever needs to be done for this Mavericks team. His defensive intensity helps set the tone for this team and his improved playmaking since coming to Dallas last season has given Dallas a new wrinkle offensively. Marshall was tied with Flagg for the team-best +16 in his 33 minutes tonight

Ryan Nembhard: B-​

6 PTS / 2 REB / 7 AST / 0 STL / 0 BLK – 22 MIN​


Nembhard is quickly emerging as one of this season’s finest rookies and his name wasn’t called during the draft. He’s been an absolute steal for this Dallas team and is continuing to grow his game with every game he plays in. His ball security (just two turnovers against a physical, lengthy Detroit defense) gives Dallas a cool, calm, and collected presence at the point guard position. He didn’t get much playing time down the stretch, but I expect that to change as the season goes on.

Klay Thompson: D​

5 PTS / 1 REB / 2 AST / 0 STL / 0 BLK – 19 MIN​


It continues to be an up-and-down season for Thompson and Thursday was another down night for him as he finished 2-8 from the field and missed an essentially wide-open floater to win the game at the end of regulation. Dallas ended up pulling out the win, so that memory may fade quickly, but his shotmaking hasn’t been there this season and he was a team-worst minus-13 in his 19 minutes tonight.

PJ Washington: B+​

13 PTS / 7 REB / 3 AST / 1 STL / 4 BLK – 37 MIN​


Washington has been arguably the most consistent player for Dallas all season, showing up night in and night out giving consistent production and effort, no matter the opponent. He made six baskets tonight, some of them at key moments to lift the team out of droughts, and his defensive effort was big for Dallas tonight. His defense on Cade especially helped slow him down enough to give Dallas the cushion it needed to eke out a win.

Brandon Williams: B-​

14 PTS / 5 REB / 2 AST / 0 STL / 2 BLK – 31 MIN​


Williams is having a great season for Dallas and has solidified his role on this team after being a two-way player last season. He continued his solid play Thursday with 14 points against a tough Detroit defense but struggled to find his shot, shooting 3-of-8 from the floor and 0-of-4 from three. He stayed composed against an aggressive team, but knocking down one or two of those threes would’ve helped stop some of those late-game Detroit runs.

Final Thoughts​


All in all, this was a gutsy win from a gutsy team. Dallas overcame a double-digit deficit in paint points (70-60), rebounding (62-51), and shot attempts (122-89) (!) to win the game. The win showed that this team can battle through anything to pull out a win if they stick together, but it also showed the team still has things to improve on.

Detroit was the more physical team all night and got multiple second chances that they just should not have gotten. Dallas took their eyes off the ball while going up for rebounds and failed to box out countless times, leading to Detroit dominating the second chance points battle, 30-15.

A win is a win and the Mavericks will take it as it starts to find its rhythm. Dallas has now won six of their last eight games including wins over the Pistons, Heat, Nuggets and Rockets. With this recent hot streak, they’ve taken sole possession of the 10th seed in the Western Conference after starting the season 5-15.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/maver...-recapping-mavericks-116-114-win-over-pistons
 
Stats Recap: 4 Numbers from Mavs electifying 116-114 win over Pistons

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The Mavericks won their most impressive game of the season tonight against the Detroit Pistons, who were coming into the game leading the Eastern Conference standings with five losses. They also had the second-best record in the entire league before playing Dallas. Dallas defeated Detroit 116–114 in overtime. Cade Cunningham’s 29 points kept Detroit close throughout the game, but Dallas made the crucial plays in the closing minutes. Cooper Flagg led the way for the Mavericks with a team-high 23 points, along with 10 rebounds, four assists, three blocks, and zero turnovers. It was a balanced effort offensively from Dallas, with six total players getting into double-digit scoring, including 15 from Anthony Davis, 16 from Naji Marshall, and 13 from PJ Washington.

Dallas jumped out to a lead by winning the possession game, using offensive rebounds and paint touches to build an early edge despite uneven shooting. Dallas produced second-chance points that Detroit was unable to match, and Cooper Flagg quickly filled the box score with rebounds and defensive play. Outside of Cade Cunningham, the Mavericks’ interior defense limited clean scoring opportunities by forcing Detroit into rugged early looks. Dallas routinely outshot the Pistons to end the quarter ahead 35-30.

In the second quarter, the Mavericks extended the lead by turning defense into offense, forcing turnovers and converting them into transition points. Even in the absence of a scoring explosion, Dallas’ offense continued to function thanks to ball movement that led to assisted baskets. Dallas maintained control by the half because of efficiency, rebounding, and fewer wasted possessions.

Cunningham caught fire for Detroit to start the third, scoring at all three levels, but Flagg matched the momentum with pull-up jumpers, cuts to the rim, and trips to the free-throw line. Dallas took complete control coming out of halftime, outscoring Detroit behind an efficient half-court offense and defensive stops. Flagg stuffed the stat sheet with scoring, rebounds, and assists, while Dallas consistently converted assisted baskets and punished Detroit in the paint. The Mavericks’ defense forced missed shots and empty possessions, allowing them to push the lead back to double digits. This was Dallas’ most complete stretch, combining execution, ball movement, and defensive discipline.

Detroit mounted a comeback in the 4th, almost entirely through Cade Cunningham, who scored repeatedly on pull-ups, drives, and late-clock shot-making. The Pistons were able to reduce the distance because Dallas’ offense fell apart, missing perimeter shots and creating multiple empty possessions. The Mavericks were unable to produce steady offense in the closing minutes, even though Anthony Davis’ rebounding and rim protection kept Dallas afloat. In the end, Cunningham’s scoring spree eliminated the deficit and necessitated overtime.

36-20: the free-throw disparity​


The Mavericks proved, hopefully to themselves and their front office, how important it is to get into the paint and create free looks at the foul line to win games and run an efficient offense. The Mavericks scored 60 points in the paint tonight and were fouled 27 times, resulting in 36 free throws attempted. The Mavericks capitalized on their free throws, making 31 of 36, shooting 86%, which probably made the two-point lead the Mavs ended up winning by.

