Dallas-Mavs.com Forums

Go Back   Dallas-Mavs.com Forums > Mavs / NBA > General Mavs Discussion

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 08-12-2003, 11:45 AM   #1
Chiwas
Guru
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 13,363
Chiwas is infamous around these partsChiwas is infamous around these parts
Default The History of the Mavs

I could read it here and there, but I think it would more fun and interesting if the old fans tell it.

When the team started and how?

The owners, why the "mavericks" name, why in Dallas, the old logos...anecdotes.

Has there had a player born in Dallas or Texas who had been a great player and idol with the Mavericks?

Add whatever you want about the Mavs history. Many of us would appreciate it.
__________________
Chiwas is offline   Reply With Quote
Sponsored Links
Old 08-12-2003, 11:58 AM   #2
XERXES
Diamond Member
 
XERXES's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2003
Posts: 3,864
XERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud of
Default The History of the Mavs

Mostly its a tear-jerker.
__________________
XERXES is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-12-2003, 12:11 PM   #3
signoftimes
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 568
signoftimes is on a distinguished road
Default The History of the Mavs

It was Don Carter who brought the NBA to Dallas.
I think the name came from a radio contest where listeners submitted possible names??

The Worst coach of the Mavericks was Quinn Buckner. He was horrible. He benched Jamal Mashburn practically his whole rookie season. Buckner did a disservice to both the team and Mashburn.

One of my favorite quotes from an owner came form Perot JR. He said he didn't know the difference between a football and a basketball.
__________________
Dance like you hurt real bad.
Work like no one's watching.
Love like you need the money.
signoftimes is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-12-2003, 12:34 PM   #4
jacktruth
Golden Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: TX
Posts: 1,868
jacktruth has much to be proud ofjacktruth has much to be proud ofjacktruth has much to be proud ofjacktruth has much to be proud ofjacktruth has much to be proud ofjacktruth has much to be proud ofjacktruth has much to be proud ofjacktruth has much to be proud ofjacktruth has much to be proud ofjacktruth has much to be proud ofjacktruth has much to be proud of
Default The History of the Mavs

Coach Dick Motta was a crucial. He built the team that McCloud took to WCF.
He got us into the playoffs after 4 years and improved the team record from 15 games to 55 in 6 years.

Motta II wasn't that great, but an improvement.

John MacCloud was like Barry Switzer for the Cowboys.

Adubato was my favorite character of all mavs coaches. Great defensive coach, passionate. But, the franchise went the other way, 42 wins to 22, in 3 years, then he was replaced in his 4th year.

A few more sucky coaches. . .

The lowest point was being name the worst franchise in sports. We all knew it, but it was humiliating anyway.

And along comes Cuban and Nellie, our franchise redeemers.

jacktruth is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-12-2003, 08:03 PM   #5
Chiwas
Guru
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 13,363
Chiwas is infamous around these partsChiwas is infamous around these parts
Default RE: The History of the Mavs

Quote:
One of my favorite quotes from an owner came form Perot JR. He said he didn't know the difference between a football and a basketball.
This is very funny, above all knowing that he meant it. [img]i/expressions/face-icon-small-wink.gif[/img]

__________________
Chiwas is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-12-2003, 08:25 PM   #6
one long blue sock
Golden Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 1,237
one long blue sock will become famous soon enough
Default The History of the Mavs

Kurt Thomas went to SMU, he didn't play too well with the Mavs, but is a good player now.
__________________
Understanding
one long blue sock is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-12-2003, 09:17 PM   #7
XERXES
Diamond Member
 
XERXES's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2003
Posts: 3,864
XERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud ofXERXES has much to be proud of
Default The History of the Mavs

Quote:
Originally posted by: one long blue sock
Kurt Thomas went to SMU, he didn't play too well with the Mavs, but is a good player now.
OLBS- It was TCU, not SMU.
__________________
XERXES is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-13-2003, 08:46 AM   #8
Big Boy Laroux
Diamond Member
 
Big Boy Laroux's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Posts: 7,673
Big Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond repute
Default RE: The History of the Mavs

isn't it amazing that kurt thomas led the NCAA in scoring? looking at him now, you'd never believe it. i still try to block it from my memory.
__________________
Big Boy Laroux is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-13-2003, 08:53 AM   #9
one long blue sock
Golden Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 1,237
one long blue sock will become famous soon enough
Default The History of the Mavs

Quote:
Originally posted by: XERXES
Quote:
Originally posted by: one long blue sock
Kurt Thomas went to SMU, he didn't play too well with the Mavs, but is a good player now.
OLBS- It was TCU, not SMU.
My bad, did Kurt Thomas and Lee Nailon play together at all by any chance.
__________________
Understanding
one long blue sock is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-13-2003, 09:05 AM   #10
Big Boy Laroux
Diamond Member
 
Big Boy Laroux's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Posts: 7,673
Big Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond reputeBig Boy Laroux has a reputation beyond repute
Default RE: The History of the Mavs

thomas left tcu in 1995, nailon in 1999. looks like they were a year off.

oh, and thomas led the nation in both scoring AND rebounding.
__________________
Big Boy Laroux is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-13-2003, 09:36 AM   #11
Drbio
Banned
 
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Nowhere
Posts: 40,924
Drbio is an unknown quantity at this point
Default The History of the Mavs

Quote:
Originally posted by: Chiwas
I could read it here and there, but I think it would more fun and interesting if the old fans tell it.

When the team started and how?
Dallas was starved for basketball ever since the Dallas Chapparals left Dallas in the late 70's (I think). The Chapparals became the San Antonio Spurs. Way before the 80-81 inaugural season, Don Carter laid the foundation for an NBA franchise. He had been working to return basketball to Dallas and Carter was rewarded in 1980 I think with his new franchise. Officially dubbed the Dallas Basketballers during the initial few months of the franchise, the team held a name the team contest (see your question below). Once named, the Dallas Mavericks would become a young boys (yes...Doc was around back then) favorite team before ever playing a single game. I begged my dad to get tickets. He did not disappoint. Dad became very interested in the Mavs when he realized that I was interested. He tried to talk about the expansion draft and I didn't really care at that point. However, I do remember being pretty upset that the Mavs didn't draft Pistol Pete Maravich when they had the opportunity to do so. I recall Dad saying something like "That was stupid." I agreed (partially because Dad said it). The Mavs selected Kiki V. in 1980 and he refused to play for us. It was the first time that I ever became aware that sports was about money. We traded Kiki V. for 2 first round picks and eventually took my favorite all time Maverick, Ro Blackmon with one of those picks (Jay Vincent with the other I think). I don't remember a lot about that year in terms of details, but I had a great time watching those games. I still have a somewhat faded out basketball signed by Ro Blackmon, Jim Spanarkel and Tom LaGarde. At the time I thought LaGarde and Spanarkel were the greatest players in the NBA. LOL!

Oops...forgot to say that we beat the Spurs in our first game. As a young kid it was fun but it put into me an expectation of winning all of the games. To say I would be disappointed that year would be an understatement. Still, I look back at the first year of this great franchise and I think about being there with my Dad and I can tell you 100% that I will always cherish that time.

I've been a fan of the Mavericks for every day of their existence. I've seen tough times, great times, tougher times, and the current recovery to the verge of greatness. It is easy for me to like Mark Cuban after liking Carter, hating Carter, liking Carter again (you long time Mavs guys know what I mean), hating Perot's group, etc. Never did like Norm Sonju for whatever reason. Had it not been for Ro, Brad Davis would probably be my all time favorite Maverick. The guy played all out each and every night and defined the Mavs in his years of service. Aguirre was a stud, Perkins was too. Tarpley got us all excited, played 1-2 good years and sadly pissed away a promising career while ripping all of our hearts out. James Donaldson was the biggest guy I had ever seen at that point in my life. Derek Harper was the da' man. The Dirk/Nash/Fin years are great.

The first ever playoff appearance was great. I think we beat up Seattle in five games. Maybe it was four I can't remember, but I do recall the game going into overtime and us winning on a last second shot (by Jay Vincent maybe? someone help me out I forget).

The owners, why the "mavericks" name, why in Dallas, the old logos...anecdotes.
The Mavericks were named the Mavericks over the Express and the Wranglers during a contest. The winner received season tickets to the Mavs in the first season I think.

Has there had a player born in Dallas or Texas who had been a great player and idol with the Mavericks?

Not sure. Good question.

Add whatever you want about the Mavs history. Many of us would appreciate it.
Maybe I will jot down more later. I had a few minutes and have been wanting to respond to this thread for a day or so now.
Drbio is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-13-2003, 10:59 AM   #12
Chiwas
Guru
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 13,363
Chiwas is infamous around these partsChiwas is infamous around these parts
Default RE: The History of the Mavs

Nice telling, Doc.

I'll reread it.



Oops...forgot to say that we beat the Spurs in our first game.

Yeah, babe! [img]i/expressions/face-icon-small-happy.gif[/img]


...have been wanting to respond to this thread for a day or so now.

It's well appreciated, and all the above posts.

__________________
Chiwas is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-13-2003, 11:07 AM   #13
Dooby
Diamond Member
 
Dooby's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Posts: 5,832
Dooby is just really niceDooby is just really niceDooby is just really niceDooby is just really niceDooby is just really niceDooby is just really niceDooby is just really nice
Default The History of the Mavs

Important to note that Reunion Arena was built with the anticipation of getting an NBA team. At the time, there was no guarantee that Dallas would get one.

Also, the first Maverick preseason game was held in Oklahoma (Tulsa or OK City, I forget which). Don Carter and his wife sat courtside. It was the first basketball game Mrs. Carter ever attended on any level.
__________________
At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened to it. I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.

A fool's paradise is a wise man's hell. – Thomas Fuller
Dooby is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-13-2003, 11:31 AM   #14
OutletPass
Diamond Member
 
OutletPass's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 4,844
OutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really nice
Default The History of the Mavs

Chi...I'll add some anecdotes later...but here's the "history" as published on nba.com



1979: Carter Welcomes Back Basketball To Dallas
In 1979 millionaire Donald J. Carter and Mavericks founding President/GM Norm Sonju set the wheels in motion to secure an NBA team. At the 1980 NBA All-Star Game league owners voted to admit the Texas franchise. For a $12 million entry fee, Dallas was in for the 1980-81 season. The Mavericks would play in the NBA's Midwest Division.
In the expansion draft the Mavericks bypassed experienced stars such as Earl Monroe, Rick Barry, Doug Collins, Pete Maravich, and Spencer Haywood. Instead the franchise went with youth-18 of the 22 players chosen by Dallas had less than three years of NBA experience. Although there was some talent-11 of the expansion picks were former first-round draft choices-it was a typical expansion crew. Among the recognizable names were Jim Spanarkel from the Philadelphia 76ers, Austin Carr from the Cleveland Cavaliers, Bingo Smith from the San Diego Clippers, and Richard Washington from the Milwaukee Bucks.

On June 10, 1980, the Mavericks selected UCLA's Kiki Vandeweghe with the 11th overall pick in the NBA Draft, making Vandeweghe the first college draftee in franchise history. But Vandeweghe refused to play for the expansion Mavericks, staging a holdout that lasted more than a month into the 1980-81 season. Finally, on December 10, Dallas traded his rights and a 1986 first-round pick to the Denver Nuggets in exchange for two future first-round draft choices.

The trade served the Mavericks extremely well. They used one of the picks to draft Rolando Blackman in 1981-Blackman became the team's all-time leading scorer. In another move that would pay huge dividends, Dallas traded Mike Bratz to Cleveland for the Cavaliers' 1984 first-round draft choice. Dallas used that pick in 1984 to select Sam Perkins, who gave the club six solid seasons at power forward and center.

