LeBron To Dallas Buzz Comes With One Twist Mavs Fans Wont Expect

Could LeBron James trade his Lakers jersey for the Mavericks, as financial opportunities in Dallas begin to overshadow basketball strategy?

LeBron James’ next move is suddenly being discussed in Dallas, and the reason has less to do with basketball than with business.

A few days ago, the Mavericks were sitting at No. 14 in the betting pecking order for James. Now they’ve jumped to No. 9, with odds listed at 40/1. That rise followed comments from Rich Paul, who used a whiteboard on the “Game Over” podcast to lay out the teams and selling points for the four-time MVP and four-time NBA champion.

Dallas was on that board.

Paul’s pitch for the Mavericks centered on the city’s business appeal. “In Dallas, they have oil,” said Paul.

“They have golf. They have Macau and the Sands Corporation.

And then with Masai, you have the whole continent of Africa. A lot comes with Dallas and Masai.”

The board also included “Dallas + Masai,” along with “Oil,” “Golf,” “Macau” and “Africa.”

The references point to money and global reach. Macau is a gambling region in China, and Mavs governor Patrick Dumont is the CEO of Sands Corporation, which controls a casino and resort there. New team president Masai Ujiri has roots in Africa, another connection Paul highlighted.

What the pitch did not include was the basketball case.

There was no mention of Cooper Flagg. There was no mention of Kyrie Irving, either, even though a James-Irving reunion has been discussed for years. James and Irving won a championship together with the Cavaliers in 2016.

James, 41, recently told the Lakers he is leaving Los Angeles to pursue success elsewhere in what will be the 24th year of his career. According to what’s understood, he and Paul will talk to the Warriors, Nuggets, Cavaliers, Heat and 76ers.

Dallas is now in that mix, but the selling point appears to be the same one Paul put on the board: oil, golf, Macau and Africa.

Not basketball. Not yet.

In Other News...

Mavericks Finally Land Long-Stashed Shooter After One Major Hurdle

Tarik Biberovic is finally on the verge of making the move the Mavericks have had his rights stashed for, with the 24-year-old wing informing Fenerbahce that he will leave the EuroLeague to sign in Dallas. The deal is expected to run two years and carry a second-year team option, a tidy bit of business for a team still looking to add shooting and long-term flexibility around its core.

The path to getting it done was not simple, though, and the timing mattered. Biberovic had to clear an opt-out deadline tied to his Fenerbahce contract, and the Mavericks also had to navigate the buyout process under NBA rules before the signing could become official. For Dallas, it is the kind of overseas holdover resolution that can quietly matter, especially when a player has been on the radar long enough to become part of the franchises future planning. [Read more 🡒]

Mavericks May Have Finally Fixed The Problem Around Cooper Flagg

The Mavericks spent the offseason attacking the same flaw that showed up too often last year: too many lineups that could not punish defenses from the perimeter. Through the 2026 draft and a series of trades, Dallas has added a cluster of players who at least bring shooting into the conversation, including Morez Johnson Jr., Sergio De Larrea and the draft rights to Vsevolod Ishchenko, while also bringing in Santi Aldama and Marcus Sasser to help reshape the spacing around Cooper Flagg.

Aldama is the most intriguing of the bunch because he gives Dallas a 7-foot forward who can stretch the floor, and Sasser offers another backcourt option who can score and shoot from deep. The bigger question now is how much of this shooting makeover actually sticks once the roster is finalized, because the Mavericks still have one more move in the pipeline that could determine whether this really is the fix they were looking for. [Read more 🡒]

Lakers Are Chasing Luka's Old Mavs Formula For Better Or Worse

The Lakers latest roster-building push has a familiar feel for anyone who watched Luka Doncic operate in Dallas, because the pieces around him are starting to resemble the kind of setup the Mavericks used in 2024. The comparison is obvious in the way Los Angeles is trying to match up key positions and give Doncic the same sort of structural support that helped Dallas reach the Finals, even if the exact names and fit are not identical.

But there is a reason this kind of copycat approach comes with caution attached. Dallas version of the formula did not end with a championship, and the Lakers still have to answer the same kind of roster questions that can make or break a contender, especially on the wing where a dependable perimeter defender remains a major need. For Los Angeles, the challenge is not just looking like the Mavericks did, but proving the blueprint can actually take a team all the way. [Read more 🡒]