In the most crucial part of the game, overtime, the Mavericks generated points at the free-throw line and in the restricted area with cutters and dunks. The Mavericks need to continue this trend to hopefully get back to .500 in the near future. A game like tonight shows that, even giving up a bunch of points in the paint, as long as the Mavs stay consistent and score in the paint while slowing the game down at the free-throw line, they can still win.

15: Mavericks Blocks​


The Mavericks committed to their theorized defensive identity tonight, finishing with 15 blocks. Along with the amazing block numbers, the Mavericks had five steals and held the Pistons to 18% from three on six total made shots from outside the arc. To end the game, the Mavs held the Pistons to one made field goal in overtime, which helped them seize their most impressive win to date.

The Mavericks need to keep up this same defensive intensity if they want to make a run in the West. Not only do the statistics need to be high, but the scheme must remain the same. Not allowing threes and protecting the rim at all costs is the perfect scheme, and the Mavericks, when healthy, have the personnel to execute it at a high level.

26: Pistons Offensive Rebounds​


The Achilles heel for the Mavs tonight, besides the awesomeness and explosiveness of Cade Cunningham, was their poor rebounding. The Mavs got outrebounded 62-51 by Detroit, allowing 26 offensive rebounds in the process. In the fourth quarter alone, they allowed six offensive rebounds, which helped the Pistons close the 18-point deficit the Mavericks had at one point and force overtime.

The Mavericks are going to have to clean this up, especially if they want to stay big and keep their multi-center rotation alive. A team with this much size needs to be more disciplined around the rim on the boards. Dominating the glass is a secret weapon this team could utilize if they figure out how. Allowing 30 total second-chance points a night is not a winning formula.

20: Cooper Flagg Field Goals Attempted​


The biggest takeaway from this game, from a big picture standpoint, was how the Mavericks are continuing to use Cooper Flagg. Flagg had a team-high 20 shots attempted, including 11 in the 4th quarter in overtime. This may sound meaningless coming off a night where Flagg shot 27 shots on his way to a career high 42 points, but that was without Anthony Davis. Usually, with Davis active, the offense and bulk of the scoring burden have been on him. Tonight, even with Davis on the floor, against one of the best teams in the league, Jason Kidd put the ball in 18-year-old Cooper Flaggs’ hands and let the kid go to work.

Flagg’s night was super impressive, giving the context that he was sharing the floor with one of the NBA’s top 75 guys and a rising superstar in Cade Cunningham, who is making an All-NBA First Team selection. Flagg showed poise and moxie going shot-for-shot with Cunningham down the stretch of the fourth quarter and putting a bow on it by finding Davis for the game-sealing field goal shots. Flagg showed tonight why Mavs fans need to stick around and that the winning will return, and quicker than maybe expected.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...rom-mavs-electifying-116-114-win-over-pistons
 
Mavericks vs. Pistons Recap: 4 thoughts as Dallas guts out a 116-114 overtime win over Detroit

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The Dallas Mavericks (11-17) survived a basketball game played by prison rules on Thursday night, escaping with a 116-114 overtime win over the Detroit Pistons (21-6) at American Airlines Center. The Mavericks blocked 14 shots in the win, the most in a game for Dallas since 2013, and the Mavs knuckled up in the game’s waning minutes despite getting killed on the offensive glass for most of the night.

Cooper Flagg was one of four Mavericks who blocked three shots and led the Mavs with 23 points and 10 boards in the win. Anthony Davis shrugged off a horrible start to the game to come up with a couple big plays down the stretch as well and finished with 15 points and 14 rebounds. Cade Cunningham led the Pistons with 29 points, 10 boards and nine assists in the loss.

The Mavericks started the game with a certain gusto, going 8-of-14 from the field in the game’s first five minutes on their way to an early 18-9 lead over the best team in the Eastern Conference. P.J. Washington slammed home a putback dunk just 3:30 into the game to pull the Mavs ahead 8-7 to ignite a 12-2 Dallas run, which featured a one-handed rim-rocker from Flagg and a rhythm 3-pointer from Washington on back-to-back possessions to force an early timeout from Pistons head coach J.B. Bickerstaff.

The Pistons responded with an 11-2 run of their own, capped by Cade Cunningham’s running alley-oop finish in transition, as turnovers reared their ugly head for the Mavericks as the first quarter rolled on. Dallas bounced back in the final few minutes of the frame as Washington and Naji Marshall scored nine points apiece to lead the Mavericks to a 35-30 lead after one.

Pistons’ forward Ausar Thompson was thrown out of the game with five minutes left in the second quarter after running up on official John Goble, who had just called Thompson for an off-ball foul as Thompson battled with the smaller Ryan Nembhard for a rebound. Thompson brushed up against Goble while letting his feelings be known about the call in the exchange, and the letter of the law gave Goble the grounds to not only add a technical foul to his ledger but to send Thompson to the locker room early as well.

The Mavs were already in the midst of what would blossom into a 22-6 run when Thompson was sent off. Klay Thompson hit a wide open 3-pointer to give Dallas a 44-42 lead before Cormac Karl “Max” Christie hit two of his own on back-to-back possessions a minute later. Flagg’s banking runner in the lane gave the Mavs their first double-digit lead of the game, 57-46, with four minutes left before halftime, and Washington found a cutting Daniel Gafford for a big-man slam with 2:13 left before halftime to put Dallas ahead 63-48.

Cade Cunningham picked up a technical with 24 seconds left in the second after arguing for a foul call against Davis, who appeared to make contact on Cunningham’s follow-through on a 3-point attempt, but Christie missed the free throw after Cunningham got heated with officials. Christie led the Mavs with nine points off the bench in an eventful second quarter, and the Mavericks took a 66-57 lead into halftime.

Raise the Flagg​

Cooper Flagg reaches WAYYY back 💥

Nice start for the No. 1 pick coming off a career-high 42 last game!

Watch here: https://t.co/e5UWv4oXy2 pic.twitter.com/vH1lAkE5J5

— NBA (@NBA) December 19, 2025

Did Flagg not set the world on fire his last time out, with a record-breaking 42-point performance in the Mavericks’ 140-133 overtime loss at the Utah Jazz? Is he not carving the league up 25 games into his NBA career? Did he not provide a couple of highlight reel buckets at the rim when the ball came his way on Thursday? At what point does his dominance command at least one single solitary play to be drawn up for him?

