The Wonder Boy: Luka Doncic and the Curse of Greatness

Excerpted from the book The Wonder Boy: Luka Doncic and the Curse of Greatness by Tim MacMahon . Copyright © 2025 by Grand Central Publishing. You can buy the book HERE. Then there was the matter of Dončić’s happiness, or lack thereof. The subject …

Excerpted from the book The Wonder Boy: Luka Doncic and the Curse of Greatness by Tim MacMahon. Copyright © 2025 by Grand Central Publishing. You can buy the book HERE.

Then there was the matter of Dončić’s happiness, or lack thereof. The subject dominated the conversation about the Mavs throughout the league because it was a potential domino that could change the balance of power in the NBA. The Mavs got the gift of unwavering loyalty from Dirk Nowitzki, the face of the franchise for a generation, but Mark Cuban acknowledged that Dončić’s commitment to Dallas couldn’t be taken for granted.

“Look, players don’t talk like that, just like, ‘Hey, I’m here for the next 17 years,’” Cuban said. “He’d like to be here the whole time, but we’ve got to earn that.”

How could the Mavs do that? Cuban’s suggested solution was easy to say and difficult to do.

“Win championships,” Cuban said. “It’s amazing how that cures all. I mean, before Giannis won, everybody was like, ‘Where’s he going? Where’s he going? He’s not staying. He’s not staying.’ Jokić, while they haven’t won, da, da, da, da, da. Dirk before [the Mavs won the 2010– 11 title], right? There’s no great player, no superstar, where they don’t question, ‘What are you gonna do if you haven’t won yet?’”

A few hours later, Kyrie Irving scored 19 points in the fourth quarter as the Mavs pulled out a win over the Kings. Dallas’s slim play- in hopes were still flickering. “Just desperation basketball,” Irving said postgame. “It’s not like it’s the first time I’ve been in a must-win game, so it felt good.”

But over the next 36 hours or so, Dallas decision-makers determined that the two remaining dates on the Mavs’ schedule were must-lose games. If Dallas dropped their last two games, they’d have about an 80 percent chance of keeping their pick entering the lottery. If they won both, they still needed the Thunder to lose one just to squeak into the play-in. The call was essentially announced when the Mavs updated the official injury report the morning of their April 7 home game against the Bulls. Irving, Tim Hardaway Jr., Josh Green, Maxi Kleber, and Christian Wood were all downgraded to out due to minor injury issues or rest. This was a bumbling, transparent tank job. Timing was of the essence, as the Mavs and Bulls were tied for the 10th-best lottery odds.

But the timing was also awkward. It was the second annual “I Feel Slovenia” night at the American Airlines Center, and Dončić had missed the inaugural edition the previous season, disappointing hundreds of his countrymen who had flown in for the festivities celebrating their homeland. A compromise was reached: Dončić would play the first quarter before calling it a season.

Dončić ended up playing one offensive possession into the second quarter, scoring on a post-up and then committing an intentional foul so he could check out of the game. The intention was to allow fans to shower Dončić with a standing ovation as he concluded the greatest individual statistical season (32.4 points, 8.6 rebounds, and 8.0 assists per game) in franchise history. Instead, the crowd responded with a smattering of confused clapping.

Dončić changed into sweats at halftime and watched from the bench as the Mavs blew a 13-point lead. He seemed loose and relaxed in the seconds before the Mavs were officially eliminated from play-in contention. He covered his mouth and chuckled to teammates before the game’s final possession, when a couple of Mavs on two-way contracts missed three potential game-tying three-pointers, none of which drew iron.

“It’s not so much waving the white flag,” Jason Kidd said after the 115–112 loss, attributing the choice to Cuban and Nico Harrison, although the coach was fully on board with it behind the scenes. “Decisions sometimes are hard in this business, and you have to make hard decisions. We’re trying to build a championship team, and sometimes you got to take a step back.”

