The Dallas Mavericks
(also known as the Mavs
) are a professional basketball team based in Dallas, Texas, USA. They are members of the Southwest Division of the Western Conference of the National Basketball Association (NBA).
Founded in 1980, the Mavericks have won two division titles and one conference championship. According to Forbes Magazine
, they are the seventh most valuable basketball franchise in the United States, valued at approximately $466 million; the franchise is surpassed in value only by the New York Knicks, the Los Angeles Lakers, the Chicago Bulls, the Detroit Pistons, the Cleveland Cavaliers, and the Houston Rockets. [1]
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History of the Dallas Mavericks
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History of the Dallas Mavericks
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Discuss)
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1980–1982: Early years
thumbIn 1979, businessman
Don Carter and partner
Norm Sonju requested the right to bring an NBA franchise to
Dallas,
Texas. The last professional basketball team in Dallas had been the Dallas Chaparrals of the
American Basketball Association, which moved to
San Antonio in 1973 to become the
San Antonio Spurs.
At the
1980 NBA All-Star Game, league owners voted to admit the new team, with the team's name coming from the 1957–1962
TV western
Maverick.
James Garner, who played the namesake character, was a member of the ownership group. There was some controversy at the time since the
University of Texas at Arlington also uses the Mavericks nickname. They joined the Midwest Division of the
Western Conference, where they would stay until the league went to six divisions for the
2004–05 season.
Dick Motta, who had guided the
Washington Bullets to the NBA Championship in
1977–78, was hired as the team's first
head coach. He had a well-earned reputation of being a stern disciplinarian, but was also a great teacher of the game.
Kiki Vandeweghe of
UCLA was drafted by the Mavs with the 11th pick of the
1980 NBA Draft, but Vandeweghe refused to play for the expansion Mavericks and staged a holdout that lasted a month into the team's inaugural season. Vandeweghe was traded to the
Denver Nuggets, along with a first-round pick in 1981, in exchange for two future first-round picks that eventually materialized into
Rolando Blackman in
1981 and
Sam Perkins in
1984.
In the Mavericks' debut game, taking place in the brand-new
Reunion Arena, the Mavericks stunned the Spurs, 103–92. But the Mavs started the season with a discouraging 6–40 record on their way to finishing 15–67. However, the Mavericks did make a player acquisition that, while it seemed minor at the time, turned out to play a very important role in the early years of their franchise. Journeyman 6'3" guard
Brad Davis, who played for the Anchorage Northern Knights of the
Continental Basketball Association, was tracked down and signed by the Mavs in December. At the time, there was absolutely no reason to expect that Davis would be any better than the expansion-level talent the Mavs had. But he started the Mavs' final 26 games, led the team in assists, and his career soared. He spent the next twelve years with the Mavericks, and eventually his #15 jersey was retired.
The 1981 NBA Draft brought three players who would become vital parts of the team. The Mavs selected 6'6" forward
Mark Aguirre with the first pick, 6'6" guard
Rolando Blackman 9th, and 6'7" forward
Jay Vincent 24th. By the end of his seven-year Mavs career, Aguirre would average 24.6 points per game.
Blackman contributed 19.2 points over his 11-year career in Dallas.
But it was Jay Vincent who made the biggest difference for the Mavs in their second season, leading the team in scoring with 21.4 points per game and earning NBA All-Rookie Team honors. The Mavericks improved to 28–54, getting out of the Midwest Division cellar as they finished above the
Utah Jazz.
1982–1985: Rise to power
In
1982–83, the Mavericks were serious contenders for the first time. At the All-Star break, they were 25–24 and had won 12 of their last 15 games. They could not sustain this momentum, and finishing seven games behind the Denver Nuggets for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference. But the Mavs' 38–44 record signified a 10-game improvement from the previous season, and the fact that a third-year expansion team had even been in playoff contention at
all
was quite remarkable.
Mark Aguirre led the 1982–83 Mavericks with 24.4 points per game, finishing sixth in the NBA.
Jay Vincent and
Rolando Blackman contributed 18.7 and 17.7 ppg, respectively. Brad Davis was 10th in the NBA in assists with 7.2 per game, and shot .845 from the line, 6th in the league.