The Mavericks' best move was the hiring of Dick Motta as the club's first head coach. A good teacher and a basketball disciplinarian, Motta had arrived in the NBA as coach of the 1968-69 Chicago Bulls and transformed the club into a winner. After Chicago's 51-31 finish in 1970-71, Motta was named NBA Coach of the Year. He left Chicago following the 1975-76 season to coach the Washington Bullets, guiding them to the NBA title in 1978. Motta arrived in Dallas with a 541-443 NBA coaching record.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1980-81: A Slow Start
The Mavericks opened the 1980-81 season in the posh new $27 million Reunion Arena. The opening-night lineup included Abdul Jeelani, Jerome Whitehead, Tom LaGarde, Geoff Huston, and Winford Boynes. Dallas upset the San Antonio Spurs, 103-92, in the team's debut contest. Jeelani scored the first points in franchise history; Boynes led Dallas with 21 points, while LaGarde added 19 points and 14 rebounds.

The rest of the season saw the losses mount with discouraging frequency, even for an expansion club. The Mavericks started 6-40 and suffered losing streaks of 10 and 12 games before they managed to win two in a row. On November 8, in a game against the Detroit Pistons, Motta joined Red Auerbach, Red Holzman, and Gene Shue on the list of coaches to log 1,000 career NBA games. Ironically, Motta missed the fourth quarter of his 1,000th game after being ejected. The Mavericks lost that contest, 101-73.

Dallas did have some good fortune. In early December the club signed free agent Brad Davis, a 6-3 guard who had been waived by the Detroit Pistons. Davis didn't seem markedly different from the rest of the Mavericks' journeyman talent, having already pulled several undistinguished stints on NBA and Continental Basketball Association rosters. The Mavericks tracked him down in the CBA, playing with the Anchorage Northern Knights. To Davis, the idea of playing with Dallas wasn't much more appealing than playing with Anchorage; he had planned to finish the season and go back to school.

Instead Davis appeared in 56 games that season for the Mavericks, starting the final 26. He tied Jeelani for the Mavericks' best individual scoring effort of the year with 31 points against the Boston Celtics on March 3, and he led Dallas in assists (6.9 apg) and field-goal percentage (.561). His career revitalized, Davis became an integral component of the Mavericks' roster for the next 12 seasons.

Dallas finished its first NBA campaign with a 15-67 record. The Mavericks scored 101.5 points per game, which would remain a team low for a decade. Jim Spanarkel led the club in scoring with 14.4 points per game and was fourth in the NBA with an .887 free-throw percentage. Tom LaGarde topped Mavericks rebounders with 8.1 boards per contest.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1981-82: Promising Draft Lifts Mavs' Hopes
Various deals netted Dallas nine first-round draft picks over the next five years, which brought such top-flight players as Sam Perkins, Derek Harper, Roy Tarpley, and Detlef Schrempf. But the immediate challenge was the 1981 NBA Draft, and Dallas selected three players who transformed the team from a doormat into a challenger-Mark Aguirre (with the first overall pick), Rolando Blackman (9th), and Jay Vincent (24th).

In 1981-82 Dallas improved its record by 13 games to 28-54 and climbed out of the Midwest Division cellar to finish above the Utah Jazz. The Mavericks opened the season with a fashion change-green road uniforms replacing the previous year's blue. Aguirre scored 19 points in his first regular-season game. On November 14 he hit for 42 points, but the Mavericks still lost (for a seventh straight time) to the Golden State Warriors. Dallas's losing streak would stretch to a season-worst 12 games. Considering that the Mavericks opened the campaign 1-13, the rest of the year brought impressive improvement.

Aguirre, a 6-6 forward who was a threat to score every time he touched the ball, was one key to the team's growing success. In his seven-plus seasons in Dallas he averaged 24.6 points. Fellow rookie Blackman, a 6-6 guard with a sweet shooting touch, also embarked on a long and productive career with the Mavericks. Over his 11 seasons with the team he averaged 19.2 points and proved to be a solid defender.

On December 15 Vincent, a 6-7 forward, started in place of Aguirre and led the Mavericks to victory over Washington by scoring 31 points and grabbing 13 rebounds. It marked the first of 15 30-point games for Vincent during the season. He scored a career-high 41 points in a December 29 win over the Kansas City Kings.

Dallas put together a modest four-game winning streak in January , an encouraging sign for the young team. Vincent continued to score at a torrid pace, and reserve guard Allan Bristow (who later became a coach in the NBA) provided able all-around support. By the end of January the Mavericks had rebounded from their horrendous 1-13 start; after those first 14 games they turned in a respectable 12-15 performance. They couldn't sustain momentum for the duration of the season, but they were showing promise. For the year, Vincent led the team in scoring with 21.4 points per game and was selected to the NBA All-Rookie Team. Aguirre added 18.7 points per contest.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1982-83: A Team To Reckon With
During the 1982-83 season the Mavericks gave indications that they were a team on the move. They finished at 38-44, 10 games better than the previous year and the third-best improvement in the NBA. Even more telling, the league was beginning to view the Mavericks not as an expansion team but as a dangerous opponent.

On January 14, just 10 days after totaling only 84 points in a loss at Washington, the Mavericks broke the club's single-game scoring record in a 149-139 win over Denver. Rolando Blackman's 31 points led the charge, while Mark Aguirre collected the first triple-double in franchise history with 30 points, 11 rebounds, and 16 assists. Dallas defeated Golden State on January 18, making Motta the fifth NBA coach to log 600 career wins. Four days later the Mavericks humbled Utah, 126-88; the 38-point win was Dallas's largest margin of victory ever. Four days later the Mavs concluded a five-game winning streak with a victory over the Kansas City Kings.

The Mavericks continued to roll as Aguirre scored 44 points to key a February 6 victory over the Portland Trail Blazers. Heading into the All-Star break Dallas had won 12 of its last 15 games and had climbed into second place in the Midwest Division with a 25-24 record. The team fell off its cloud in the second half of the season. The Mavericks were challenging for a playoff spot until they went into a seven-game slump with two weeks left in the stretch run. Out of the playoffs, Dallas rolled over in the final game of the year, watching the San Antonio Spurs run to an NBA-record .707 shooting percentage and a 132-120 victory.

Despite the disappointing finish, 1982-83 had been a season of promise for Dallas. The Mavericks ranked fifth in the league in team scoring (112.7 ppg) and committed fewer turnovers (16.4 per game) than any other team. Mark Aguirre paced Dallas in scoring with 24.4 points per game, sixth in the NBA; he was backed by Jay Vincent (18.7 ppg) and Rolando Blackman (17.7). Brad Davis placed among the league's top 10 in three categories-eighth in field-goal percentage (.572, the best ever by a guard), 10th in assists (7.2 apg), and sixth in free-throw percentage (.845).

The franchise strengthened its young roster in the 1983 NBA Draft by selecting Derek Harper, a 6-4 guard from the University of Illinois. Harper went on to average 15.0 points and 6.1 assists over the next decade.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1983-85: Dallas Sees Postseason For First Time
In 1983-84 the Mavericks achieved their first winning season, finishing 43-39 and second to Utah in the Midwest Division. Now in its fourth season, Dallas also made its first playoff appearance and came away with moderate success.

The Mavericks got off to a hot start in November with a 10-3 record (the best month in club history), which included 9 straight wins at home. On November 17 Dallas began a team-record eight-game winning streak. Aguirre scored 40 points in consecutive games against the Golden State Warriors and the San Diego Clippers on December 10 and December 11. He also became the first All-Star in franchise history when he appeared in the 1984 NBA All-Star Game.

The Mavs continued to impress with their firepower. In a March 24 game against Denver, Aguirre scored 24 first-quarter points, finishing the game with 46, while Blackman added 38. In early April little-used rookie guard Dale Ellis set an NBA record by hitting 8 consecutive three-pointers, spread over several games. For the season, Aguirre averaged 29.5 points and ranked second in the NBA in scoring to Utah's Adrian Dantley (30.6 ppg). Blackman was 13th with 22.4 points per game, and Brad Davis ranked 10th in assists with 6.9 per contest. For the second consecutive campaign Dallas committed the fewest turnovers in the league, with 15.9 per game.

Although the Mavericks ended the 1983-84 season with a loss at Golden State, they had already clinched the fourth playoff spot in the Western Conference. In the team's initial postseason experience, Dallas defeated the Seattle SuperSonics in a best-of-five first-round series, winning Game 5 in overtime, 105-104. The Mavericks then drew the Los Angeles Lakers in the Western Conference Semifinals, and the Finals-bound Lakers won in five games.

Thanks to a 1980 trade, Dallas owned Cleveland's first-round pick in the 1984 NBA Draft. Because Cleveland went 28-54 in 1983-84, the Mavericks found themselves picking fourth. They selected 6-9 Sam Perkins from the University of North Carolina, one pick after the Chicago Bulls had selected another Tar Heels player named Michael Jordan. Perkins, who had helped North Carolina to the 1982 NCAA Championship, brought an effective, deceptively laid-back game to the NBA. He averaged 14.4 points and 8.0 rebounds in six seasons with the Mavericks, moved on to help the Lakers in the waning years of the Magic Johnson dynasty, and landed in Seattle for the SuperSonics' run in the 1990s.

The 1984-85 Mavericks finished a single game better than the previous season at 44-38, marking the fourth consecutive year of improvement. Perkins made the NBA All-Rookie Team and Mark Aguirre once again led the Dallas scoring parade with 25.7 points per game. On January 28 Aguirre broke his own team record by pouring in 49 points against Philadelphia. Rolando Blackman represented the franchise in the 1985 NBA All-Star Game. Motta became the fourth NBA coach to win 700 games when Dallas downed the New Jersey Nets, 126-113, on March 10.

Dallas had talented players, but a major key to its success was that the Mavs stayed healthy all year. For the third straight season the Mavericks led the league in fewest turnovers, this time with an NBA-record low of 14.4 per game. Their 152 three-pointers were also an NBA best, another trend that would become a characteristic of the team. Dallas made its second consecutive postseason appearance in 1985 but was a first-round victim of the Portland Trail Blazers. The Mavericks notched a thrilling double-overtime victory in Game 1 of the best-of-five series, but the Blazers roared back to win three straight.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1985-86: Dallas Drafts Detlef, Deals For Donaldson
In 1985-86 Dallas notched another 44-38 record while continuing to develop into a contender. The club had added another piece to its growing talent pool with the selection of Detlef Schrempf in the 1985 NBA Draft. Once again the pick was the result of an earlier trade with the Cleveland Cavaliers. A multidimensional 6-10 forward, the German-born Schrempf had played collegiately at the University of Washington. In addition, after shuffling through six opening-day centers in as many seasons, the Mavericks acquired 7-2 center James Donaldson from the Los Angeles Clippers on November 25 in exchange for Kurt Nimphius.

Dallas hosted the 1986 NBA All-Star Game, and Rolando Blackman represented the team in the midseason classic for the second straight year. Blackman scored a career-best 46 points against the Sacramento Kings on March 12, second on the all-time Dallas scoring list to Mark Aguirre's 49 points the previous year.

A high-scoring outfit, the Mavericks averaged 115.3 points, second in the NBA to the powerful Los Angeles Lakers. The individual scoring was more balanced than in previous seasons: Aguirre (22.6 ppg) and Blackman (21.5) paced the squad, with Sam Perkins, Jay Vincent, and Derek Harper also averaging in double figures. Donaldson ranked ninth in the NBA in rebounding, grabbing 9.6 boards per game. For the fourth straight year the Mavericks led the league in fewest turnovers, and for the second straight year they finished first in three-pointers made.

Dallas eliminated Utah in the first round of the 1986 NBA Playoffs, then encountered the title-bound Los Angeles Lakers in the Western Conference Semifinals. The Lakers won the series in six games, four of which were decided by four points or less. The Mavericks picked big Roy Tarpley in the 1986 NBA Draft. The 7-foot forward from the University of Michigan turned out to be one of the better players in franchise annals-and the saddest story.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1986-87: Team Tops 50 Wins; Crumbles in Postseason
In 1986-87 the Mavericks served notice that they had arrived as an elite team in the NBA, with a versatile young roster that seemed to presage years of future success. Dallas posted a best-ever 55-27 record and won the Midwest Division.