The decision was made despite Dončić’s public protest a few days prior. The Mavs’ front office could live with making Dončić mad for a moment if the scheming helped the franchise bounce back from this debacle of a season. The real disaster would be if Harrison and his staff failed to make the drastic roster upgrades the Mavs desperately needed and, as a consequence, couldn’t make a realistic case that the franchise was on the path toward contention. They had limited assets for this roster reconstruction, and the lottery pick would rank as the best among them.

“Once we didn’t control our own destiny, it was like, all right, we can’t be foolish,” Harrison said later, well after the league office’s investigation reached the obvious conclusion, resulting in a harshly worded statement and a $750,000 fine. “The worst-case scenario was we were 11 versus being 10— and you don’t make the play-in and don’t get your pick. Then I think I would probably look more foolish than doing it the opposite way.”

The Mavs conducted their media exit interviews immediately after a bunch of backups wrapped up this season to forget with a blowout home loss to the Spurs, whose more traditional tank job had already secured them a bottom-three record, maximizing their odds to win the lottery that ultimately delivered Wembanyama to San Antonio. Dončić didn’t talk after the previous game, when the Mavs pulled the plug, and didn’t have much to say about that matter other than that he “didn’t like that decision.” However, he downplayed the threat of him leaving Dallas in the near future. He wasn’t fond of ESPN reporting that the organization feared Dončić could request a trade as soon as the summer of 2024 if the Mavs didn’t make major progress the next season.

“It was funny, you know, because I didn’t know that was true,” Dončić said sarcastically. “I didn’t say it.”

Dončić didn’t have to say a word about a trade request for the Mavs’ front office to operate with that sense of urgency. That’s the reality of the modern- day NBA. The sense from people who knew Dončić well was that he genuinely enjoyed Dallas and wouldn’t look for reasons to leave, but the Mavs had to make sure those reasons— like another losing season— weren’t smacking him in the face.

“I think our job really to keep Luka happy, if you will, is surrounding him by the right players to help him win,” Harrison said a couple of days later. “And I think Luka’s a talent that deserves that.”

But Dončić wanted to ease the pressure, at least publicly, before heading back to Slovenia for the summer. “I’m happy here, so there’s nothing to worry [about],” Dončić said.

Of course, Dončić wasn’t happy about the Mavs’ 38–44 record and missing the playoffs for the first time since his rookie year. “Some things got to change, for sure,” Dončić acknowledged. It was an embarrassing way to end the season for a perennial MVP candidate, especially after Irving’s midseason arrival created so much excitement. But Dallas went 7– 18 after the duo’s debut together, falling from fourth in the West to an early vacation. The Mavs were only 5– 11 in games Dončić and Irving played together, which is the worst winning percentage (.313) for a pair of teammates who were both All-Stars since the ABA- NBA merger in 1976–77, according to ESPN Stats and Information research. But Dončić remained confident that the co-stars could form the foundation of a contender.

“I think it’s a great fit,” Dončić said. “Obviously people are going to say no [and] look at the results we are having, but like I said, chemistry and relationships takes time. I wish he can still be here.”

Harrison reiterated during his season-ending media availability that re-signing Irving would be the Mavs’ top summer priority. Harrison expressed optimism that it would happen, citing comments Irving had repeatedly made “about how he feels here, how he feels appreciated, how he feels accepted and allowed to be himself.” Harrison firmly believed that the Dončić-Irving duo could work, despite evidence to the contrary.

“I really think it’s the players around them . . . kind of knowing their role with having those two guys out on the floor at the same time,” Harrison said, emphasizing the need for good defenders who had high basketball IQs to fill out the supporting cast. “I think that’s the thing that we need to work on.”

Irving opted out of the exit interviews with the media and managed to steer completely clear of the subject entering his free agency summer, leaving people to wonder whether his silence spoke volumes.

