RSS Mavericks Team Notes

Cooper Flagg gets Rookie of the Month honors again

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The Dallas Mavericks are on a four-game losing streak after a New Year’s Day loss to the 76ers. Ongoing trade rumors continue to heat up, raising questions about what this team will look like once the February trade deadline hits. It’s a bit of a tumultuous time to be a Mavs fan.

As he has done throughout the season, Cooper Flagg comes through to give some good news to Mavs Nation. Flagg has been nothing short of amazing, exceeding even the lofty expectations that were put upon him as he breaks record after record. His latest accolade? Being named KIA Western Conference Rookie of the Month for the month of December.

The NBA announced today that Cooper Flagg was named the Kia Western Conference Rookie of the Month for games played in the month of December, garnering the award for the 2nd straight month while becoming the 3rd Maverick to earn consecutive Rookie of the Month honors. pic.twitter.com/4ehuVhyxdz

— Mavs PR (@MavsPR) January 2, 2026

This is the second consecutive time he has received the honor, and after the October/November win (the NBA consolidates those two months into a single award), it’s difficult to be surprised given how much his game improved since opening night. For the month of December, Flagg averaged 23.5 points, 6.2 rebounds, 4.8 assists, 1.0 steal and 1.2 blocks per game. He connected on 52% of his total shots and 81% of his free throws during the 13-games he played in December.

The highlights of his month were a 27-point outburst during his Christmas Day debut, which was only outdone by his performance against the Utah Jazz when he became the youngest player in NBA history to score 40-points.

Flagg came out of the gates better than most expected he would, which really says something given the expectations surrounding him as the #1 overall pick in the Draft. Since then, he has only improved his game, stepping up in the clutch and showing time and again that he is the real deal. The Mavs have work to do to reconfigure their roster, but the future looks bright with Cooper Flagg as the face of the franchise.

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/mavericks-news/54328/cooper-flagg-rookie-of-the-month-honors-deceember
 
Mavericks vs. Rockets Preview: 3 ways for Dallas to avoid a blowout against Houston

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The Dallas Mavericks (12-23) are in a bad way as the Houston Rockets (21-10) roll into town Saturday for what appears to be a scheduled blowout at American Airlines Center. The Mavericks are as healthy as they’re going to get at this point, missing just Kyrie Irving, whose rehab from knee injury that ended his 2024-25 season in March continues, and Dante Exum and Dereck Lively II, whose seasons were cut short this year due to injuries. But still, the team has dropped its last four and seven of the last nine. The Mavs’ New Year’s Day comeback fell short against the Philadelphia 76ers on Thursday, as Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe exposed Dallas’ backcourt once again in a 123-108 loss, also at the AAC.

Meanwhile, the Rockets have won their last four after dropping a pair of disappointing losses on the West Coast to the Sacramento Kings and the Los Angeles Clippers before Christmas. The last time these two teams met, on Dec. 6, the Mavericks orchestrated one of their most improbable upsets of the season so far in a 122-109 win behind 29 points (on 14-of-19 shooting) and eight rebounds from Anthony Davis.

That win came during a mirage of six wins in an eight-game stretch, which also included wins over the Miami Heat, the Denver Nuggets and in overtime over the Detroit Pistons. Remember that run? When reactionary Mavs fans (including this one) were falling all over themselves about Ryan Nembhard and having visions of making a playoff push when Irving returned to the lineup? It seems so long ago after the other shoe fell, including losses to the Kings and the New Orleans Pelicans (again).

But that’s the thing about this team. You never know which version is going to lace ‘em up on any given game day. Most of the time, it’s been bad, but you never know. To that end, here are three things the Mavs need to do to avoid a blowout against the Rockets, who at this point are a top-four team in the Western Conference.

Re-establish defensive identity​


The Mavericks’ defensive rating has been slipping recently. They’re down to 10th in the NBA (113.4) after starting the year with a top-five rating through 20 games. In their last 12, the Mavs own a 117.4 defensive rating, which is good for just 22nd in the league.

In their earlier win over the Rockets, the Mavericks held Kevin Durant to just seven points in the second half and limited Houston to just nine second-chance points overall. That was no small feat, as Houston enters Saturday’s matchup as the best offensive rebounding team in the NBA, averaging 16 per game.

Defensive rebounding has been one of the Mavs’ biggest bellwethers for success this year. If Dallas can limit opponents to one shot per possession at a league-average rate, they give themselves a chance to win.

Third dance partner​


The Mavericks know what they’re going to get, more or less, from Davis and rookie sensation Cooper Flagg — that is, when Davis is available. Dallas has shown signs that Davis, Flagg and a third playmaking dance partner can transform this team from a bottom-five team on the Mavericks’ worst nights into a truly formidable unit. That’s largely how the Mavs put together that string of six wins in eight games. When Davis is out, or when Flagg looks like a rookie, or when that third is simply not on the dance card, things can spiral quickly.

It’s a lot to ask for with this roster. The last nine games have shown us that. With ESPN’s Tim MacMahon expressing skepticism on Friday “that [the Mavericks are] going to be able to get an Anthony Davis trade done before [the NBA Trade] Deadline,” getting at least steps one and two of that equation right may be Dallas’ only hope of staying in games the rest of the year, if that is indeed what Mavs fans are rooting for at this point.

Cormac Karl “Max” Christie has flashed in the team’s last two games, shooting 15-of-25 from the field (including 7-of-14 from 3-point range). If he can continue that trend for a third game, perhaps the Mavs can summon lightning in a bottle one more time against the Rockets.

Compete from deep​


Dallas comes into Saturday’s game against the Rockets tied for last in the NBA in 3-pointers made per game (10.7) and 29th in 3-point shooting (32.1%). It’s a sad state of affairs, and improvement from beyond the arc is not a lever a team built the way the Mavericks are built can simply pull. You’re asking for a heater if you want to see the Mavs win, which can be frustrating.

The futility the Mavericks have played with recently makes it easier to let one’s thoughts drift to the 2026 NBA Draft. To that end, laying bricks is productive, but boy, is it tough to watch on a night-in, night-out basis.

How to watch​


The Mavericks host the Rockets at American Airlines Center on Saturday, with tipoff scheduled for 7:30 p.m. CDT. The game will be televised locally on KFAA Channel 29 and on sister stations throughout the Mavs’ regional viewership area. It can also be viewed on NBA League Pass where available, or streamed on MavsTV.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...for-dallas-to-avoid-a-blowout-against-houston
 
NBA Power Rankings Watch: the Maverick hauntings of 2025 in the new year

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The Dallas Mavericks’ hellscape 2025 is now over. A fresh calendar and fresh opportunities lay on the horizon for this team, as they try to remove any and all hauntings of a truly insane self-sabotage.

Now, the calendar move to January doesn’t mean the problems disappear. This week’s Power Rankings Watch really drives home that this team is inconsistent, unhealthy, and in desperate need of moving past the remnants of Nico Harrison’s vision. As rumors continue to swirl about the trade landscape for Anthony Davis the team continues collecting losses, and perhaps a better position in this summer’s draft.

ESPN

Rank: 24​

Last week: 21​

As the Mavs explore the trade market for Anthony Davis, the other player received as part of the return package in the widely criticized Luka Doncic trade is providing reason for optimism that he can be part of the franchise’s core into the future. Max Christie, 22, is shooting a career-best 46.6% from 3-point range as a part-time starter. According to NBA Advanced Stats, Christie has an effective field goal percentage of 76.2% on catch-and-shoot opportunities, the best in the league among the 61 players with at least 120 attempts. — MacMahon

NBA

Rank: 26​

Last week: 19​

  • Davis has yet to play in more than five straight games and, with their loss in Sacramento on Saturday, the Mavs are 4-13 without him. Eleven of those 13 losses have been within five points in the last five minutes (they continue to lead the league in clutch games), but they’ve scored just 106.3 points per 100 possessions over those 17 games overall. Saturday was just the fourth time that the Kings have allowed less than 105 per 100.
  • The one-point win over the Nuggets (with Davis) was the Mavs’ best offensive game of the season (131 points on 98 possessions). Cooper Flagg led the way with 33 points and nine assists, making as many 3-pointers (four) as he had made over his previous 10 games combined. That included a late-clock 3-pointer that put Dallas up five with a little more than three minutes left. Flagg’s 68 clutch points are more than twice as many as any other rookie and 30 more than any rookie had all of last season.
  • The Mavs had just four 3-pointers as a team in their 10-point loss to the Warriors, when they were outscored by 30 points from beyond the arc. They now have four games of making five or fewer 3s, while the rest of the league has just eight. The Mavs and Pelicans are the two teams that rank in the bottom five in both 3-point percentage and 3-point rate.

Coming up: The Mavs have now lost six straight road games and will complete a three-game trip in Portland on Monday. One of their four wins without Davis came in mid-November against the Blazers, who they trail by a game and a half for the final SoFi Play-In Tournament spot in the West.

The Athletic

Rank: 26 (Tier 5: Basement Floor)​

Last week: 21​

What a 2025 for the Mavericks. They really traded Luka Dončić, who did not play a single game for them in the calendar year after his Christmas 2024 calf injury. If you thought Dallas could get through Christmas 2025 without another soft tissue injury, you’d be sadly mistaken, as Anthony Davis left the game in Golden State and was held out of the loss in Sacramento due to right adductor soreness.

Bleacher Report

Rank: 20​

Last week: 18​

In his one season at Duke, Cooper Flagg averaged 16.3 points and shot 42.1 percent from the field in his first 12 games. From that point to the end of the season, he averaged 20.5 and shot 51.1 percent from the field.

Now, in the NBA and against stiffer competition, he’s on a similar developmental trajectory.

In his first 10 games as a Dallas Maverick, Flagg put up 13.9 points and made 40.3 percent of his shots. Since then, he’s averaging a team-high 22.0 points, while shooting 52.6 percent from the field. He’s also adding 6.3 rebounds, 4.2 assists, 1.2 steals and 1.0 blocks.