Derek Harper was drafted by the Mavs with the 11th pick of the
1983 NBA Draft. The 6'4" guard would spend the next decade with the organization, averaging 15 points and 6.1 assists.
The Mavericks' hard work paid off in
1983–84 as they posted a winning record for the first time in franchise history, finishing 43–39 and second in the Midwest Division. The Mavs also earned the first playoff berth in franchise history. Mark Aguirre was named the team's first NBA All-Star, as he finished with an average of 29.5 points per game—second in the league only to Utah's
Adrian Dantley.
Dallas finished with the fourth seed in the Western Conference playoffs, and their first playoff trip was modestly successful as they defeated the
Seattle SuperSonics in five games. The fifth and deciding game of that series was played at
Moody Coliseum, as Reunion Arena, then the home court for the Mavericks, was hosting a tennis tournament. The
Magic Johnson-led
Los Angeles Lakers were next for the Mavs, and the young club fell short, losing four games to one. But a trade the Mavericks made in their inaugural season of 1980 paid off for them in 1984, because they owned
Cleveland's first-round pick, which ended up being the fourth pick overall. The Mavs used it to select forward/center
Sam Perkins, a former
North Carolina Tar Heel with surprising range from the three-point line who would average 14.4 points and 8.0 rebounds in six seasons with Dallas.
About this time, the
Dallas Cowboys, once one of the
NFL's elite teams, began a slow decline that eventually saw them fall to 1–15 in 1989. The Mavs were hitting their stride at about the same time, and replaced the Cowboys as the Metroplex' team.
The
1984–85 team finished a game better than the previous year at 44–38. Mark Aguirre led the team in scoring again with 25.7 ppg,
Sam Perkins made the All-Rookie team, and
Rolando Blackman represented the Mavericks in the 1985
NBA All-Star Game.
The Mavs returned to the playoffs in 1985, but were not as successful as they had been the previous year. They won Game 1 in double-overtime against the
Portland Trail Blazers in their first-round playoff series, but lost the next three games in a row, ending their season.
1985–1988: A true contender
Dallas had the eighth pick in the
1985 NBA Draft—again due to a trade with the Cavaliers—and drafted German-born forward
Detlef Schrempf out of
Washington. He would show flashes of brilliance in his three-plus seasons with the team, but it was not until he was traded to the
Indiana Pacers that he displayed his full potential.
The Mavericks also traded center
Kurt Nimphius to the
Los Angeles Clippers for center
James Donaldson, who would play for the Mavericks until halfway through the
1991–92 season. This allowed the Mavericks to have the steady hand at center that had been lacking throughout the franchise's first five years. In 1988, James Donaldson would represent the only All-Star center in Dallas Maverick history.
Jordan Lynn represented the Mavericks in the
1986 All-Star Game, hosted by Dallas at Reunion Arena. The 1985–86 Mavericks were second in scoring at 115.3 points per game, gaining them their third straight playoff appearance. They defeated
Utah three games to one in the first round. In the conference semi-finals, they ran into the
Lakers again, and L.A. defeated Dallas in six games. But four of those games were decided by four points or less, and Dallas won half of those, leaving Mavericks fans room to hope that they could finally top the Lakers in the following season. The Mavs drafted
Michigan center
Roy Tarpley with the seventh overall pick, who would go on to become a very talented—but troubled—member of the roster.
The
1986–87 Mavericks team had their most successful regular-season to date, going 55–27 and winning their first Midwest Division title. But despite the great expectations surrounding the team, they self-destructed in the playoffs. After hammering the
Seattle SuperSonics by 22 points in Game 1, the bottom dropped out for the Mavs, as they lost Games 2 and 3 in close fashion before succumbing in Game 4 in
Seattle.
Following the unexpected early playoff exit, Motta, who had been with the team since its inception, shockingly resigned as head coach.
John MacLeod, who had led the
Phoenix Suns to nine playoff berths in 11 seasons including an NBA Finals run in 1976, was hired as his replacement.
The
1987–88 NBA season saw the Mavericks dip just a little bit in the regular season—finishing 53–29 and losing their Midwest Division title to the
Denver Nuggets—but it was another successful year for the team. Mark Aguirre and James Donaldson both played in the
1988 NBA All-Star Game, the Mavericks rattled off a franchise-best 11-game winning streak, and
Rolando Blackman scored his 10,000th career point. Aguirre led the team in scoring for the sixth consecutive year with 25.1 points per game, and Roy Tarpley won the
NBA Sixth Man Award with averages of 13.5 points and 11.8 rebounds.