Irving mostly kept a low profile while living and training in Los Angeles during the offseason. But he raised eyebrows with a couple of very public appearances, attending a pair of Lakers home playoff games. His seats were directly across from the home bench. On both occasions, after LeBron James was introduced in the starting lineups, he jogged over to greet Irving. They exchanged hugs and their customized handshake from their days together in Cleveland. It sure felt like pre-free agency flirting, similar to Irving’s infamous All-Star hallway chat with Kevin Durant months before they became a package deal headed to Brooklyn.

Speculation about the Lakers pursuing Irving had plenty of fuel. LA could have made a legitimate bid by bidding farewell to free agents point guard D’Angelo Russell and forward Rui Hachimura and making a smaller salary-dump trade or two. However, Lakers GM Rob Pelinka immediately hushed that conversation, declaring during his exit interview that the franchise planned to lean into continuity. Pelinka followed through on that plan, as the Lakers never showed any interest in signing Irving.

A few weeks before free agency officially opened, there were reports that Irving planned to recruit James to join him in Dallas. It was a juicy twist— if only it were even remotely feasible. James wasn’t a free agent. Even if he shockingly decided to force a trade— leaving the entertainment empire he had built in LA just as his son Bronny entered his freshman year at nearby USC— the Mavs had no way to make an offer to the Lakers anywhere close to the appropriate value.

Reports before free agency about Irving intending to meet with the Phoenix Suns were just as silly. The Suns, who had just traded for Bradley Beal to play alongside Durant and Devin Booker, could only offer the veteran’s minimum. There just wasn’t much of a market for Irving outside of Dallas, certainly not above the midlevel exception.

The Mavs were offering $120 million guaranteed over three years, plus another $6 million in incentives tied to games played and wins. Irving, whose agent is his stepmom Shetellia Riley Irving, officially agreed to the deal in the opening hour of free agency. The Mavs received some media criticism for bidding against themselves, but Harrison’s goal wasn’t to win the negotiation. It was to have a happy Irving on a roster that had flexibility to be upgraded. This deal accomplished that, awarding Irving a contract that reflected his production and status while providing the Mavs enough wiggle room within the salary cap rules to have their midlevel exception available.

“It wasn’t too difficult of a process,” Irving said when he finally met with the media again during the first week of training camp. “Had Dallas as number one on my list. Obviously I looked elsewhere— salary cap opportunities, where I could fit in with other guys around the league— but there just wasn’t much space. And me being 31 now, I had to have a different vantage point, and I felt like I could not just settle here but be happy to come back here and be welcomed back with a warm embrace.”

Excerpted from the book The Wonder Boy: Luka Doncic and the Curse of Greatness by Tim MacMahon. Copyright © 2025 by Grand Central Publishing. You can buy the book HERE.

Rob Pelinka actually thanked the Mavericks GM for the Luka Doncic trade

Of course Rob Pelinka would thank Nico Harrison for letting him steal his lunch money.

Los Angeles Lakers general manager Rob Pelinka and Dallas Mavericks GM Nico Harrison almost certainly agree on a key fact: their mutual late friend Kobe Bryant would’ve wanted Luka Doncic in L.A.

So they pulled the strings to get him there.

To start the Lakers’ introductory press conference of Doncic on Tuesday morning, Pelinka made sure to thank one key person for gifting Los Angeles yet another all-time great talent. That’s right.

He actually thanked the Mavericks and Harrison for facilitating the Doncic trade. Man, that’s like a bully thanking you for giving them your lunch money. That’s like an old-timey robber being appreciative that they had the opportunity to commit a massive heist of a moving train.

“Thank you for letting me rob you blind,” Pelinka … probably.

Honestly, I don’t blame Pelinka for feeling a little cocky, though:

When have you ever seen a sports executive publicly thank the other team’s representative like this?

Of course Pelinka would thank Harrison for gifting him a current top-three player. Of course, Pelinka admitted that Lakers owner Jeanie Buss was in the loop of the trade from the beginning, while Harrison kept mostly everything a secret from the Mavericks. Harrison made acquiring a generational talent for pennies on the dollar so simple and so easy!