There was little doubt the Duke product would get better over the course of his first NBA campaign, but the upward slope he’s on is steeper than even his strongest believers could have imagined.

At this point, it feels like All-NBA contention could be in play within the next couple years.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/maver...he-maverick-hauntings-of-2025-in-the-new-year
 
Mavericks vs. Rockets Recap: 3 things after Dallas takes it to Houston, 110-104

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The Dallas Mavericks (12-23) entered Saturday night’s game against the Houston Rockets (21-11) on a four-game losing streak, but found a way to get a second-straight big win over their rival to the South, 110-104.

The game got off to a painfully slow start, with Rockets center Alperen Sengun rolling his ankle a minute in, resulting in a timeout before he headed to the locker room. By the time the game got going, the Mavs had turned it over three times in as many minutes and were down by nine points. Of note, Anthony Davis and Daniel Gafford both started, which meant the Cooper-Flagg-as-point-guard experiment was back for at least one night. It did not go particularly well. Dallas turned it over five times in the first quarter and found themselves trailing 31-25 after one.

The second quarter featured a more conventional lineup for Dallas and much better results came with it. Dallas couldn’t miss in the frame (13-for-22 from the field) while Houston couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn (7-for-28). The Mavs turned a six-point deficit into a four-point lead and things were looking good, but then P.J. Washington’s night came to an end after he injured his right ankle while fighting over a screen. Kevin Durant (who was getting anything he wanted to that point) committed his fourth foul and had to go to the bench, allowing Dallas to build a 57-50 lead at halftime.

The Rockets remembered how proficient they are at rebounding to open the third quarter and punished the Mavs on the boards. Dallas countered with pace and high percentage shots at the rim, led by Brandon Williams’ drives to open up the offense. Max Christie got in on the action with a ferocious two-handed slam as well. With the game tied at 65, Dallas reeled off a 22-10 run to take an 87-75 lead into the fourth quarter.

The flow became a grind for the Mavs in the fourth quarter, as a 17-point lead dropped to nine before Ryan Nembhard hit a tricky flip shot followed by a Christie three-pointer to give Dallas some breathing room. Oddly, Naji Marshall controlled the offense despite Williams being on the floor, and the results were mixed. Houston was able to force turnovers and cut a 14-point lead to eight where it hovered until the game was all but out of reach after a drive and dunk by Christie with under a minute remaining.

The Mavs need a point guard at point guard


It’s understandable that head coach Jason Kidd played Flagg as the starting point guard so the Mavs could match Houston’s size with both Anthony Davis and Daniel Gafford starting down low. Hopefully, this will be the last time Dallas tries it, however. The Mavs got roasted by Houston’s guards, not their bigs (granted, Sengun went down early), then found themselves with the lead once Williams and Nembhard got some burn. Flagg had two turnovers and two fouls in the blink of an eye. When Flagg moved to his natural position, Dallas played almost eight minutes of turnover-free ball. Again, the logic was defensible against the Rockets, but enough is enough. Flagg is significantly better in his natural position on the wing. Oh, and he ended up with five first-half assists when he shifted away from point guard. Go figure.

Max Christie sighting


Christie has looked like a different player since dropping 25-points against the Blazers two games ago. At some point shortly after arriving in Dallas, Christie seemed almost relegated to shooting from beyond the arc. Over the past week, Kidd indicated he wanted Christie more involved, and Christie has taken full advantage. His game is clearly much more than just shooting corner 3-pointers. Christie has been a point of excitement since he’s taken on a more featured role.

The Mavs’ roster is likely to look very different as soon as the upcoming NBA trade deadline. It will be nice to see Christie get more looks and possibly become a bigger part of the action going forward. He shot 10-for-13 from the floor and 4-for-6 from deep en route to 24 points to go along with 7 rebounds in the win over Houston. He’s put together his best three-game stretch of his young career in the Mavs’ last three games — and it doesn’t feel like a fluke.

Battle of the boards


The Rockets are the best rebounding team in the league by a huge margin (2.2 rebounds per game over the second-best team). Tonight they pulled in 51 to the Mavericks’ 47. Being outrebounded by only four is a huge accomplishment, whether or not Sengun (or Steven Adams) was able to play. The Rockets rebound as a squad, and hanging that close with them was a significant part of a successful outcome for Dallas. In addition to the pure rebounding totals, there were at least two sequences in the game where Dallas ceded multiple offensive boards to the Rockets. While maddening, the ultimate outcome was Dallas getting stops both times. That tenacity was demonstrated in various aspects of the game and made a big difference.

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...10-104-max-christie-kevin-durant-cooper-flagg
 
MMB Lounge: Trade season baby

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Well I did the thing again where I forgot to make a new lounge around 500 comments. I really want y’all to get on me about this. It’s important to you which makes it important to me. Here’s the old one for good measure.

Trade season is essentally the next 32 days. We’ll see what happens, if anything. I cannot earnestly believe that the Dallas Mavericks will be able to trade anything Davis for what they want. He’s an aging big with a very bad contract managed by an agency group that is stubborn as mules (which is what they should be). That Rich Paul is pushing an extension so hard speaks to AD’s lack of value, in my opinion, because if he were that valuable, Paul wouldn’t have to market it so hard.

Then there’s Gafford, probably the most affordable player to move. Dallas getting something in terms of a younger player might be interesting, but I don’t have high hopes there either. Klay Thompson needs to let it be known about what he wants and then Dallas should do that for him. And if that means staying, that’s fine too! Naji Marshall should net something on the market and he’ll be due for a nice pay raise after this contract.

The whole of the Dallas roster with the exception of Cooper Flagg should be up for discussion. Dallas has done something by the trade deadline for 7 or 8 straight years. This year won’t be any different, it’s simply a matter of what that will be.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/mavericks-rumors/54361/mmb-lounge-trade-season-baby
 
Writing about the Mavericks was a small step toward my own recovery — but it wasn’t enough

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Hi,

I’m a regular Mavs Moneyball contributor, and I’m an alcoholic. I’m one of the lucky ones, because I found help in recovery after trying dozens of failed solutions on my own. Now I hope that in recovery I can help someone else out there who might be struggling with a similar problem.

Growing up, the Dallas Mavericks were one of my first sports loves. I latched onto the Three Js at the same time playing basketball for my school became an option in the fourth grade. I still have that Jason Kidd rookie card that meant so much to me as a kid, and through high school, I took to taking one-legged jumpers, like Dirk Nowitzki (I thought), much to the chagrin of my coaches.

I didn’t recognize it at the time, but in my last couple years of high school, I was already starting to drink like an alcoholic. I quit the basketball team my senior year, using the excuse that the coach wouldn’t allow basketball players to go on a senior trip I wanted to go on, because it fell during basketball season. Quitting was convenient for me, a young man who had recently discovered the wonders of alcohol and chasing girls. Quitting gave me more time to drink with my buddies and get into all kinds of fun trouble.

Over the years, as I became an adult, the trouble became less and less fun. The drinking became less fun. I started to drink alone, and I justified it, the same way I justified my choice to quit the basketball team. This is just what adults do, I told myself. They drink.

I continued to follow the Mavericks as a devoted fan through the championship year of 2011 and for a couple years after that, but my fandom waned soon afterward, over the same years I now recognize that my drinking was starting to control more and more of my life. In fact, I remember the day of the championship parade. Some friends and I all called out from work, filled backpacks with booze and took the first TRE train from Fort Worth to Dallas that morning. We started drinking at around 5:30 a.m. that day. I would lose that job due to various alcohol-related issues three years later.

I lost several jobs in my 20s and 30s due to my drinking problem, in fact, and after each of these critical moments, I decided I would slow down or stop for a while. But every time, after a month, or three months, or six months, I’d always go back to it. I’d get comfortable again, I would make whatever justifications needed to be made at the time so that I could go back to drinking, and eventually, the drinking would become a problem again.

Fast forward to a few years ago, when I responded to a preseason tweet from our editor Kirk Henderson. He was asking for contributors to Mavs Moneyball for the upcoming season. Once again, I had slipped back into old habits, but the thought that my life had become unmanageable due to my drinking was still completely off my radar. Look at all the things I still had: a home, a car, a middling corporate career. Sure, my marriage had failed a couple of years earlier, but I wasn’t living under a bridge, so how could I be an alcoholic?

I reached out and got onboard. Here was a chance, I thought, to reconnect with the team I loved for so many years and to keep myself out of the bar for two-to-three nights a week, six months out of the year. That’ll be the ticket. I’ll keep myself busy, and that’ll cure me. On some baseline level, I knew I had a problem, and I was grasping for a solution. I meant well, but meaning well isn’t enough. Writing about basketball, as rewarding as this little side gig quickly became, was simply not enough to get well.

The alcoholic brain is clever and deceitful. We become great liars out of necessity, to keep up the charade that “everything is fine,” and the one we end up lying to the most is ourselves. My alcoholic brain speaks to me in my own voice, telling me things like, “It’ll be different this time.”

I found ways to drink as much and more than I ever had, be it basketball season, a work night, the night before I had family obligations to attend to, whatever. Any little irritation or minor success became a great excuse to go on a tear. I drank when I was happy. I drank when I was miserable, and despite my new hobby, the misery was winning.

It all culminated in a decision I made one year ago today, on Jan. 4, 2025, to seek help. My escalating binges over the holiday season put me down for the count for good. The holidays can be tough, especially for hard-drinking loners. I realized then that I did not, of my own volition, have what it took to stop and stay stopped. I did not, under my own power, have any control of the amount I drank once I started. I realized I was completely powerless over alcohol. I was honest with myself and with another man about it, for the first time in over 25 years of drinking.

I’ve been working on my recovery for a year now. I am a member of a recovery program I will not name here, as I am no spokesperson for this program, nor is it endorsed by or does it endorse the website for which I write. I am simply an alcoholic trying to get better — and I’m here to tell you, a few simple changes in my own attitude and behavior have netted me the best year of my adult life.

