Dirk questions Mavericks

Street Knowledge

Veteran
Supporter
Joined
May 2, 2012
Messages
26,287
Reputation
2,279
Daps
63,368
Reppin
NYC
Dirk Nowitzki questions Mavericks - ESPN

DALLAS -- With the Dallas Mavericks' 12-season playoff streak in serious jeopardy, star forward Dirk Nowitzki expressed strong doubt about the front office's plan for the franchise's future, even wondering whether it'd be in the Mavs' best interests to trade him.

Nowitzki, who was admittedly disappointed and frustrated after the Mavs dropped to eight games below .500 with their eighth loss in nine games Saturday night, told ESPNDallas.com that owner Mark Cuban's post-lockout decision to let Tyson Chandler and other key members of the 2011 title team leave could be judged as "a mistake or not" after seeing whether the Mavs are able to make any major personnel moves this summer.

The plan was to acquire a legitimate superstar in his prime -- or possibly even two -- to lighten the 34-year-old Nowitzki's load in the latter stage of his surefire Hall of Fame career. But Chris Paul and Dwight Howard did not hit the free agency market last summer as anticipated when Dallas decided to create significant salary cap space for the first time in Cuban's 13-year ownership tenure -- they both can be free agents this summer -- and the Mavs' recruiting efforts failed to land Deron Williams.


"It's going to be tough now," Nowitzki said after the Mavs' home overtime loss to the Western Conference cellar-dwelling New Orleans Hornets. "I always liked to think you don't want to build your franchise on hope.

"We hoped for Deron last year. We hoped for Dwight. Why would he leave the Lakers? To me, it makes no sense. He's in a great situation. Why would CP3 leave? (The Los Angeles Clippers are) the best team in the league probably right now. They're probably the deepest team. So are you going to hope that we get something?

"Maybe Cuban has something up his sleeve. Maybe you have to take a chance on a bad contract to get him in here and make something happen. I mean, I don't know. That's something we'll have to see this summer. We're going to play out this season. I'm going to get better and better, hopefully from game to game, so I can actually close out some of these games. And then we'll see what happens."

At 13-21, the Mavs entered Sunday 5½ games out of the West's eighth seed, and there are only two teams in the conference with worse records. It's an unfamiliar feeling for a franchise that had its streak of 11 50-win seasons end during last season's lockout-compressed campaign, when the stripped-down Mavs' title defense ended with a first-round sweep at the hands of the Oklahoma City Thunder.

Now Nowitzki, who notes that the Mavs' playoff hopes wouldn't be nearly so bleak had he not missed the first 27 games of the season after undergoing arthroscopic surgery on his right knee, is the centerpiece of a struggling team with chemistry concerns, surrounded by newcomers whose contracts expire at the end of the season.

That's the risk the Mavs took when they opted to make financial flexibility a priority in an attempt to hit a home run in free agency.


"We knew that coming in, that eight or nine new guys on one-year deals is not really an ideal situation, but what else is there to do?" Nowitzki said. "So either you break the whole thing up and trade me or you get a bunch of one-year deals and try to be a player next summer. That's the decision we made, so now we've got to fight through it."

That was the second time in a week that Nowitzki, who has a no-trade clause in his four-year, $80 million contract that expires after the 2013-14 season, mentioned the possibility of trading him.

However, Nowitzki said he has not seriously considered playing for another franchise. The 15-year veteran and 11-time All-Star has consistently said he wants to play his entire career for the Mavs.

"The only reason I would leave -- or would have left -- is if we wouldn't have won the championship and I would have been like a Karl Malone and (Gary) Payton going to join Kobe and Shaq in L.A. like they did at the end," Nowitzki said. "But now I've got a ring and obviously want to finish my career here. But I also want to be competitive."
 

G.O.A.T Squad Spokesman

Logic Is Absent Wherever Hate Is Present
Joined
May 12, 2012
Messages
79,937
Reputation
5,721
Daps
235,008
He's had more success in 1 year than my franchise has had in 35 years. I have no sorrow for him. He's won damn near every season he's been in the league. Let him eat at the bottom with the crabs for awhile.
 

Arrogance.

King Novak of Melbourne, the First of His Name
Joined
May 13, 2012
Messages
7,593
Reputation
1,535
Daps
13,800
Reppin
TSC/LToMD
:guilty:

"We hoped for Deron last year. We hoped for Dwight."

Nowitzki, who was admittedly disappointed and frustrated after the Mavs dropped to eight games below .500 with their eighth loss in nine games Saturday night, told ESPNDallas.com that owner Mark Cuban's post-lockout decision to let Tyson Chandler and other key members of the 2011 title team leave could be judged as "a mistake or not" after seeing whether the Mavs are able to make any major personnel moves this summer.

I still do not get why Dallas couldn't have made a second run at the title with JJ Barea, Tyson Chandler, and a couple mid level veteran free agent pickups. There was something special about that Mavs team. Tyson as the defensive pillar set the tone for the entire team on that end. His confidence as a leader can be seen in New York now, and Dallas still hasn't found a replacement. Oh, but Dwight is available at the end of the year, right?

Cuban fukked up.
 

Codeine Bryant

Superstar
Supporter
Joined
Nov 19, 2012
Messages
11,712
Reputation
3,260
Daps
46,114
Reppin
DFW
He's just venting. Dirk's not going anywhere. Guy has always sat with the TV guys and done commentary while he's sat out games the past couple years, and he's going to have a 30 foot statue built in front of the AAC when it's all said and done.

I do feel bad for the guy, though. He put his heart and soul into this franchise and Cuban is making a mockery of him right now. On the other hand, that's the price you pay when you keep signing old ass veterans on your team instead of drafting and developing youth. We'll have a ton of cap space this offseason along with what should be some decent draft picks, assuming we continue sucking and miss the playoffs, entering the lottery for the first time in over a decade :gladbron:

Not saying we're going to get CP3 or Dwight :comeon: in the offseason, but we'll be prepared to offer some quality players contracts, which is something we haven't done in a few years.

Plus, are people on here actually with the line of thought that the Mavs would be better off with aging players like Kidd and Terry? :wtf: Or one year wonder, 2nd string AT BEST players like JJ Barea? Deshawn Stevenson was money in the Finals in 2011, but he's just a role player. Really, the ONLY guy that fans and Dirk can be mad about letting go is Tyson, and even then, that was one of only 3 healthy seasons he had ever played in his entire tenure in the league up to that point. After giving guys like Shawn Bradley, Raef LaFrentz, Erica Dampier, and Bendan Haywood egregious contracts, I can understand the hesitation for giving a guy who has never shown the ability to stay healthy a hefty 4 year, 60 mil contract.
 

Arrogance.

King Novak of Melbourne, the First of His Name
Joined
May 13, 2012
Messages
7,593
Reputation
1,535
Daps
13,800
Reppin
TSC/LToMD
Resigning Kidd? :huhldup:
Keeping Terry? :mjpls:

Getting rid of the whole championship roster? :snoop:

I like Cuban's high aspirations for the franchise. Blowing up the team based on a couple of maybe-this-will-pan-out scenarios still wasn't the logically sound move. As CFDT pointed out, there's a lot of money moving off the books this offseason and we could build on youth for once. Just kill the Dwight and CP3 shyt already, or at least show up to the fukking free agent meetings this year! :heh:
 

R=G

Street Terrorist
Supporter
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
125,225
Reputation
8,795
Daps
148,243
Reppin
Westcoast
Dirk has always been there for Dallas..thick and thin. He's not leaving but he's not used to this kind of shyt. Must be irritating.
 
Top