Pelinka absolutely knew he was pulling off the NBA heist (trade) of the century from the start here. Harrison was all too happy to oblige.

Man, I’d be thanking him like this, too.

Anti-Jerry: NBA’s Mavs show Cowboys fans the flaws of a professional GM

Nico Harrison showed local fans of Dallas sports the downside of the GM conundrum this weekend. | From ReidDHanson

Dallas Cowboys fans have not been pleased with the front office of their franchise. In the minds of many, the frugality of the team’s top decision makers has led to too many missed opportunities over the years. It’s a trend that appears to be continuing into 2025, and a resentment that’s been unrivaled in the local DFW fanbase.

That is, until the Dallas Mavericks told Jerry Jones to hold their beer.

The Mavericks recently made news for all the wrong reasons this week. They took a generational talent, just entering his prime, and flipped him for a player who’s great, but, by most accounts, past his prime. Other side dishes were included in this smorgasbord of lopsidedness but for the most part it was a trade of Luka Doncic for Anthony Davis.

The Mavericks GM, Nico Harrison, defended the trade citing things like culture, fit, defense and conditioning as reasons why the trade was made. These issues may have very well existed, but to most fans, they hardly justified trading away a perennial MVP candidate. It was a move that made Jones and the Cowboys look good. Considering what’s happened for them over the past two seasons, that’s saying something.

Jones has been on a mission of austerity as of late. While he’s re-signed his must-have superstars, he’s been essentially asset stripping his roster by parting ways with costly second and third-tier players, rounding out the roster, coaching staff, and support personnel the cheapest way possible.

A reason why he would do such a thing is a fatal flaw within the structure of the team. Jones isn’t just the general manager and chief decision maker but he’s also the owner. What he doesn’t spend on players, coaches, and support personnel, he gets to keep in some ways. That’s not something any other GM in the NFL can say.

Other GMs are given a budget and are fairly determined to spend to the limits of that budget in the name of winning. Unlike Jones, they can be fired if they fall short of expectations therefore, they have to make every season count. The demand to win now is significant, so understandably the life expectancy of a GM is fairly low. Based on these same motivating forces, the Cowboys have no comparable urgency to win and every financial reason to save.

Up until this week, Harrison was regarded as one of the best GMs in the NBA. The former Nike executive has stacked the Dallas roster and made the 2024-2025 Mavericks one of the deepest and most talented teams in the league. He’s gone to the Conference Finals twice and the Finals once in a short time and done so with wildly different rosters. Even with Harrison’s success he feels the pressure to win now and has wasted no time making moves to achieve that goal.

Unlike Jones, Harrison doesn’t have the benefit of eternal job security on his side and that has presumably led to a highly controversial roster move. When asked about how the Doncic trade affects the Mavericks in the long-term Harrison showed why even a traditional GM structure has flaws.

“[Anthony Davis] fits right along with our timeframe to win now. And win in the future. In the future to me is three or four years from now,” Harrison clarified to reporters. “The future, 10 years from now, I don’t know. I think they’ll probably bury me and J [Kidd] by then. Or we bury ourselves.”

Harrison isn’t a fan of the Mavericks, but rather he’s an employee. He’s not married to the team like the fanbase is. There’s a good chance he’ll be gone in three or four years, making Doncic’s long-term value unimportant to him. Fans are critical of the move because they’ll still be Mavericks fans for the next 10 years. After Harrison is gone and Davis is retired, they’ll still be watching Doncic dominate the NBA and it will probably be extremely painful. That day could realistically be just five years away.

This kind of thing isn’t an issue for Jones and the Cowboys. Jones loves his Cowboys franchise and if anything, he cares too much about the long-term good of the team and not enough about the urgency of the here and now. He probably would have cashed on the Doncic brand in perpetuity. He probably wouldn’t have surrounded him the same depth of talent as Harrison has done, but he would have kept him.