The solution I, and millions of other recovering alcoholics, have found is in acceptance, honesty, open-mindedness and willingness to change. To those of you who are able to have a couple of drinks to relax and put the booze down, to those of you who innately know how to live life on life’s terms, these things may already be second nature. Well, for an alcoholic like me, who drank for 25 of my first 40 years on God’s Green Earth, acceptance, honesty, open-mindedness and willingness to change were wholly foreign concepts. The fact that the world refused to bend to my whims was ultimately why I drank. In a lot of ways, when I got sober last year, I was developmentally still just a 14-year-old kid. What I’m trying to do now is piece together one good day at a time, by making one right decision after another. It’s simple, but for an alcoholic like me, it isn’t easy.

One of those right decisions along the way has been writing for Mavs Moneyball. It’s a good use of my time. I am useful and productive within this community, and now I’m able to do it with a clear head and focus that have been a springboard for greater and greater usefulness, productivity and service to my fellows in other areas of my life.

Sports fandom and alcohol have gone together like peanut butter and jelly since before I showed up on the scene, and they will continue to long after I’m gone. I’m not going to change that, and I don’t aim to. I don’t begrudge my friends who want to have a beer and watch the game. It was up to me to figure out that my own fandom does not have to be intertwined with my alcoholism. It was up to me to get rid of the things in my life that were not working and to keep the things that do work.

My recovery is for me and those closest to me, but another thing I have learned over the last year is that to keep the gift of recovery, I have to give it away. This is the ultimate point of this post on the one-year anniversary of my sobriety.

If you or someone you know is wondering whether they might be an alcoholic, odds are that it’s probably already gotten to the point where it is, in fact, a problem. The good news is that there is help, and it doesn’t cost any money. The bad news is, it’s us. Whether you’re a man or woman, black or white, religious or agnostic, gay or straight, rich or poor, the suggestions we follow are the same. You can do it, too, one day at a time.

The good people who have helped to guide me in this design for living hold to the belief that one alcoholic working with another alcoholic is the best way to get rid of the obsession to drink and live a better life. It yields better results than any pill you can take or any resolution you can make. Rarely have we seen a person fail who has thoroughly followed our path.

To that end, I’m going to set up a new email address, and I’m going to add it to my phone. I will check it every day — hell, it’ll be on my phone — I won’t be able to avoid it. If you think you might have a problem with alcohol or drugs, I want to hear from you. I will share my name and contact information with you after a brief exchange, and if you want it, I will help you find a group of people in your area who have found the same solution I have. If you are in Dallas-Fort Worth or the surrounding area, I want to show up for you like so many have shown up for me over the last year. And if you’re not, I can tell you more about my experience and point you toward the proper online resources or resources near you.

Unlike on the basketball court, there is victory in surrender when it comes to addiction. In life’s worst moments, it may seem antithetical to say that the dawn of a new day draws ever closer, but I’ve seen it happen for dozens of alcoholics who got to a point where they were only living to drink. Out of hopeless situations, I have seen lives changed. If you want to change yours, it’s going to take some work, but help in getting started is just one conversation away.

If any of this sounds like something you want to talk about further, please reach out at [email protected].

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/maver...ep-toward-my-own-recovery-but-it-wasnt-enough
 
3 things to watch as the Mavericks meet the Kings

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The Dallas Mavericks (13-23) return to the road and attempt to continue their return to winning Tuesday against the Sacramento Kings (8-28) with a 10pm CST tipoff at Golden One Center. Dallas halted a four-game skid Saturday with an upset win against the Houston Rockets, 110-104. The Kings’ 115-98 loss Sunday to the Milwaukee Bucks extended their brutal losing streak to five; the game featured the return of guard Zach LaVine from an ankle injury but also the departure of guard Keon Ellis with a thumb injury.

Best laid plans​


Though LaVine’s return marks some long-awaited good news, Sacramento’s plans this season were dashed when stars LaVine and Domantas Sabonis went down with injuries, leaving a very odd mix of nonetheless talented players to attempt to hold things down. The Kings present the same wounded-animal danger that they did in these teams’ most recent clash Dec. 27, a 113-107 Kings victory in which a Mavericks team missing Anthony Davis coughed up 21 turnovers in a weird Saturday matinee matchup. Sacramento has yet to win since.

Led by veterans like Russell Westbrook, DeMar DeRozan, Malik Monk, and Dennis Schröder, a pair of skilled role players entering their prime in Keegan Murray and Keon Ellis, and intriguing rookie big man Maxime Raynaud, this group was assembled to form a supporting cast for LaVine and Sabonis, and it’s easy to imagine a healthy version of this roster being a very tough out. For long stretches of games, they often are; besides holding a double digit lead for much of the game against Dallas, they took a tie with Boston into the fourth quarter Thursday before being doomed by an 0-10 shooting performance from three in the final frame. The following night they managed a scrappy back and forth first half against the Suns before hitting the wall.

Deep trouble​


On both ends, the Kings are undone at the three-point line. One big drawback to losing their best perimeter and floor-stretching three-point threats to injury is an offense with load-bearing roles being played by historically iffy deep threats. Westbrook, a career .307 three-point shooter, is having one of the better long-range shooting seasons of his career at .353 as he finds himself open on the corners. Murray, shooting .281 this year from downtown, still can get hot, as he did in making three of five against the Suns and three of four in a win against the Rockets Dec. 21, but like Westbrook does not draw defenders out. DeRozan has turned himself into a fairly accurate three-point shooter late in his career but only attempts 2.2 per game.

Their chemistry is patchwork but the Kings have players who can score. Schröder and Ellis, two players with very different resumes, share a proclivity for three-level scoring and boldness with their shot selection. The careful craftsman DeRozan, one of the game’s last ambassadors for the isolation and midrange style of play that defined multiple generations of scoring guards, is 23 of 25 from the free throw line over his last five games. Raynaud, a very nice finisher at the rim, has used his growing role to become a steady double-double threat, an achievement made more impressive by the lack of spacing around him. He went 9-15 against the Mavericks but didn’t do much against the Suns’ big lineups. Even the defensive specialist Murray, who did not play against Dallas Dec. 27, can go off as he did when he went for 23 against the Suns.

The deep ball makes the difference between victory and defeat on the defensive side for Sacramento too. Over this five-game losing streak, the Kings have cumulatively shot 44-125 from deep while allowing 64-185, getting taxed beyond the arc by the Lakers’ Nick Smith Jr, (5-10), the Clippers’ Kawhi Leonard (5-9), and the Celtics’ Sam Hauser (5-7), as well as at the rim, where Lebron James, the Suns’ Devin Booker, and the Bucks’ Giannis Antetokuonmpo have cut through the exhausted Sacramento defense like paper.

The Mavericks and Kings, the league’s 29th and 30th ranked teams in terms of three-point shots made this season, lit it up last time they played. Cooper Flagg, Max Christie, and Klay Thompson all cooked from long range, making a combined 9 of 16. The Kings also shot an uncharacteristically high 17 for 38 from deep in that game, a rare one in which they had more than a league-average number of attempts from there (former Maverick Doug McDermott made three of his six). LaVine, who connected on two of four three-pointers against the Bucks Sunday, should bring the Kings more balance.

Big steps​


The availability of P.J. Washington, who left early in the second quarter against Houston with an ankle injury, influences how much size the Mavericks can counter the Kings with. Washington was key to finally slowing Raynaud in the third quarter Dec. 27 but Davis and Daniel Gafford give the Mavericks more looks this time. If Washington does not play, expect to see more of Naji Marshall, who stepped up against the Rockets. Head coach Jason Kidd threw the kitchen sink at the Kings last time, trying every available player off the bench in defeat.

Tuesday’s game is the first in a three-game road trip for the Mavericks, who play Utah Thursday and Chicago Saturday. For a team with more time between wins than the players would prefer, Tuesday brings a rare shot at an opponent with a worse record. Of course, that’s been no guarantor of success for Dallas so far this season.

How to watch/listen​


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

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...ings-to-watch-as-the-mavericks-meet-the-kings
 
Grading the Mavericks: the Anthony Davis saga is exhausting

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The Mavericks were 1-1 this past week and moved up to 11th place in the West. They lost to Philadelphia (123-108) and beat Houston (110-104) at home. Max Christie led the team in scoring this with 21 points per game. Kyrie Irving (knee) remained out, and P.J. Washington sprained his ankle against the Rockets and played just 12 minutes.

Grade: C+

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The Mavericks are consistently themselves. They lose games to dynamic guard play and win games against teams with a lack of shooting. The 76ers’ Tyrese Maxey averaged 36 points in two games against Dallas this season and made nine of his 21 threes in those contests. The Mavericks seem to have the Rockets’ number, as they are now 2-1 against them this year and have held them to just 28.3 percent shooting from deep. In fact, Anthony Davis has relished these opportunities, scoring 27 points, grabbing 12 rebounds, and blocking three shots a night in three games against Houston as a Maverick dating back to last February.

Cooper Flagg shot the ball poorly in the two games they played. He has played in 35 games in just under two and a half months, which is closing in on the 37 he played at Duke last year in about half the time. The rookie wall is real, and it seems like Flagg is trying to push through it right now, at least with respect to shooting the ball. He did manage to dish out 13 assists while turning the ball over just four times. Daniel Gafford continues to be a liability on defense and thus was limited to just 30 minutes last week, even with a damaged center rotation.

The Mavericks are a competent team at home this season, with a perfectly balanced 10-10 record. This includes some big wins against the Rockets, Pistons, and Nuggets. One of those came on Saturday, which is what boosted their grade to a near B. Unfortunately, they are going on the road for three games in five nights, where they will look to turn around a 3-13 start on the road. Earning a good grade next week will mean defying the team’s trends to this point.