The season saw the Mavs' deepest playoff run to date. They dispatched the
Houston Rockets in four games and the Nuggets in six, leaving only the defending NBA Champion
Lakers between them and their first-ever trip to the
NBA Finals. The Mavericks gave the Lakers everything they could handle, but in the end the more experienced Lakers prevailed, defeating Dallas in seven games on the way to eventually winning their second consecutive NBA Championship.
1988–1989: Season in ruin
Despite all the changes, the Mavs remained in contention. However, their season effectively ended when James Donaldson went down with a ruptured
patella tendon on March 10, 1989 and missed the rest of the season as a result. The Mavericks were left undermanned, demoralized and disheartened as they finished with a 38–44 record. It was their first losing season since 1982–83—which was also the last time they missed the playoffs.
The Mavericks returned to the playoffs in
1989–90 with a 47–35 record, but it was another season of off-court chaos. On November 15, only six games into the Mavs' season, Tarpley was arrested for
driving while intoxicated and resisting arrest. The team started 5–6 and MacLeod was fired, replaced by assistant coach
Richie Adubato. The Mavs finished the season with four straight victories to surge into the playoffs, but went down rather meekly to the
Portland Trail Blazers in three games. It would be the team's last winning season and last playoff appearance until 2001.
1990–1992: Freefalling
The team endured numerous changes in 1990, losing Sam Perkins to the Lakers via free agency and suffering injuries to practically their entire
1990–91 starting lineup. The players they managed to acquire—
Rodney McCray,
Fat Lever and
Alex English—were all in the twilight of their careers. On November 9 it was announced that Fat Lever would have season-ending surgery on his right knee, and that very night, Tarpley suffered a knee injury of his own which ended his season. The Mavericks' season only got worse from there, and they finished with a record of 28–54, the worst in the NBA, falling behind even the second-year
Minnesota Timberwolves and
Orlando Magic.
In March 1991, Tarpley was charged with suspicion of
driving while intoxicated and was suspended again by the NBA.
It got even worse in
1991–92. Before the season even began, Tarpley violated the league's substance abuse policy for the third time and was banned from the NBA for life. The former Sixth Man Award winner's fall from grace was complete. The few talented players the Mavericks had remaining to them were lost to injury. Brad Davis' back problems forced him to retire in mid-January, and Fat Lever had knee surgery again on January 29, missing the remainder of the season—hardly worth the cost of losing two first-round draft picks. The team finished with a 22–60 record.
In
1992–93 the rebuilding began in earnest, with the Mavs trading
Rolando Blackman—who by that point had surpassed Mark Aguirre as the team's all-time leading scorer—to the
New York Knicks for a first-round draft pick. Blackman had made four All-Star Game appearances in his Mavericks career.
Herb Williams joined the Knicks as a free agent. Fat Lever underwent more surgery and missed the entire 1992–93 season. Derek Harper was the team's sole bright spot, leading the team with 18.3 points per game.
1992–1994: Flirting with futility
The Mavericks selected
Ohio State guard
Jim Jackson with the fourth overall pick of the
1992 NBA Draft, but he and owner Donald Carter could not come to terms on a contract for half of his rookie season. Jackson only played 28 games in
1992–93, a year that was also ruined by trades, a coaching change and injuries. The Mavericks started 2–27 and fired Adubato on January 13, replacing him with
Gar Heard. The Mavericks came dangerously close to setting the all-time worst record in NBA history (9–73, set by the
1972–73 Philadelphia 76ers). But when Jackson was signed on March 3, the Mavs managed to rally, closing the season with a 7–14 mark, including two straight wins to end the season. That year the Mavericks finished 11–71 which was the 2nd worst record in NBA history.
Dallas selected
Kentucky forward
Jamal Mashburn with the fourth overall pick of the
1993 NBA Draft and hired
Quinn Buckner as coach, but the team's progress was minimal, to say the least. Part of the problem was that Buckner decided from the start to be a disciplinarian on the model of his college coach,
Bobby Knight. The mostly young roster did not respond very well to Buckner's stern coaching style, and started 1–23. By the end of January they were 3–40, and it was once again possible that they could tie the 1973 Sixers for the all-time worst record in the league. But 5–9 records in February and April, coupled with Buckner loosening the reins a little bit, helped the Mavs finish 13–69. It was still by far the worst record in the league, but the Mavericks again avoided setting an all-time futility record. They did, however manage to tie the NBA's
single-season
record for consecutive losses at
20 games (since broken).
