Mavs May Be Watching A Rookie Force A Real Backcourt Decision

Sergio De Larrea's impressive Summer League performance is making a strong case for his role as a key playmaker with the Dallas Mavericks.

Sergio De Larrea is making a strong early case in Las Vegas, and the Dallas Mavericks are paying attention.

The 20-year-old Spaniard, listed as a 6-5 rookie guard, delivered his best Summer League performance on Monday night, finishing with 16 points and 12 assists in Dallas’ 96-88 win over the Memphis Grizzlies. It was the Mavs’ first victory of Summer League, and it came with De Larrea running the offense like he’d been doing it for years.

That kind of showing matters for a Dallas team that still has a clear opening behind Kyrie Irving. With Irving set to return to the rotation next season, the Mavs are still looking for a reliable second-string primary ball-handler when he’s off the floor. De Larrea is making his pitch.

“He looks like someone who played point guard growing up,” summer coach Joe Boylan said. “His passing, his vision, his IQ, those are things of somebody who has probably played the position a long time.”

Boylan also pointed to the way the league is changing, noting the value of having multiple ball-handlers on the floor at once.

“I think the NBA is trending toward having as many point guards on the floor at one time . . . it gives you flexibility and you can play alongside to play next to another ball-handler,” Boylan explained.

“I think [De Larrea will] get opportunities as the primary and secondary guy. And it’s going to be [exciting] to see where he’s best suited to play. He’s going to be really versatile and adaptable player.”

De Larrea has now put together three solid Summer League outings, averaging 10 points and seven assists. His outside shot still needs work - he’s 4 for 15 from 3-point range - but the playmaking has stood out.

Against Memphis, he got his first real run as the lead guard with Ryan Nembhard sidelined, and he said afterward that he felt comfortable in that role.

“I think it was good,” he said after Monday's game, his first true opportunity as a lead point guard with Nembhard sidelined. “I think I managed well all the situations ... I shared [the ball] good and I think that we made good connections with all of the guys, so I would say I feel comfortable with playing point guard.”

Boylan said De Larrea’s size can be an advantage in Summer League, especially against smaller pressure defenders.

“Summer League can be really difficult for taller guards because you get these athletic pressure guards that try to get under you and he’s a guy who’s kind of wise beyond his years,” Boylan said about De Larrea.

“He showed the alley-oop pass and he’s got some things you just can’t teach. He handled the pick-and-roll and did a great job of handling some pressure.

“He’s so poised. He was a little down on himself about some of the shots, but we don’t want to judge guys on just the results.

We want it to be process-oriented. He took a bunch of great shots.

We believe in him.”

Dallas has one guaranteed Summer League game left, Thursday, July 16, against the Oklahoma City Thunder at 3 p.m. CT. It could also be a chance for top rookie Morez Johnson Jr. to return after missing Monday with calf soreness, though the team could choose to shut him down.

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The Mavericks finally broke through in Summer League, topping the Memphis Grizzlies 96-88 for their first win of the showcase. It was a useful night for a roster still sorting itself out, with Sergio De Larrea handling a bigger share of the offense and the second unit supplying plenty of help along the way.

De Larrea finished with 16 points and 12 assists, a line that stood out even more because Dallas was missing Morez Johnson Jr. and Ryan Nembhard. The bench did its part too, as Kaodirichi Akobundu-Ehiogu, Darin Green Jr. and Jaden Springer all reached double figures, giving the Mavericks a deeper look at who can carry real weight when the rotation thins out. [Read more 🡒]

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For the Mavericks, the appeal is obvious: Thompson still carries enough reputation as a high-end floor spacer to draw real attention, even if his contract makes any deal tricky. For Miami, the pursuit sits alongside a broader search for scoring options, with the Heat also keeping tabs on other veteran names as they sort through a crowded offseason board. [Read more 🡒]