In an interview with ESPN’s Malika Andrews during All-Star weekend (YouTube link), star guard Kyrie Irving called for the Mavericks to “tailor back” their criticism of Luka Doncic, who was shockingly traded to the Lakers prior to the deadline earlier this month. As Grant Afseth writes for Athlon Sports, there have been numerous media leaks that have been critical of Doncic in the aftermath of the deal while glossing over how impactful he was during his time with the team.
“Part of our job every day to deal with the public space, but there were real relationships that were built behind the scenes that will transcend just the basketball court, coaching, and then upper management,” Irving told ESPN. “I know that for my own peace of mind, just because we not only had two years together, but we got a chance to know each other as men.
“Hopefully, we can tailor back on some of the public criticism aspects of it and really just maintain the kindness and the compassion that we have for each other that’s real every day, not just one moment or a sound bite that ends up being described as something that could be taken out of context. That’s what I feel like is going on right now. People are highly emotional. I’m not the one to shun anybody, whether in a public forum or behind the scenes, and trying not to have that happen.”
Here’s more on the Mavs:
- In an in-depth feature story for ESPN.com, Michael Rothstein examines the local fallout from arguably the most stunning trade in NBA history, as well as the team’s botched handling of the aftermath, which included censoring Doncic out of a promotional video on Friday morning. One longtime Mavericks fan who is also the co-founder and managing partner of a local public relations firm said the trade and fallout were handled “atrociously,” according to Rothstein. “If all of them were aligned and able to articulate their rationale without bashing Luka,” said Stephen Reiff, “I think it would have helped, and I think it would have gone away quicker. [It] has made it a lot worse.”
- Part of management’s rationale behind the deal was the idea of featuring a massive, defense-first frontcourt, with P.J. Washington at small forward, Anthony Davis at power forward and Daniel Gafford at center. As Christian Clark of The Athletic observes, that trio looked promising together through about three quarters on February 8 against Houston, but then Washington (ankle) and Davis (adductor strain) went down with injuries, followed by Gafford sustaining a Grade 3 MCL sprain on Feb. 10. Due to a litany of injuries up front (second-year center Dereck Lively has been out since January due to an ankle fracture), the Mavs have instead had to scramble and go small, Clark notes. “I’d say our goals are still obtainable,” head coach Jason Kidd said Thursday. “It’s a matter of, ‘Can we get healthy?’“
- Kidd dodged a question about whether Davis’ “good progress” means he’ll avoid surgery, tweets Mike Curtis of The Dallas Morning News. However, it certainly sounds like Davis is trending in the right direction. “I’m not a doctor,” Kidd said. “(Davis’ reevaluation is) in two weeks. I think you’ll get a better understanding of what has to take place but right now he’s doing great. He’s in the weight room. He was shooting on the court. A lot of positive things for him. I don’t know if that means surgery, but I think we’re all excited to see him back to work.”
- Kidd also gave an update on Caleb Martin on Thursday, per Curtis (Twitter link). Acquired from Philadelphia in a trade involving Quentin Grimes and second-round picks, Martin still isn’t doing contact work as he recovers from a hip injury. “Caleb is doing better,” Kidd said. “I don’t know if you guys were in there when he was doing some dribbling and shooting on the court. No contact, but he is trending in the right direction. He feels better.”
I feel for Mark Cuban but he was stupid enough to sell controlling interest. I don’t see them winning a championship this year. OkC will eat them alive.
Makes me wonder if Cuban was having money problems to sell it like he did. He tried talking them out of that bad trade.
I think he’s gonna be ok.
That same OKC which this same season went 1-3 against the Mavs, only winning the one game Luka did play? If there is a team OKC struggles against is the Mavs.
Obviously any team missing all its bigs will struggle against anyone, but if most of them get healthy again by April nobody is eating anyone alive here.
If they can get healthy and click before the playoffs begin. I think they’ll roll over OKC. PJ wasn’t traded
Kyrie of course would say that…He has the most to gain…he has the leverage now to get the Max Contract he is seeking.
remember Kyrie took a pay cut coming to Dallas after the Brooklyn fiasco. He took $40 mil for 3 years…below the max. Now he will get the Max with Luka not there.
Roster imbalances:
Mavs face issues with roster balance, lacking adequate depth on the back court
Both Irving and Klay are overrated.
Mavs notes for the next few decades until they are sold on…
They are doomed…
That is all…
I like this Mavs team short term if healthy
They have more than a punchers chance vs anybody in the west any given series
Kyrie possibly becomes the most exciting player in the playoffs if they move along given Kidd probably just lets him run wild with the offense. KI usually excels under those circumstances under the bright lights
Must’ve been checking on Gobert for Doncic