If fans had to pick which is GM setup is better, most would probably point to the traditional type of GM like the Mavericks have. But as Harrison just showed everyone, even that has its problems because most GMs aren’t concerned about life after they’re gone. For universal Dallas fans, it’s the worst of both worlds this year. Guess it’s a good time to be a Stars fan.

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Jason Kidd looked absolutely baffled as Nico Harrison explained the Luka Doncic trade

There is no way Jason Kidd would’ve approved of this if he heard about it in advance.

At no point in the process of the Luka Doncic trade negotiations did Dallas Mavericks general manager Nico Harrison feel the need to talk to anyone else about the move. Therein lies the core problem. Because everyone else would’ve told him to get serious before blowing up the franchise’s entire future for no good reason.

Take head coach Jason Kidd, for example.

Kidd was unaware that Harrison was shopping Doncic. Harrison reportedly had nearly a month of dialogue with Los Angeles Lakers general manager Rob Pelinka about the move. Not once did he tell the coach he thinks he’s aligned with about what was in the works behind the scenes.

During a press conference on Sunday, Harrison explained how the Doncic trade manifested. He said that he simply had to keep it a secret between himself and Pelinka. Otherwise, the Mavericks’ dirty laundry with their star player would’ve been aired out in public.

Buddy, that’s not a bad thing!

If everyone else had found out the Mavericks were trying to trade Doncic, they might have saved Harrison from making arguably the worst mistake he’ll ever make as a front-office executive. It’s mind-boggling that Harrison didn’t consider that Pelinka was not an impartial party in these proceedings. Beyond even shopping Doncic around the league for bigger and better trade offers, it would’ve been great to hear other perspectives, too.

Judging by Kidd’s clearly displeased and startled reaction while listening to Harrison talk, he likely would’ve been the one to stop the general manager from destroying the Dallas franchise in the first place:

Man, does Harrison not hear himself talk here?

He didn’t tell Kidd about trading a top-three NBA player in advance, but he thinks that’s OK because he knows they’re “aligned” as general manager and coach. Talk about denial over the earth-shattering move you just made.

I can tell you one thing with great confidence. Harrison and Kidd might have been aligned on their vision for the Mavericks franchise at one point.

That is almost certainly no longer the case after this Doncic fiasco. Harrison probably just lost Kidd for good.

Mavericks GM Nico Harrison tried to explain why he stunningly traded Luka Doncic to the Lakers

Defending the indefensible.

There are probably five players across the NBA who are thought as untouchable, simply not available for a trade. And many would have assumed that Luka Doncic was at the very top of that list.

Mavericks general manager Nico Harrison clearly had different ideas when he shocked the basketball world in dealing Doncic to the Lakers for Anthony Davis late Saturday night.

The obvious question after the trade was … why? Doncic is a generational talent, just 25 years old and led Dallas to the NBA Finals last season. That’s not the kind of player you just give up on. In an interview with the Dallas Morning News, Harrison voiced his concerns about Doncic’s contract situation while explaining the motivation behind the trade.

“We really feel like we got ahead of what was going to be a tumultuous summer, him being eligible for the supermax and also a year away from him being able to opt out of any contract,” Harrison said. “And so we really felt like we got out in front of that. We know teams, they’ve had it out there, teams have been loading up to try to sign him once that comes available.”

Doncic would have been eligible for a five-year, $345 million supermax extension this summer, so by trading him, the Mavericks actually took that supermax eligibility away from Doncic.

But if there was genuine concern about Doncic opting out and signing elsewhere, you’d think the Mavericks would shop around for the best offer. They didn’t do that.

The entire situation remains so weird.

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Mavericks not worried about Jalen Brunson, Knicks tampering inquiry

Callie Caplan: Mavs GM Nico Harrison on @dfwticket on Knicks/Jalen Brunson tampering inquiry: “I’m not worried about it. … Honestly for me, it’s not even worth event thinking about because we’re so focused on our team. It really doesn’t matter after …

What’s the buzz on Twitter?