The season started on a defensive note when Dallas walloped opening-night opponent Utah while holding the Jazz to a .311 field-goal percentage. A week later Dallas drilled Seattle, 147-124, as a club-record nine Mavericks scored in double figures. On November 26 the always careful Mavericks tied their own NBA record with only 4 turnovers against the Sacramento Kings. Their 13-1 start at home was the best in team history.

Dallas's lineup had settled into a starting unit of Mark Aguirre, Sam Perkins, James Donaldson, Derek Harper, and Rolando Blackman, with Detlef Schrempf, Roy Tarpley, and Brad Davis coming off the bench. The team was talented and versatile at every position, presenting problems for almost all NBA opponents. In January, Schrempf recorded the third triple-double in team history. In March, Donaldson surpassed Jay Vincent's 1984-85 single-season record of 704 rebounds. March proved to be the team's best month ever at 12-4, including Dick Motta's 800th career win on March 28 against Washington.

As always, the Mavericks protected the ball-for the fifth straight year they led the NBA in fewest turnovers, with 14.7 per game. As teams throughout the league began to use the three-point shot as a regular part of offensive strategy and not just as a gimmick or bailout, Dallas continued to lead the pack in treys. The Mavericks made 231 three-pointers and averaged 116.7 points. Donaldson shattered the club rebounding record and led all NBA centers with 11.9 boards per game. Dallas, which hadn't lost more than two games in a row during the season, melted under playoff pressure. In the opening game against Seattle the Mavericks set 11 club playoff records in a 151-129 victory. Then the wheels came off as Dallas dropped three straight to the Sonics, who were led in scoring by former Mavericks player Dale Ellis, reborn in Seattle as one of the NBA's top three-point marksmen.

After the 1986-87 season Dick Motta unexpectedly resigned as head coach, and the reins were turned over to John MacLeod. MacLeod had coached the previous 14 seasons with the Phoenix Suns, compiling a 579-543 record. He had guided the Suns to the playoffs nine times and to the NBA Finals in 1976.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1987-88: One Game Shy of the Finals
The 1987-88 Mavericks maintained the pace they had set the previous season, slipping only two games in the victory column to a 53-29 record. MacLeod collected his 600th career victory on January 13 when Dallas beat the Indiana Pacers, with Roy Tarpley grabbing 23 rebounds in the game. Mark Aguirre and James Donaldson played in the 1988 NBA All-Star Game in February. Then, beginning on February 14, the Mavericks ran off a club-record 11-game winning streak. On February 24, during the sixth game of the streak, Blackman scored his 10,000th career point.

With an April 15 loss, Dallas fell out of first place in the Midwest Division for the first time since December 21. After 110 days at the top, the club was displaced by Denver and finished the year one game behind the Nuggets. For the sixth consecutive season Aguirre led the team in scoring, with 25.1 points per game. Tarpley won the NBA Sixth Man Award by averaging 13.5 points and 11.8 rebounds.

Dallas enjoyed its finest postseason run in 1988. After dumping the Houston Rockets in four games and Denver in six, the Mavericks found themselves in the Western Conference Finals for the first time in team history. All that stood between Dallas and the NBA Finals were the defending NBA-champion Lakers. The Mavericks gave the Lakers all they could handle in the series, but Los Angeles's playoff experience prevailed. The Lakers won the seventh and deciding game, 117-102.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1988-90: Mavericks Miss Playoffs; Regroup
Injuries plagued the 1988-89 Mavericks, who saw their record tumble to 38-44. It was Dallas's first losing season and first time out of the playoffs since 1982-83. The Mavericks started the campaign 9-3 before chaos descended. By January the team was beginning to swerve out of control. Roy Tarpley was suspended indefinitely on January 5 for violating the league's antidrug policy. A week later the disoriented Mavericks lost their sixth straight game.

In mid-February the Mavericks sent Mark Aguirre to the soon-to-be NBA champion Detroit Pistons in exchange for Adrian Dantley. Both were superbly talented players with reputations for moodiness. When Dantley heard about the trade he refused to report to Dallas, although he finally showed up eight days later. While Dantley was still holding out, Dallas traded Detlef Schrempf to Indiana for Herb Williams. The versatile Schrempf eventually won two NBA Sixth Man Awards with the Pacers before joining a talent-laden Seattle team in 1993.

On March 10 James Donaldson went down with a ruptured patella tendon, was carried off the floor on a stretcher, and missed the rest of the season. The decimated Dallas team had lost several key players, had suffered emotional turmoil, and had a tough time regaining its mental focus. The remainder of the year (which included a 12-game losing streak in March) was simply time spent waiting for the offseason.

The Mavericks bounced back in 1989-90, returning to the playoffs with a 47-35 record. Dallas was still a solid, talented, defense-minded team, with a roster that included Adrian Dantley, Herb Williams, Roy Tarpley, Sam Perkins, Rolando Blackman, and Derek Harper. However, it was another tumultuous season. On November 15, six games into the schedule, Tarpley was arrested for driving while intoxicated and resisting arrest. After 11 games and a 5-6 record, Coach John MacLeod was replaced by Assistant Coach Richie Adubato. The team struggled to midseason but then put together modest winning streaks of seven, five, and six games. Harper scored a career-high 42 points on December 29 against Portland. Donaldson, Dallas's all-time leading rebounder, pulled down 27 boards in the same game.

The team surged at the end of the year. On April 4 the Mavericks tied the biggest comeback in club history, surging from 19 points down to defeat the San Antonio Spurs. Sam Perkins scored a career-high 45 points on April 12 to lead Dallas to a win at Golden State. The Mavericks closed out the season with four straight victories, then drew the Portland Trail Blazers in the first round of the playoffs. The Blazers blitzed Dallas in three straight on their way to the NBA Finals.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1990-91: A Fall From Contention
After a strong showing in 1989-90, the debacle of 1988-89 appeared to have been nothing more than a brief detour. The Mavs seemed to be back on track; however, the track would prove to lead right off the edge of a cliff. All NBA teams evolve through cycles of success, decline, and rebuilding, but this was different. The Mavericks went into a free fall the likes of which have seldom been seen in the NBA. Within a couple of seasons they would be one of the worst teams in the league, not even competitive with a new flock of expansion franchises, and flirting with league records for futility.

The Mavericks' roster continued to change. Sam Perkins went to the Lakers as a free agent in 1990, and Rodney McCray, Fat Lever, and Alex English-all near the ends of their careers-made their first Mavericks appearances. Virtually all of the remaining starters suffered injuries in 1990-91, and the team plummeted to 28-54, a record which was bettered by both the expansion Orlando Magic and Minnesota Timberwolves.

The team's problems began early. On November 6 Roy Tarpley led the Mavericks to a victory over the New York Knicks by scoring 29 points and grabbing 10 rebounds. Three nights later it was announced that Fat Lever would have surgery on his right knee and be lost for the year. In that night's game Tarpley went down with a kneecap injury and was also lost for the season. With Tarpley and Lever out, the club fell into a nosedive.

On November 28 Rolando Blackman passed Mark Aguirre to become Dallas's all-time leading scorer. That milestone was barely noticed amid the tumult of the season. In March the Tarpley story took another unfortunate turn. He was charged with suspicion of driving while intoxicated and was again suspended by the NBA.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1991-92: Rebuilding Begins
The 1991-92 season was another struggle as the Mavericks fell to 22-60. On October 16 Tarpley was banned from the NBA for violating the league's substance abuse policy for a third time. It was a sad turn of events for a man whose career had once held great promise. Tarpley had been voted to the 1986-87 NBA All-Rookie Team and initially sought treatment following that season. In 1987-88 he won the NBA Sixth Man Award, averaging 13.5 points and 11.8 rebounds. In the middle of the 1988-89 campaign he was suspended for 49 games. He missed the final 77 games of the 1990-91 season after injuring his right knee. Tarpley played in only 69 of 246 games from 1989-90 through 1991-92 because of injuries and suspensions. During that time the Mavericks were 45-24 (.652) with him and 68-109 (.384) without him.

The team had only a handful of good players left, and what talent it did have was diluted by a rash of injuries. A back problem ended Brad Davis's career in mid-January. Fat Lever had knee surgery on January 29 and missed the rest of the season. During his prime years with the Denver Nuggets he had been one of the league's most versatile players at the guard spot. But Lever, who had cost the Mavericks two first-round draft picks, played only 35 games in three seasons because of knee injuries.

All of the team records set during the season were unwanted ones: a 15-game losing streak in March; a 26-game road losing streak; an all-time team-low and NBA season-worst 97.6 points per game; a franchise-worst .439 field-goal percentage. Dallas was held to fewer than 90 points 19 times. Recognizing a pattern, the franchise began unloading its veterans and started to rebuild.

Prior to the 1992-93 season Dallas sent Rolando Blackman to the New York Knicks in exchange for a first-round draft pick. Blackman departed the Mavericks as the most popular player in franchise history and the team's all-time leading scorer. In 11 seasons with Dallas, Blackman had scored 16,643 points (19.2 ppg) and had made four All-Star Game appearances. Herb Williams went to New York via free agency. And Fat Lever underwent more surgery and missed the entire 1992-93 season. The only remnant of the team's glory days was 10-year veteran Derek Harper, who led the Mavericks in scoring in 1992-93 with 18.2 points per game.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1992-93: Mavericks Escape Futility Mark
Dallas banked its future on young players, not the least of whom was Jim Jackson, selected by the Mavericks with the fourth overall pick in the 1992 NBA Draft. But Jackson and owner Donald Carter could not agree on contract terms, resulting in a prolonged holdout that kept Jackson off the team for more than half the season.

With its veterans gone and its young players yet to arrive, Dallas simply did not have the talent or experience to be competitive in the NBA in 1992-93. After a run of successful draft picks in the early years of the franchise, the Mavericks had hit a slump in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Top 10 selections such as Doug Smith and Randy White, while competent NBA players, did not become the superstars many had predicted they would be.

So, with a roster depleted by trades, injuries, and a contract dispute, the Mavericks stumbled through the 1992-93 season. It was a nightmarish campaign, with losing streaks of 12, 15, and 19 games. On January 13, with the Mavs' record at 2-27, Richie Adubato was fired as coach and replaced by Assistant Coach Gar Heard. Heard won his first game six days later, snapping a 15-game losing streak.

As the season wound down, suspense built as the Mavericks came dangerously close to posting the worst record in league history. The yardstick was the 9-73 mark turned in by the Philadelphia 76ers in 1972-73; after 61 games Dallas stood at 4-57. However, the signing of Jackson on March 3, coupled with the announcement that Quinn Buckner would take over as coach the next season, gave the team the emotional boost necessary to avoid infamy. Jackson appeared in the Mavericks' last 28 games, averaging 16.3 points. In the final 21 contests he helped the team to a 7-14 record, including two straight victories to close out the year and finish at 11-71.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1993-94: Team Tabs Quinn But Doesn't Win
The reins were turned over to Quinn Buckner for 1993-94. An intelligent performer, Buckner had always played for winners, beginning in college at the University of Indiana and then continuing in the NBA with the Milwaukee Bucks, Boston Celtics, and Indiana Pacers. Although his statistics were modest in his NBA seasons, Buckner's teams compiled a .619 winning percentage. The hope was that some of his winning attitude would rub off on his squad.