Straight A’s: Max Christie

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I have sung Christie’s praises before, and I will again. He plays in any role and has really evolved his offensive game since coming to Dallas. In the last three games, he is averaging 22.3 points on 65.8 (!) percent shooting. He is fifth in the NBA this season in three-point percentage (46.6) on 5.2 attempts a night. He has shown an ability to cut and get to the rim and has even flashed playmaking from time to time. Christie is still just 22 years old with room to grow and is a guy who will help a winning team.

Currently Failing: the Anthony Davis experience


To put it frankly, the business of having Anthony Davis on your team is not fun. The trade rumors consume your feed, his play on the court is up-and-down (that is, when he plays), and the elephant in the room, the way he got to Dallas, is something that still looms large. In recent days and weeks, the reporting around a potential deal has heavily emphasized that the likelihood Davis gets traded this season has declined. Other teams’ interest seems to be mild to inquiring at best, and because Davis cannot put together an extended stretch of healthy basketball, the narrative around his wants and the teams’ ability to move him has completely changed.

Tim MacMahon reported Monday that Davis’ preference would be to stay in Dallas and sign a long-term extension this summer. Whether this is actual smoke or posturing with the goal of seducing other teams into moving for him now, the possibility of Davis being extended is scary. He is owed ~$58 million next year and ~$63 million in 2027-28, meaning a four-year extension with an annual value of over $68 million would kick in the year before Dallas will have to pay Cooper Flagg his maximum rookie extension. If this were to happen, Dallas would be paying Davis at age 36 and 37 more than their young superstar at ages 23 and 24. That is not conducive to winning.

The Mavericks should and will start building around Cooper Flagg as soon as they can. That they would handicap themselves with a player like Davis from an old regime seems unlikely. But each day that passes, an amount comes off the probability he gets traded as well. All of this drama for a guy who has not played six consecutive games yet in a Mavericks jersey is not ideal. I will rejoice when he either starts playing consistently or gets traded. Or both.

Extra Credit: Brandon Williams


Williams came off the bench and sparked Dallas’ offense as he has done time and again. He scored 29 points in 48 minutes this week while remarkably snagging 14 rebounds and handing out eight assists. When he is good, he helps this team a lot. And he has been good over the last few weeks.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/maver...-saga-is-exhausting-max-christie-cooper-flagg
 
Mavericks vs. Kings Recap: 4 thoughts as Dallas comes back to steal a 100-98 win in Sacramento

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The Dallas Mavericks (14-23) snapped their four-game losing streak, and their seven-game road skid on Tuesday, escaping Golden 1 Center with a 100-98 win over the Sacramento Kings (8-29). Brandon Williams waited until there were just 30 seconds left to play before hitting his first 3-pointer of the game, and it turned out to be the game-winner as Sacramento missed three desperation 3-point attempts in the game’s final 10 seconds.

Cooper Flagg led the Mavericks with 20 points on 8-of-15 shooting, eight rebounds and six assists in the win. Anthony Davis added 19 points and 16 boards, but shot just 7-of-23 from the field for Dallas. Naji Marshall scored all 15 of his points in the second half.

DeMar DeRozan led all scorers with 21 points and five rebounds for Sacramento in the loss. Zach LaVine added 20 more as the Kings held the lead for most of the game before Dallas stormed back in the last 2:45 of the third quarter and finally grabbed the lead back late in the fourth.

Turnovers early on for the Mavericks made for a disjointed first quarter, leaving exasperated sickos everywhere to wonder aloud, “I stayed up for this?” Davis turned the ball over twice in the game’s first four minutes, but also made two of his first three shot attempts. Naji Marshall also turned it over twice in the first quarter. Klay Thompson’s 3-pointer from the right corner midway through the first tied the game at 13-13, but Russell Westbrook and LaVine each hit 3-pointers on the Kings’ next two possessions to grab a 19-13 lead a minute later. Thompson would miss his next eight attempts from the field.

Sacramento came into the game with the fewest 3-point makes in the NBA (10.5 per game), but the Kings made four of their first seven against the Mavericks in the game’s first seven minutes. A track meet broke out in the last four minutes of the first, as Brandon Williams turned a steal along the perimeter into a run-out and a transition slam to bring Dallas back to within 21-20 with 3:43 left in the opener. The Kings held onto a 35-25 lead after one, behind nine early points from LaVine and a 9-0 run late in the period. The Mavericks turned it over six times and shot 9-of-20 (45%) from the field.

The Isolation Blues​


The Mavericks’ offense devolved into isolation looks early in the game. This roster lacks the individual playmaking firepower to win individual matchups. Everything was off the dribble. Everything was forced. There was little to no “flow” to the Mavericks’ Flow offense, and the product of that slop is a seven-turnover first quarter.

Cooper Flagg tends to get lost in these kinds of situations. It doesn’t help that P.J. Washington’s ankle injury forced Flagg into another spot start at point guard, with both Davis and Daniel Gafford starting in the frontcourt. Flagg went 0-for-2 from the field in the first quarter before making his first bucket of the game early in the second, a baseline jumper from Ryan Nembhard. He scored on another assist from Nembhard the next time down, before Caleb Martin found Flagg open near the top of the key for his first triple of the contest with 9:43 left in the first half to bring the Mavs back to within 35-32 and force a Kings’ timeout.

The ball moves much better with a true point guard in the lineup. Imagine that. But in Mavericks’ coach Jason Kidd’s defense, Nembhard’s play over the last few weeks has not been quite as impactful as it was in his first few starts in November. Nembhard’s third assist to Flagg came with eight minutes to play in the second, as Flagg made a nice cut through the lane for an easy dunk that cut Sacramento’s lead to 37-34. To that point, Flagg accounted for all nine of the Mavericks’ second-quarter points after his scoreless first quarter.

But another 10-2 mini-run late in the second pushed the Sacramento lead to 12, up 58-46 at the break.

Finish the frame​


The Mavericks gave away cheap little runs at the end of the first and second quarters, forcing their struggling offense into tight spots going into the second and third quarters. The Kings outscored the Mavs 14-5 in the final 3:43 of the first before getting the better of Dallas, 14-6 over the final 4:01 of the half to extend their lead to 12 at halftime.

Dallas shot an abysmal 9-of-27 (33.3%) from the floor in the second quarter. The Kings’ offense left the door open for the Mavericks in the frame, shooting just 9-of-22 (40.9%) on the other end, but Dallas wilted when the moment beckoned. No juice. No gumption. No will. No execution.

The Mavericks finally showed signs of life late in the third, though. After DeRozan hit his second 3-pointer of the game to give the Kings a 74-64 lead with 2:45 left in the third, Dallas put together a 12-2 run to tie the game at 76-76 on Williams’ 3-point play with 35 seconds left in the quarter. Thompson finally hit his second 3-ball of the game a possession earlier on a nice find from Williams in secondary transition.

Scary moment for Flagg​

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Flagg took the worst of a knee-to-knee collision with 7:50 left in the third quarter, while defending an awkward-looking drive by Precious Achiuwa. Achiuwa scored on the play to give Sacramento a 62-55 lead. Flagg was helped off the floor but stayed with the team on the sideline before heading for the stationary bike to keep the knee loose. He was hopping around a little trying to shake off the pain of the collision before making his way back to the bench.

Flagg had 12 points on 5-of-10 shooting, five rebounds and four assists in the game at that point. He returned with 5:07 left in the third quarter sporting a welt on the inside of his knee, but no worse for wear. Flagg picked off an errant pass from Dennis Schroeder a minute later to start a fast break that ended in two free throws for Davis and cut the Kings’ lead to 69-62. He had a hitch in his giddy-up after getting fouled while corraling a defensive rebound with 2:12 left in the third, but was still able to finish a tip-dunk on Martin’s missed layup in transition with less than two minutes to play in the third.

Cash in the clutch​

BRANDON WILLIAMS SPLASH!

HE PUTS DALLAS AHEAD BY 2.

33.3 seconds left… Kings ball.

Watch here: https://t.co/nT0VTHYk5c pic.twitter.com/PrEQfc4JPN

— NBA (@NBA) January 7, 2026

Once again, the Mavs found themselves in a clutch-game situation down the stretch. Dallas came into Tuesday’s game 11-16 in clutch games this season. After falling down 84-79 on LaVine’s coast-to-coast fastbreak drive off a Gafford miss early in the fourth, the Mavs worked their way back to within one possession with five minutes left to play. Marshall stole the ball from LaVine on the right wing and drove for a transition score of his own to give the Mavericks an 88-87 lead with 4:02 to play, Dallas’ first lead since midway through the first quarter.

LaVine stripped Max Christie two possessions later and scored in transition to put Sacramento back in front, 91-88, with 3:36 left in the game, but Christie found Marshall open for a corner 3-pointer with less than two minutes to play to tie the game, 93-93. Williams’ pull-up jumper over Maxime Raynaud with 1:35 left gave Dallas a 95-93 advantage, but DeRozan rose up for a 3-pointer from the top of the key in response to swing things back in the Kings’ favor, 96-95, with 1:15 left. Flagg banked home a turnaround jumper in the game’s final minute, but DeRozan hit a dagger of a mid-range jumper coming off a screen with 42 ticks showing on the clock to give the Kings a 98-97 lead.

Out of a timeout, Flagg drove to his right, sucking in a second Sacramento defender. Flagg kicked it out to Williams for a huge 3-pointer from the right wing to pull the Mavs in front, 100-98, with just 33 seconds left. Both Scroeder and Westbrook missed 3-pointers on the Kings’ next possession, and Williams’ first 3-pointer of the game was good for a game-winner to halt Dallas’ four-game losing streak. He came into the game shooting just 18.8% from 3-point land on the season. Williams finished with 18 points off the bench for the Mavs on 7-of-13 from the field.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...ento-cooper-flagg-anthony-davis-demar-derozan
 
Dallas Mavericks New Year’s Resolutions mean a fresh start

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We’ve entered a new year, and while yes the year began nearly a week ago, a fresh start began in earnest this week. For most that means taking stock of lessons learned in the previous 365 and setting sights on actionable goals for a better you.