There is no excuse for this team to ignore Flagg like they did in the first half on Thursday — especially not on a night when Davis was little more than a doormat in the lane for the Pistons to run over on their way to the basket. Flagg shot the ball four times in the first half against Detroit. He made three of them.

Somehow, Dallas got away with it against one of the best teams in the NBA, but it’s just maddening to see this team lose sight of the nuclear talent at its disposal for long stretches at a time. Flagg did what he could in his 18 first-half minutes, scoring eight points and grabbing six boards in a half when Detroit out-rebounded the Mavs 32-28.

Flagg took matters into his own hands in the third, though. He saw the sea parting before him and rose up for his second highlight dunk of the game with 7:06 left in the third to put Dallas ahead 79-63. Two minutes later, Flagg showed his prowess on the other end of the floor, blocking an alley-oop attempt from Jalen Duren at the rim. He scored nine points in the third as the Mavericks extended their nine-point halftime lead to 12, fending off a flurry from Detroit’s bench unit late in the frame to take a 91-79 lead into the fourth quarter.

The kid is a highlight reel. He wills himself to become unstoppable, even when his own teammates are the ones slowing him down. Flagg scored 15 of his team-high 23 points in the second half against the Pistons and did everything he could down the stretch

Just enough Davis​


There is no joy in wrapping a signature win with a wet blanket, but Davis was an eyesore for most of the night against the Pistons. So was Thompson, for that matter. Davis let Jalen Duren run roughshod through the lane on his way to 17 points in the first half. He missed his first eight attempts from the field, fading away on his post-up attempts and exuding an air of cautious passivity for three quarters. Davis finally rattled home one of those fading post-up attempts midway through the third quarter over Duren for his first bucket of the game to put the Mavericks in front, 81-66. He got posterized on a vicious slam by Cunningham the next time down before connecting on his first 3-pointer of the night on the other end.

Davis opened the fourth quarter by giving up yet another offensive rebound to Detroit reserve big man Paul Reed and surrendering two more second-chance points on a baseline hook. Detroit was bullying the Mavericks on the offensive glass, outscoring Dallas 25-7 on second-chance opportunities to that point.

Davis has made a career of feasting on also-ran teams and no-showing against tougher competition. If the team wants to cry “calf contusion” after the fact, then sit him for another night. God knows this team has grown accustomed to playing without him in the lineup.

Davis finished with 15 points on 7-of-18 shooting and 14 rebounds in the win. He went 7-of-10 from the field after missing his first eight attempts.

Things fall apart … or do they?​

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The Mavs’ 12-point lead evaporated in a hurry as the Pistons decided enough was enough to start the fourth quarter. Reed abused Davis on the opening possession of the fourth to ignite a little 12-2 run fueled by Reed and fellow second-teamer (and Dallas Hillcrest High School’s own) Daniss Jenkins, who scored on a baseline 3-pointer and a pull-up mid-range jumper to cut Dallas’ lead to 93-89 with 9:47 left to play.

Flagg stopped the bleeding two possessions later with a pull-up of his own to keep the Mavs in front, 95-91, but Jenkins dropped in a creative little tear-drop over Davis to tie it up, 95-95, with 7:45 left in the game. The officials swallowed their whistles as the fourth quarter wore on, and the Pistons continued to bludgeon the Mavericks on the offensive glass. Isaiah Stewart’s rough-and-tumble putback dunk midway through the fourth gave Detroit its first lead of the second half, 99-97.

You could see the wheels coming off and the Mavs’ liabilities inside coming home to roost, but the Mavs had one last gasp in them. Marshall finished a baby hook in transition over two Pistons’ defenders with 2:39 left to play to pull the Mavs back in front, 104-103. Davis tipped home Flagg’s driving miss inside on a play that looked like he touched the ball while it was still in the cylinder, but it went un-called, and the Mavs suddenly held a 106-103 lead.

But Cunningham, whose jersey number was retired at nearby Arlington Bowie High School one night earlier, scored on back-to-back possessions in the final 90 seconds of the game to swing things back in Detroit’s favor. Jenkins hit a pair of free throws with 59 seconds showing on the clock to extend the Pistons’ lead to 109-106. Flagg threw two more late punches in the final minute, with a clutch floater in the lane to bring the Mavericks back within 109-108 just seven seconds later and a pull-up jumper with 19 ticks left to pull Dallas in front 110-109.

Davis fouled Stewart with 3.4 seconds remaining, sending Stewart to the line for two free throws. Stewart bricked the front end, but tied the game on the next one, setting the Mavs up with one last chance to pull out an unlikely win. With the Detroit defense blanketing Flagg on the inbound pass after a timeout, the ball went Thompson’s way. Thompson’s baseline runner hit rim, backboard, then rim again, but wouldn’t go down, and five minutes of free basketball would have to decide things.

Flagg found Davis for a dunk along the baseline with 1:35 left in the overtime period to give Dallas a 116-114 advantage, and Davis won a rugby scrum for a defensive rebound against Buren with 15 seconds remaining, showing a glimmer of toughness for the first time all night when the Mavericks needed it most.

Mavs Trivia: Block party​


For the first time in Dallas Mavericks’ franchise history, four players each recorded three or more blocked shots in the same game against the Pistons. Flagg, Washington, Davis and Gafford each recorded three blocked shots against the Pistons on Thursday. Little Brandon Williams blocked a pair of shots as well in the win.

The Mavs were given every chance to block shots inside on Thursday, given the volume of offensive rebounds and second-chance opportunities the Pistons manufactured on the glass. Detroit beat Dallas up on the offensive glass, 25-11 on the night, and outscored the Mavs 30-15 in second-chance points in the loss.

There were no shortage of statistical anomalies in the Mavs’ latest win, but Dallas will take this one any way they could get it in the end.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...14-cooper-flagg-anthony-davis-cade-cunningham
 
3 things as Dallas travels to Philadephia

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The Dallas Mavericks have the look of a team that has started to figure some things out. Flagg has improved game to game, Nembhard has emerged as a starting-capable point guard, and the front court has some of its depth back with Anthony Davis returning and Daniel Gafford not having to shoulder the entire weight of the center position.