Buckner was fired after garnering the worst full-season record for a rookie head coach (a record since broken). The Mavericks brought back Dick Motta, who had led the franchise to some of its most successful seasons. The Mavericks also wound up with the #2 pick in the
1994 NBA Draft, and picked up
Cal point guard
Jason Kidd, giving them a solid tandem of Jackson, Mashburn and Kidd which would become known as "The Three Js".
1994–1996: Three Js give Dallas hope
The addition of Jason Kidd infused the Mavericks with new life in
1994–95. Kidd averaged 11.7 points, 5.4 rebounds and 7.7 assists in his rookie season, and even led the league in triple-doubles.
Roy Tarpley was allowed to return to the league after three years and helped with 12.6 points and 8.2 rebounds per game.
The tandem of Jim Jackson and Jamal Mashburn combined as the league's highest-scoring pair of teammates. On separate occasions, Mashburn and Jackson scored 50 points in a game that season. Mashburn contributed 24.1 points per game, fifth in the NBA; Jackson averaged 25.7 points, but suffered a severe ankle sprain in February which caused him to miss the remainder of the regular season. Second-year forward
Popeye Jones had a great year as well, as he averaged 10.6 rebounds and led the NBA in offensive rebounds.
The Mavericks' improvement was dramatic. They jumped to 36–46, 10th in the Western Conference and only five games behind the
Denver Nuggets for the eighth and final playoff spot. It was the biggest one-year improvement in the team's history, and the highest in the NBA that season.
Many expected the Mavericks' improvement to continue with the franchise's first foray into the NBA Playoffs since 1990. But despite a 4–0 start, the
1995–96 season was a disappointment in about every conceivable way.
For the second time in his career, Roy Tarpley was given a lifelong ban from the NBA for repeated violations of the anti-drug policy—he never played in the NBA again. Jamal Mashburn had season-ending surgery to repair his sore right knee only 18 games into the Mavericks' schedule.
The team's two remaining stars, Jason Kidd and Jim Jackson, bickered throughout the season, though neither of them had any trouble establishing his individual stardom. Jackson led the team in scoring with 19.6 ppg, made 121 three-pointers and was the only Mav to start in all 82 games. Kidd became the first Maverick to be elected a starter in the NBA All-Star Game, and finished second in the league in assists and fourth in steals while averaging 16.6 ppg.
George McCloud, who averaged 9.6 ppg in his previous year, blew away his career-high scoring average as the Mavs resorted to the outside shot time and again due to their lack of an inside scoring threat. McCloud averaged 18.9 ppg and made 257 three-pointers, equaling the second-highest individual season total in league history.
Overall, the Mavericks connected on 735 of their 2,039 three-point attempts, both new league records. But that particular statistic is more indicative of the Mavs' desperation to get points from
somewhere
than of how well they did as a team.
The Mavs finished 26–56, fifth in the Midwest Division and 33 games out of first place. At season's end, Motta was relieved of his head coaching responsibilities and replaced by former Bulls assistant coach
Jim Cleamons. And Don Carter, the only owner the Mavericks had ever had, sold the team to a group of investors led by
H. Ross Perot, Jr..
1996–2001: Starting over
The
1996–97 season was a year of transition for the Mavericks, as they basically re-designed their
entire
team; 27 different players saw action for this Dallas team, setting an all-time NBA record. By the time the season was over, only rookie forward
Samaki Walker remained from the opening-day roster.
The first big move came in December, as Jason Kidd,
Loren Meyer and
Tony Dumas were traded to the
Phoenix Suns for guards
Michael Finley and
Sam Cassell and forward
A. C. Green. By far the most important of these acquisitions was Finley who, after his first half-season in Dallas, would go on to average over or near 20 ppg for at least the next seven years of his Mavericks career. He made two visits to the NBA All-Star Game, and even played in each of the Mavs' games until the 2004–05 season.
Don Nelson was hired as Dallas' general manager on February 7, and it didn't take him long to leave his own mark on the team. Within a week of his hiring, the Mavs had released
Fred Roberts and
Oliver Miller and traded Jamal Mashburn to the
Miami Heat for forwards
Kurt Thomas and
Martin Müürsepp and guard
Sasha Danilovic.
This particular trade didn't really pan out for the Mavs. Thomas did not play in 1996–97, and only ended up playing in five games as a Maverick before signing as a free agent with the
New York Knicks. Danilovic played in 13 games for the Mavs before opting out of his contract and signing with Bucker Bologna of the Italian League, and Müürsepp played in 73 games for the Mavericks over the next two years before leaving the NBA.