Might we suggest that for the Dallas Mavericks as well? A team in tailspin for the better part of the last 11 months received a lifeline over the summer in the form of Cooper Flagg. And while some changes, needed changes, have already taken place, this organization has plenty more to do.

So I turned to the only reliable source of truth and guidance in the year of our lord 2026 and asked several AI tools the most popular resolutions in the new year. We’ll use that technological hellscape as guru and apply it to a Mavericks team that needs to make some big decisions — some in the next few weeks.

Improve mental well-being​


“The reason a new year’s resolution is so hard to keep, is a year, is a year long,” sage words from comedian Josh Johnson. And look, we’re trying. Trying to remove the stink of 2025 and the memories of betrayal. But we’re also human.

Credit to this roster, and the coaching staff, because most nights they are putting in work and staying mostly competitive. That’s a credit to this team. But it’s also undeniable that the shell-shock of the last year has impacted not just the fanbase but the players who were around last season (and further back). It could take more time for the fan base to clear their minds and emotional resentments to the organization. But the front office needs to evaluate, especially before next month’s trade deadline, how to best position this team in the future and in turn improve the mental health of a team in desperate need of commitment to a new era.

Build healthier habits​


The Dallas Mavericks are currently 26th in three-point frequency and the 30th in three-point percentage. It is no surprise that there is little to praise on offense, and their outside shooting being a primary culprit. A team with a core of forwards and bigs who mostly need to operate inside 15-feet, and few ball handlers to facilitate anything in the half court will lead you to those rankings. And somehow the team is also 24th in paint touches on the season. All this gives you 28th in Offensive-rating.

This team needs to find shooting. Be it the trade market, or a primary focus in the summer, 2026 has to be about perimeter play. Without more options to stretch the floor defenses will never be forced to rotate, expand, and stay packed to the paint waiting for a slew of forwards to hit a brick wall. This roster doesn’t have those tools on paper so it must be found through future moves, and one other avenue, which leads us to…

Learn new skill​


Cooper Flagg has been everything advertised. His defense is somehow not been spoken of enough, his comfortability in transition offense is at a veteran level, and his ability to get into the restricted area out of isolation already feels like an automatic bucket.

But Cooper: you have to start taking threes. This isn’t about learning a new skill. You have it, tap back into it. Flagg re-expanding that part of his game in the halfcourt will be vital to his development.

I expect Flagg will start to find comfort in the perimeter in next month or two, much like he did in his lone season at Duke. Currently Flagg is averaging 3.4 attempts per game, connecting on just 27-percent. Last year at Duke, in the first 13 games of the season (November and December) he attempted 3.7 per game, also hitting on 27-percent. January forward at Duke his attempts per game were essentially the same, but he was hitting on nearly 45-percent from three. It would make sense if his hesitancy now is getting acclimated to the space (or lack) and getting comfortable with misses. But this season is about process, not results. Trusting the development process will be key and will pay dividends next year.

Save money & plan for the future​


This is perhaps the most vital resolution for the Dallas Mavericks, at the very least until summer. The giant question currently hanging over the team’s head is what happens with Anthony Davis. He’s expensive, not reliable to be on the floor consistently, and also reportedly in search of a large extension. One that could pay him nearly $70-million per year as he nears 40 years old. Whether that’s a good idea, for any team with Davis, is completely separate from the fact that the Mavericks are a lottery team operating at the second apron. It restricts what they can do with the roster while also facing stiff financial penalties.

You simply cannot continue that financially, especially when you’re a roster sniffing a top eight pick in the draft. These next several weeks are vital for a front office operating with interim co-general managers Michael Finley and Matt Riccardi. Finding a destination for Anthony Davis, as well as possibly moving veterans Klay Thompson, Daniel Gafford, D’Angelo Russell, Naji Marshall or some combination, is priority. Reset your books, restock draft capital, and start fresh in earnest with Cooper Flagg leading the way.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/maver...ons-2026-nba-cooper-flagg-anthony-davis-trade
 
3 Themes to be aware of when the Mavericks travel to face the Utah Jazz

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Fresh off of a 100-98 win over the lowly Sacramento Kings, your Dallas Mavericks (14-23) are set to begin game two of a three game road trip. The venue turns to Salt Lake City, where the Mavs will face off against the Utah Jazz. The Jazz, for their part, will be on the butt end of a back to back, having played in New Orleans on Wednesday evening. Because of that, the Mavericks will be favored. However, this team rarely does what they are supposed to, so it’s best that we don’t chalk this one into the win column.

What should you know before tipoff? Let’s dive in.

Travel issues​

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The main issue that has plagued the Mavericks this season is their inability to win games away from home. They’ve won just four contests away from the American Airlines Center, including Tuesday night’s win that required a double-digit comeback. This Utah team will very likely be shorthanded come Thursday night. Are the Mavericks going to be mature enough to handle their business? Early returns would say no, but that is why we play the games.

The Davis dilemma​

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It’s no secret that Anthony Davis is firmly on the trade block as we approach the early February trade deadline. According to multiple reports, Davis is far more interested in acquiring a new contract extension than he is in playing for any given city. Thus far, the Mavericks have waffled on extending the oft-injured big man. Are these trade talks going to affect he and/or the team? How long is the organization going to allow these rumors to press on without any action? Is a Trae Young trade going to affect the market for Davis? All things that are hanging over this team as they try to win ball games.

Keyonte George is for real​

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A tip of the hat is in order for the young Jazz guard, who has been absolutely cooking for a while now. George has LEAPED up to over 24 points per game scored in his third season, on both the highest volume and best efficiency of his career. For a guy that a lot in the league were ready to chalk up as an inefficient scoring guard, George has really flipped the script. Assuming he goes in this game, Dallas will have a steep challenge in stopping him, as George lit the Mavericks up for 37 last month.

How to watch​


Tipoff time is set for 8:00p CT from the Delta Center in Salt Lake City. Mavs TV, KFAA Channel 29 or NBA League Pass have you covered for the broadcast.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...ew-january-8-cooper-flagg-anthony-davis-trade
 
MMBets: The rollercoaster Mavericks visit the flailing Utah Jazz

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The Dallas Mavericks (14-23) are off to Utah in the second leg of their three-game road trip on Thursday at the Delta Center. The Jazz (12-24) played an overtime game on Wednesday in Oklahoma City and lost, extending their current losing skid to five games. The story with the Mavericks right now is a potential trade of Anthony Davis, but Davis is playing and has helped the Mavericks win two games in a row. This is a great matchup for either team’s leading scorer, Davis for Dallas and Keyonte George for Utah. The Mavericks will need to overcome their offensive woes if they want to take advantage of tired legs from the Jazz and eek out just their fifth road win this season.

Game intangibles


Dallas Mavericks (14-23) at Memphis Grizzlies (12-24)

Tipoff: 8:00p CT at the Delta Center in Salt Lake City, UT

How to watch: The game will be televised locally on KFAA Channel 29, and will stream on Mavs TV for anyone in the Mavericks media market. For those outside of the viewing area, NBA League Pass will have you covered.

Odds via the Fanduel Sportsbook as of 12:30PM CST


Spread: Dallas -6.5 (-108)

Over/Under: 240.5 (-110/-110)

Moneyline: Dallas -245

Player props

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Keyonte George over 25.5 points (-120)

Anthony Davis over 38.5 points + rebounds (-114)


As I mentioned, these two guys have excellent matchups. Without Walker Kessler, the Jazz are weak inside on defense and Davis should be able to get what he wants. He did not play in these teams’ first matchup, but historically he has dominated the matchup with Lauri Markkanen, averaging 27.4 points and 14.2 rebounds in their last five matchups.

George is the kind of guard that kills Dallas, and has been on a tear this season. He had 37 against the Mavericks earlier this year, and has put up over 28 points a night at home since December 1.

Game sides

Jazz +6.5 (-112)

Under 240.5 points (-110)


These plays are simple. The Mavericks do not blow people out, and given that the Jazz are on a back-to-back, this will be an easy under. The ceiling for the Mavericks tonight is winning 115-111, but I could see Dallas dropping this game outright. The best day to play after a tough loss is the next day, and Utah has what it takes to right the wrongs from a night ago at home. Thursday’s game could get ugly on offense, and this is a spot where the Mavericks traditionally disappoint.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...ng-preview-and-predictions-fanduel-sportsbook
 
Player Grades: Recapping Mavericks vs. Jazz

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Coming off a tight win Tuesday night, the Dallas Mavericks took on the Utah Jazz looking for continued success, but lost a 116-114 contest in Salt Lake City similar to their last matchup with the Jazz when they allowed a big run to let one get away.

Let’s get to the grades!

Cooper Flagg: A

26 PTS / 10 REB / 8 AST / 3 STL / 1 BLK – 38 MIN


Flagg was excellent all night and arguably should have gotten more looks given how well he was playing. Regardless, his 10-for-18 shooting, including 3-for-6 from downtown made him the Mavs’ leading scorer. His near triple-double keeps his grade high despite the turnover total and four fouls.

Max Christie: B+

16 PTS / 4 REB / 4 AST / 0 STL / 0 BLK – 32 MIN


Coming off a rough shooting night in Tuesday’s game, Christie put that behind him and got right back to doing what he had been doing in recent weeks. He hit a huge three just as the game officially became “clutch” which put the Mavs up by seven at the time. Although Dallas didn’t close it out, Christie shot well (5-for-9; 3-for-6 from deep) and had a solid all-around game.

Naji Marshall: B

17 PTS / 2 REB / 4 AST / 0 STL / 0 BLK – 37 MIN


There are not enough reverse-superlatives to articulate how bad a turnover Marshall committed on an inbounds pass with under a minute remaining. It had no chance in any plane of reality whatsoever, and served as the cherry on top of Dallas blowing a winnable game as Utah went on a run to close it. To his credit, he otherwise had a solid game on 7-for-11 shooting and only one turnover, but it just felt a bit empty overall.