Callie Caplan @CallieCaplan
Mavs GM Nico Harrison on @dfwticket on Knicks/Jalen Brunson tampering inquiry: “I’m not worried about it. … Honestly for me, it’s not even worth event thinking about because we’re so focused on our team. It really doesn’t matter after the fact what they do anyway, right?” – 12:08 PM
Brian Mahoney @briancmahoney
Can the Knicks get back to the playoffs this season? That might depend on if Jalen Brunson is everything they believe he is.
apnews.com/article/new-yo…7:49 PM
Callie Caplan @CallieCaplan
Jason Kidd talked all last year about wanting Jalen Brunson to “get paid,” and he took the same approach today when asked about Josh Green’s rookie option.
Gotta be really encouraging for players to have a coach so open and aligned with that goal.
➡️ https://t.co/fUC5C6uPsl pic.twitter.com/VLxOsIwrhw4:47 PM

Ian Begley @IanBegley
From earlier: “In the NBA, a point guard – fair or not fair – becomes the leader on the floor. He won’t dodge that responsibility. He’ll eat it up.”
– Rick Carlisle shares insight on Jalen Brunson & Thibs assesses Randle & Reddish: sny.tv/articles/obser…2:46 PM

More on this storyline

Clutch Points: Jalen Brunson drives to the hoop for his first points as a Knick 💪 pic.twitter.com/qxcUIsCu35 -via Twitter @ClutchPointsApp / October 4, 2022
Tim Bontemps: The Knicks will start Jalen Brunson, Evan Fournier, RJ Barrett, Julius Randle and Mitchell Robinson tonight against the Pistons in their preseason opener here at Madison Square Garden. Quentin Grimes will not play, as he’s been dealing with an injury for the past week. -via Twitter @TimBontemps / October 4, 2022
By arriving at camp in better condition, paired with the arrival of Jalen Brunson and the return of a healthy Rose, the Knicks believe they can be off and running this season. “That’s the goal, yeah,” Randle said. “Play faster, recover better, all those different type of things. As you get more and more seasons under your belt, you want to continue to stay on top of your body and give yourself the best possible chance to be the best version of you every night, so that was the goal, for sure. “Another season under my belt. I want to be able to adjust and play faster, play on and off the ball. For me, being in shape is always number one, so I take pride in that and every year I try to go back . . . and adjust how I can be better and play faster and quicker basketball, be efficient.” -via Newsday / October 3, 2022

Mavs, Jalen Brunson meeting today in New York

Marc Stein: The Mavericks are indeed sending their contingent to New York today for a meeting with Jalen Brunson after 6 PM ET. Team owner Mark Cuban was already in NYC this week on non-NBA business and will be joined by Nico Harrison, Michael …

Marc Stein: The Mavericks are indeed sending their contingent to New York today for a meeting with Jalen Brunson after 6 PM ET. Team owner Mark Cuban was already in NYC this week on non-NBA business and will be joined by Nico Harrison, Michael Finley and Jason Kidd.
Source: Twitter @TheSteinLine

What’s the buzz on Twitter?

Anthony Chiang @Anthony_Chiang
According to a league source, the Heat never was scheduled to meet with top free agent Jalen Brunson and won’t be meeting with him today. – 11:01 AM
Ira Winderman @IraHeatBeat
So now word from a party familiar with the situation: There is no Heat meeting with Jalen Brunson and none was scheduled by or with the team. – 11:00 AM
StatMuse @statmuse
The 2018 draft class could be on the move today:
Deandre Ayton
Mo Bamba
Collin Sexton
Kevin Knox
Miles Bridges
Lonnie Walker
Jalen Brunson
Just to name a few. pic.twitter.com/5KP4AIne4r10:49 AM

