The Dallas Mavericks fell again at home on Friday night, losing to the Orlando Magic 138-127. Wendell Carter Jr. led a balanced Magic scoring attack with 28. Cooper Flagg put up 51 points in defeat for Dallas, becoming the first teenager to ever score over 50 in an NBA game.
The opening period in Dallas saw the Magic score early, often, and easily from the field. The team shot 65% from the floor with contributions spread evenly across the board. The Mavericks hung in largely through fantastic three-point
shooting; the team hit five of 10 attempts in the opening quarter. Dallas trailed the Magic after 12 minutes, 38-31.
Klay Thompson seemed hellbent on keeping Dallas in this one, hitting his third and fourth threes of the game early in the quarter under extreme duress. The Mavericks eventually picked up Klay’s energy and Cooper Flagg and Naji took control of the game, rallying Dallas back to within three halfway through the period. But after tying the game at 53, Dallas got stuck offensively, committing a variety of turnovers paired with many missed shots. The Magic slowly pushed ahead as the Mavericks could not get out of their own way, ending the half trailing, 71-58.
As has been the pattern in the third quarter, Dallas got ground down to dust. The Magic scored at will on a Dallas defense devoid of principles in the halfcourt. Cooper Flagg at least put on a scoring binge, so that was fun, but the Mavericks entered the fourth down 111-92.
The final frame was chaotic; Jason Kidd was ejected arguing a horrible no call on a Cooper Flagg drive and Naji Marshall earned a technical as well. Despite Dallas being down 25 or more points, Dallas went on a Flagg-led run to close the lead some, forcing an Orlando timeout. This is the same team that allowed a 31-0 run from the Raptors just last month. But, despite Flagg’s performance, Dallas just couldn’t get stops to make a real dent in the lead. Watching Flagg operate was awesome though.
For Cooper Flagg, there is no ceiling
We’ve talked about Cooper all year, his shooting, his defense, his growth as a play maker. He’s a star in the making and if you’re still grinding out these Mavericks games with us, you’re going to be able to say you saw him way back when one day.
Tonight’s offensive performance from Flagg is a rallying call for those Mavs fans in your life who are checked out because the season’s been awful or who haven’t watched a game since the Luka trade. I get it, it’s not been easy. But this is special, very special and I want other people to join us here. We should have a whole post on this scoring performance at some point.
Tonight, the three point shot made the difference, as he hit six of nine attempts. That’s going to be what turns him from a good to great scorer and while it won’t happen over night, it will happen. He’s too good.
Shout out to Frank Vogel for his timeout usage. He helped get Flagg spots of rest so that he could go for that scoring number.