Philly, as seems to be the case every year, has looked promising, but are dealing with injury to a number of starters, including Joel Embiid, who is unlikely to be available to play against Dallas because of an illness and knee injury. The 76ers are also without Kelly Oubre. Playing against the Knicks on the first leg of a back-to-back won’t do the shorthanded squad any favors, either.

Attack mode​


Over the last 10 games, Dallas has the seventh-most drives per game. Their concerted effort to get to the rim, especially from players who are high-quality finishers like Flagg, Davis, and Nembhard, the Mavericks have seen their FG% close to the rim, from five to nine feet from the hoop, to 51.3%, fifth-best on the season.

It’s a marked shift in play style and offensive efficacy from a team that was allergic to paint touches early in the year. Not only has getting to the rim paid dividends in terms of shooting percentages, but they’re also earning their fair share of trips to the free-throw line, which has been a deciding factor in quite a few of their victories. Just against Detroit, Dallas marched to the line 36 times compared to the Pistons’ 20, and Dallas made 31, good for a team F% of 86%. Every point matters in an overtime victory.

Marking Maxey​


Tyrese Maxey has emerged as a true cornerstone for Philadelphia, as he’s leading the team in points (31.5) assists (7.2), and steals (1.7).

The 76ers’ second leading scorer, Embiid, is unlikely to suit up for Dallas, so the load that will be squarely on Maxey’s shoulders will be just that much heavier to deliver — especially offensively. Philadelphia’s next highest scorer is the 35-year-old Paul George. He’s a danger to get hot on any given night, but it’d be surprising if that night came on the second game of a back-to-back.

If Dallas can shut down Maxey, Philadelphia’s offense might just be stuck in the mud. The Mavs, on the other hand, is a team whose offensive output is much more diversified. They have eight players averaging double-digit scoring, but no one is averaging above 20 per game.

Petition to move East​


Dallas will be heading to Philadelphia as the winners of five out of their last seven games, with their most recent coming against the East’s top-rated team. This season they’ve also already notched victories against the Raptors and Heat — the number three and seven teams in the East — and lost by just two points to the second-seeded Knicks, who had to mount a furious fourth-quarter comeback to earn the dub.

Contrast that with how they’ve fared in the West (though the Denver and Houston victories are promising), and you can see which way the power in the league is shifted.

The 76ers are currently fifth in the East and, considering the two teams’ current trajectories, might add another Eastern Conference notch to their belt. The status of Anthony Davis and Klay Thompson is up in the air, but if Dallas rolls into Philly largely healthy, against a short-handed team on a back-to-back, their trademark late-season surge might officially be coming early.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...845/3-things-as-dallas-travels-to-philadephia
 
MMBets: Will the climb towards .500 continue in Philly?

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The Dallas Mavericks (11–17, 3–7 Away) are coming off a gritty 116–114 overtime win in Detroit — a game that may have been too close for comfort, but still marked another notch in their December climb. Now they head to Philadelphia to face the 76ers (15–11, 8–7 Home), who remain uncertain on the status of Joel Embiid and have already ruled out Kelly Oubre.

Dallas has now won six of its last eight — a stretch fueled by rim pressure, high free-throw volume, and the accelerating development of Cooper Flagg. Even in their losses, the execution has improved, and the effort has held steady. Philadelphia, meanwhile, just played a tough game against the Knicks last night and could be dealing with fatigue on the second night of a back-to-back — especially with Embiid still listed as day-to-day.

If Dallas really has turned a corner, it’ll show in matchups like this: beatable opponents on the second night of a back-to-back, with your key guys playing better and your rotation settling.

Let’s scan the lines in search of value.

Game Fixtures​


December 20, 2025 — Dallas Mavericks (11–17, 3–7 Away) at Philadelphia 76ers (15–11, 8–7 Home)
Tipoff:
6:00 PM CT — Xfinity Mobile Arena, Philadelphia, PA
How To Watch: KFAA-TV, Mavs.com

Odds via DraftKings Sportsbook (as of 6:45 AM CST)​


Spread: DAL +2.5 (-108) / PHI -2.5 (-112)
Total: 226.5 (O -110 / U -110)
Moneyline: DAL +130 / PHI -155

Game Sides​


Lean: Mavericks +2.5 (contingent on Embiid being ruled out)
Lean: Under 226.5


The Mavericks are trending up — not in flashy ways, but in grounded, repeatable ones. Their drives per game rank seventh in the league over the past ten contests, and they’re converting those into high-quality looks, foul line trips, and more balanced scoring. Detroit forced overtime, but Dallas still shot 86% from the stripe and got key stops late.

This is a gut check moment. The Sixers are solid at home (8–7) and still dangerous when Maxey gets loose, but if Embiid is out or limited, this feels like a game Dallas should be expected to win. They’re better rested, slightly healthier, and playing with more cohesion on both ends.

We’re also leaning under the total here. Without Embiid, Philly’s scoring profile narrows considerably, and Dallas games—even in wins—haven’t typically turned into track meets. If the pace resembles regulation tempo from the Detroit game (not the OT-inflated final score), then something closer to 215–220 feels more realistic than the 226 range currently listed.

Player Props​


Cooper Flagg over 18.5 Points (-102)
Flagg has cleared 20 points in four of his last six games, including a career-high 42-point explosion against Utah. His confidence in transition and comfort at the line (35-for-42 in that stretch, 83.3%) give this line value, especially in a game that could lean on his isolation scoring if Philly loads up on Davis.

Tyrese Maxey over 3.5 threes (+153)
This is a plus-money dart with merit. Maxey has hit at least four threes in four of his last six games, including 6-for-12 against the Knicks and 5-for-8 versus the Lakers. With Embiid uncertain and Philly’s shot creation concentrated in his hands, the volume will be there — he’s taken 9+ attempts in 9 of his last 12 games. If Dallas collapses early on his drives, this line could clear before the fourth quarter.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...icks-at-sixers-does-the-climb-to-500-continue
 
Player Grades: Recapping Mavericks vs. 76ers

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The Dallas Mavericks made a trip east to face the 76ers on Saturday night. Coming off a gutsy overtime win against the Detroit Pistons on Thursday night, Dallas was unable to continue their winning ways as they were dealt a 121-114 loss.