Chris Gatling was the Mavericks' sole representative in the NBA All-Star Game, but he did not last much longer in Dallas. In one of the largest two-team trades in NBA history, the Mavericks traded Chris Gatling, Jim Jackson, Sam Cassell, George McCloud and
Eric Montross to the
New Jersey Nets for 7'6" center
Shawn Bradley, forward
Ed O'Bannon and guards
Khalid Reeves and
Robert Pack. Nelson claimed the trades were necessary because the situation in the locker room was unacceptable. However, whereas Cassell went on to become a consistent floor leader and Jackson, Gatling and McCloud all continued to be solid contributors to their teams for several more years, only Bradley lasted any sort of time in Dallas and would spend part of the next eight years putting up modest contributions for the Mavs and giving them solid numbers in terms of blocked shots.
Undrafted rookie guard
Erick Strickland was a pleasant surprise for the Mavs as he averaged 10.6 ppg. He, along with Finley and Bradley, were expected to be the core of this new Mavericks team.
The constant changes made it impossible to establish any sort of team chemistry in
1996–97, and the Mavericks finished 24–58. But they had acquired some of the pieces that would help them start to turn things around in years to come.
In the lockout-shortened
1998–99 season, the Mavericks finished with a lowly 19–31 record, but Michael Finley and
Gary Trent put up solid numbers and led their team to their first winning home record (15–10) since 1989–90. Notable were the acquisitions of power forward
Dirk Nowitzki and point guard
Steve Nash, two seemingly unspectacular moves which would make a great impact in the future.
In the following season the team finally "clicked" and started to win on a consistent basis. Led by Finley, the Mavericks earned their first 40-win season since 1989–90. He was greatly helped by Nowitzki, who finally "arrived" in the NBA and established himself as a potent offensive threat.
On January 14, 2000, Ross Perot's group sold the Dallas Mavericks to internet entrepreneur and season ticket-holder
Mark Cuban for $285 million. Cuban immediately set out to revitalize the Mavericks and increase the team's popularity in Dallas and nationwide. His controversial moves (he allowed
Dennis Rodman to live in his house for a week before temporarily signing him) and outspoken personality quickly made him a fan favorite in Dallas and garnered the team lots of press in the national media. He has also been fined millions of dollars for violating NBA rules.
In
2000–01, the Mavericks improved further and finished with an impressive 53–29 record, fueled by an impressive offensive triangle of Nowitzki, Finley and Nash. The Mavs made a blockbuster trade minutes before the trade deadline that sent
Hubert Davis,
Christian Laettner,
Courtney Alexander,
Loy Vaught, and
Etan Thomas to the
Washington Wizards for
Juwan Howard,
Calvin Booth and
Obinna Ekezie. This move brought in fresh blood that secured the club's first playoff visit in 11 years. Also,
Wang Zhizhi became the first Chinese player to play in the NBA, signing with the Mavs in January, along with the Eduardo Nájera, bringing Dallas a decent international cast that included
Canada's Nash and
Germany's Nowitzki. In the playoffs, the Mavericks won the first round against the
Utah Jazz, advancing to the second round for the first time since 1988. Even though they would be eliminated by the
San Antonio Spurs in five games, it marked a sense of optimism for Dallas in seriously contending for an NBA title. This was also the last season in the old
Reunion Arena before making the move to the modern
American Airlines Center.
2001–2004
The
2001–02 season was a great season for the Mavericks, with a 57–25 record and many sellout crowds in the
American Airlines Center. This season also saw a change in logo and colors, changing from the cowboy hat logo and green to a new horse logo. In addition, the team gained sleeker uniforms. Another blockbuster trade sent
Juwan Howard,
Tim Hardaway and
Donnell Harvey to the Denver Nuggets in exchange for
Raef LaFrentz,
Nick Van Exel,
Tariq Abdul-Wahad and
Avery Johnson. The Mavericks swept the
Minnesota Timberwolves in the playoffs but lost again in the second round, this time to the
Sacramento Kings.
