Report: Dallas Mavericks Not Interested In Trading All-NBA Player
The Dallas Mavericks are off to a rough 5-14 start, and with injuries piling up, trade rumors have begun to swirl. However, despite the team’s struggles and external noise, the front office has reportedly made its position clear on one key player: Kyrie Irving is not on the trading block.
Dallas Mavericks Want To Keep Kyrie Irving
According to a recent report from ESPN’s Tim MacMahon, “the Mavericks do not want to trade him.” This stance represents a significant doubling down on their investment in the veteran guard, whom they re-signed to a three-year, $118 million contract this past offseason, even as he was recovering from a torn ACL. While some may question the logic of holding onto an aging, injured star on a struggling team, the Mavericks’ decision signals a belief in the long-term vision they have for their roster.
A Bet on a Healthy Roster
Dallas’s decision to keep Irving is fundamentally a bet on what this team can be when fully healthy. Irving has yet to play this season, and fellow star Anthony Davis has missed all but five games with a calf injury. Without their two cornerstones, the Mavericks have relied heavily on rookie Cooper Flagg. While Flagg has been impressive, he can’t carry the load alone.
The front office clearly believes that a healthy trio of Irving, Davis, and Flagg is a combination that can compete in the Western Conference. Trading Irving before he even has a chance to share the court with the team’s other key pieces would be a premature abandonment of their offseason strategy. The Mavericks see more value in staying the course and waiting to see what their full-strength roster can accomplish. Their shallow backcourt depth, compared to a more crowded frontcourt, also makes holding onto an All-Star caliber guard a logical priority.
What Does This Mean for Anthony Davis?
While the Mavericks seem committed to Irving, the same may not be true for Anthony Davis. MacMahon also noted that a trade involving Davis is a “real possibility” and perhaps even a “likelihood.” This makes sense from a roster construction standpoint and signals a potential pivot in team-building strategy.
Davis was the centerpiece of the trade that sent Luka Donฤiฤ to the Los Angeles Lakers, but the general manager who orchestrated that deal, Nico Harrison, was recently fired. With a new leadership direction, the team may look to move the oft-injured, 32-year-old big man for assets that better fit their long-term timeline and on-court needs. Trading Davis could bring back a significant return that adds depth and youth, while keeping Irving provides the proven, high-level guard play needed to complement Flagg.
For now, the Mavericks are choosing patience over panic. They are doubling down on their belief that a healthy Kyrie Irving is a critical part of their path back to contention. This decision effectively tables major roster changes until Irving returns and the front office can properly evaluate the team’s true potential.