Let’s get to the grades!

Ryan Nembhard: C+

7 PTS / 0 REB / 5 AST / 1 STL / 0 BLK – 26 MIN


Nembhard was fine, with slightly subpar shooting (3-for-7) and an overall game that is best described as decent. Nothing remarkable, nothing terrible, nothing especially notable.

Naji Marshall: A​

22 PTS / 9 REB / 4 AST / 2 STL / 0 BLK – 34 MIN


Marshall has been playing great basketball lately and he continued the trend tonight. His turnover total (5) left much to be desired, but otherwise he continued his trend of elite finishing in the paint to shoot 9-for-12 overall. He was slick in drawing a foul on a full-court heave at the end of the first quarter, earning himself a 3-for-3 trip to the free throw line.

Cooper Flagg: B+

24 PTS / 4 REB / 3 AST / 0 STL / 1 BLK – 36 MIN


Flagg continues to put in work. He shot well from the floor (8-for-16) and his free throw shooting was lights out (8-for-8). The counter point was four fouls and three turnovers. Generally speaking, he continues to grow and to show he is one of the best players on the team any given night. Tonight was no different. Solid outing that just wasn’t quite enough to help the team overcome some other errors.

P.J. Washington: B

15 PTS / 8 REB / 2 AST / 0 STL / 1 BLK – 30 MIN


Washington did a little bit of everything and had a hot hand, going 6-for-8 overall and 1-for-2 from beyond the arc, which only made it worse that he missed a three in the waning minutes that would have kept Dallas connected. One shot does not a grade make, and he did otherwise have a nice game, though his -13 plus/minus tells a tale of its own.

Anthony Davis: B+

24 PTS / 14 REB / 2 AST / 0 STL / 1 BLK – 34 MIN


Davis looked much better tonight, hopefully a sign that his calf injury and illness are behind him. He was badly pushed around by Andre Drummond a few times — not surprising given how Drummond plays — but the lack of forceful resistance was apparent. Still, he had himself a very nice night and was arguably Dallas’ best player for the evening. He connected on 55% of his 20 shots and went off for a nice double-double.

Klay Thompson: C-

10 PTS / 1 REB / 1 AST / 1 STL / 0 BLK – 17 MIN


Thompson could not find the range from deep. He shot 4-for-10 overall, but missed 5-of-6 from downtown. Ouch. He was also a team high (low) minus-20 in plus/minus and was largely unmemorable aside from those glaring misses that just would not fall for him tonight.

Final Thoughts


The Mavs were a turnover machine in the first quarter. Had it not been for seven giveaways, the story at the end of the first frame may not have been a five-point deficit. Taking care of the ball continued to be a problem throughout, as was Philadelphia’s ability to collect offensive rebounds. The Mavs hurt themselves almost as much as the 6ers hurt them.

Simply put, this was a very, very winnable game for Dallas. Had they taken even poor care of the ball and fouled even slightly less (the starting five had 15 fouls combined), they probably would have won by seven instead of losing by seven.

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

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...1-114-cooper-flagg-anthony-davis-tyrese-maxey
 
3 things to watch as the Mavericks visit the Pelicans

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The Dallas Mavericks (11-18) will travel to New Orleans Monday to face the Pelicans (7-22) with a 7:30pm tipoff at the Smoothie King Center. The two clubs enter this game rejuvenated by recent success, with the Pelicans riding a four-game win streak after stuffing the Pacers into a locker Saturday 128-109, and the Mavericks having won six of their last nine games after their 121-114 loss Saturday in Philadelphia.

Like the Mavericks, the Pelicans secured a tough overtime win against one of the league’s best teams Thursday. Against the Rockets they fumbled a first-quarter lead, then came back from down 22 at the half to prevail in overtime, 133-128. The victory extended a streak that began with wins against Portland and in Chicago. Meanwhile, Dallas gutted out a rock fight with the East-leading Pistons, 116-114.

These teams split their previous two meetings this season, both home games for Dallas. The Pelicans won 101-99 Nov. 5, then the Mavericks got revenge Nov. 21, 118-115. For the Pelicans, forward Herb Jones left Saturday’s game with a head injury and did not return; he is doubtful for Monday. The Mavericks will miss guard Kyrie Irving, out with a knee injury, and center Dereck Lively II (foot).

Ahead of the game​


Like the Mavericks, the Pelicans have been energized by a pair of dynamic rookies in the starting lineup, center Derik Queen and point guard Jeremiah Fears. Queen, a rapidly improving playmaker with excellent footwork, touch, and vision, is a creative passer operating with the ball above the break. He’s also a deft manipulator of rhythm on post-ups and drives, where he can score over taller defenders or dump off to a cutter. That aforementioned creativity can tip into some risk-taking; the big man averages 4.0 assists per game but also averages 2.3 turnovers. Against the Pacers Saturday he unsuccessfully tried a couple of sneaky lob attempts from beyond the arc that he’ll either have the wisdom not to try or the skills to pull off a year from now. The speedy Fears, chippy against the Mavericks in their most recent matchup, has a nice pull-up jumper but is most dangerous in transition and on drives. He was one of four Pelicans to top 20 points against the Mavericks Nov. 21.

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The Mavericks’ own youth movement continued Saturday against the 76ers as Cooper Flagg shared the team scoring lead of 24 points with Anthony Davis, and guard Ryan Nembhard submitted an unspectacular but steady outing in which he did not worsen the team’s turnover troubles.

Stalwart secondary​


Like the Mavericks, the Pelicans’ chances of winning improve considerably when their best player, a former No. 1 overall selection power forward with game-altering abilities on both ends who has been dogged by years-long questions of durability, is in the lineup. Zion Williamson came into this season in the best shape of his seven-year career, determined to avoid the injuries that have limited him to 35.6 games per season going into 2025-26 (he missed all of 2021-22 and played in a career-high 70 games in 2023-24). While he hasn’t been completely immune from health woes, having missed six games in early December with a left hip adductor strain, his improved conditioning helped him return about a week ahead of schedule in their win against Chicago.

