The Mavericks were 0-3 this past week and remain in 13th place in the West. Defense was optional during their losing streak, as the Mavericks lost three barn burners to Atlanta (135-120), the Clippers (138-131), and Golden State (137-131). Cooper Flagg led the team in scoring with 22.3 points per game.
Grade: C+
The Mavericks hung tough with the Clippers and Warriors. In both games, they attempted a shot to win in regulation, and both were facilitated by Cooper Flagg (one was a shot he took, and one was a pass
to the guy who shot). Neither play was successful, and Dallas lost both overtimes in a similar way: by running out of steam. The games are starting to run together as the season reaches the final stages.
Daniel Gafford continues his resurgence and now owns the fourth-most 20-point games ever without a miss. Naji Marshall and P.J. Washington maintained steady play, averaging 16.0 and 17.7 points over the last three games, respectively. Klay Thompson heard my criticism from last week and made 13 of the 23 threes he attempted. Max Christie’s play has leveled back out with a 12-of-25 shooting performance over his last 86 minutes.
The Mavericks have a quick road trip out west this week to Denver and Portland before they return home to face Minnesota next Monday.
Straight A’s: Cooper Flagg
The Mavericks have 10 games left before the 2025-26 campaign is a wrap. Flagg is currently averaging 20.3 points, 6.6 rebounds, 4.6 assists, 0.9 blocks, and 1.1 steals per game. All of these rank in the top-five among rookies, and his points per game ranks 33rd among all 450-plus players in the NBA. He is outscoring guys like Karl-Anthony Towns and DeMar DeRozan, and yet, according to FanDuel, Flagg is not the favorite to win rookie of the year. That honor goes to Kon Knueppel, who is having a fantastic rookie season. But he is not Cooper Flagg.
Flagg is coming off of his eighth 30-point game of the season, which ties Luka Doncic for second-most in franchise history for a rookie, and seventh-most in the last 30 years of the NBA. His 56 blocks this season place him behind Dereck Lively as the only Mavericks rookies to record 50-plus blocks since 2004 (Josh Howard, 54). The 277 assists he has dished out are fourth behind Dennis Smith Jr., Luka Doncic, and current head coach Jason Kidd in the Mavericks rookie ranks. He has done a little of everything, and all at the ripe age of 19.
In the one head-to-head matchup between the two, Flagg had 49 points and 10 rebounds. But, in what is likely the reason Knueppel is ahead of Flagg in the race, the Hornets won that game. I am not sure if there has ever been a rookie of the year race decided by team success. It is not usually a relevant statistic, given that a lot of these guys are drafted to bad teams. If that ends up being the reason Knueppel wins, so be it. Flagg will just beat him to more important awards. But it shouldn’t be the reason Flagg loses, because if you watch the two of them play consistently, it is clear who the better rookie is. And it is the guy who plays in Dallas.
Currently Failing: Khris Middleton
Last week, I mentioned that “The Unction” (Klay Thompson and Khris Middleton) was huffing and puffing to get to the finish line. Thompson found some life, but Middleton seemingly keeled over and gasped for air after I wrote that. This past week was one of the worst he has had in recent memory. He made just one of every three shots he took, and played under 20 minutes in each game (this includes two overtime contests). He turned it over five times while recording just three assists and has not reached 10 points in six consecutive games. That is especially hilarious because the seventh game was a 35-point explosion in Memphis. There is no one more eager to get to the offseason than Middleton.
Extra Credit: Marvin Bagley III
Bagley has been a gem after he was seemingly a throw-in to the Anthony Davis trade. He has given Dallas a great boost at center off the bench, so much so that he has made a case to be the team’s backup next season. What really separated him from Daniel Gafford or Dwight Powell, however, has been his willingness to take open threes. He took four this week and made three, and if he can build on that going into the offseason, he will find himself a home in Dallas.