The Mavericks selected the University of Kentucky's Jamal Mashburn with the fourth overall pick in the 1993 NBA Draft. The versatile, 6-8 forward was expected to provide frontcourt scoring and team with Jackson to form a solid nucleus. Still, Dallas faced a long, steep climb to erase its reputation as the league's doormat. The NBA continued to wipe its feet on the Mavericks in 1993-94. With Jackson and Mashburn on board, the team appeared to be in better shape and did show a modicum of improvement. However, Buckner's strict style didn't catch on initially, and Dallas limped to a 1-23 start and a 3-40 record by the end of January.

With the specter of compiling the worst record in history looming once again, pressure mounted on the Mavericks. Buckner eased up, and the team responded with loose yet sometimes energetic play. The Mavericks went 5-8 in both February and April to finish at 13-69. They had the Minnesota Timberwolves to thank for saving them from infamy-Dallas notched 5 of its 13 victories against the Wolves.

Despite the difficult season, the Mavericks' two young guns showed signs of future greatness. Mashburn led all NBA rookies with an average of 19.2 points per game, and Jackson exhibited triple-double potential, leading the team in assists (4.6 apg), tying Mashburn in scoring, and finishing second on the squad in rebounding (4.7 rpg).

At the end of the season Dallas management fired Buckner and brought back Dick Motta, the franchise's first head coach and the architect of its successful teams of the 1980s. The Mavericks also added another big-time talent, nabbing University of California point guard Jason Kidd with the second overall pick in the 1994 NBA Draft. Return to top of page


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1994-95: New Kidd Sparks Mavs Turnaround
The Mavericks moved forward dramatically in 1994-95. After having gone 13-69 the previous season, Dallas posted a 23-game improvement and finished at 36-46, the biggest turnaround in club history and the greatest improvement in the NBA for the season. The 36 wins were 12 more than the Mavericks had managed in the previous two seasons combined.

A major catalyst for the turnaround was rookie point guard Jason Kidd, who led the NBA in triple-doubles with 4 and averaged 11.7 points, 5.4 rebounds, and 7.7 assists on the year. For his efforts, Kidd was named co-Rookie of the Year along with the Detroit Pistons' Grant Hill. Kidd finished 10th in the league in assists and 7th in steals. In Dallas's 156-147 double-overtime win over the Houston Rockets on April 11, Kidd registered a triple-double (including 38 points) and hit a trio of three-pointers in the final 55 seconds of the first overtime.

Kidd was part of a core of young and talented Mavericks players that also included Jim Jackson and Jamal Mashburn, who combined as the league's highest-scoring pair of teammates. Both led players at their position for much of the year. The youthful Mashburn finished fifth in the NBA with an average of 24.1 points per game. Jackson severely sprained his ankle in February and missed the remainder of the campaign; although he averaged 25.7 points, he didn't score enough points to qualify for the leaderboard.

Second-year forward Popeye Jones also had a fine year. His average of 10.6 rebounds per game was good enough for 10th in the NBA. Jones snatched 329 offensive rebounds, more than any other NBA player. Roy Tarpley, who had been banned from the league in 1991 for violating its antidrug program, was reinstated by the NBA prior to the 1994-95 season. He rejoined the Mavericks and contributed 12.6 points and 8.2 rebounds per game.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1995-96: Carter, Motta Era Ends in Disappointment
After showing such promise in 1994-95, the Mavericks suffered a disappointing 95-96 campaign that resulted in only 26 wins, the end of Dick Motta's second tenure with the Mavericks, and the first ownership change in team history.

Before the season, several players talked about taking the next step forward in their rebuilding - a trip to the postseason. A 4-0 start seemed to back up their words. But injuries, the lack of an inside presence, the absence of veteran leadership and internal strife all helped seal the Mavericks' fate.

After only 18 games, Jamal Mashburn's season ended when he had surgery to repair a sore left knee. Jackson and Kidd sometimes had trouble getting along, but neither had trouble establishing himself as a star. Kidd became the first Maverick to start in an All-Star Game, and finished the season second in the NBA in assists (9.7) and fourth in steals (2.2). Jackson led the team in scoring (19.6) and was the only Maverick to play in all 82 games.

In the absence of an inside threat, the Mavericks offense degenerated into a barrage of three-point shooting that helped the Mavericks set a single-season record for three-point goals made (735) and attempted (2,039). George McCloud re-emerged on the NBA scene with an average of 18.9 ppg in place of Mashburn, and connected on a 257 threes, the second best total in league history.

At season's end, Dick Motta was replaced by Bulls' assistant coach Jim Cleamons, and controlling interest in the club was sold by Donald Carter to a group of investors headed by Ross Perot, Jr., son of the former presidential candidate.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1996-97: Mavericks Revamp, Rebuild
The Mavericks began the 1996-97 with the "Three J's" and the optimism of a new head coach. By season's end, Jason Kidd, Jamal Mashburn and Jimmy Jackson all had new addresses, and Head Coach Jim Cleamons had used an NBA-record 27 players. The lack of continuity led to a 24-58 finish, but Cleamons is hopeful the Mavericks now have the ingredients in place for a winning team.

In December, the Mavericks aggresively began their pursuit of a new direction, trading Kidd, Tony Dumas and Loren Meyer to Phoenix for A.C. Green, Sam Cassell and Michael Finley. That trade, made to improve the team's chemistry, proved to be only the beginning of a complete roster overhaul.

On February 7, the team hired Don Nelson as general manager to oversee the rebuilding. Nelson wasted little time. Within a week, the team waived Oliver Miller and Fred Roberts, and traded Mashburn to Miami for Kurt Thomas, Sasha Danilovic and Martin Muursepp.

Ten days later, the Mavericks and New Jersey Nets completed one of the biggest trades in NBA history. Dallas sent Jackson, Cassell, Eric Montross, George McCloud and Chris Gatling (who days earlier represented the Mavericks in the All-Star Game) to New Jersey. In return, they received center Shawn Bradley, forward Ed O'Bannon and guards Robert Pack and Khalid Reeves.

When all was said and done, only Derek Harper and rookie Samaki Walker remained from the opening day roster. Harper, a popular one-time Maverick who re-signed as a free agent, became only the 10th player in NBA history to collect 15,000 points and 6,000 assists.

The Mavericks headed into the 1997-98 season hoping to build around a nucleus that included NBA shotblocking leader Bradley (13.2 ppg, 8.4 rpg, 3.40 bpg), Finley (15.0 ppg), Pack (14.3 ppg, 8.4 apg) and Erick Strickland, an undrafted free agent who contributed 10.3 ppg in his rookie season, eighth among all NBA rookies.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1997-98: Big Wins, But Not Enough Wins
Unfortunately, an NBA season is judged on the quantity -- not the quality -- of your wins. In the history books, the Dallas Mavericks' 1997-98 season will go down as a 20-62 campaign, but the Mavericks wowed crowds all season with wins over the unlikeliest of foes.

The Mavericks spoiled the Seattle SuperSonics' home opener on Nov. 1, outscoring Seattle 23-2 over the final 5:01 to steal the 89-81 win. On December 4, with Dallas struggling at 4-12, General Manager Don Nelson relieved Coach Jim Cleamons of his duties and took over as head coach. Nelson's debut featured another surprise showing by the Mavericks, who handily beat the 10-6 New York Knicks, 105-91, behind a team-high 27 points from Michael Finley.

Finley, the team leader in points (21.5 ppg), assists (4.9 apg) and steals (1.61 spg), was the only constant for the Mavericks during a season marked by the coaching change and an injury bug that sidelined Robert Pack and Kurt Thomas for most of the season, and also bit Shawn Bradley and Samaki Walker, Cedric Ceballos and Chris Anstey for extended periods.

Like upset wins, big nights from Finley were a trend that would continue throughout the season. Finley scored 29 (and Erick Strickland had a career-high 30) as the Sonics were victimized again, 107-98, on Jan. 20. One week later, the 25-16 Cleveland Cavaliers were the unsuspecting recipients of an 84-77 overtime loss at the hands of the Mavericks, in which Finley posted a career-high 39 points and 10 rebounds.

All of the aforementioned upsets, and later wins over Indiana, Washington and Minnesota, were just tune-ups for the main event, an improbable 104-97 overtime win over Chicago. Trailing 89-74 with 3:44 remaining, Dallas outscored the defending World Champions 17-2 down the stretch to force overtime.

The most noteworthy individual accomplishment was achieved on Nov. 20, when forward A.C. Green appeared in his 907th consecutive game, setting a new NBA record. Green, who has not missed a game since Nov. 18, 1986, was honored during the game for his streak, which stood at 978 games by season's end.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1998-99: Home, Sweet Home
For Dallas fans, each home game during the 1998-99 season was a chance to watch one of the NBA's best young players and, more often than not, to see a Mavericks victory.

Although the Mavs went 19-31, they posted a winning home record (15-10) for the first time since 1989-90. Dallas finished up strong with an 8-7 overall record in April as they beat playoff-bound teams from San Antonio, Phoenix, Minnesota and Houston (twice).

Fourth-year guard Michael Finley, a star on the rise, scored 20.2 points per game and was one of only 10 NBA players with at least 1,000 points in the lockout-shortened season. Forward Gary Trent also played well, averaging 16 points and 7.8 rebounds.

Cedric Ceballos had a solid start to the season, averaging 12.5 points in 13 games. But the veteran forward missed the rest of the season after breaking both wrists Feb. 25 against Denver.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1999-2000: Mavs Finish Strong
It's been some time since the Dallas Mavericks tasted the fruits of victory on a consistent basis. The 1999-2000 season didn't offer any promise of changing that. But what started as a season of disjointedness, injury, and confusion, finished with cohesion, health and a sense of purpose. And while Dallas failed to make the playoffs for the 10th straight season, the Mavericks tasted success and are optimismistic about reaching postseason next season.

A 30-18 finish over the season's second half, including a league-best 9-1 month of April, gave the team its first 40-win season since 1989-90.

Michael Finley is the foundation up which Dallas will do it's building. The 6-7 swingman led the league in minutes (42.2) and finished among the league leaders in scoring (11th at 22.6 ppg) and assists (20th at 5.3). He played in all 82 games, stretching his consecutive games streak to 379, second in the NBA.

The five-year veteran put up career-bests in scoring and rebounding (6.3), recorded four triple-doubles and was one of only four players to average more than 20 points, 5 rebounds and 5 assists. The others were Kevin Garnett, Grant Hill and Gary Payton.

Dirk Nowitzki made great strides in his second NBA season. The only other Mav to play all 82 games, Nowitzki finished second on the team in scoring (17.5 ppg), rebounding (6.5 rpg) and minutes (35.8). The athletic seven-footer shot 37.9 percent from three-point range and finished 15th in the NBA with 116 three-pointers. At NBA All-Star Weekend, Nowitzki finished second in the three-point shootout.

With the new ownership, a young nucleus, the 12th pick in this year's first-round, and the addition of Harris, Heard, and former NBA great Sidney Moncrief to the coaching staff, expectations in Dallas are, and should be, high.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2000-2001: Mavs Leave Reunion On Winning Note
The Mavs finished up the ‘99-00 season strong and looked to continue that success for the final season in Reunion Arena. The 2000-01 campaign was the club’s most successful in over a decade as the team finished with a 53-29 record and posted the first 50-win season in 13 years (third in team history). The Mavs finished in the top five of the NBA in points per game (100.5), field goal percentage (45.9%), free-throw percentage (79.4) and three-point field goal percentage (38.1) and had the most road victories in franchise history with 25. These wins set the pace for the Mavs first-ever winning road record. In addition, the club defeated every team in the Eastern Conference at least once for the first time in franchise history.

The Mavs made a blockbuster trade minutes before the trade deadline that sent Hubert Davis, Christian Laettner, Courtney Alexander and Etan Thomas to the Washington Wizards for Juwan Howard, Calvin Booth and Obinna Ekezie.

This move helped the club secure fifth place in the Midwest Division and the club’s first playoff visit in 11 years, ending the longest playoff drought in the NBA.