Zion, who scored 29 points in 24 minutes against the Pacers, has come off the bench and played limited minutes in each of his three games since returning. He adds to the veteran presence among the reserves also being provided lately by guard Jordan Poole. Poole, who returned the game before Williamson after a quadriceps injury kept him out of the previous 17 games, is enduring a down year of three-point shooting after nailing them at a career high mark of . 378 last year; he’s chipping in 17.8 points per contest for New Orleans. Reserve guard and longtime Mav-tormentor Jose Alvarado is a pest at point guard; the Mavericks will have to exercise more caution than they did early against Philadelphia Saturday, when first-quarter turnovers put them in a hole.

Turning the thing around​


Like the Mavericks, the Pelicans have shrugged off a seemingly hopeless start to the season as their offensive identity has coalesced. One silver lining to playing without Williamson so often over the years is that New Orleans has plenty of practice doing it. Although the attention commanded by Zion gave the Pelicans’ shooters space as the team began its comeback against Houston, the team completed the feat using a balanced attack with Williamson sitting for much of the fourth, led by the team’s other three starters, forwards Saddiq Bey, who scored 29 points; Herb Jones, who scored 18; and Trey Murphy III, the team’s de facto No. 1 offensive option for much of the year, who scored 27. The career .381 three-point shooter has picked up right where his breakout 2024-25 season left off, averaging just under 22 points per game.

Monday’s game will be the second for Dallas in a stretch in which it plays eight of 11 games on the road; beating their downstairs neighbor in the division standings would give the club a much needed boost. The team can help itself by connecting on more than the three shots from deep it managed against the 76ers. Max Christie, tagged for two fouls early, never got into his game and missed both his attempts from the field. Klay Thompson has had some nice shooting games lately but only made one of seven from beyond the arc last time around.

The Mavericks can also control their fate with another excellent paint performance from Naji Marshall, and improved rebounding against a Pelicans team that has gotten beaten on the boards even in its two most recent victories. Like most NBA teams, New Orleans is capable of controlling the glass in stretches; in jumping out to its early lead in the Houston game, the Pelicans collected four first-quarter offensive rebounds in a frame where they shared the floor with Houston’s Steven Adams much of the time.

How to watch/listen​


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

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...-to-watch-as-the-mavericks-visit-the-pelicans
 
Stats Rundown: 7 numbers to know from the Mavericks’ 121-114 loss at the Philadelphia 76ers

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The Dallas Mavericks (11-18) fell apart in the fourth quarter against the Philadelphia 76ers (16-11) on Saturday, 121-114, at XFinity Mobile Arena. The Mavericks scored just 17 points in the fourth quarter, when they shot 7-of-23 (30.4%) from the field after taking a six-point lead into the final frame. The backcourt combo of Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe combined to score 64 points on eight made 3-pointers, and 20 of those 64 points came in the pivotal fourth quarter.

The fourth-quarter scoring flurry was just too much for the Mavs to handle, after coming into the game winners of six of the team’s last eight games. Now the Mavericks face a stretch where eight of their next 11 games (including Saturday’s loss) will come on the road. Nut-cuttin’ time is a-coming.

Cooper Flagg and Anthony Davis each scored 24 points to lead the Mavs in the loss, but Dallas turned the ball over 18 times in the loss. And those two were free, so here are seven more stats that tell the tale of the Mavs’ latest loss in Philadelphia.

7: First-quarter Mavericks turnovers​


After falling down 5-0 in the game’s opening minutes, the Mavericks responded with an early 13-3 run to force 76ers head coach Nick Nurse into the game’s first timeout. That’s when turnovers reared their ugly head for Dallas, as they have so many times this season, especially early in games.

The Mavericks turned the ball over three times in the next two minutes to give the lead right back to Philadelphia. Naji Marshall, who has been playing great whether he’s in the starting lineup or coming in off the bench this year, coughed it up three times in the first 6:40 of the game. His third led to a transition 3-pointer from Maxey, his second 3-ball of the first quarter, which gave the 76ers a 16-15 lead.

Two minutes later, Klay Thompson threw a bad pass out of bounds for the Mavs’ sixth turnover of the opening frame, leading to a step-back jumper from Edgecombe, which gave Philadelphia a 22-19 lead with 3:13 left in the first. Thompson threw away another awful pass a minute and a half later. Jared McCain picked it off, and Edgecombe was a blur in transition on his way to the bucket this time to put the 76ers up 33-21.

Edgecombe did his best Dwane Wade impression in the first quarter, torching the Mavericks for 14 points, while Maxey, who played his high school basketball at South Garland High, added 11 more on three made 3-pointers. Philly took a 38-33 lead after one, outscoring the Mavs 10-0 off turnovers.

26-24: VJ Edgecombe’s slight scoring advantage over Cooper Flagg​

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Saturday’s game between the Mavericks and the 76ers featured the two most exciting rookies in the NBA’s 2025-26 class in Edgecombe and Flagg, and this in-game side quest didn’t disappoint. Flagg came into the game second among rookies in scoring, at 18.6 points per game, while Edgecombe came in third, at 15.6. Charlotte’s Kon Knueppel leads all rookies in scoring a third of the way through the season, at 19.4 points per game.

Edgecombe was the engine that made the 76ers go in the first quarter, getting the edge on Flagg with 14 early points, while Flagg took just three shots in the first and scored four of his eight early points at the free-throw line. Ryan Nembhard found Flagg streaking to the hoop after a steal in transition midway through the second quarter, with Edgecomb the only defender back for the 76ers. Edgecombe hacked Flagg to prevent him from getting to the rim for an easy score, picking up his third foul of the first half on the play. He did not score in the second, while Flagg made the plays the game asked him to make and finished the first half with 12 points (to go along with three turnovers).

