Someone was legally required to win the alleged basketball game between the Dallas Mavericks (22-44) and the Memphis Grizzlies (23-42) at the FedEx Forum on Thursday. Simply by being able to field a team of greater than eight glorified G-Leaguers, the Mavericks were that team, earning a win if only by default, 120-112, in the Home of the Blues.
The Mavericks built a double-digit lead early, which is notable because they came into Thursday’s game having only built a double-digit lead in 22 games this
year, the second-worst mark in the league. Dallas tried to give it all back with a lazy third quarter, but beat the Grizzlies for the first time this year in the fourth and final meeting between the two teams.
Khris Middleton was a man on fire in the fourth to bring home the win that snapped the Mavericks’ eight-game losing streak. More on that below, as we’ve got five stats that tell the tale of Thursday’s feel-good(?) win for the Mavs.
3-of-3: Khris Middleton first-quarter 3-point shooting
Khris Middleton came in off the bench with 6:48 left in the first and hit his first 3-pointer of the game from the left corner just two possessions later, extending the Mavs’ lead to 14-9. He stepped back along the left wing for his second of the game two minutes later as part of a little 9-0 Dallas run to make it 20-9. His third came in the final minute of the first quarter from nearly the same spot and put the Mavericks ahead 32-17.
Middleton went 3-of-3 from distance in the first quarter to lead the Mavericks with nine points at the end of one. Dallas led 34-22 with one quarter in the books. Max Christie was the only other Maverick to make a 3-pointer in the first.
Middleton finished with 35 points on 10-of-17 shooting and 8-of-10 shooting from 3-point range in the win at Memphis.
5:58: Grizzlies’ second-quarter stretch without a field goal
The Mavericks held Memphis without a field goal for 5:58 of the second quarter, starting at the 8:28 mark. Already up 10, a 12-2 Dallas run fed the advantage and pushed the lead to 57-37 on Naji Marshall’s driving score with 4:38 remaining in the first half.
At one point, the hapless Grizzlies’ offense missed nine straight field goal attempts in the second. Memphis responded with its first signs of life of the game, a 14-3 run to pull within 61-50 on Taylor Hendricks’ first make of the game, a 3-pointer from near the top of the key with 1:38 left in the half.
The Mavericks led 65-54 at the break.
4: Consecutive double-doubles for Daniel Gafford
Daniel Gafford feasted inside against the smaller Memphis front line, racing to 17 points and eight rebounds in the first half. He finished with 22 and 14 in the win. His free throw with just under nine minutes to play broke his previous season-high mark, which came just five days ago in the Mavericks’ 122-92 loss at the Toronto Raptors.
The win over the Grizzlies was Gafford’s fourth straight double-double, a good sign after injuries and the absence of a certain Slovenian superstar in the lineup have pushed his production into the commode this season. He grabbed his 10th rebound with 9:30 remaining in the third quarter and consistently showed more lift to his game, albeit against a diminutive set of bigs opposite him.
3:56: Mavericks’ scoreless stretch late in the third
Marvin Bagley III drove for a score with 3:58 remaining in the third to put Dallas ahead 84-74, and the Mavericks did not hit another shot from the field for the rest of the quarter. They wouldn’t have scored any points at all were it not for a bail-out foul with Middleton in the air attempting a 3-pointer with two seconds remaining.
Middleton made 2-of-3 at the line for the Mavs’ first points in nearly four minutes to give Dallas a slim 86-84 lead going into the fourth. Memphis outscored the Mavericks 30-21 in the frame, as Dallas went 1-of-8 from deep after halftime.
22: Middleton’s fourth-quarter scoring
Those two free throws were part of Middleton’s personal 11-0 run, as the trade deadline acquisition scored the first nine points of the fourth quarter. He nailed two more 3-pointers from the top of the key to extend the Mavs’ lead to 92-84 with 11:20 to play. Then, he was fouled on another 3-point attempt by Memphis rookie Javon Small the next time down.
His baseline jumper two possessions later gave him 13 straight points for the Mavericks and 24 for the game, singlehandedly pulling Dallas out of a tailspin in the process. His mid-range fadeaway with 8:15 left gave Middleton a new season-high 26 points, and he finished with 35.
When his seventh 3-pointer of the game fell despite a hand in his face from the left corner with two minutes to play, his 19 fourth-quarter points became the most of any Mavs player this year in the final frame. He hit his eighth the next time down for good measure to give him 22 in the fourth and 35 for the game. At 34 years of age, it was the highest scoring quarter of Middleton’s career. He hadn’t had a 30-point game in nearly three years.
He was, as they say, on one as Dallas went home with the 120-112 win.