As the fifth seed in the Western Conference, the Mavs were matched up against the Utah Jazz in the First Round of the NBA Playoffs. After the first two games the Mavs found themselves in a 0-2 deficit, but were prepared to fight at home for games three and four. After tying the series up at 2-2, Game Five was played in Utah.

To keep the Jazz from having complete home-court advantage, Cuban found a way to have some “Reunion Rowdies” in attendance by giving away free tickets to Mavs fans that found their way to Utah and painted themselves in Mavs colors. In an amazing, heart-stopping game the Mavs pulled off the upset and beat the Jazz, 84-83, and advanced to the Second Round for the first time since 1988. With this First Round victory, the Mavs became the sixth team in playoff history to erase a 0-2 deficit and win a five-game series.

In the Second Round of the NBA Playoffs, the Mavs took on intrastate rival San Antonio. Although the Mavs gave it a valiant effort, the Spurs took the series 4-1 and knocked the Mavs out of the playoffs.

In addition to the team’s success, there were also some individual accomplishments:

Michael Finley played in his 461st consecutive game.

Dirk Nowitzki became the second player in league history to have more than 100 three-pointers (151) made and 100 blocks (101) in a season. [Robert Horry did it in 1995-96 with Houston (143 three’s and 109 blocks)].

Nowitzki became the first Maverick in franchise history to earn All-NBA honors as he was named to the league’s third team.

Sports Illustrated selected Head Coach/General Manager Don Nelson as “Executive of the Year” and Michael Finley and Dirk Nowitzki to the third team All-NBA.

With an incredible season complete, the Mavericks helped close out Reunion Arena in a winning fashion and looked forward to showcasing the club’s talent in the team’s new home, American Airlines Center.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2001-2002: Mavs Begin New Era In New Arena
With the 2000-01 season setting the standard for Mavericks basketball, the 2001-02 team raised the bar in their pursuit to win a championship. The season began with the opening of the brand new, state-of-the-art American Airlines Center and another record-breaking season swung into action.

The Mavs set a franchise record for 57 wins in a season and became one of four teams in the NBA to post consecutive 50-win seasons. The team also had 38 sellouts for the season (fourth most in franchise history). The club set the NBA record for fewest turnovers (averged 12.1 a game), surpassing the Pistons’ mark from 1996-97. The Mavs had the best road record in the NBA with 27 victories, led the NBA in free-throw shooting (80.6 %), average points per game (105.2) and ranked fourth in the NBA in field goal and three-point percentage.

In February, the 2002 NBA All-Star Game was held in Philadelphia and the Mavs had the largest representation in team history with two players and a coach on the Western Conference team. Head Coach Don Nelson led the helm as Dirk Nowitzki and Steve Nash helped the West beat the East, 135-120.

For the second straight season the Mavs pulled off a blockbuster trade minutes before the deadline. This time the club sent Juwan Howard, Tim Hardaway and Donnell Harvey to the Denver Nuggets in exchange for Raef LaFrentz, Nick Van Exel, Tariq Abdul-Wahad and Avery Johnson.

After finishing the season 57-25, the Mavs were seeded second in the Midwest and took on the Minnesota Timberwolves in the First Round of the NBA Playoffs. For the first time in team history, the Mavs swept a team in the Playoffs. The club also set a NBA record for the highest free-throw percentage in a three-game series (87.7%).

For the second consecutive season, the Mavs advanced to the Second Round of the NBA Playoffs and faced Western Conference leader Sacramento and for the second straight year the Mavs were outmatched. The team lost the series 4-2.

As the Mavs continue to improve as a team, individual players are making their mark in the record books.

Dirk Nowitzki consistently recorded outstanding performances throughout the season and playoffs. On February 23 vs. Sacramento, Nowitzki set the league record for the most defensive rebounds in a game (21) without pulling down an offensive one. Nowitzki earned All-NBA honors for the second straight season, was selected to the NBA’s Western Conference All-Star team for the first time and was chosen as the Western Conference Player of the Week for January 21-27th. Nowitzki posted 38 double-doubles (points and rebounds) for the season and for the first time in his career he was forced to miss a game (4) due to an injury. In the First Round of the Playoffs, Dirk was one rebound shy of the NBA Playoff record of 43 and also joined Kareem Abdul-Jabbar as the only other player since 1970 to record at least 30 points and 15 rebounds in four-straight playoff games.

Steve Nash earned All-NBA honors and finished third in the NBA’s Most Improved Award. For the first time in his career, Nash played in all 82 games and was the only Maverick to do so. He was selected to the Western Conference All-Star team for the first time and was also chosen as the Western Conference Player of the Week for December 10-16th. Nash recorded 20 double-doubles for the season for points and assists.

Michael Finley scored his 10,000th point on March 23 vs. Memphis. Finley was named Western Conference Player of the Week for April 8-14th. A strained hamstring ended Finley’s consecutive games played at 490. This was the longest active streak in the NBA.

Raef LaFrentz became the third player in league history to record 100 three’s and 100 blocks in a season, joining teammate Dirk Nowitzki (2000-01) and Robert Horry (1995-96). Avery Johnson became the fifth player in NBA history to play for all three Texas teams (Chucky Brown, Mark Bryant, Vernon Maxwell and David Wood are the other four).

Head Coach/General Manager Don Nelson coached his second All-Star game in February and became the third coach in NBA history to record 1,000 wins (only Lenny Wilkins and Pat Riley have more wins).

What, then, does this mean for the 2002-03 Dallas Mavericks? There is certainly a bright light at the end of the new American Airlines Center tunnel. With the new season on the horizon, the Mavs are focused on continuing the record-breaking trend and have high hopes of winning it all.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2002-2003: Mavs Reach New Heights
The 2002-03 season for the Dallas Mavericks established their position as one of the elite teams in the NBA and produced many team and individual achievements. After starting the season on fire and winning their first 14 games, the Mavericks made franchise history by finishing the season with a 60-22 mark, that eclipsed the 2001-02 season record of 57-25. The 60-22 record was the team's ninth winning season in franchise history and also made Dallas one of three NBA teams to post 50 wins in three consecutive seasons. Dallas became the first team to clinch a playoff spot in the NBA in mid March. The Mavericks advanced to the Western Conference Finals for the first time since 1988, before bowing out to the eventual World Champion, San Antonio Spurs in six games. The Mavericks playoff run consisted of 20 games marking the longest post season run in Mavs history.

The Mavericks where guided by Don Nelson, in his 25th year as a head coach, to their 60-22 record. Nellie has led Dallas to a better record in each of the last four seasons. Only seven other coaches in NBA history have ever accomplished this amazing feat. Nellie has led teams to 50 win seasons 12 times and now has coached two teams to 60 win seasons. Nellie was named the Western Conference Coach of the Month in November.

Along with the guidance of Don Nelson, the Mavericks "Big Three" of Dirk Nowitzki, Steve Nash and Michael Finley combined once again for a powerful punch. Dirk joined Mark Aguirre as the only Maverick to score 2,000 points or more in a single season. While scoring his 2,011 points, Nowitzki continued to show his versatility ranking first on the team in points (25.1), rebounds (9.9) and steals (1.35) as well as averaging 39 minutes per game. Nowitzki has improved each year with the Mavericks as he has increased his scoring average over each of the last five seasons.

Steve Nash continued to prove why he is one of the top point guards in the NBA by ranking as the team's third leading scorer (17.7 ppg) and the top assist man with 7.3 apg. This season he recorded career highs in free throws made and attempted, free throw percentage, steals and total blocks. Nash set a franchise record by making an unbelievable 49 free throws in a row. That mark surpassed current player development coach, Rolando Blackman's record of 45 consecutive free throws.

The third member of the "Big Three" Michael Finley played outstanding basketball for the Mavericks during the 2002-03 season. The two-time All-Star reached the 10,000 point mark for his Maverick career and became the fourth all-time leading scorer in Mavericks history. Finley averaged 19.3 ppg, 5.8 rpg and 3.0 apg and played an incredible 38.3 mpg. Finley also set career highs in points (42), rebounds (15), three pointers made (7), free throws made (15) and attempted (17).

Nowitzki, Nash and Finley were all named November's Western Conference Player of the Month for the impressive numbers they accumulated. Steve Nash and Dirk Nowitzki were both once again named to the 2002 NBA Western Conference All-Star team for the second consecutive season.

The excitement of the 2002-03 season spread throughout the Metroplex and interest in the Mavericks reached new heights. The Mavs recorded a franchise-record 41 regular season sellouts and it was the first time in Mavs history that all homes games were sold out. The Mavericks have now sold out American Airlines Center for 71 consecutive regular season games dating back to the 2001-02 season.

With the new expectations and goals, the Mavericks look poised to make a run for the Championship in 2003-04.

__________________
Gimme Two - One's just not enough.
OutletPass is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-13-2003, 04:48 PM   #15
u2sarajevo
moderately impressed
 
u2sarajevo's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Home of the thirteenth colony
Posts: 17,705
u2sarajevo has a reputation beyond reputeu2sarajevo has a reputation beyond reputeu2sarajevo has a reputation beyond reputeu2sarajevo has a reputation beyond reputeu2sarajevo has a reputation beyond reputeu2sarajevo has a reputation beyond reputeu2sarajevo has a reputation beyond reputeu2sarajevo has a reputation beyond reputeu2sarajevo has a reputation beyond reputeu2sarajevo has a reputation beyond reputeu2sarajevo has a reputation beyond repute
Default RE: The History of the Mavs

That is great OP... thanks!

Memories....
__________________
u2sarajevo is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-13-2003, 04:51 PM   #16
Drbio
Banned
 
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Nowhere
Posts: 40,924
Drbio is an unknown quantity at this point
Default The History of the Mavs

Reading that brought back many more memories. sweet.
Drbio is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-14-2003, 12:23 PM   #17
OutletPass
Diamond Member
 
OutletPass's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 4,844
OutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really nice
Default The History of the Mavs

A little more about Moody Madness, The Reunion rowdies and Reunion arena.

This article that I found highlights MY two favorite games (before the current team)...the "Moody Madness Game" and Game 6 of the WCF against Magic and "Showtime" in 88.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


The Reunion Rowdies

Ironically, the birth of Reunion Arena's reputation as one of the loudest facilities in pro basketball came across town, at Moody Coliseum.

The WCT Finals forced the Mavericks to move the deciding game of their first playoff series – against Seattle, on April 26, 1984 – to SMU. Dallas advanced with a dramatic 105-104 victory as a sellout crowd of 9,007 roared its approval.

It was dubbed "Moody Madness," and a legend of fan support that would follow the Mavericks to Reunion Arena was born. For the record, the winners that night over at Reunion were Jimmy Connors and Jimmy Arias.

Starting the next season, the Mavericks would average more than 16,000 fans and play to at least 98 percent of Reunion's 17,007-seat capacity for the next seven years. In 1986-87, when Dallas won a team-record 55 games, the Mavericks played to 99.9 percent capacity.

Not only did the fans show up in droves, but they were loud. Airplane-runway loud. Technicians measured the noise at 112 decibels in the mid-1980s.

"It was one of the loudest buildings I ever played in back in the 1980s," said former Mavericks guard Brad Davis, whose jersey No. 15 was retired by the team and hangs in the Reunion rafters. "It got so loud sometimes that you couldn't even hear yourself think. Those fans were amazing."

The undisputed Mavericks highlight at Reunion would come on June 2, 1988. As 17,007 towel-waving fans chanted, "Beat LA! Beat LA!" and a national-television audience looked on, the Mavericks beat the Los Angeles Lakers, 105-103, to force a Game 7 of the Western Conference finals. The Mavericks lost Game 7, but the reputation of their leather-lunged home fans was forged.

"That was the most effective crowd I've seen in my 25 years in the NBA," legendary Lakers broadcaster Chick Hearn said after Game 6.

