The Mavericks may have walked away from the 2026 NBA Draft with a sneaky good one in Sergio De Larrea.
Dallas took him with the No. 25 overall pick, though that selection technically belonged to the New York Knicks. De Larrea was even announced as New York’s pick on draft night before word of the trade surfaced shortly after.
By then, the deal was likely already in place. For a brief stretch, Knicks fans were left trying to figure out who the pick was, and then he was Dallas’ problem - in the best possible way.
At NBA Summer League in Las Vegas, De Larrea has already started to make that look like a sharp move.
On Monday night, he posted 16 points and 12 assists in a strong showing that helped the Mavs surge to the win. The line came with two 3-pointers and a game-high assist total, and the highlights backed up the box score.
No. 25 overall pick Sergio De Larrea's double-double helped the Mavs surge to the win in NBA Summer League 🙌
16 PTS
12 AST (game-high)
2 3PM pic.twitter.com/wLvKvZ7xx4
- NBA (@NBA) July 14, 2026
What stands out most is how comfortable he looks running the show. At this level, De Larrea is playing at the speed he wants, getting where he wants on the floor and finding teammates in a bunch of different ways.
And while it’s way too simple to start comparing every big Dallas point guard to Luka Doncic, there’s at least a little bit of a resemblance if you squint hard enough and let yourself get carried away.
The bigger point for Dallas is simpler: if De Larrea can keep making the game easier for Cooper Flagg, the Mavs will have found something useful. There’s no guarantee he’s that guy, but he’s got a chance.
In Other News...
CJ McCollum Just Said What Knicks Fans Never Wanted To Hear
The Knicks got through Atlanta in six games, but the way they finished the first-round series said a lot more than the final 4-2 result. After dropping two of the first three, New York settled in and won the last three in a row, turning what looked like a tense matchup into a one-sided close.
CJ McCollums postseries assessment tried to put a different spin on it, saying the Knicks figured something out and that the Hawks pushed them to the limit. From New Yorks side, though, the closing stretch told a harsher story for Atlanta, with the Knicks separating themselves by huge margins and leaving little doubt about who had control when the series mattered most. [Read more 🡒]
Andre Drummond Gives Knicks One Thing Fans Never Had With Mitch
When the Knicks moved on from Mitchell Robinson, they were not just replacing a rim protector and rebounder. They were also looking for a center who could survive late-game situations without becoming a foul-shot liability, and Andre Drummond gives them a different kind of answer. Signed to a one-year deal, he arrives with the kind of interior presence New York needs, but with a more dependable touch at the line than the player he is stepping in for.
Drummond also brings a little more to the table offensively than people usually associate with a traditional backup center. He knocked down 35.6 percent of his threes last season on limited attempts, which at least gives the Knicks something they did not have at the position before. For a team trying to keep its spacing clean around Karl-Anthony Towns and its perimeter scorers, that small layer of versatility could matter more than it looks on paper. [Read more 🡒]