Wes Goldberg @wcgoldberg
One domino effect of a hypothetical Jalen Brunson sign-and-trade to Miami is that it would essentially open up the full MLE to be used on a free agent, since the team would be hard capped already. – 9:50 AM
Chris Sheridan @sheridanhoops
With DeAndre Ayton to #Nets rumors rampant, #Heat getting a meeting with Jalen Brunson and #spurs trading Dejounte Murray to #Hawks, there are not a whole bunch of unrestricted free agency options for Leon Rose and the #Knicks. Huge day for him. Hope he has Plans B and C. – 9:27 AM
Sam Vecenie @Sam_Vecenie
Game Theory Podcast: @dieter is here! Some Pre-Free Agency stuff
-Dejounte Murray to ATL!
-What does a potential Jalen Brunson to NYK fit look like?
-Kyrie and Harden options!
-My love for the movie Interceptor!
APPLE: itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/gam…
WATCH: youtube.com/watch?v=QSGIIO…9:08 AM
Jared Weiss @JaredWeissNBA
New @AthleticNBAShow w/ @Jake Fischer breaking down the rumors from Jalen Brunson to DeAndre Ayton ahead of free agency’s opening bell.
podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the…9:03 AM
Steve Popper @StevePopper
Today’s the day. It’s here (and so are the Mavs to try to cut off the Knicks recruiting). Still, Knicks expected to land Jalen Brunson, but what’s next in free agency? newsday.com/sports/basketb… via @Newsday8:06 AM
Sam Vecenie @Sam_Vecenie
GAME THEORY PODCAST LIVE! @dieter IS BACK!
We run through all the NBA madness across the league.
-Dejounte Murray deal
-Jalen Brunson
-Kyrie back to Brooklyn
-James Harden taking less?
-Wiz/Nuggets deal
-John Wall!
WATCH LIVE IN 10 MINUTES: https://t.co/Af08xrSaAl pic.twitter.com/ARIle68UnJ12:11 AM

Wes Goldberg @wcgoldberg
just recorded an episode of @LockedOnHeat reacting to the Jalen Brunson news (and a whole lot more). Up shortly. – 7:19 PM
Callie Caplan @CallieCaplan
Which Maverick is most likely to lock Jalen Brunson in a New York hotel tomorrow and tweet a pic of a chair at the door, Blake Griffin-style? dallasnews.com/sports/maveric…7:07 PM
Ira Winderman @IraHeatBeat
P.J. Tucker heads to market; Jalen Brunson, James Harden add free-agency twists for Heat. sun-sentinel.com/sports/miami-h… Heat also should be set with Strus, Vincent and Yurtseven at midnight. – 6:56 PM
Barry Jackson @flasportsbuzz
NEW: Heat reportedly gets meeting with Jalen Brunson. Plus Heat-related updates on P.J. Tucker, Beal, free agent power forwards, more, with free agent floodgates sent to open in less than 24 hours: miamiherald.com/sports/spt-col…6:46 PM
Dan Favale @danfavale
congrats to jalen brunson on going from “can’t get the josh richardson extension from the mavs” to “possibly leveraging the knicks into a max deal” in less than six months. – 6:28 PM
Wes Goldberg @wcgoldberg
speculated that Jalen Brunson could be a dark horse candidate for the Heat on today’s @LockedOnHeat
podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/loc…6:13 PM
Barry Jackson @flasportsbuzz
Mavs free agent PG Jalen Brunson will meet with Knicks (considered the heavy front-runner for him), Dallas and Heat this week, per @Chris Haynes .. Would require sign and trade with Miami, which already has Kyle Lowry at PG…. NBA (legal) floodgates open at 6 tomorrow. – 6:12 PM
Chris Haynes @ChrisBHaynes
Free agent guard Jalen Brunson is granting meetings to Dallas Mavericks, New York Knicks and dark horse Miami Heat on first day of free agency, league sources tell @YahooSports: sports.yahoo.com/sources-jalen-…6:09 PM
Steve Popper @StevePopper
Knicks expected to land Jalen Brunson, but what’s next in free agency — and trades? newsday.com/sports/basketb… via @Newsday6:02 PM
Callie Caplan @CallieCaplan
From @KSherringtonDMN: Mark Cuban, Mavericks had every opportunity to avoid this fiasco with Jalen Brunson dallasnews.com/sports/maveric…5:49 PM
Stefan Bondy @SBondyNYDN
Knicks interested in Dejounte Murray trade to pair with Jalen Brunson nydailynews.com/sports/basketb…5:02 PM
Fred Katz @FredKatz
Jalen Brunson isn’t the only guy who could get a big deal from the Knicks.
When free agency begins, RJ Barrett is eligible for an extension. His max is $185 million over 4 years.
Will the Knicks give it to him?
Story ($1/mo subscription offer inside): https://t.co/lYcxXJFzRl pic.twitter.com/NHw2p2D0wN4:46 PM