The noise level – not to mention the actual number of people in the seats – began to dwindle as the Mavericks' nosedive began in 1990. Only last season, with the arrival of energetic owner Mark Cuban, did the fan intensity begin to approach 1980s levels.

"It's always been a good facility for the players," Davis said. "It was a great shooting arena with soft rims and a real good shooting background. And when it was loud, with the fans right on top of you, it was one of the best home-court advantages in the NBA, bar none."

1988 WCF

L.A. Lakers 4, Dallas 3
Mon., Dallas 98 at L.A. Lakers 113
Wed., Dallas 101 at L.A. Lakers 123
Fri., L.A. Lakers 94 at Dallas 106
Sun., L.A. Lakers 104 at Dallas 118
Tue., Dallas 102 at L.A. Lakers 119
Thu., L.A. Lakers 103 at Dallas 105
Sat., Dallas 102 at L.A. Lakers 117

Both team won every game on THEIR homecourt...oh, mercy...if the Mavs could have just taken 1 in LA.

hopes were high for the next season BUT Nov. 9, 1988 was the night that not only Fat Lever had season ending surgery to his body, but that was the same night that Roy Tarpley went down
with a season ending knee injury.

Soon, Sleepy Sam had gone to the Lakers. Detlef had gone to Seattle. Ro, and Derrick were in New York of all places, and they had enrolled in the John Stark school for punk boys. Tarpley had self destructed, and Aguirre was winning Championships in Detroit.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moody madness (9,007 Seats there as compared to Reunion's 17, 007)
After rallying from eight points down in the final minutes to force overtime, Dallas appeared to win in overtime in a strange final sequence


The Mavericks' first playoff series was perhaps the most bizarre and memorable of any series involving a Texas team. In 1984, the Mavericks played Seattle in a best-of-5 first round. Because of scheduling conflicts, the five games were played in four different arenas. The young Dallas team dropped behind, 2-1, but put together a remarkable Game 4 and defeated the Sonics. That set up Game 5, which had to be played in SMU's Moody Coliseum because no one had thought the Mavericks would get that far, and Reunion Arena was booked. With one second left in overtime, Jay Vincent purposely bounced an inbounds pass off Seattle's Tom Chambers, who recovered the ball and missed on a 50-foot desperation shot. But the clock operator failed to start the clock. After 14 minutes, both teams were ordered back on the court to play the last second again. The Sonics were unsuccessful on a lob pass, and the Mavericks won. (Ro had 29pts and Mark had 25; Cummings 16, Vincent 15, Davis 10 and Ellis 10)

1984 NBA Playoffs, First Round - Game 5
Dallas Mavericks 105, Seattle SuperSonics 104 OT at Dallas (April 26)
[Moody Madness]

1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT - Final 2FG 3FG FG% FT%
Dallas 26 23 23 23 10 - 105 .500 .000 .489 .789
Seattle 22 27 22 24 9 - 104 .516 .200 .500 .700

Halftime: 49-49
3rd Q: Dallas 72-71
4th Q: 95-95
Technicals: None
Refs: Jake O'Donnell, Mike Mathis
Attendance: 9,007


Dallas Mavericks REB
Player MIN FGM-FGA 3PM-3PA FTM-FTA PTS O-T AST TO PF STL BLK
Mark Aguirre 44 11-21 0-1 3-5 25 0-9 1 2 1 1 0
Jay Vincent 44 5-14 0-0 5-7 15 1-10 1 2 1 0 0
Pat Cummings 35 7-14 0-0 2-2 16 4-7 2 2 1 0 0
Brad Davis 42 4-8 0-0 2-2 10 0-2 6 2 4 2 0
Rolando Blackman 46 13-20 0-0 3-3 29 4-8 8 5 1 1 2
Dale Ellis 17 5-12 0-1 0-0 10 3-6 0 0 0 0 0
Derek Harper 16 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 2 0 1 0 0
Kurt Nimphius 18 0-2 0-0 0-0 0 0-5 0 1 4 0 2
Elston Turner 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0
Bill Garnett 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 53 45-92 0-2 15-19 105 12-47 20 14 13 4 4

Seattle SuperSonics REB
Player MIN FGM-FGA 3PM-3PA FTM-FTA PTS O-T AST TO PF STL BLK
Danny Vranes 39 5-11 0-0 0-0 10 4-11 4 1 5 1 1
Tom Chambers 38 4-10 0-0 1-2 9 2-7 0 4 5 1 0
Jack Sikma 36 12-24 0-0 2-2 26 0-4 0 0 6 0 1
Gus Williams 49 13-21 1-3 0-0 27 0-0 14 2 0 1 1
Al Wood 23 2-6 0-0 0-1 4 1-5 2 2 1 0 0
Reggie King 14 1-1 0-0 0-0 2 1-4 2 1 3 0 0
Fred Brown 35 8-16 0-2 2-3 18 0-4 6 0 2 1 0
Steve Hawes 31 3-7 0-0 2-2 8 3-8 2 1 3 1 0
Totals 53 48-96 1-5 7-10 104 11-43 30 11 25 5 3




__________________
Gimme Two - One's just not enough.
OutletPass is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-14-2003, 01:05 PM   #18
OutletPass
Diamond Member
 
OutletPass's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 4,844
OutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really nice
Default The History of the Mavs

Another tidbit on the 87-88 season...check out the top and bottom of the midwest standings !!

Western Conference Final Standings

Midwest Division W L Pct. GB
Denver Nuggets 54 28 .659 -
Dallas Mavericks 53 29 .646 1
Utah Jazz ...........47 35 .573 7
Houston Rockets 46 36 .561 8
San Antonio Spurs 31 51 .378 23
Sacramento Kings 24 58 .293 30

Pacific Division W L Pct. GB
Los Angeles Lakers 62 20 .756 -
Portland Trail Blazers 53 29 .646 9
Seattle SuperSonics 44 38 .537 18
Phoenix Suns 28 54 .341 34
Golden State Warriors 20 62 .244 42
Los Angeles Clippers 17 65 .207 45

__________________
Gimme Two - One's just not enough.
OutletPass is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-14-2003, 01:35 PM   #19
OutletPass
Diamond Member
 
OutletPass's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 4,844
OutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really nice
Default The History of the Mavs

Now some statistical history (current through 2003)...this is from Patricia's....and you'll see why some of us LOVED the Aguirre, Blackman, Harper, Perkins, Davis, Vincent, Ellis and Donaldson teams.

Special note: Aguirre shot at a 49.2% clip and Ro shot at a 49.7% pace...while with the Mavs.

Points
16643 Rolando Blackman
13930 Mark Aguirre
12597 Derek Harper
10044 Michael Finley
7623 Brad Davis
7394 Dirk Nowitzki
6766 Sam Perkins
6464 Jay Vincent
5660 Jim Jackson
4809 Steve Nash

Points Averaged
24.6 Mark Aguirre
20.5 Michael Finley
20.1 Dirk Nowitzki
19.9 Jamal Mashburn
19.6 Jim Jackson
19.2 Rolando Blackman
19.1 Chris Gatling
17.0 Adrian Dantley
16.9 Jay Vincent
16.6 Sasha Danilovic

Games Played
883 Brad Davis
872 Derek Harper
865 Rolando Blackman
566 Mark Aguirre
490 Michael Finley
484 James Donaldson
471 Sam Perkins
439 Shawn Bradley
367 Dirk Nowitzki
330 Steve Nash

Games Started
781 Rolando Blackman
620 Derek Harper
527 Mark Aguirre
470 Michael Finley
467 James Donaldson
423 Sam Perkins
422 Brad Davis
343 Dirk Nowitzki
301 Steve Nash
255 Shawn Bradley

Minutes
29684 Rolando Blackman
27985 Derek Harper
21402 Brad Davis
19742 Michael Finley
19154 Mark Aguirre
15657 Sam Perkins
15597 James Donaldson
13029 Dirk Nowitzki
10736 Steve Nash
10566 Shawn Bradley

Minutes Averaged
40.3 Michael Finley
36.3 Jim Jackson
35.7 Jason Kidd
35.5 Dirk Nowitzki
35.1 Jamal Mashburn
34.6 Dennis Scott
34.3 Rolando Blackman
33.8 Mark Aguirre
33.8 Geoff Huston
33.7 Sasha Danilovic

Field Goals Made
6487 Rolando Blackman (6487-13061)
5441 Mark Aguirre (5441-11060)
4899 Derek Harper (4899-10454)
3933 Michael Finley (3933-8764)
2874 Brad Davis (2874-5630)
2580 Jay Vincent (2580-5356)
2540 Sam Perkins (2540-5321)
2532 Dirk Nowitzki (2532-5448)
2134 Jim Jackson (2134-4820)
1716 Steve Nash (1716-3671)

Field Goals Attempted
13061 Rolando Blackman (6487-13061)
11060 Mark Aguirre (5441-11060)
10454 Derek Harper (4899-10454)
8764 Michael Finley (3933-8764)
5630 Brad Davis (2874-5630)
5448 Dirk Nowitzki (2532-5448)
5356 Jay Vincent (2580-5356)
5321 Sam Perkins (2540-5321)
4820 Jim Jackson (2134-4820)
3707 Jamal Mashburn (1529-3707)

Field Goal Percentage[listing more as I'm not using a minimum]
1.000 Chucky Brown (1-1)
.667 Howard Wright (2-3)
.551 James Donaldson (1621-2944)
.550 Donnell Harvey (22-40)
.548 Calvin Booth (46-84)
.533 Chris Gatling (309-580)
.525 Eduardo Najera (337-642)
.517 Jim Grandholm (30-58)
.517 Tom Sluby (30-58)
.511 Christian Laettner (165-323)
.510 Brad Davis (2874-5630)
.503 Bill Garnett (311-618)
.500 Ralph Drollinger (7-14)
.500 Joao Vianna (1-2)
.499 Adrian Griffin (179-359)
.497 Rolando Blackman (6487-13061)
.494 Pat Cummings (885-1793)
.494 Oliver Miller (76-154)
.492 Mark Aguirre (5441-11060)

3-Pointers Made
705 Derek Harper (705-2030)
604 Michael Finley (604-1661)
568 Dirk Nowitzki (568-1504)
465 Steve Nash (465-1111)
369 George McCloud (369-972)
306 Hubert Davis (306-674)
275 Jamal Mashburn (275-876)
270 Brad Davis (270-840)
240 Jim Jackson (240-715)
233 Mark Aguirre (233-765)

3-Pointers Attempted
2030 Derek Harper (705-2030)
1661 Michael Finley (604-1661)
1504 Dirk Nowitzki (568-1504)
1111 Steve Nash (465-1111)
972 George McCloud (369-972)
876 Jamal Mashburn (275-876)
840 Brad Davis (270-840)
765 Mark Aguirre (233-765)
718 Jason Kidd (224-718)
715 Jim Jackson (240-715)

3-Pointers Percentage[listing more as I'm not using a minimum]
1.000 Greg Dreiling (2-2)
.529 Jim Grandholm (9-17)
.454 Hubert Davis (306-674)
.450 Marty Byrnes (9-20)
.419 Steve Nash (465-1111)
.407 Wang Zhizhi (48-118)
.404 Mike Iuzzolino (113-280)
.398 Howard Eisley (107-269)
.396 Stan Pietkiewicz (19-48)
.386 Johnny Newman (22-57)
.380 George McCloud (369-972)
.378 Dirk Nowitzki (568-1504)
.376 Dale Ellis (117-311)
.371 Nick Van Exel (152-410)
.368 Scott Brooks (42-114)
.367 Sasha Danilovic (22-60)
.365 Morlon Wiley (76-208)
.364 Michael Finley (604-1661)
.363 Lucious Harris (109-300)
.363 Tim Legler (74-204)