On the Mavs’ next possession, Flagg pressed the issue on his way to the rack again, splitting the Philadelphia defense for a driving score to bring Dallas to within one, down 55-54 with 5:15 left in the second. Flagg tied the game, 68-68, on another strong drive to the hoop just a minute into the third, as part of an initial 10-0 Mavericks’ run out of halftime.

Edgecombe drove right past Flagg three minutes into the third quarter on his way to his first bucket of the second half, which killed what was then a 12-0 Dallas run, carried over from the last seconds of the second quarter. Four minutes later, Davis found Flagg alone along the baseline off a loose ball, and Flagg dunked it home over Andre Drummond to give the Mavs a 78-74 lead. Two possessions later, Edgecombe hit his first 3-pointer of the game to bring Philly back to within 80-79. He would nail two more before the third quarter was out. But Flagg would not be outdone, scoring on a turnaround jumper two possessions later to put the Mavericks up 84-79 with 4:40 left in the third.

Edgecombe held a slim 22-20 scoring advantage over Flagg after three quarters. Flagg’a baseline jumper three minutes into the fourth quarter tied the game at 104-104, but two minutes later, Edgecombe’s double-pumping drive through the lane gave the 76ers a 108-104 lead and forced Mavs head coach Jason Kidd into a timeout at a crucial juncture of the game.

Flagg’s baseline alley-oop jam in transition from Brandon Williams with 4:35 left to play brought the Mavs back to within 115-108 and gave Flagg 24 points for the game, but the damage (see bottom section) had already been done at that point.

These rooks can hoop. Flagg concluded his tenure as an 18-year-old in the NBA on Saturday, averaging 18.7 points per game before his 19th birthday, second only to LeBron James (20.2 points per game) in NBA history. He turns 19 on Sunday. Flagg scored 24 points to go along with four rebounds and three assists in the loss, while Edgecombe scored 26, pulled down six boards and dished four assists in the 76ers’ win.

16: First-half points from Dominick Barlow​


While Maxey predictably led all scorers with 22 points on 9-of-18 shooting, someone named Dominick Barlow turned Saturday’s first half into a career night, adding 16 points on 7-of-10 shooting for the 76ers. Barlow got the start at power forward in the absence of injured stars Joel Embiid and Paul George.

Barlow is a two-way player in his fourth year in the NBA out of Overtime Elite, Atlanta’s private high-school alternative for top-level basketball prospects. His previous high-scoring mark this year was 13 points, before he exploded for 16 in Saturday’s first half against the Mavericks. He cut to the basket for an uncontested dunk with 20 seconds left in the first half to put Philadelphia up 68-60, before Anthony Davis tipped home Flagg’s missed jumper on the final possession of the half to make it a 68-62 game at the break.

Davis led the Mavericks with 14 points and eight rebounds at halftime. Barlow scored 13 in the second quarter, often finding himself free underneath for easy dunks early in the shot clock or in transition. His career-high scoring mark came in a 21-point performance against the Mavericks in 2023, when he played with the San Antonio Spurs. Barlow would match that career-high mark midway through the third on a turnaround jumper from former Maverick Quentin Grimes, which cut the Mavericks’ lead to two, 78-76.

Barlow finished the game with 21 points on 9-of-13 shooting and four rebounds.

8-of-8: Naji Marshall’s shooting start​

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Marshall shrugged off his three early turnovers against the 76ers to hit his first eight shots from the field. He didn’t miss until there were just 4:30 left to play, on a coast-to-coast drive for a floater that could have cut the Philadelphia lead to five.

Marshall matched Flagg’s 12 points at the break and scored eight more in the third. His runner in the lane with 3:13 left in the third put Dallas up 88-83 and gave Marshall 20 points on the night.

All eight of Marshall’s shot attempts to that point came within the lane, where he is shooting better than 64% this season. The trio of Marshall, Flagg and Davis turned the tide in the third quarter, giving the Mavericks a 97-91 lead heading into the fourth. Those three shot 22-of-28 from the field through the first three quarters for the Mavs.

Two possessions after his first miss of the game, Marshall converted a transition look in close from P.J. Washington that cut the 76ers’ lead to 117-112, but that was as close as the Mavs could get to a comeback. Marshall finished the game with 22 points on 9-of-12 shooting and nine rebounds in the loss.

24-7: 76ers’ run to start the fourth quarter​


The 76ers came into Saturday’s game with the best fourth-quarter scoring differential (+5.0) in the NBA, and they showed the Mavericks why through the first six minutes of the frame. Maxey and Edgecombe combined to score 16 points during the 76ers’ 24-7 run to open the fourth. Edgecombe found Maxey open near the top of the key with 6:30 left to play for Maxey’s fifth 3-ball of the game to extend the 76ers’ lead to 11, up 115-104, after the Mavs carried a 97-91 lead into the decisive frame.

The Mavericks couldn’t come back from Philly’s late knockout blow.

36-9: 76ers’ scoring advantage from 3-point range​


In a game that featured 16 lead changes, look no further than these last two stats for why the Mavericks fell in Philadelphia on Saturday. Dallas couldn’t the 3-ball to save their lives against the 76ers, making just 3-of-18 (16.7%) attempts from deep in the loss.

The 76ers didn’t have a great shooting night from 3-point land, either, but they connected on 12-of-40 (30%) in the win, outscoring the Mavericks 36-9 from beyond the arc in the win. Maxey and Edgecombe combined to hit 8-of-22 from 3-point range against Dallas.

“We just weren’t secure with the basketball,” Kidd said in his televised press availability after the game. “We just didn’t make [3-pointers], and we didn’t defend the ball well [on Saturday].”

20-8: 76ers’ offensive rebounding advantage​


The 76ers beat the Mavs from the outside, and they won the rebounding battle on the inside as well. Philadelphia created 20 second-chance opportunities with offensive rebounds and gave up just eight on the other end. They outscored the Mavericks 19-12 on those second-chance opportunities in the win and shot the ball 19 more times than the Mavs did because of the 18 Dallas turnovers and the offensive rebounding advantage.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...flagg-tyrese-maxey-anthony-davis-vj-edgecombe
 
MMBets: Can the Mavs slow the Pelicans’ momentum?