But it was only in the next season when the Mavericks finally broke through. They started the
2002–03 season with a 14–0 record which was 1 shy of tying the NBA record set by the
1993–94 Houston Rockets (15–0). The Mavericks finished with a 60–22 record in the regular season, astonishing fans and critics with their sparkling offense. The "Big Three" Nowitzki, Finley, and Nash were a 100-point-game waiting to happen and led the Mavericks into the Conference Finals against the
San Antonio Spurs. However, with the series tied 1–1 Dirk Nowitzki, the team's leading scorer, suffered a knee injury in game three that kept him out of the rest of the series. This worsened the Mavs depth problem in the front court (both of their backup centers were injured for the entire series) and the Spurs took the series in 6 games.
In
2003–04, two blockbuster trades were announced. The Mavericks acquired
Jordan Lynn,
Danny Fortson,
Jiri Welsch and
Chris Mills from
Golden State in exchange for Nick Van Exel,
Evan Eschmeyer, Popeye Jones,
Avery Johnson and
Antoine Rigaudeau. Another high-profile trade sent Raef LaFrentz, Chris Mills and Jiri Welsch to Boston for
Antoine Walker and
Tony Delk. Although the team struggled for chemistry, the Mavericks easily qualified for the playoffs. With the trio Nowitzki-Finley-Nash and
NBA Sixth Man of the Year, Jamison, the Mavericks continued their reputation as the best offensive team in the NBA. Notable were two rookies,
Josh Howard and
Marquis Daniels, who made an immediate impact. However, the Mavericks were eliminated quickly
in the playoffs, losing in the first round to the
Sacramento Kings, a team which clearly played better defense. The Mavericks management had to re-evaluate their strategy.
Those years also saw Nowitzki win the first two of his unprecedented five consecutive
Euroscar Awards as the top player in Europe, in 2002 and 2003. (Note that this award is presented at the end of a calendar year, as opposed to the end of the season as in the NBA awards.)
2004–2006: Roster changes
The
2004–05 season brought in blockbuster trades which (among others) brought in burly center
Erick Dampier, combo guard
Jason Terry, speedy rookie point guard
Devin Harris, scoring machine
Jerry Stackhouse, and defensive stalwart
Alan Henderson. Although the loss of All-Star Steve Nash via free agency visibly hurt the Mavericks' offense, the new acquisitions strengthened the team defense. The run-and-gun style of former times changed into a more balanced style of play. At the All-Star break, the Mavericks acquired
Keith Van Horn for Calvin Booth and Henderson, the latter resigning only days later. Nowitzki added his third consecutive Euroscar during this season as well.
On March 19, longtime coach Don Nelson resigned and his assistant Avery Johnson succeeded him. Under Johnson's tutelage, the defense of the Mavericks became stronger and they easily qualified for
the playoffs with an impressive 58–24 record.
The Mavericks defeated the
Houston Rockets in Round 1 of the playoffs in 7 games but then lost to the
Phoenix Suns 4–2, led by former Maverick star
Steve Nash.
Prior to the
2005 NBA Draft, the Mavericks had traded all their picks away and were left empty-handed. On August 15, 2005, veteran guard Michael Finley was waived under the new "Allan Houston Rule".
[2] Under this rule, the
Orlando Magic waived
Doug Christie, who then signed with the Mavericks. On August 19, the Mavericks held a press conference announcing they had re-signed
Darrell Armstrong, and introduced Christie,
DeSagana Diop,
Rawle Marshall, and
Josh Powell as new Mavericks. Christie's playing time was very limited amidst a surgically-repaired ankle still hampering his play. He was waived on November 25, 2005.
At the end of calendar 2005, Nowitzki achieved a rare double by winning both the Euroscar and
Mr. Europa, a second prestigious award for the top European player. He additionally was named the inaugural
FIBA Europe Player of the Year.
Up until the very end of the season, the Mavericks would be toe-to-toe with the
San Antonio Spurs for the crown of the Southwest Division as well as the #1 spot in the Western Conference. However, they fell short of the title and had to settle for a fourth seed. Nonetheless, they once again achieved a 60–22 record, with
Avery Johnson winning
NBA Coach of the Year honors.
In the playoffs, they swept the
Memphis Grizzlies, leading to a titanic series against their state rivals and the reigning NBA champions the San Antonio Spurs. Five out of the seven games were decided in the last minute, including a Game 7 that had to go into overtime. Yet under the guidance of
Dirk Nowitzki and an incredibly deep bench, the Mavericks were able to advance to the Conference Finals against former teammate Steve Nash and the Phoenix Suns. While the Suns did extend the series to six games, the Mavs' defense and depth allowed them to advance to the NBA Finals for the first time in franchise history.