Anthony Davis: B

21 PTS / 11 REB / 4 AST / 1 STL / 1 BLK – 35 MIN


This is the second game in a row that Davis’ grade does not appear commensurate with his box score, but watching the game told a different story than the number from my perspective. He hit 50% of his 20 shot attempts, but Davis got roasted on multiple occasions on the defensive end and too often clogged up the paint offensively, preventing his teammates from executing and getting to their spots. I’d respectfully comment he should not have been the leading shot taker on the team either. Davis left after a somewhat bizarre hand injury late in the fourth quarter, that as of this writing, has not been diagnosed and disclosed publicly other than coach Jason Kidd acknowledging Davis suffered a hand injury during his postgame media availability.

Daniel Gafford: D

0 PTS / 7 REB / 0 AST / 0 STL / 0 BLK – 25 MIN


Gafford grabbed a handful of boards, but otherwise this was a no-show.

Ryan Nembhard: C+

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


There wasn’t much doing in this one. Nembhard couldn’t find his stroke, especially from downtown (1-for-4) and turned it over three times. It won’t show in the box score, but Nembhard gets bonus points for his relentless hassling of Jazz inbounders and full court pressure which helped the Mavs close the half on a nice run. That effort helped him to the best plus/minus on the team (by far) of plus-13.

Brandon Williams: N/A

2 PTS / 3 REB / 1 AST / 0 STL / 0 BLK – 9 MIN


Williams unfortunately exited the game due to sickness and did not return, so we’ll refrain from grading his partial performance.

Klay Thompson: A

23 PTS / 3 REB / 5 AST / 0 STL / 0 BLK – 29 MIN


Thompson found his shot since last time out, and aside from two bizarre turnovers in the early going, he scored nearly a point per minute played early on to keep Dallas close while Utah put on a dunk contest in the first quarter. From there, it only continued. He finished shooting 7-for-13, with six of those makes coming from downtown. His assist total was also his season high. It’s a shame one of his better performances of the season ended in a loss.

Final thoughts


Dallas looked like the Washington General in the first quarter. The nature of their turnovers was almost comical and would make Benny Hill proud. They were literally falling down, double-dribbling and making horrific passes. Amazingly and despite the start, they had the game won but allowed Utah to make a big run to close things out. This was a bad loss exacerbated by the injury to Anthony Davis. Whether you want him here or want him traded, a long-term hand injury could spoil your day either 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/dalla...kkanen-mavs-lose-116-114-anthony-davis-injury
 
Stats rundown: 3 Stats from The Mavs’ clutch loss to the Jazz, 116-114

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The Dallas Mavericks lost to the Utah Jazz, 116-114, but boy does Cooper Flagg love playing in Utah. He lead Dallas with 26 points, and was the only Maverick in the starting five to finish the game with a positive +/-, at +3.

Lauri Markkanen led all scorers with 33 and was supported with 19 from Keyonte George, who continues to play great in his breakout season.

68: points scored by Cooper Flagg in two games against Utah​


In his first game against the Jazz, Cooper set the high-scoring mark for his young career, putting up 42 points in what became his “I’ve arrived” game. In that first matchup, though, Flagg required 15 free throws to get to 42. Tonight, he earned just four, and made three of them.

It was his shooting from the floor — 10-of-18 from the floor and 3-of-6 from three — that powered the majority of his 26-point night. He also finished with eight assists and 10 rebounds, just two assists shy of his first triple-double, and what would be the youngest player to do so in league history. The watch continues. It’s just a shame both of those impressive nights from Flagg have ended with a loss (well, depending on what you want from this season)

-3: Pivotal shot taken off the board​


With Dallas holding a 107-103 lead with under four minutes to go in the fourth quarter (a clutch game, obviously), Cooper Flagg hit what looked like an astounding circus shot. He caught an inbounds pass, spun, and fired up a three from the corner with under a second to go on the shot clock. Nailed it.

Initially, the bucket was counted, but upon review, the shot was just late and resulted in a shot clock violation. So, instead of pushing the lead to seven, Utah got the ball, and Lauri Markkannen promptly went and laid in a hook shot, the start of an 11-1 Jazz run that vaulted them ahead of Dallas with a lead they never surrendered. The 3-pointer that got removed from the board was more than just a loss of points; it shifted the momentum in a game that had been back and forth all night.

1: season-altering finger injury​


Anthony Davis left the game in the fourth quarter with a finger injury. He went to the lockerroom and didn’t return. In a post-game press conference, all Coach Kidd could say about it was that Davis had injured his left hand.

With Atlanta moving Trae Young to the Wizards, it really felt like progress was being made to get AD sent to the team that has been most closely linked with Dallas in trade discussions. How much value AD possessed on the market has been hotly debated, but AD, with an injury to his hand that’s going to keep him out multiple weeks, is certainly going to be much less than it was before.

Dallas is attempting to tread an impossibly narrow path in retooling around Flagg with the few remaining assets they have to rebuild the team on the fly. Getting even less for AD means there’s going to be an even smaller room for error in this rebuild.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...from-the-mavs-clutch-loss-to-the-jazz-116-114
 
On the eve of a possible trade, Anthony Davis predictably injures himself, yet again

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Anthony Davis went to the locker room late in the fourth quarter of the Dallas Mavericks’ 116-114 loss at the Utah Jazz on Thursday, after brushing his hand against Lauri Markkanen’s jersey as Markkanen drove past Davis along the baseline on his way to two of his game-high 33 points.

Davis doubled over in pain immediately and walked out of bounds, clearing the lane for Markkanen to hit a little reverse layup as part of a 9-1 run that killed the Mavericks’ late comeback attempt at the Delta Center.

He seemed to know immediately. He was obviously in pain on the bench, a team trainer came over and the two headed straight for the locker room after a few seconds of back-and-forth. That sequence would seem to portend that the injury was more than just a jammed finger.

There were no updates on the nature or severity of the injury immediately after the game, but if Davis’ latest injury is anything more serious than a sprain, it could cloud the team’s outlook as the NBA’s Feb. 5 Trade Deadline approaches.

“He hurt his left hand,” Mavericks head coach Jason Kidd said in his postgame comments. “That’s all we have.”

It’s not subterfuge; the injury had just occurred about 20 minutes before Kidd gave that answer. But on the other hand, this is not an encouraging quote at all. Any kind of prolonged hesitation on the team’s part to offer an update on his status could derail the team’s ability to get off Davis’ salary as soon as possible and switch gears to focus on building around rookie superstar Cooper Flagg, who scored 26 points, grabbed 10 rebounds and dished eight assists in the loss on Thursday.

Davis was expected to be traded before the deadline, likely for a combination of expiring contracts, spare parts and/or draft compensation. The Atlanta Hawks and Toronto Raptors were two of the latest teams rumored to have interest in acquiring Davis.

watch AD's hand pic.twitter.com/29Dc364ld2

— MavsHighlights (@MavsHighlights) January 9, 2026

This hand injury could end up setting the Mavericks back in a big way. It came at the worst possible moment. His stat-padded good nights have buoyed his trade value to this point. If he’s on the shelf for anything longer than a week, you’d have to think Atlanta, Toronto, Golden State, Chicago and any other potential suitors would immediately vanish into the mist. And if the Mavericks are unable to move Davis before the trade deadline, they may be stuck with him until 2028.

That would put Dallas to a decision as soon as this offseason on whether to extend him when he becomes eligible for his next deal in August. The correct decision there, given Davis’ staggering injury history and franchise-crushing $120-million combined salary cap hit over the next two years, is not only no, but hell no. The list of potential teams interested in Davis’ services after this season will no doubt shrink, since his agent, Rich Paul, has made it known that Davis wants to play for a team that will extend him. If there is no interest in Davis outside the Mavericks, he would, at that point, almost certainly opt in to his player option for 2027-28, leaving Dallas even more hamstrung under the salary cap than they already are.

The Mavs are positioned well with Flagg as a tentpole to come out the other side of the worst trade in modern sports history with a chance to be relevant again in a couple of years. But that’s only if they’re able to offload Davis before the trade deadline or after this season. A 35-year-old Davis still eating up 35% of the salary cap in 2027 would be catastrophic.

That’s why moving him for spare parts and draft picks is such a valuable option for this team — anything that helps them avoid that fate is the best outcome for Dallas. This hand injury is the perfect microcosm for the Anthony Davis Experience in Dallas. This flukey hand injury is exactly why the best reason for trading Davis is simply to be rid of Davis. Yea, he looks good on some nights and still has the ability to influence actual wins against actual good teams in his best moments, but those moments come too few and too far between. They will come even fewer and even farther between over the next two years, if only because he continues to prove his inability to stay healthy.

There’s nothing sustainable about Davis’ good moments, because who knows when his hand is going to brush against someone’s jersey, sending him straight to the locker room the next time? The prognosis on this hand injury will have a ripple effect on the Mavs’ future for years to come.

UPDATE: NBA insider Marc Stein reported late Friday morning that imaging was scheduled on Friday to assess the severity of Davis’ injury.

Imaging is scheduled for today to determined the severity of Anthony Davis’ hand injury sustained Thursday night in Utah, league sources say.

The Mavericks are traveling to Chicago and Davis’ status for his annual homecoming game Saturday is not yet known. https://t.co/mwL3YF4LQh

— Marc Stein (@TheSteinLine) January 9, 2026

The fact that imaging is even necessary suggests that there is at least some possibility that the injury is more severe than a simple jammed finger or hand. Davis’ status for Saturday’s game at the Chicago Bulls remains in question as of Friday afternoon.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/maver...y-davis-predictably-injures-himself-yet-again
 
NBA Power Rankings Watch: the Mavericks are at a crossroads

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There is a frenetic anxiety mounting in the atmosphere around the Dallas Mavericks. As the league inches closer to the NBA trade deadline the unknown possibilities for the Mavericks has left fans feeling they’ve entered the final episodes in a season of Breaking Bad. It ramped up more when now-former Atlanta Hawks guard Trae Young was traded to the Washington Wizards — in what seemed a first domino to the Mavericks trading Anthony Davis to the Hawks. Only for Davis to exit Thursday’s game in the final minutes and head straight to the locker room with a new injury. An injury that could keep him out longterm and remove immediate chances at a deal.

