Mark Cuban has taken his fight over the Dallas Mavericks’ future to court, saying he’s being shut out of the team’s push for a new arena and may be facing a breach of the agreements he says are already in place.
Cuban’s lawyers filed a petition in Dallas County district court seeking sworn testimony from a corporate representative of the Arena Development Institute, a company formed by Mavericks ownership in Delaware. The filing centers on the Mavericks’ arena plans and Cuban’s claim that he is being kept in the dark as those plans move ahead.
The team announced in June that it had entered into an option agreement for the potential purchase of 104 acres of land at the former Valley View Mall site in North Dallas. The Mavericks’ lease at American Airlines Center runs through 2031, and the team wants to be in a new building before the 2031-32 season.
In the court document, Cuban lays out his version of how he sold his majority stake in the Mavericks to Miriam Adelson and her son-in-law Patrick Dumont, the Sands Corporation CEO who also serves as the Mavericks governor. Cuban said he began working with them in 2019 to help pass gambling in Texas, with the goal then being to build a “Venetian style destination resort” somewhere in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex.
Cuban said he officially sold his majority stake in 2023, but that a handshake agreement was in place for him to keep control of basketball decisions while Dumont handled the business side. “This handshake agreement was reiterated in multiple emails and orally in the presence of Dumont, Miriam Adelson, another NBA owner, and Mavericks employees,” Cuban’s legal action read.
The Athletic asked Cuban if he could produce those emails. Cuban replied, “Can’t say anything at all.”
The basketball side of the Mavericks has already gone through major upheaval under Dumont’s ownership. He initially leaned on former general manager Nico Harrison, and that arrangement paid off for a stretch.
Dallas made separate moves for P.J. Washington and Daniel Gafford before the 2024 trade deadline, then surged down the stretch and made a surprising run to the NBA Finals.
That momentum disappeared in February 2025 when Harrison traded Luka Dončić to the Los Angeles Lakers, a move that backfired and ultimately cost Harrison his job.
In May, Dumont brought in Masai Ujiri, the championship-winning executive who spent 12 seasons running the Toronto Raptors, to serve as president and alternate governor in Dallas. Ujiri is expected to hold major influence, and one of his first significant decisions was to fire coach Jason Kidd even though Kidd had more than $40 million left on his contract.
Cuban still owns a 27 percent stake in the Mavericks, but he has little involvement in the team’s daily operations. In the petition, he says Dumont once told him, “Why would I give you control of a $4 billion asset?”
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What makes the situation more urgent is the shape of the roster itself. The Mavericks are heavy on wings, with 11 wing-capable players, and light on guard depth at a time when Kyrie Irvings injury status only sharpens the concern. Dallas has already added Tarik Biberovic and acquired Santi Aldama, but the bigger question is whether the team can turn one of its exceptions, or even a veteran trade, into the kind of backcourt help it still badly needs. [Read more 🡒]