First finals appearance
The Mavericks advanced to their first NBA Finals in franchise history when they defeated the
Phoenix Suns in game 6 of the Western Conference Finals on June 3, 2006 in the
US Airways Center in
Phoenix. They faced the
Miami Heat in the finals, held home-court advantage and scored two convincing wins. After game 2 Dallas city officials had already planned the victory parade. However, in Game 3, the Mavs blew a late double-digit lead, courtesy of Heat guard
Dwyane Wade. He carried the Heat to the win, with Nowitzki missing a potentially game-tying free throw in the last seconds. After getting blown out in Game 4, the Mavericks suffered another loss in Game 5 when Wade scored the game-tying basket in the last possession of regular time, putting the Heat ahead with last-second free throws in overtime. The
tragic figure was
Josh Howard, who missed a pair of clutch free throws in overtime and mistakenly called an early timeout, so the Mavs had to bring in the ball at backcourt rather than halfcourt for the last possession. In Game 6, the Mavericks took an early double digit lead, but again, Wade poured in 36 points, helped by
Alonzo Mourning's five blocked shots, and the Mavericks lost their fourth game and the title after a string of botched three pointers. Many Maverick's fans were stunned by the defeat. Mavericks owner
Mark Cuban was fined a total of $250,000 for "several acts of misconduct" during the series, and Nowitzki was fined $5,000 for kicking a ball into the stands after Game 5. Nowitzki was also caught by TV cameras attacking a stationary bicycle in the hallway outside of the Mavericks locker room.
Jerry Stackhouse was suspended for Game 5 after fouling
Shaquille O'Neal on a breakaway dunk attempt. The latter marked the third time a Mavericks player was suspended in the 2006 playoffs.
The Mavericks became only the third team in NBA history (the first since 1977) to lose in the Finals after taking a 2–0 lead. In Game 3, the Mavs held a 13-point lead with under seven minutes remaining but were outscored 22–7 in the momentum-changing 98–96 defeat. The Heat's performance in the last seven minutes represented the team's greatest postseason comeback in team history.
[3]
2006–2007: First round upset
After a disappointing end to their magnificent playoff run in 2006, the Mavericks sought retribution in the new season. After a rocky 0–4 start, the Mavericks then went on a historic run and posted a 52–5 record over their next 57 games. They finished out the regular season with a record of 67–15, good enough to be tied for 6th place all-time, 1st in the league and the #1 seed in the Western Conference playoffs.
Dirk Nowitzki had a dominant season, further cementing his place as one of the game's elite players; he won his fifth consecutive Euroscar during the season, and was named the NBA MVP at its end.
Josh Howard was named to the all-star team. However, the 8th seeded
Golden State Warriors systematically dismantled the Mavericks in the first round of the playoffs by exploiting matchups and preying on Dirk Nowitzki's weaknesses. Dirk Nowitzki and his 1st place Mavericks were defeated in 6 games by the 8th seeded Warriors to give way to one of the biggest upsets in NBA history. Former NBA champion and All-Star legend Bill Russell stated in his NBA.com blog that he didn't consider it to be an upset, since Golden State was 3–0 vs. the Mavericks in the regular season. The Mavs were exposed defensively. As mentioned, Mavericks star Dirk Nowitzki won the regular season MVP award, which created an awkward dilemma regarding the MVP trophy ceremony. Traditionally, the MVP award is given to the winner in a ceremony between the first and second round of the playoffs. But it's believed the league opted to put some distance between Nowitzki's ceremony and the Mavericks' stunning first-round exit against Golden State. By the time Nowitzki collected his MVP award, nearly two weeks had elapsed since the Mavs were eliminated.
2008–present: Return of Jason Kidd
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The Mavericks dealt
Devin Harris, two first round picks and others in a blockbuster trade to the
New Jersey Nets for veteran all-star
Jason Kidd and other role players. The Mavericks were 3 and 11 against winning teams since the trade and lost Nowitzki for a little over a week due to a high ankle sprain injury. He returned April 2 in a crucial game against the Golden State Warriors in a 111–86 Mavericks victory and helped defeat the Phoenix Suns in a 105–98 win on April 6. This win in Phoenix was especially significant because the Mavs had been nearly unable to defeat a contending team on the road the entire season. Continuing their playoff push, Dirk hit a crucial three-pointer with 0.9 seconds left, defeating the
Utah Jazz 97–94 on April 10. This victory guaranteed them a playoff spot and their 8th consecutive 50-win season. In the first round of the playoffs, the Mavericks were eliminated once again, by the
New Orleans Hornets 4–1 on the road, 99–94. Just one day after a disappointing season ended, Avery Johnson was dismissed as Head Coach of the Dallas Mavericks. On May 9, 2008,
Rick Carlisle was hired as the head coach.