That’s all separate from the X’s and O’s and game results, which have dipped back down save for a few wins against quality opponents. The organization is at a crossroads. Any thoughts of “waiting to see” what develops with the current roster need to be squashed. Action to build anew must happen now. That’s the truth lying just below the surface of this week’s Power Rankings Watch.

ESPN

Rank: 23​

Last week: 24​

Anthony Davis watch will dominate discussions about the Mavericks until the trade deadline. He’d be happy to stay in Dallas if he gets a contract extension this summer, but it’s a stretch to say that would be a logical decision for the Mavs as they built around teenage prodigy Cooper Flagg. Klutch Sports CEO Rich Paul, who represents Davis, will play a significant role in the search for a trade partner willing to make that kind of commitment to the 10-time All-Star this offseason. — MacMahon

The Athletic

Rank: 23 (Tier 4: Not the Tier to Fear)​

Last week: 26​

2026 resolution: Maximize Cooper Flagg

Head coach Jason Kidd said that Cooper Flagg has to touch, rub and hold the rookie wall. I’m surprised Kidd didn’t say that Flagg will need to ride the snake to get through the rookie wall as well. Certainly, he’ll be headed for that method with Flagg starting at point guard once again, though Dallas was able to survive a rough Flagg scoring game against the Rockets and get its first win in five games.

NBA

Rank: 25​

Last week: 26​

Anthony Davis missed only two games with his latest injury, played 76 total minutes over his first two games back, and led the Mavs (with 26 points, 12 rebounds and five blocks) to a win over the Rockets on Saturday.

Three takeaways

  • The win on Saturday ended a four-game losing streak and was the Rockets’ worst offensive game of the season (104 points on 101 possessions). The five games prior were the Mavs’ worst stretch of defense (120.3 points allowed per 100), but they still rank in the top 10 on that end of the floor, having seen the league’s sixth biggest improvement from last season. Of course, a lot of that improvement is from the league’s second-biggest drop in opponent 3-point percentage, and time will tell if it sustains.
  • The Mavs beat the Rockets despite shooting just 3-for-10 from mid-range and making only eight 3-pointers themselves. They have the league’s second-biggest differential between their field goal percentage in the paint (57.5%, 16th) and their effective field goal percentage on shots from outside the paint (48.2%, 29th). Naji Marshall, Brandon Williams, Davis and Cooper Flagg have the fifth, sixth, 10th and 12th biggest differentials, respectively, among 175 players with at least 75 shots in the paint and at least 75 shots outside.
  • The Mavs erased a 17-point deficit in Portland last Monday and had a wide-open 3-pointer for the lead with seven seconds left, but Marshall missed that shot and they lost what could have been a huge game regarding the Western Conference Play-In picture. They’ve now lost their last seven road games, with four of those seven losses having come to other teams in the bottom seven in the West.

Coming up: Overall, the Mavs are just 3-8 (only the Kings have been worse) in games played between the seven West teams with losing records. The three-game trip that begins Tuesday includes games in Sacramento and Utah.

Bleacher Report

Rank: 25​

Last week: 22​

It’s time for the Dallas Mavericks to surrender their pursuit of a play-in spot (assuming they haven’t done it already).

Trade Anthony Davis, enjoy the big Cooper Flagg nights (like Thursday, when he had 26 points, 10 rebounds and eight assists in a loss to the Utah Jazz) and chase better lottery odds.

There’s some value in playing high-leverage games early in your career, but the play-in would likely give Dallas just one or two of those. And that doesn’t come close to measuring up to the potential of a Flagg pairing with one of the top prospects in this upcoming draft.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/maver...ny-davis-injury-espn-athletic-bleacher-report
 
Stats Rundown: 3 numbers to know from the Mavericks blowout loss to the Bulls

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The Dallas Mavericks got ran off the floor, literally, against the Chicago Bulls 125-107 Saturday night in Chicago. Dallas drops their second straight game against a losing team, their first game since Anthony Davis injured his hand in the loss against the Jazz on Thursday night.

This was a no-good, very-bad game for the Mavericks, who trailed for the entire game. It was a rare blowout loss for the Mavericks, losing by as much as 27 points in the fourth quarter. Rookie point guard Ryan Nembhard led Dallas with 16 points, while Bulls guard Coby White led all scorers with a game-high 22 points.

This game wasn’t very fun to watch, and was potentially a bad foreshadowing of things to come as the Mavericks attempt to push the season forward with Davis expected to miss at least the next month, maybe even more. Let’s just get to the numbers.

38-8: Bulls advantage in fastbreak points​


Chicago rammed the ball down Dallas’ throat the entire night. In a battle between two fast-based teams, it was the Bulls that looked like a blur in the open court, while the Mavericks were a step-slow and sluggish from opening tip. That 38-8 fastbreak point edge is the worst the Mavericks have lost the transition battle all season.

The Mavericks only had 14 turnovers, which isn’t bad, but nearly all of them were catastrophic, live-ball turnovers. The Bulls scored 17 points off those 14 turnovers, which was honestly a let off considering how many opportunities the Mavericks handed them. Even without the turnovers, the Bulls raced past the Mavericks at every opportunity. Dallas was very jumper heavy tonight, attempting 35 three pointers and 12 midrange jumpers. That left only 44 of the Mavericks 91 shots in the paint, and all those long misses fueled the Bulls’ transition attack.

5: Cooper Flag’s combined rebounds, assists, blocks, steals​


The Maverick star rookie was coming off big-time performances against the Kings and the Jazz, and this felt like maybe Flagg’s worst game of his young career. He’s scored fewer than the 11 points he posted against the Bulls, but it was everything else and his disposition that felt off.

Flagg had 1 rebound, two assists, one block, and one steal. He had just as many turnovers (five) as he did all those categories combined, which shows how invisible Flagg was in this game. He looked a bit shell-shocked, and maybe hit just a piece of that rookie wall that was talked about prior to the last two games. There was never a point in the game where Flagg looked locked in or engaged, and that trickled down to the rest of the team.

Of course, Flagg is a 19-year-old rookie. He’s allowed to have bad games, especially with how hard he normally plays. This was just an off night, but hopefully it’s nothing more than that.

0: Sh*t’s given​


I’m being a bit glib with that headline, but the Mavericks all season have prided themselves on if nothing else, playing extremely hard. It hasn’t translated to wins, as Dallas entered the night still outside of the West’s play-in picture, but it’s at least made all these losses watchable and competitive — Dallas overwhelmingly leads the league in clutch games played, and despite all the adversity this group has faced this season, it never felt like the team was on the verge of giving up, even when they had plenty of reasons to do so.

For the first time in a long time, it felt like the Mavericks gave up. They were due for an effort like this, as I can’t imagine it’s easy to continually bring A-level effort after every disappointing loss. It’s commendable that we’ve gotten to Jan. 10 and this is the first time it’s felt like the Mavericks let go of the rope in a game they should have been in against a sub-par opponent.

But I can’t help but wonder. The loss to the Jazz on Thursday was as deflating as they come, with the Mavericks fighting like hell to claw their way back, only to fumble the game away at the end with Anthony Davis suffering another weeks, if not months, long injury. To add insult to that injury, Davis’ injury caused the Mavericks to punt on two crucial possessions in the final minutes of the game, with Davis playing one-armed and out of the play in pain while the Mavericks offense broke down, and then the Jazz scoring easily while Davis couldn’t do anything other than hold his hand in pain.

It’s only human nature to feel an immense let down after that. My main thought watching this game was “was that injury the last straw?” Dallas has been holding their season together as well as possible considering everything that’s happened, but maybe the Davis injury is the start of a real slide. Every Maverick looked dejected toward the end of that Jazz game, and the Davis injury and news that he’ll be out for a while might have hit the team especially hard. It reminded me of the first game the Mavericks played last season after the Luka Doncic trade, getting ran down by the Cavaliers while every player looked like they were at a funeral. To the Mavericks credit, they regained their competitive edge after that and fought to make the play-in — this Mavericks team has a similar opportunity, but it must be hard to have to continuously muster that energy again and again. Dallas’ margin for error is basically non-existent without Davis. Tonight looked like a team that knew their season was over. For the rest of us sickos still tuning in, we can only hope that’s not the case.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...-from-the-mavericks-blowout-loss-to-the-bulls
 
Player Grades: Recapping the Mavericks’ 127-107 loss at the Chicago Bulls

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The Dallas Mavericks (14-25) began a new era of sorts on Saturday night against the Chicago Bulls (18-20) — one where Anthony Davis is out for the foreseeable future. The Mavs came in with a 4-14 record in games Davis sits, and ended up with another loss after a 125-107 beat down.

Let’s get to the grades!

Ryan Nembhard: B

16 PTS / 3 REB / 6 AST / 0 STL / 0 BLK – 29 MIN


Aside from stealing the ball from Cooper Flagg and essentially passing it to Bulls’ Matas Buzelis for a layup, Nembhard was good in his return to the starting lineup. He led all Mavs in scoring, though that may be more of an indictment of the Mavs than merit for Nembhard. He shot well overall (5-for-11; 3-for-6 from deep) in the loss.

Max Christie: B-

10 PTS / 3 REB / 2 AST / 0 STL / 0 BLK – 27 MIN


Christie wasn’t bad, but wasn’t especially good — a theme for the Mavs on Saturday. He shot a solid 4-for-9 and 2-for-5 from downtown, but didn’t log particularly high minutes in a blowout.