Adam Zagoria @AdamZagoria
Now on @ForbesSports
After Trade, The Knicks Can Offer Jalen Brunson A 4-Year Deal Worth Close To $110 Million via @forbes forbes.com/sites/adamzago…4:36 PM
Kevin O’Connor @KevinOConnorNBA
New pod with @Marc Stein on Mavericks likely losing Jalen Brunson to the Knicks, and what it means for both teams. open.spotify.com/episode/2QerPO…3:14 PM
The Ringer @ringernba
🗣 Why Jalen Brunson is worth the money he’s getting
🗣 How can the Mavs replace Brunson?
🗣 The Dejounte Murray sweepstakes
‘The Void’: open.spotify.com/episode/2QerPO…3:11 PM
Callie Caplan @CallieCaplan
Is a sign-and-trade even realistic now?
Add in another team?
Luxury tax maneuvering?
Evaluating ‘Plan Bs’ for the Mavericks in free agency if and when Jalen Brunson signs with the Knicks dallasnews.com/sports/maveric…2:56 PM
Sirius XM NBA @SiriusXMNBA
Listen to today’s episode of The Starting Lineup with @Frank Isola & @Brian Scalabrine on Pandora!
🏀 Jalen Brunson Rumors
🏀 Russell Westbrook picks up player option
📰 HEADLINES!
pandora.app.link/akU72h5vYmb2:53 PM
Sirius XM NBA @SiriusXMNBA
Jalen Brunson is expected to get a 4-year, $110 million offer from the Knicks once free agency opens.
@Frank Isola likes the move for New York pic.twitter.com/whw6xNzuoh2:22 PM

Adam Zagoria @AdamZagoria
Flashback to Jay Wright and Dave Leitao raving about Jalen Brunson who was the National College player of the Year in 2018
zagsblog.com/2018/02/22/jay…2:18 PM
Sirius XM NBA @SiriusXMNBA
With rumors swirling Jalen Brunson will end up with the Knicks during free agency, @Fred Katz wonders how Brunson’s style of play will fit in with the core of the team
#NewYorkForever | @JoelMeyers | @Howard Beck pic.twitter.com/gRJjj2QYz12:11 PM

Eric Koreen @ekoreen
It’s enjoyable that free agency hasn’t started and the Knicks have already lost free agency. (Mandatory note that Jalen Brunson is good.) – 1:50 PM
Dave Early @DavidEarly
If you knew you were losing Jalen Brunson, would you be interested in Tobias Harris or Matisse Thybulle? (If you got Harris, you’d have to offer multiple picks to get Bobi back though I figure.) – 1:35 PM

More on this storyline

 

Tim Reynolds: The Heat are not planning to meet with Jalen Brunson today, and they did not have such a meeting scheduled, per league source. -via Twitter @ByTimReynolds / June 30, 2022
Free agent point guard Jalen Brunson is scheduled to meet with a few teams, headlined by the New York Knicks and Dallas Mavericks, on the first day of NBA free agency, league sources told Yahoo Sports. The free agency period begins Thursday at 6 p.m. ET. Brunson will hold free agent meetings in New York, sources said. -via Yahoo! Sports / June 29, 2022

 

The Mavericks will be given an …