[4] [5] [6] [7] [8]
After losing to the
Hornets in the first round of the 2008 playoffs,
Avery Johnson was fired, and
Rick Carlisle was hired as the new head coach for the Dallas Mavericks. After getting off to a rocky start at 2-7, the Mavericks eventually found themselves with the sixth spot in the western conference playoff bracket for 2009. This was after going 50-32 (ninth consecutive 50+-win season) and about three to four weeks earlier, weren't even sure if they were going to make the eighth and final spot. But a run of 5-1 in their last six regular season games got them to a game over the Hornets for sixth place.
Dirk Nowitzki also entered the postseason with a streak of twenty-five consecutive games of scoring 20 or more points, which was ended in the first game of the quarterfinals series verses the arch-rival,
San Antonio Spurs.
The Mavericks surprised many people by winning Game 1, 105-97 in San Antonio. The Spurs would come back to win Game 2 though, by twenty-one points, as the series shifted to Dallas, as the two teams had both won a game. Dallas, who had only lost one game at home after the All-Star Break, won both Games 3 and 4 at home, by twenty-one and nine points, 88-67, and 99-90. San Antonio was just trying to win Game 5 to extend the series, but they couldn't do it as the Mavericks eventually took over and won by thirteen, 106-93, clinching the series, as they would get out of the first round of the playoffs for the first time since the 2006 playoffs when they advanced all the way to the Finals.
In the semifinals, they would face the two-seeded
Denver Nuggets, who were fresh off an easy 4-1 series win against the New Orleans Hornets, including a 58-point win in New Orleans. The Mavericks would stay close with the Nuggets in the first three quarters of Games 1 and 2, but it was the fourth quarter where
Carmelo Anthony and the Nuggets would finally wake up, as they took the first two games by double-digit figures. Game 3 in Dallas was close the whole way, and Dallas seemed to be going on to win, leading by five points with less than a minute to go. But a three-pointer got the Nuggets within two, and when Dirk Nowitzki missed a turnaround fadeaway shot that he has been known so much for hitting, the Nuggets got an opportunity with less than ten seconds to go. Carmelo Anthony used it to nail a three-pointer with exactly one second to go, but it wasn't a
good
shot. Antoine Wright, knowing that the Mavericks had a foul to give, intentionally fouled Anthony by bumping him a bit, but the official didn't call it. The Maverick players stopped play, expecting to hear the whistle, when Carmelo hit the shot that shocked Dallas fans, making the score 106-105 with 1.0 seconds to go. Rick Carlisle and other Maverick players tried to explain that Antoine had fouled him before the shot, but it couldn't be taken back. After the Nuggets won Game 3, it was later announced by the league that the referees made the wrong call, but nothing could be done about it.
44 points in Game 4 from Dirk Nowitzki would save the Mavs' season, sending the series back to Denver for a Game 5, the series in Denver's favor, 3-1. Nobody had ever come back from a 3-0 series defecit in NBA history, and the Mavericks wouldn't either, losing 124-110 in Game 5 to end their season.
Uniforms
Currently the Dallas uniforms consist of midnight blue with royal blue, silver and white trim on the road uniforms, while the home uniforms consist of white with midnight blue, royal blue and silver trim. Beginning in the
2004–05 NBA season, they introduced the alternate green uniforms, similar to the Mavs '80s road uniforms. They are designed by rapper
Sean "P. Diddy" Combs, and feature "Mavs" in the front side of the jersey with blue trim. Initially, the road uniform colors are royal blue with green and white trim during their expansion season of
1980–81, but was inverted to green with royal blue and white trim, which was their uniform standard during the 1980s. In the 1990s they reverted back to their first season road uniform scheme, with minor alterations in the "Dallas" script. For the first 21 years of the franchise their home uniform colors were white with royal blue and green trim, with a few alterations to the script "Mavericks" during the 1990s.
Head coaches
Season-by-season records
Home arenas
- Reunion Arena (1980–2001)
- American Airlines Center (2001–present)
Transactions
Players
Current roster
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