Cooper Flagg: D

11 PTS / 1 REB / 2 AST / 1 STL / 1 BLK – 28 MIN


Simply put, this was Flagg’s worst NBA game since his bumpy start to his rookie season, so hopefully it’s now behind him and he can get back to the supernova status he achieved in December. His turnover total (five) exceeded almost every other primary statistic, which tells you all you need to know.

Naji Marshall: C

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


A pregame stat graphic on the game broadcast showed Marshall holds the fourth-highest field goal percentage of all NBA players under 6’7”. Then the game happened, and he decided to disprove the graphic. The otherwise highly efficient Marshall struggled with his shot (4-for-11). Aside from a nice steals total, he just couldn’t get much going throughout the night.

Daniel Gafford: D

6 PTS / 7 REB / 0 AST / 0 STL / 1 BLK – 25 MIN


Gafford is in position to capitalize on newfound opportunity, but it didn’t quite materialize on Saturday. He missed a disproportionate number of shots, saw passes go through his hands, and should have had more rebounds as the primary big in the Mavs’ lineup.

Klay Thompson: C-

10 PTS / 2 REB / 1 AST / 0 STL / 1 BLK – 20 MIN


Thompson shot 4-for-10 from the floor but had the worst plus/minus on the team with -19. Thompson provided little boost to a team in desperate need of anything. Like so many of his teammates, this one was forgettable.

Moussa Cisse: A-

5 PTS / 10 REB / 0 AST / 2 STL / 3 BLK – 19 MIN


In a game like this, one could argue no one deserves a grade in the A range, but individual performance is key. Cisse got the call from the big club and made the most of his opportunity as the only player who actually cared to rebound (the only Mav in double-figure boards) and actually played defense while the Bulls were getting anything and everything they wanted. Five stocks to go along with 10 boards in under 20 minutes made him the unlikely star of the night for Dallas. He hurt his shoulder in the fourth quarter, but managed to stay in the game.

Jaden Hardy: B

14 PTS / 1 REB / 0 AST / 0 STL / 0 BLK – 19 MIN


His game mainly took place in garbage time, so that factors into the equation here, but scoring more points than minutes played on shooting the likes of which virtually no one else could achieve (5-for-8 overall; 4-for-7 from deep). Two turnovers and a foul in limited minutes is a bit much.

Final Thoughts


Without Anthony Davis (and Dereck Lively and P.J. Washington), the Mavs lost the rebounding battle against the Bulls, and it might be something we all want to get used to for a while. Dallas was outrebounded 52-42 and the Bulls had nearly as many defensive rebounds (41) as the Mavs had total rebounds. They will be rolling out relatively fewer big men and a variety of players who don’t normally get much floor time for the foreseeable future, so this may be a trend.

The Bulls had the largest lead they’ve had in any game all season long, a dubious distinction to hang on the Mavs. This is not a particularly daunting opponent, and yet they made the Mavs look like G-League team. Let’s hope this was a one-off and Dallas can get back to their endless run of clutch games quickly.

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...lls-125-107-cooper-flagg-anthony-davis-injury
 
Mavericks vs. Nets Preview: Grasping for 2 reasons to watch Dallas host Brooklyn

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It’s over for your little Dallas Mavericks (14-25) on a number of different fronts as the team prepares to host the Brooklyn Nets (11-24) on Monday at American Airlines Center. Anthony Davis’ finger hurts, so any lingering hope of finding a back-door into the playoff picture is all but gone. Anthony Davis’ finger hurts, so any hope of exciting activity at the NBA Trade Deadline must now be replaced by thinking of what the team can get for the likes of Klay Thompson, Daniel Gafford and/or Naji Marshall. But hey, the silver lining amid all the finger discomfort and general malaise is that an absolutely stacked draft class awaits the NBA also-rans the Mavericks find themselves swimming with as the 2025-26 season nears its midpoint.

For now, fellow also-ran Brooklyn stands in the Mavs’ way of a few more lottery balls on Monday. It’s a hell of a thing to watch your favorite team play and know that the best result in the long run is a loss to a bad team, but here we are.

The last time these two teams met, on Dec. 12, Dallas took a 119-111 win in Brooklyn, behind 24 and 14 from Davis and 22 and eight from rookie sensation Cooper Flagg. That win came during the Mavs’ mirage of six wins in eight games after Davis came back from the calf injury that kept him out for 14 games. One adductor strain and some ligament damage later, Davis will likely be out for a couple of months at least — he might even be on the shelf for the rest of the season if he chooses to have surgery on his finger.

So why even peer between two fingers as your head lay in your hands at the horror show that is sure to unfold on Monday at the AAC? Here are three reasons.

Break through the rookie wall​


Flagg is coming off an 11-point performance (4-of-13 shooting) in Saturday’s 125-107 drubbing at the Chicago Bulls and has had three off games in his last five. Without Davis for the Dallas offense to lean on, Flagg needs to take this thing over the rest of the way. You’d love to see him break through the little mini-rookie wall he’s hit lately and provide a few highlights along the way, as he is wont to do in his rookie season.

Flagg needs to be involved early and often to help the Mavs get off to a better start against the lowly Nets. He has done a good job of letting each game come to him, but while that’s happening, Dallas has looked lost on offense and passive on defense to start too many games recently.

He had 26 and 10 in Thursday’s 116-114 loss at the Utah Jazz and 20 points on 8-of-15 shooting in Tuesday’s 100-98 win at the Sacramento Kings, but in two games before those and one since, Flagg has combined to shoot just 12-of-40 (30%) from the field.

The Mavs need a dose of hero ball from the young man who swooped in to the team’s rescue after a stroke of miraculous NBA Draft Lottery luck. The Rookie of the Year race is on between Flagg and his Duke teammate Kon Knueppel, and Flagg needs to go and grab it instead of letting it come to him if and when it will. We’re grasping for something to hang onto here.

Who else?​


With Davis’ trade value stuck in a crater, who is going to ride shotgun with Flagg from here on out? We’d love to see something from Thompson, Gafford and/or Marshall, the Mavs’ last best trade assets. Any one of those three could help a contender, and a stretch of good form from that trio could help the Mavs’ pump-and-dump scheme before the deadline.

Marshall has been solid to very good this season and is likely a starter the rest of the way, or at least as long as P.J. Washington is sidelined with his ankle injury. Marshall comes into Monday’s game averaging 13.4 points on 53.5% shooting from the floor, to go along with 4.6 rebounds, 2.6 assists and a steal per game this year. That mirrors his production from last year, which was the best year of Marshall’s NBA career. His toughness and skill in the paint has definite value, and his contract should make him an attractive option for contending teams looking to enhance their roster.

Thompson has shown flashes, but his 3-point shooting is down this year, at 35.8%. He’s only getting 22 minutes per game, fewer than even the 24.4 he played in his rookie season way back in 2011-12 with the Golden State Warriors. He’s been a little better of late, shooting it at just a hair over 37% since the start of December. One heater before now and Feb. 5 may be all it takes for some contender to convince themself that they’re one Klay away from a deep playoff run, and that is just the kind of small win the Mavericks need between now and then.

Thompson signed with Dallas, expecting to be on the receiving end of some of the highest-quality looks of his career, due to the all-everything basketball savant Luka Dončić playing beside him. Without that generational shot-creating force, he looks average on a bad team, scoring just over 11 points per game this season.

Gafford has been an eye sore for most of this year after limping into the season following his own ankle injury in training camp. He’s never looked quite right and has alluded to that in several postgame press conferences. He’s not the best rebounding big, and he doesn’t have any post moves, but the Mavs need … something, anything out of Gafford in the next month if he can be packaged in a trade for a draft pick coming back.

How to watch​


The Mavericks host the Nets on Monday at American Airlines Center, with tipoff scheduled for 7:30 p.m. The game will be televised locally on KFAA Channel 29 and on sister stations throughout the Mavs’ regional viewership area. It will be streamed on MavsTV and through NBA Leauge Pass where avialale.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...llas-host-brooklyn-cooper-flagg-anthony-davis
 
MMBets: the Mavericks will try to avoid a third consecutive embarrassing loss

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The Mavericks are back home after a three-game road trip to face the Brooklyn Nets for a second time this season. Their first matchup was exactly one month ago, where Dallas won 119-111. This time around, the Mavericks will be without Anthony Davis and possibly P.J. Washington, while the Nets will not have first-round pick Egor Demin. Still, Nets’ leading scorer Michael Porter Jr. will be in the lineup, and he has caused a lot of problems for Dallas in the past. With how the Mavericks have looked the last few games, they will need to lean on home court advantage to have any shot of not disappointing again.

Game intangibles


Dallas Mavericks (14-25) vs Brooklyn Nets (11-24)

Tipoff: 7:30p CT at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, TX

How to watch: The game will be televised locally on KFAA Channel 29, or streaming on Mavs TV for anyone in the Mavericks media market. For those outside of the viewing area, NBA League Pass will have you covered.

Odds via the Fanduel Sportsbook as of 1:00PM CST


Spread: Dallas -4 (-106)

Over/Under: 219.5 (-112/-108)

Moneyline: Dallas -164

Player props

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Cooper Flagg over 35.5 points + rebounds + assists (-106)

Michael Porter Jr. to score 30+ points (+164)


Cooper Flagg will not have two bad games in a row. The Nets have the fifth-worst defense in their six games in January, and Flagg was able to get 22 points, five rebounds, and eight assists in these teams’ last matchup. Porter Jr. is a matchup nightmare for Dallas and had 34 points in their first meeting. He is coming off a bad game in the last contest he played in as well, so expect a duel from these two tonight.

Game sides

Nets +4 (-114)

Over 219.5 points (-112)


The Mavericks should not be favored against anyone right now. Not with the laundry list of injuries they have, certainly not with their incentive to lose. The Nets are not necessarily competitive either, but they do have guys that pose a threat to whatever Mavericks defense is left. The first meeting had 230 points; this one should have a similar amount.

Source: https://www.mavsmoneyball.com/dalla...ng-preview-and-predictions-fanduel-sportsbook
 
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