Free Throws Made
3501 Rolando Blackman (3501-4166)
2815 Mark Aguirre (2815-3793)
2094 Derek Harper (2094-2804)
1762 Dirk Nowitzki (1762-2078)
1629 Sam Perkins (1629-2002)
1605 Brad Davis (1605-1933)
1574 Michael Finley (1574-1941)
1303 Jay Vincent (1303-1661)
1152 Jim Jackson (1152-1425)
1029 James Donaldson (1029-1352)

Free Throws Attempted
4166 Rolando Blackman (3501-4166)
3793 Mark Aguirre (2815-3793)
2804 Derek Harper (2094-2804)
2078 Dirk Nowitzki (1762-2078)
2002 Sam Perkins (1629-2002)
1941 Michael Finley (1574-1941)
1933 Brad Davis (1605-1933)
1661 Jay Vincent (1303-1661)
1425 Jim Jackson (1152-1425)
1352 James Donaldson (1029-1352)

Free Throws Percentage[listing more as I'm not using a minimum]
1.000 Chucky Brown (1-1)
1.000 Howard Carter (1-1)
1.000 Tom Garrick (2-2)
1.000 Roger Phelgley (2-2)
1.000 Stevin Smith (1-1)
1.000 Bruno Sundov (2-2)
1.000 Kurt Thomas (3-3)
1.000 Howard Wright (2-2)
.917 Ed O'Bannon (11-12)
.900 Jim Farmer (9-10)
.897 Steve Alford (78-87)
.893 Steve Nash (912-1021)
.875 Myron Jackson (7-8)
.859 Kelvin Upshaw (55-64)
.857 Bob McCann (12-14)
.857 Jim Spanarkel (751-876)
.856 Hubert Davis (243-284)
.850 Alex English (119-140)
.849 Tracy Moore (118-139)
.848 Dirk Nowitzki (1762-2078)
.842 Sasha Danilovic (48-57)
.840 Rolando Blackman (3501-4166)
.840 Sam Cassell (42-50)
.840 Adrian Griffin (68-81)

Offensive Rebounds
1296 James Donaldson
1259 Mark Aguirre
1226 Sam Perkins
1001 Rolando Blackman
964 Roy Tarpley
921 Shawn Bradley
917 Popeye Jones
772 Jay Vincent
700 Michael Finley
623 Terry Davis

Defensive Rebounds
3293 James Donaldson
2541 Sam Perkins
2531 Dirk Nowitzki
2082 Rolando Blackman
2032 Shawn Bradley
1985 Mark Aguirre
1958 Michael Finley
1839 Roy Tarpley
1704 Jay Vincent
1645 Derek Harper

Rebounds
4589 James Donaldson
3767 Sam Perkins
3244 Mark Aguirre
3083 Rolando Blackman
2994 Dirk Nowitzki
2953 Shawn Bradley
2803 Roy Tarpley
2658 Michael Finley
2476 Jay Vincent
2245 Popeye Jones

Rebounds Averaged
14.3 Dennis Rodman
10.0 Roy Tarpley
9.5 James Donaldson
8.8 Popeye Jones
8.2 Dirk Nowitzki
8.2 Pat Cummings
8.0 Sam Perkins
7.9 Chris Gatling
7.8 Lorenzo Williams
7.6 Richard Washington

Assists
5111 Derek Harper
4524 Brad Davis
2748 Rolando Blackman
2232 Steve Nash
2163 Mark Aguirre
2012 Michael Finley
1590 Jason Kidd
1087 Jim Jackson
854 Sam Perkins
851 Jay Vincent

Assists Averaged
8.7 Jason Kidd
6.8 Steve Nash
5.9 Derek Harper
5.1 Brad Davis
4.9 Geoff Huston
4.9 Robert Pack
4.4 Allan Bristow
4.3 Mike Iuzzolino
4.2 Nick Van Exel
4.1 Michael Finley

Fouls
2040 Brad Davis
2012 Derek Harper
1718 Mark Aguirre
1405 Rolando Blackman
1393 Sam Perkins
1368 Shawn Bradley
1181 Jay Vincent
1060 Kurt Nimphius
1029 James Donaldson
1034 Dirk Nowitzki

Disqualified
35 Shawn Bradley
26 Kurt Nimphius
24 Mark Aguirre
21 Doug Smith
19 Brad Davis
16 Sam Perkins
15 Popeye Jones
15 Roy Tarpley
15 Jay Vincent
15 Lorenzo Williams

Steals
1551 Derek Harper
712 Brad Davis
668 Rolando Blackman
616 Michael Finley
502 Mark Aguirre
485 Sam Perkins
371 Jason Kidd
365 Dirk Nowitzki
317 Roy Tarpley
303 Shawn Bradley

Turnovers
1771 Derek Harper
1746 Mark Aguirre
1720 Rolando Blackman
1311 Brad Davis
1063 Michael Finley
907 Jim Jackson
811 Steve Nash
810 Jay Vincent
787 Sam Perkins
691 James Donaldson

Blocks
1113 Shawn Bradley
615 James Donaldson
475 Kurt Nimphius
444 Sam Perkins
355 Dirk Nowitzki
346 Herb Williams
329 Roy Tarpley
311 Lorenzo Williams
271 Derek Harper
258 Rolando Blackman


__________________
Gimme Two - One's just not enough.
OutletPass is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-14-2003, 01:40 PM   #20
Chiwas
Guru
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 13,363
Chiwas is infamous around these partsChiwas is infamous around these parts
Default RE: The History of the Mavs

Quote:
Field Goal Percentage[listing more as I'm not using a minimum]
1.000 Chucky Brown (1-1)
.667 Howard Wright (2-3)
.551 James Donaldson (1621-2944)
.550 Donnell Harvey (22-40)
.548 Calvin Booth (46-84)
.533 Chris Gatling (309-580)
.525 Eduardo Najera (337-642)
Yeah, babe! [img]i/expressions/face-icon-small-wink.gif[/img]



Great posts, OP. (I now have good reading for all weekend)

__________________
Chiwas is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-14-2003, 02:49 PM   #21
OutletPass
Diamond Member
 
OutletPass's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 4,844
OutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really nice
Default The History of the Mavs

Chi...I'll start with some anecdotes in my next post...it'll begin with the Mavs draft history...because I believe much of the tale is told there....

BUT...two other memorable games for me (excluding this past season) were:

1) My daughter's first mavs game...she was born 10/5/85...and we took her on 1/4/86 to see The Jazz vs. Mavs...... Mavs 119 Utah 106 Aguirre 30pts/ Perkins 13 rebounds

2) The Sock's first Mavs game.....he was born 5/18/89.....and we took him to see the Mavs vs. Lakers (opening night) 11/3/89 Lakers 102 Mavs 98 Tarpley 23pts/Tarpley 17 rebounds ....(oh, the promise that Tarpley had !...he got hurt 6 days later...his season was over...and all of his other problem destroyed him)



__________________
Gimme Two - One's just not enough.
OutletPass is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-14-2003, 04:01 PM   #22
OutletPass
Diamond Member
 
OutletPass's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 4,844
OutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really nice
Default The History of the Mavs

Here's the Mavs draft history...and I've excluded the picks that were past the second round...in the "old days" the draft went 10 freaking rounds:

As a sidenote, do you see ANYONE selected at #29 or past that who EVER produced for the Mavs ?

Dallas Mavericks Draft History

1980 Expansion Draft
Del Beshore (Chicago)
Winford Boynes (New Jersey)
Alonzo Bradley (Houston)
Mike Bratz (Phoenix)
Marty Byrnes (LA Lakers)
Austin Carr (Cleveland)........A Notre Dame guy who could shoot lights out.
Jim Cleamons (Washington)....remember this name ?
Terry Duerod (Detroit)
Jack Givens (Atlanta)
Joe Hassett (Indiana)
Geoff Huston (New York)
Abdul Jeelani (Portland)....crowd favorite in the early years.
Jeff Judkins (Boston)
Arvid Kramer (Denver)
Tom LaGarde (Seattle)....serviceable rebounder/defender
Billy McKinney (Kansas City)
Wiley Peck (San Antonio)
Bingo Smith (San Diego)
Jim Spanarkel (Philadelphia)...lead the first year team in scoring with 14.4
Raymond Townsend (Golden State)
Richard Washington (Milwaukee)
Jerome Whitehead (Utah)


1980
#11 Kiki Vandeweghe (1st round)
#34 Roosevelt Bouie (2nd round)
---Kiki Totally disses the Mavs and refuses to play for them....He gets boo'ed for years after...ironic how he later came to be associated with the Mavs.


1981
#1 Mark Aguirre (1st round)
#9 Rolando Blackman (1st round)
#24 Jay Vincent (2nd round)
#43 Elston Turner (2nd round)
--- Mavs strike it rich. The first pieces of the great 80's team are in place with Mark and Ro. Vincent is a big surprise...but his career doesn't last all that long.

1982
#4 Bill Garnett (1st round)
--- A momentary step back. A huge, huge bust.

1983
#9 Dale Ellis (1st round)
#11 Derek Harper (1st round)
#30 Mark West (2nd round)
#33 Dirk Minniefield (2nd round) (draft day trade to New Jersey for
a 2nd round pick in 1986 and the option to switch 2nd round picks
with New Jersey in 1987)
---Another good one. Two more pieces are put in place with Derek and Dale.


1984
#4 Sam Perkins (1st round)
#15 Terence Stansbury (1st round)
#38 Charlie Sitton (2nd round)
#40 Anthony Teachey (2nd round)
#41 Tom Sluby (2nd round)
---Sam proves to be the real deal....another piece !

1985
#8 Detlef Schrempf (1st round)
#16 Bill Wennington (1st round)
#17 Uwe Blab (1st round)
#40 Mark Acres (2nd round)
---Detlef was no Malone....but was a great role player here. Another decent piece. Wennington and Blab prove to be big zeros.

1986
#7 Roy Tarpley (1st round)
#25 Mark Price (2nd round) (draft day trade to Cleveland for a
1989 2nd round pick and future considerations)
#35 Milt Wagner (2nd round)
---Another huge piece...Roy was just tremendous, won 6th man of the year...but you know the rest.

1987
#20 Jim Farmer (1st round)
#26 Steve Alford (2nd round)
---The downhill slide starts...while the team is about to reach its peak years. Neither is a player.


1988
#46 Morlon Wiley (2nd round)
#49 Jose Vargas (2nd round)
---The slide continues with no 1st rounder. Neither is a player.

1989
#8 Randy White (1st round)
#35 Pat Durham (2nd round)
#53 Jeff Hodge (2nd round)
---The slide gets worse. We have the #8...and end up with nothing.

1990
#49 Phil Henderson (2nd round)
---No first round pick and four bad drafts in a row...and the tone for the 90's is set as the old team is disbursed. And nothings in the cupboard.

1991
#6 Doug Smith (1st round)
#33 Donald Hodge (2nd round)
#35 Mike Iuzzolino (2nd round)
---Make it 5 bad drafts in a row. We have the #6 and get nothing. our horrible record sets us up for a good pick.

1992
#4 Jim Jackson (1st round)
#30 Sean Rooks (2nd round)
--- The first of the 3 J's. JimmyJax has it...but gets hurt down the road.

1993
#4 Jamal Mashburn (1st round)
#28 Lucious Harris (2nd round)
#33 Eric Riley (2nd round) (draft day trade to Houston for the
rights to Popeye Jones)
---The second of the 3 J's plus Lucious (who doesn't stick). But things start to look up !

1994
#2 Jason Kidd (1st round)
#19 Tony Dumas (1st round)
#28 Deon Thomas (2nd round)
---The third J is now in place...Mav's Fever comes back to life.

1995
#12 Cherokee Parks (1st round)
#24 Loren Meyer (1st round)
---Horrible picks...and the 3 J's are getting ready to disintegrate.

1996
#9 Samaki Walker (1st round)
#34 Shawn Harvey (2nd round)
#58 Darnell Robinson (2nd round)
---Another bad one as we blow the #9 on a lifelong journeyman.

