It sure feels like the Dallas Mavericks' reset has hit a wall. They expected turbulence in the post-Luka Doncic era. What they didn’t expect, though, was paralysis. As the February 5 trade deadline approaches, Dallas finds itself caught between a generational new beginning and an immovable financial anchor. Anthony Davis’ uncertain future threatens to turn a difficult season into a long-term nightmare.
Season derailed
Dallas Mavericks forward Cooper Flagg (32) reacts after scoring against the Charlotte Hornets during the first quarter at American Airlines Center.
Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images
The Mavericks’ 2025-26 campaign has been a polarizing journey through what-ifs and hard realities. Sitting at 19-30 and 11th in the Western Conference, Dallas has spent most of the season searching for stability that never arrived. The plan to transition into a new era around Davis collapsed almost immediately when a devastating hand injury on January 8 limited him to just 20 appearances. Without him, the defensive identity the front office envisioned never materialized.
Compounding the issue is Kyrie Irving's injury status. That has removed the team’s only true perimeter shot-creator. The result has been an expensive roster without a functional hierarchy. Thy are too slow to defend, too disjointed to score, and too fragile to build momentum. For a franchise carrying one of the league’s highest payrolls, Dallas has instead been forced into nightly improvisation.
Cooper Flagg changes the timeline
Yet amid the chaos, a star was born. Cooper Flagg’s arrival has transformed the emotional trajectory of the franchise. Averaging 19.8 points, 6.6 rebounds, and 4.1 assists per game, Flagg has not merely flashed potential. He has played at an All-Star level from day one. He often looks like the most reliable two-way player on the floor.
Flagg’s rapid ascent has forced a philosophical shift. What was supposed to be a win-now bridge year has turned into the first chapter of a long-term rebuild. Every possession he dominates raises the stakes of the front office’s decisions. Dallas no longer has the luxury of drifting. Every misstep now risks wasting the most valuable asset in the sport: a cost-controlled generational talent.
Mavericks trade rumors
That urgency has fueled one of the most complicated rumor cycles in the league. The central question is stark. Can Dallas move Davis and truly reset? Reports suggest the front office has explored “cut at the root” scenarios. Those include ambitious frameworks that would send Davis to Utah in exchange for younger pieces better aligned with Flagg’s timeline.
That said, the market has been brutally cold. Davis’ $54.1 million salary, combined with his injury status, has cooled interest from teams initially linked as potential suitors. Public denials from his representation have done little to quiet speculation. Meanwhile, quiet withdrawals from teams like Atlanta and Toronto have left Dallas with limited leverage.
At the margins, Dallas has explored selling off role players. Naji Marshall has quietly become one of the most coveted wings on the market. For his part, Daniel Gafford could net meaningful draft capital. There’s even chatter about shedding veteran salary by moving Klay Thompson to a contender. Yet none of these moves solve the core dilemma. These merely rearrange the furniture.
The untradable anchor
The true nightmare for Dallas is making no trade at all. As the deadline approaches, the fear is that Davis simply can’t be moved.
This is where the situation turns dire. Again, Davis is owed a ton of salary this season. He is projected to earn nearly $58 million next year. Around the league, that number isn’t viewed as a superstar investment but as a financial albatross. Missing 26 of 46 games this season has only reinforced the perception that any acquiring team would be buying risk, not certainty.
Article Continues Below
Making matters worse is the extension factor. Reports indicate Davis is seeking a long-term max extension from any team that acquires him. That demand has reportedly spooked potential partners. Trading for Davis is no longer just about assets. It's about committing massive future cap space to a player entering his mid-30s with a long injury history. For rebuilding teams, that’s a non-starter. For contenders, it’s a gamble very few are willing to take.
A PR and roster disaster
Standing pat would leave Dallas entering the 2026 offseason with the fourth-most expensive roster in the NBA and a double-digit losing record. That is a public relations nightmare and a basketball one. It sends a damaging message to the locker room, to the fanbase, and most importantly, to Flagg.
Instead of clarity, the franchise would project confusion. Instead of a clean rebuild, Dallas would be stuck straddling timelines. They remain unable to fully pivot and unable to fully compete. One year of Flagg’s rookie contract would be effectively burned with nothing to show for it.
This hurts more than a bad trade
Bad trades can be corrected. Time can heal asset wounds. Immobility, though, is poison. If Dallas fails to move Davis now, his value only trends downward. Another injury, another missed stretch, or another expensive extension negotiation tightens the vise.
This franchise already endured the emotional whiplash of the Doncic departure. Now, this scenario would feel like déjà vu but worse. The Mavericks wouldn’t just be rebuilding; they’d be stuck rebuilding around a contract they can’t escape.
Choose direction or be chosen by it
Mavericks Anthony Davis sitting on the sideline. Place question marks everywhere.
The Mavericks don’t need a perfect deal. They need resolution. Whether that means absorbing short-term pain to align with Cooper Flagg’s timeline or swallowing pride to move off Anthony Davis at less-than-ideal value, doing nothing is the worst possible outcome.
In this league, indecision is often more damaging than mistakes. For Dallas, the real nightmare is being unable to let AD go.