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The Mavericks have won five of their eight December games, but they’re coming off a narrow loss in Philadelphia where Tyrese Maxey’s fourth-quarter burst proved too much to overcome. Despite a strong performance from their frontcourt — Cooper Flagg and Anthony Davis each scored 24 — Dallas fell 121–114 after surrendering 20 offensive rebounds and committing 18 turnovers.

New Orleans, meanwhile, is riding a season-best four-game win streak, leaning on high-efficiency spurts from Zion Williamson and a suddenly productive bench unit. They just dropped 66 bench points on Indiana and opened that game with a 44-point quarter — their best start of the year. But even with that surge, the Pelicans sit just 7–22 on the season and rank near the bottom of the league in defensive rating. If Dallas can manage the early tempo and control the glass, this matchup remains winnable — especially with Flagg active and Davis stabilizing the paint.

Game Fixtures


December 22, 2025 — Dallas Mavericks (11–18, 3–8 Away) at New Orleans Pelicans (7–22, 5–12 Home)
Tipoff:
7:00 PM CT — Smoothie King Center, New Orleans, LA
How To Watch: KFAA-TV, Mavs.com

Odds via DraftKings Sportsbook (as of 6:30 AM CST)

Spread:
DAL +1.5 (-115) / NOP -1.5 (-105)
Total: 239.5 (O -105 / U -115)
Moneyline: DAL +108 / NOP -112

Game Sides


Lean: Mavericks +1.5 (contingent on Cooper Flagg playing)
Lean: Under 239.5

If Cooper Flagg is active, Dallas has the frontcourt scoring and defensive versatility to stay inside this number. Anthony Davis has stabilized the paint on both ends, and P.J. Washington’s rebounding and switching on the perimeter matter against a Pelicans team that still struggles to string together clean half-court possessions.

Despite the four-game win streak, New Orleans remains one of the league’s poorest defensive teams by rating, and that structural issue hasn’t vanished. When the Pelicans can’t live off transition bursts or early shot-clock chaos, their defense is still vulnerable — particularly against frontcourts that can score without relying on pace.

The under case starts with pace. Dallas is top five in fewest possessions per game this season. New Orleans, meanwhile, sits closer to league average in pace and has relied on early-clock bursts rather than sustained speed. If Dallas avoids live-ball turnovers, this game is far more likely to settle than sprint.

More importantly, Dallas has quietly been one of the better defensive teams in the league by rating, ranking inside the top ten on the season. That defensive competence shows up most clearly when games slow—Dallas is comfortable switching, protecting the paint, and forcing opponents into late-clock decisions. New Orleans’ offensive surges have come when games stay chaotic; when possessions stack and reads matter, their efficiency drops.

At 239.5, the total is priced in a full-speed game with clean scoring on both sides. That’s a fragile assumption. If Dallas controls pace even modestly and the game trends toward half-court basketball after the opening stretch, the under becomes far more viable than the number suggests.

Player Props​


Naji Marshall over 14.5 points (-107)
Marshall’s role has quietly expanded over the last four games, starting in place of Max Christie — a look Jason Kidd appears comfortable with. The minutes have followed. Marshall has played 32+ minutes in six of his last seven, and the scoring has come organically: 22, 16, 15, and 17 points in his last four contests—in fact, you have to go back to the Denver game to find him under this total. He’s not shot-hunting, but he’s consistently getting downhill, drawing fouls, and finishing efficiently around the rim. Against a Pelicans defense that still struggles to contain secondary scorers, this line feels a step behind his current usage.

Derik Queen over 25.5 PRA (-107)
Queen has been one of New Orleans’ most reliable interior engines over the past two weeks, and the production has been steady rather than matchup-dependent. He’s averaging 15.8 points, 8.3 rebounds, and 5.6 assists in December, with multiple games clearing this PRA number comfortably. He also posted a strong all-around line in Dallas earlier this season, and his minutes have remained secure even as the Pelicans shuffle lineups. With Dallas likely prioritizing Zion’s drives and Murphy’s perimeter shooting, Queen should continue to find space to accumulate across all three categories.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...mbets-can-the-mavs-slow-the-pelicans-momentum
 
MMBets Game of the Week: Playing ball with the Joker

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Welcome back to MMBets, a series where apparently we’re going to find out how much hypothetical cash Tyler can burn through during an 82-game NBA season. Today’s clash between the Denver Nuggets and the Dallas Mavericks will be the the next installment in our Game of the Week series. Before we get into the handicap, lets go over the results from last week.

Last week’s results​


David: 2-2 (-$13)

Tyler: 0-4 (-$400)

Once again, my sincerest apologies go out to anyone who is ridiculous enough to tail me after the year I’ve had. In fairness, Cade Cunningham was one assist away from cashing a triple double for me at +1000, so I really wasn’t that far off. But still, this is unacceptable.

Overall​


David: 16-15 (+$249)

Tyler: 11-21 (-$936)

Overall: 27-36 (-$687)

In the words of the great philosopher Stephen A. Smith: “This is bad. This is very, very bad.”

With that out of the way, let’s get to this week’s cap.

Game intangibles​


Denver Nuggets (21-7) vs Dallas Mavericks (11-19)

Tipoff:
7:00p from the American Airlines Center

How to watch: NBC and Peacock

Game odds as of 12:00p​

Odds provided by the Fanduel Sportsbook and are subject to change. Wager Responsibly!​


Spread: Denver -6.5

Over/Under: 235.5

Moneyline: Dallas is +215 to pull off the upset

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David’s picks​

  • Over 235.5 points (-110)
  • Jamal Murray to score 25+ points (-115)
  • Anthony Davis to score 25+ points (+108)
  • Tim Hardaway Jr. over 2.5 made three pointers (+130)

Tyler’s picks​

  • Denver Nuggets -6.5 (-114)
  • Nikola Jokic over 12.5 rebounds (-114)
  • Jamal Murray to score 10+ first quarter points (+178)
  • PJ Washington over 14.5 points (+102)

Again, please do not tail me. When you are on an all-time cold streak such as myself, you do not try to jump on that train. I will figure it out eventually if it is the last thing I do for this site!

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...mavericks-fanduel-betting-preview-december-23
 
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