Mavericks Risk Reopening Their Biggest Weakness With One Looming Decision

Trading Klay Thompson could weaken the Mavericks' already struggling 3-point shooting, compromising their playoff hopes.

Klay Thompson’s name keeps surfacing in trade chatter around Dallas, but moving him would only sharpen the problem that already cut deepest for the Mavericks last season.

The logic for dealing him is easy enough to see. Thompson is one of the more movable pieces on the roster, and he has just one year left on his contract. But the fit issue cuts the other way, too: Dallas was among the NBA’s worst teams from 3-point range last season, and taking Thompson out of the equation would leave an already thin shooting group even more exposed.

That matters because Thompson is not just any veteran wing. He’s one of the greatest 3-point shooters the league has ever seen, sitting fourth on the all-time list for made 3s and still chasing Ray Allen for third place. His résumé alone makes him tough to move, and the Mavericks’ roster construction makes the case even stronger.

Last season’s numbers told the story of a team that simply didn’t have enough shooting around Cooper Flagg. Dallas finished in the bottom five in 3-pointers made, 3-pointers attempted, and 3-point percentage. The lack of spacing became a major drag on the offense, and the Mavericks never really solved it.

The team also didn’t give Flagg much help from the corners. Marvin Bagley III was their best long-range shooter by percentage, hitting 48.5 percent of his attempts, but Bagley III is gone.

Max Christie and John Poulakidas followed, both above 40 percent, though Poulakidas is on a two-way contract and not always available. Khris Middleton and Thompson were next in line, but Middleton is also gone, which leaves Dallas leaning heavily on Thompson and Christie as its two best shooters.

Thompson’s own season was a mixed bag on paper, but there was enough there to remind Dallas why he still matters. He shot 38.3 percent from deep, down slightly from the year before, yet that doesn’t capture the stretches when he looked like himself again.

In January, he had several games where he hit half his 3-point tries, and he finished that month at 43.6 percent from beyond the arc. He stayed above 40 percent in March, too, which suggested his touch was still intact.

That’s the bigger point here: Dallas does not have a surplus of outside shooting to absorb the loss of a player with Thompson’s track record. His record-setting night with 14 3-pointers, his nine threes in a single quarter, and his place second in NBA history for career playoff 3-pointers made all reinforce the same idea. This isn’t a player the Mavericks can casually replace.

Thompson came to Dallas two years ago with the hope of helping the team make another playoff push after its run to the 2024 NBA Finals. That mission still isn’t finished, and the Mavericks still need a fix for the weakness that hurt them most last season.

For all the trade noise, the answer seems plain enough: Dallas can’t afford to make its shooting problem worse by sending Klay Thompson out the door.

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Mavericks May Have A Risky Klay Path To A Better Flagg Fit

The Mavericks are already being linked to another roster-shaping move as they look for ways to build around Cooper Flagg, and Klay Thompsons expiring contract has become part of the conversation. Dallas has the financial flexibility to explore a sign-and-trade path, and the front office is clearly weighing whether a veteran piece can be turned into a younger fit that better matches the timeline of the franchises next core.

What makes the idea interesting is the kind of player Dallas would be chasing in return, since the appeal is less about splash and more about balance, defense and lineup versatility. The obstacle is just as obvious: any deal would depend on Denvers willingness to engage, and there is still plenty of uncertainty around how the Nuggets view Thompsons contract, what they might want in return and whether this stays a trade idea or drifts toward a buyout-type outcome. [Read more 🡒]

Klay Thompson Rumor Puts Mavericks Fans In A Familiar Bind

Klay Thompsons name is back in the rumor mill, and for Mavericks fans it brings a familiar offseason tension: a proven shooter, a big contract conversation, and the possibility that another team could be waiting in the wings if Dallas ever changes course. After finishing last season in Dallas, Thompson remained a useful floor-spacer, averaging 11.7 points per game while shooting 38.3% from three-point range.

The latest chatter has Miami looking for ways to add talent after its trade for Giannis Antetokounmpo, with NBA insider Jake Fischer noting that several teams could enter the picture if Thompson becomes available. For now, though, there is no indication the Mavericks are looking to move him, and that leaves the story in the same place plenty of offseason whispers end up: with interest building around a player Dallas may not be ready to discuss at all. [Read more 🡒]

Former Teammate Just Revived One Of Lukas Most Absurd Nights

Quentin Grimes is back in the spotlight in Los Angeles, but the former Maverick was talking this week about a different kind of run-in with Luka Doncic, one that still stands out as one of the wildest nights of Doncics career. Grimes has seen enough of Doncic up close, both as an opponent and later as a teammate after Dallas brought him in during the 2024 offseason, to appreciate how quickly a game can tilt when Doncic gets rolling.

The memory Grimes brought up traces back to a December 2022 meeting with New York, when Doncic delivered a performance that left a lasting mark on everyone involved. It also carried a little extra meaning for Grimes, who later shared a locker room with Doncic in Dallas before both players were moved on in February 2025, a reminder of how fast the league can turn even familiar faces into part of the opposition again. [Read more 🡒]