The Dallas Mavericks (23-48, 14-22 Home) took the Los Angeles Clippers to overtime on Saturday before falling 138-131 in a game that had no business being that close and (if you were watching) every reason to be exactly that close. These Mavericks don’t fold. They don’t mail it in. They play hard enough to make you forget, for stretches at a time, what the standings actually say. On Monday at 8:30 PM CT, they host the Golden State Warriors (33-38, 14-23 Away), who arrive at the AAC without Stephen
Curry, without Jimmy Butler, and without much to offer beyond Draymond Green’s behavioral grab bag and Brandin Podziemski doing his best impression of a lead guard. Both teams have lost eight of their last ten. One of these losing streaks ends tonight. Let’s look at three things before the Mavericks take on a familiar yet barely recognizable foe.
The Mavericks are losing the right way
Somewhere between sixth and seventh in the Tankathon standings, Dallas sits with a 9.0% shot at the top pick in a loaded draft class—behind Indiana, Washington, Brooklyn, Sacramento, and Utah, all of whom have more losses and, in several cases, seemingly more organizational intent to keep accumulating them. The NBA made that point explicitly in February, when it fined the Jazz $500,000 and the Pacers $100,000 for what commissioner Adam Silver called “overt behavior that prioritizes draft position over winning.” Pulling healthy stars in fourth quarters of close games. Sitting rotation players against medical advice. The league had seen enough.
The Mavericks are not engaged in such overly obvious shenanigans. Jason Kidd is playing as close to a winning rotation on any given night as he has available. Veterans including Washington, Gafford, Marshall, and Thompson are playing to win every night because that’s who they are, not because the front office is choosing their level of competitive fire or minutes on the floor. PJ Washington is averaging 14.6 points and 6.9 rebounds since the start of March, and in the overtime loss to LA on Saturday put up 21 and nearly won it off an offensive rebound in the final seconds. Daniel Gafford came off the bench against Atlanta last Wednesday after a brief absence and went 9-for-10 from the field for 24 points in 22 minutes, which is the kind of performance that makes you wonder why his minutes are being managed at all. This is not Cooper Flagg and four guys standing around watching. There’s real pride in this building, and it shows up every night even when the results don’t.
That duality—proud of the fight, aware of the math—is what it means to watch this team right now. Dallas sits eight games back of Indiana and two behind Utah in the loss column. They probably aren’t moving up given how hard they are fighting but they aren’t engineered to move down either, and there’s something genuinely refreshing about that in a season where the race to the bottom has been uglier than usual.
The cost of betting on aging stars
Stephen Curry is 37 years old and, when healthy this season, has been almost absurdly good—averaging 27.2 points, which only LeBron James has topped at that age in NBA history. The problem is the “when healthy” part. Curry has been out since January 30 with runner’s knee, and in his absence the Warriors have gone 6-13. With him, they won 59% of their games. Without him, 32%.
Golden State made a calculated bet last season when they acquired Jimmy Butler, deciding that Curry’s window—however narrow it was getting—was still worth pushing through. It was a reasonable bet. Butler tore his ACL in January. Curry went down two weeks later. Two pillars of the same window, lost in the same month.
The Mavericks learned a version of this lesson themselves. Kyrie Irving and Anthony Davis were supposed to form the bridge between the Luka era and whatever came next. Irving is missing this entire season during his ACL recovery and Davis was traded to Washington in a reset button maneuver. When you pin your hopes on players past thirty, availability is a variable, not a constant. Golden State found that out. Dallas found it out. The difference is Dallas now has a teenager who plays like he’s been doing this for a decade, and Golden State has Draymond Green playing out the string of a dynasty that won its last ring four years ago.
Curry is trending toward a return as early as Wednesday’s home game against the Nets. Tonight in Dallas is likely one of his last absences. It’s still not going to save the Warriors’ season as I suspect they are out in the play-in or an early round exit if they advance to the playoffs.
Four years is forever
I just find it genuinely hard to believe that the 2022 Western Conference Finals happened four years ago. I can still see Dorian Finney-Smith and Reggie Bullock ground down to a fine pumice like substance by the end of that series because Jason Kidd had no one else he trusted to defend opposing scorers. Brunson and Dinwiddie starting without Luka in Utah. Maxi Kleber hitting threes in the desert like he’d been saving them all season. That whole run felt like the sky opening up—like Dallas had finally turned a corner and the next decade was going to be something.
Four years later, here are the players from those two rosters still on their original teams who may see action in tonight’s contest: Draymond Green. Dwight Powell. That’s the list.
Klay Thompson—who scored 32 points and hit eight threes to close out these Mavericks in Game 5 of that series—is now in a Dallas uniform, averaging 11.8 points in year two of a three-year deal on a team that has pivoted decisively away from anything he signed up for. He came here for a fifth ring. Luka got traded six months later. His contract runs through next season at $16.7 million and he may well be dealt in the offseason when whoever takes over as GM starts building their own thing around Cooper Flagg. We might be watching the final chapters of Klay Thompson’s career, which is a strange thing to sit with.
Part of this is just this old writer getting…older. Time moves faster at 50 than it did at 40, and four years that should feel like four years somehow feels like eighteen months. But part of it is genuinely how completely these franchises have transformed. The Warriors went from dynasty to expensive construction project gasping for the stars to align for just one more run. The Mavericks went from Finals contender to full rebuild, skipping several steps along the way thanks to the decision maker at the time who has Voldemort levels of popularity in Dallas.
What hasn’t changed is that these two teams still show up and compete. That’s worth something, even in March, even with the standings looking the way they do.
Where to watch
The Mavericks and Warriors tip off at 8:30 PM CT from American Airlines Center on Monday. Watch on Peacock. Go Mavs.









