The Dallas Mavericks season may be over, but the team’s still making headlines — the NBA fined the organization $750K for resting several key players like Kyrie Irving vs. the Bulls in the second-to-last game of the season, with the league accusing the team of losing on purpose.
The league announced the hefty punishment Friday … explaining the Mavs violated the league’s player resting policy on April 7 in the game with Chicago to improve their chances of keeping their first-round draft pick in the 2023 NBA Draft.
Mavericks coach Jason Kidd confirms sitting players is a managerial decision, but he’s confident the team could win two play-in games on the road.
While things could change based on tonight’s outcome, Kidd expects Luka Doncic’s season to be done after the 1st quarter. pic.twitter.com/gPSYSeNsAA
— Grant Afseth (@GrantAfseth) April 7, 2023
@GrantAfseth
NBA executive VP Joe Dumars condemned Dallas for the move … saying the team’s actions “undermined the integrity of the sport,” adding their actions “failed our fans and our league.”
The Mavs were tied with the Bulls for the tenth-best lottery odds heading into the matchup … and would have owed the Knicks their first-round pick if they beat Chicago, going back to terms agreed on during the Kristaps Porzingis trade.
Jason Kidd literally put it on wax so this investigation should be quick lolpic.twitter.com/PxRqn8vrjJ
— Josh Buckhalter (@JoshGBuck) April 8, 2023
@JoshGBuck
The NBA launched an investigation after Dallas rested several key players — Kyrie Irving, Christian Wood, and Tim Hardaway Jr. — even with the team’s play-in tournament hopes still alive. Luka Doncic played the first 12 minutes and 35 seconds but missed the rest of the game.
Dallas head coach Jason Kidd seemed to confirm the idea of resting their players in the crucial game came from upper management … but said he agrees with his bosses’ decision.
The short-handed Mavericks took Chicago down to the wire … but ultimately lost their final two games, finishing the regular season with a disappointing 38-44 record after reaching the Western Conference Finals last season.
But, they kept their draft pick. What they didn’t keep … was the $750,000.