Every now and then, a video drops that doesn’t just react to news — it reframes the entire ecosystem around it. This time our RoundUp spotlight falls on a breakdown of Tim MacMahon’s latest reporting,
and if you haven’t read the ESPN piece yet, this video actually serves as the better point of entry. It takes a sprawling story — power struggles, playoff illusions, back-channel maneuvering — and tightens it into a human problem rather than a basketball one. Because at a certain point, this isn’t about Luka, or AD, or Cooper Flagg. It’s about what happens when a franchise’s internal story stops matching reality.
What this video captures best is the texture of that denial. Cuban insisting he still ran basketball ops long after the paperwork said otherwise. Nico Harrison selling a narrative so confidently to a post-Finals deer-in-the-confetti new owner. Patrick Dumont stepping in hard, and discovering—too late—what happens when you accept a single voice as the whole truth.
The takeaway isn’t just that Dallas made the worst trade in modern NBA history. It’s that they built the conditions where such a trade became imaginable. Bad decisions don’t appear out of thin air; they come from misaligned incentives, overgrown egos, and leaders who assume the room will bend to their certainty.
What I appreciate most about TheFlightMike’s approach is that he doesn’t sensationalize the chaos. He organizes it. He shows you how each man believed he was the adult in the room — and how that belief, unchecked, created a nine-month freefall from Finals to farce. (Mike does attribute the beer removal to Harrison rather than Finley—though the RoundUp can easily imagine that was a Harrison directive.)
If you care about team-building, leadership, or the thin line between confidence and blind spots, this one’s worth your time. It’s not just a recap. It’s a map of how power actually moves when no one is truly in control.
Bonus Musical Vibe:
Simply Red has been at it for 40 years, and the Dallas Mavericks are celebrating their 45th. Given the state of affairs in Mavs land, this song feels timely.











