The Mavericks spent the offseason reshaping their roster around one clear need: more shooting. After last season’s rough work from deep, Dallas went out and stocked the depth chart with players who can space the floor for Cooper Flagg, and the result is a much different-looking team heading into 2026-27.
That matters because the numbers from a year ago were brutal. Dallas hit just 34.4 percent from 3-point range on 31.9 attempts per game, and both marks finished in the bottom five in the NBA. Flagg already proved he could finish at a high level as a rookie, but the fit around him should be far cleaner now with open lanes and more reliable kick-out options.
Max Christie is the lone holdover from last season’s 15-man roster who shot better than 40 percent from three, and he’s back in a rotation that now has far more help around him. The Mavericks also brought in four rookies through the 2026 NBA Draft and added three players in a massive six-team trade, giving the roster a very different shape.
At point guard, Kyrie Irving’s return changes the entire equation. Irving missed all of last season with a torn ACL, and Flagg has not played with him yet. Even so, his presence alone should stretch defenses and make life easier for the young wing.
Behind Irving, Marcus Sasser looks like the most natural backup after Dallas acquired him in that six-team deal. He shot 41.5 percent from three for the Detroit Pistons last season, and the Mavericks will be counting on that touch holding up.
Sergio De Larrea and Ryan Nembhard are also in the mix, and both are in Summer League. The two guards are described as elite passers and strong shooters, which only adds more help for Flagg when they share the floor.
The shooting guard spot is built for spacing. Klay Thompson’s future in Dallas is still unclear, but Max Christie and John Poulakidas appear to have firmer footing.
Both shot above 40 percent from three last season and thrive as catch-and-shoot threats. Christie’s 3-and-D profile and Poulakidas’ movement shooting give Dallas a pair of perimeter options that should benefit from Irving drawing attention.
On the wing, the Mavericks have no shortage of bodies. Flagg is the obvious starter, with Naji Marshall, Tarik Biberovic, and Caleb Martin behind him. Marshall spent plenty of time in the backcourt last season because of his passing, slashing, and limited jumper, but with Irving back, he looks more like a wing piece now.
Biberovic may be the most intriguing name of the group. He averaged 12.1 points per game while shooting 45.8 percent from three in 78 games for Fenerbahce in 2025-26, and Dallas acquired his draft rights in a six-team trade before signing him to a two-year deal.
If those overseas numbers translate, he could carve out a real role right away. Martin brings another 3-and-D option and gives the Mavericks elite defense at the point of attack, even if his jumper has been streaky since arriving in Dallas.
The biggest logjam might be at power forward. Dallas used the No. 9 overall pick in the 2026 NBA Draft on Morez Johnson Jr. even though P.J.
Washington is still on the roster, and that setup could lead to a trade if Dusty May wants Johnson Jr. in the starting lineup immediately. Washington has already been mentioned in trade rumors this offseason, and his 32.5 percent shooting from three in 2025-26 doesn’t help his case.
Santi Aldama was another major frontcourt addition, and he gives Dallas something it has wanted: stretch-five potential with size. The 7-footer is a career 34.6 percent shooter from deep on 4.1 attempts per game, and his shooting and connectivity could change the way the offense looks when he plays next to another big.
Tobi Lawal and Tyler Smith are both on two-way deals, with Smith offering the more polished shooting profile. Smith is a career 35.4 percent 3-point shooter on 1.9 attempts per game and has enough guard-like skills to make him an interesting year-three player.
Lawal, a rookie, brings athleticism and dunking, but his offensive game is still raw.
Down low, Dereck Lively II and Daniel Gafford remain together after three seasons as Dallas’ center duo, though injuries limited both last year. When they’re available, the Mavericks still have high-level play at the five. Neither one solves the shooting issue, even with the yearly hope that Lively II will eventually become a floor spacer, but Aldama can also play center.
That group may not stay intact for long. Gafford has been in trade rumors for years, and Moussa Cisse could also return in free agency. Dallas still has access to the Mid-Level Exception and a Traded Player Exception, so the depth chart could keep changing before opening night.
Even so, the work already done has changed the outlook. Masai Ujiri and Mike Schmitz have built a roster with far more shooting around Flagg, and if this is the team that opens the season, it still looks like a successful offseason. The Mavericks are entering a new era, and this version is built to give Flagg the spacing he needs.
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