Oh, the good, old days. Back when things were so much better, and the sun was shining brighter, and the ocean was less polluted. Back then, Luka Doncic was a Maverick and constantly managed to carry his team further than expected, and we talked about how the team as a whole was better than the sum of its parts.
But you know what wasn’t better in the good, old days? Jalen Brunson. Luka’s sidekick, who was a decent playmaker back then, but nothing extraordinary next to Luka Doncic. The two were drafted
together in 2018 and learned the ropes of the league together. They grew up together in a way, until Jalen Brunson signed with the New York Knicks as a free agent in 2022.
The failure by Dallas to retain Brunson was highly criticized by many at the time and remains a sore topic for many Dallas fans. It didn’t help when he started winning with and leading a Knicks team, slowly and steadily built around him. Brunson became an All-Star in 2024 and received All-NBA Team selection for the first time that same year. He went on to become a three time NBA All-Star, three time All-NBA Second Team and Clutch Player of the Year in the 2024/25 season.
Because, as it turns out, Jalen Brunson’s ceiling was much higher than we’d seen in Dallas. His potential to lead was clear from his Villanova days, but in reality he was not a real factor next to Luka Doncic.
Sure, there were signs. Jalen Brunson averaged 32 points in the three playoff games he played without Luka Doncic during his time in Dallas. He led – and I mean led – the Dallas Mavericks to victory in two out of those three games in the First Round of the 2022 playoffs against a Utah Jazz team that had had a very good season. It stood out how Brunson rose to the occasion back then.
And after he had departed from Dallas, it became very clear that there was a void on the team, a type of leadership void that was hard to pinpoint. But the fact was that something was missing, lacking, on a team still with its best player around in Luka.
I wrote a piece back then, calling him the shadow leader we took for granted, and how he had clearly been a much needed support and fixture for a young superstar in Luka. Brunson helped Luka Doncic carry the team and he helped him thrive in Dallas as he had from day one.
Without Brunson things got murky. Until Kyrie Irving came along and provided some of the same support, things seemed harder and the joy and energy of the team and its superstar had waned a little. Even the best of superstars and generational talents to ever see the sport have needed a second guy, a number two to help carry the mental load, the burden of lifting and carrying and locker room leadership. Jalen Brunson was that along the way for Luka Doncic.
But for Brunson to reach his own full potential, he needed more possessions, more space, a different way of playing. They both have a heliocentric style of playing, him and Luka, needing touches and time to thrive. The other thing they have in common is the clutch finishing. Both players step up when needed, thrive under pressure and enjoy the challenge and responsibility of closing a game.
In Dallas, it was Luka’s team, it was his job and his pride to close games. In New York, with a roster built around him, Jalen Brunson is the guy with the final touch. The guy who takes responsibility for the game with seconds left. And he is good at it.
We saw that play out once again last night in the first game of the NBA Finals, where the Knicks stole the win against the San Antonio Spurs. In the fourth, Brunson took charge and led the team to victory. That is how you can tell the difference between who is a superstar and who is just a very good basketball player.Are you able to take over a game when it matters the most? Brunson did it in the biggest game of his career yet last night.
But Jalen Brunson is not Luka Doncic. Comparing the two is not worth our time. Both are great players in their own right, however, and unlike Luka Doncic, Jalen Brunson has a roster that fits him. It was built around him, from best Villanova buddy Josh Hart, who can read his mind because they know each other so well (same can more or less be said of fellow Villanova alumni Mikal Bridges), to OG Anunoby, who’s the team’s leading scorer after Brunson, and Karl-Anthony Towns, who playing more like an offensive hub during the playoffs to create looks for his teammates.
Connection and cohesion over a longer period of time matters in team sport. Building a roster that fits together matters. You can’t just put a couple of superstars on the same team and assume that it works out like in a computer game.
Jalen Brunson is a great example of how roster construction can make or break a career. If you never end up in the right – or just a good – situation that can help you reach your ceiling, you may never reach your potential.
What would have happened if Brunson had stayed in Dallas? I don’t want to speculate about that, it’s not a nice thought. But it does show how many players, who may seem washed or mid, could have a huge hidden potential in the right situation.
And if they had the right people around them, who could help them get to an environment which is better for them, there’s a good chance they might thrive and blossom into stars, which most of us never saw coming.
Hidden gems are all over the league, all over the world. The trick is to see the signs of their potential before it’s too late.
And in the name of hoping for the best basketball possible, of course we cheer for old Maverick JB, who went through so much to finally find his home in New York. Too bad it wasn’t in Dallas, though.
Let’s hope all potential stars get the chance to end up in a similar situation.