1997
#15 Kelvin Cato (1st round) (draft day trade to Portland for the
rights to #18 Chris Anstey and $500,000)
#35 Bubba Wells (2nd round)
---Anstey proves to be fast...and not much else...another horrible pick and the Mavs are firmly back in hell. But just around the corner is....

1998
#6 Robert Traylor (1st round) (draft day trade to Milwaukee for
the rights to #9 Dirk Nowitzki and the rights to #19 Pat
Garrity - who was then traded to Phoenix along with Bubba Wells,
Martin Muursepp, and Dallas' 1999 1st round pick for Steve Nash)
#30 Ansu Sesay (2nd round)
#35 Bruno Sundov (2nd round)
#53 Greg Buckner (2nd round)
---The Dirk/Nash era begins with Fin in place.

1999
#36 Wang Zhi-Zhi (2nd round)
#40 Gordan Giricek (2nd round) (draft day trade to San Antonio for
the rights to #29 Leon Smith and Dallas' 2000 2nd round draft pick)
---Leon Smith never plays a game...no pieces added this year (as happened in the 80's)

2000
#12 Etan Thomas (1st round)
#31 Dan Langhi (2nd round) (draft day multi-trade to Orlando along
with Dallas' 2001 lottery protected 1st round draft pick and $3
million for the rights to #13 Courtney Alexander; Orlando sent #31
to the LA Clippers as part of a trade; the LA Clippers sent #31
back to Dallas with Eric Murdock for Sean Rooks; Dallas then
sent the rights to #31 Dan Langhi to Houston for the rights to #38
Eduardo Najera and a 2nd round draft pick in 2001)
#58 Pete Mickeal (2nd round) (draft day trade to New York along with
Erick Strickland for the rights to #22 Donnell Harvey and John
Wallace)
---The year of Etan, Courtney, Donnell and Eduardo. And the start of the Juwan in/Juwan out scenario

2001
#44 Kyle Hill (2nd round)
#54 Kenny Satterfield (2nd round)
---No first rounder and no pieces added.

2002
#55 Mladen Sekularac (2nd round)
---No first rounder...and Mladen looks like a bust from his summer league play this year.

2003
#29 Josh Howard (1st round)
#57 Xue Yuyang (2nd round) (draft day trade to Denver for Houston's
2004 2nd round draft pick)
---Hope springs eternal with the fine play of Josh in summer league...and we pick up Daniels as a FA...time will tell.


The Great mid-late 80's teams were built through the draft, step by step...piece by piece with few missteps...a lot of fine guys who go on to hold many Mavs all time records.

As that team reached it's peak, our drafts (with lower picks) got worse. As the team was broken up and Tarpley self destructed....the Mavs blew pick after pick. And some very high ones at that.

When we started getting the 3 J's and hope came back...the idiotic drafts continued and no real "pieces" were added. The disintegration of the 3 j's team just added insult to injury...and the Mavs added nothing via the draft (though we started to become very, very active in the trade market)

We basically got nothing until the Dirk/Nash/Fin era began...but again, the Mavs didn't add pieces through the draft. Obviously, this doesn't tell the whole story....BUT we had some very, very solid draft years in the 80's and that lead to our first trip to the WCF in the 87-88 season. The great Mavs team that we have now has been built through the Dirk draft and trades that brought us Steve, Fin, Juwan (in and out) and NVE...but, up to this point, our "pieces"...our backups and role players haven't come through the draft. That's why we're not that young...but somewhat old as far as the NBA goes.

What I personally loved about the 80's team was that we were very, very solid through the 8th or 9th man... look at the names...and look at the all time record holders to date. Dirk and Fin will be up there...and probably Steve, too...but who else ?

__________________
Gimme Two - One's just not enough.
OutletPass is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-14-2003, 04:16 PM   #23
Drbio
Banned
 
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Nowhere
Posts: 40,924
Drbio is an unknown quantity at this point
Default The History of the Mavs

Quote:
#33 Dirk Minniefield
The original Dirk. Had forgotten all about this guy.




Quote:
1981
#1 Mark Aguirre (1st round)
#9 Rolando Blackman (1st round)
#24 Jay Vincent (2nd round)
#43 Elston Turner (2nd round)
--- Mavs strike it rich. The first pieces of the great 80's team are in place with Mark and Ro. Vincent is a big surprise...but his career doesn't last all that long.
IMHO, the Mavs best draft class ever.



Drbio is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-14-2003, 04:26 PM   #24
NewMexiMav
Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2003
Posts: 426
NewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to behold
Default The History of the Mavs

Well, the history has been told. Now for some anecdotes!

First, a little background on me, and why the Mavs are my all-time favorite sports team:

When I was a young teen, my family moved from the plains of Kansas to Dallas in 1980. I left behind my favorite teams of the time: the Kansas City Royals and the Kansas State University basketball team led by one Rolando Blackman. Having never really been a fan of any NBA team (the Kansas City Kings of that time sucked) I quickly took an interest in the Mavs. Like me, they were Dallas newcomers. My interest turned to fanaticism, however, when Ro was drafted (along with Mark and Jay) in 1981.

I recall, I think it was in 1982 or 1983, that 7-11 had a promotion where they gave away a Mavericks poster every week. If you collected all 8 (or some such number) and put them together, you had a giant poster of the Mavs' team photo (it was something like 8 feet by 6 feet). Anyway, that poster covered one wall of my bedroom. I was there for every minute of the long haul to respectability, the trip to the WCF against the Lakers, the painful decline to mediocrity and eventually, utter ineptitude. And that is what has made the current rise to prominence so sweet. Don't get me wrong, I want a championship as much as anybody, but I will always appreciate and never take for granted successful, winning seasons like we've had the last three years.

I remember the high points, like everyone else--the first win over San Antonio, the first playoff appearance, the unbelieveable Moody Madness game (I couldn't get tickets, but watched the game on pay-per-view on a goofy pre-cable Dallas movie channel called "VEU"), Ro's great All-Star Game performance, Game 6 of the WCF in a deafening Reunion Arena (I was there for that), the last second playoff win over Utah three years ago, etc.

As a "day one" Mavs fan, however, you've got to laugh a little bit at the low points: Kiki's holdout, the free agent signing of "big man" Ralph Drollinger only to have him retire before ever playing a game, the amazingly inept draft picks over the years (Bill Garnett, Jim Farmer, Uwe Blab, Randy White, Doug Smith, I could go on and on), the coaching "talents" of the mighty Quinn Buckner and Jim Cleamons, the "three heads are better than one" (yeah, right) front office office of Carter-Sonju-Sund, the multiple meltdowns of Roy Tarpley, the petty bickering and eventual destruction of the 3 J's, and the occassional side shows created by the current Mavs brain trust (i.e., Dennis Rodman, Leon Smith, Wang ZhiZhi, Cuban's sensitive musings on the Kobe case, etc.).

One other note: Funniest Mavericks Moment--I don't remember the year, it had to be mid-1980's. In the fashion of other successful sports teams of the time, the Mavs decided they needed a theme song. I think Sonju commissioned some song writers to write a catchy tune for our beloved Mavs to play at home games. The result: an absolutely dreadful song called "Mavericks On Fire" which sounded like it was performed by "Up With People." I was at the game when they unveiled the song during a timeout, playing it over the PA on a turntable (no CD's at the time). When the song concluded, 17,007 spectators were stone cold silent and all you could hear in the arena was the needle on the tuntable skipping at the end of the record groove. In my memory of the moment, I've added the occassional chirping cricket! Anyway, the song was never played again and Norm Sonju's budding career as a record producer was stopped in its tracks. I'd give anything to hear that song again, because I can't remember how it went, I just know it was gawd awful.

Thanks for letting me take the trip down memory lane, and here's to many great future Mavs Moments.
NewMexiMav is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-14-2003, 04:42 PM   #25
Drbio
Banned
 
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Nowhere
Posts: 40,924
Drbio is an unknown quantity at this point
Default The History of the Mavs

Nice post. Welcome to the board.
Drbio is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-14-2003, 04:43 PM   #26
OutletPass
Diamond Member
 
OutletPass's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 4,844
OutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really nice
Default The History of the Mavs

Quote:
The owners, why the "mavericks" name, why in Dallas, the old logos...anecdotes.
Quote:
The Mavericks were named the Mavericks over the Express and the Wranglers during a contest. The winner received season tickets to the Mavs in the first season I think.
--Actually, there were 41 who voted for the Mavs name...and got tickets as their prize.

Great voter turnout, eh ?

In those days, with the expansion team that we had, most of us were just damn excited to see guys like Kareem and Dr. J came to town...

I believe that in the first two years, attendance varied between 6000 and 9000 in Reunion...my season tickets were 6th row...then attendance rocketed in the third year....as the "Hardline" is fond of saying the "cocaine and boob job crowd" joined with the NBA fanatics.

Thanks for the post NewMexiMavs...I hope more will follow with anecdotes....sheesh, I even remember the old posters that you talked about !!

__________________
Gimme Two - One's just not enough.
OutletPass is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-14-2003, 05:55 PM   #27
giantbenmav
Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2003
Posts: 132
giantbenmav is on a distinguished road
Default The History of the Mavs

One interesting note about the name "mavericks" is as you all should know that live in the metroplex, the university of texas at arlington has the name "mavericks".......rightfully so UTA did not like the name that was chosen because it was theres and it would impede on possible merchanise sales and other stuff like that.......well i believe it was settled when Carter gave them a settlement amount so that they could have the name as well, it was around 100,000 or something like that.......
__________________




Go MAVS!!!!
giantbenmav is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-14-2003, 09:32 PM   #28
Chef Ed
Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Posts: 209
Chef Ed is on a distinguished road
Default RE: The History of the Mavs

__________________
Have a nice day, and thanks for playing
Chef Ed is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-14-2003, 09:43 PM   #29
Chef Ed
Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Posts: 209
Chef Ed is on a distinguished road
Default The History of the Mavs

It is funny how one person can bring you to the top of the mountain, and at the same time take you to the cellar. Roy Tarpley did exactly that. He took us from a good team, and put us in the top with the Celtics, Lakers, and Pistons. Without Roy we never would have made it to the Western Conference Finals. We never would have challenged the Lakers. Not to mention the Reunion Rowdies, and the home court that we enjoyed in the 80's.

But as I said the same person that came of the bench averaging a double double was the same person that took us down, and I mean took us down hard. The year after the WCF against the Lakers, Roy blew out his knee, and then he went down, and went down hard. But the end of the next couple of years Blackman, and Harper were playing for the John Stark school for punkboys(Knicks), Sleapy Sam was in LA. Shremph was in Seatle, and Mark was winning Championships for the Pistons. It was the hardest time for any Maverick fan, but it taught us the reality of the NBA, and it made us all appreciate the loyalty, and the great sportsmanship from people like Ro, and Derick. Not to mention Brad.

It also taught us that no matter how successful you are, it can go away at anytime. That is why we all should appreciate what we have now, and stop being so critical about things that mean little, or nothing. We should be proud of what we have accomplished, and we should also be grateful for where we are now. We all want the prize, but the fact that this team has a hole lot of character, and great sportsmanship, and great chemistry between the players should make us all proud.

I was never in favor of the New logo all though I think it looks cool, but I liked the old one better. I also wish Kevin was still the anouncer at the games. But that's just me. I also mis Ted Davis doing the games, and I miss Durham. But I guess I'm just old. I also miss Wally doing Mavericks overtime.........But things change, and we all grow up a little. Sometimes it's fun, and sometimes it sucks, but the best part is that we all love the Mav's, and we probably allways will........Just a thought.
__________________
Have a nice day, and thanks for playing
Chef Ed is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-14-2003, 11:09 PM   #30
Chiwas
Guru
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 13,363
Chiwas is infamous around these partsChiwas is infamous around these parts
Default RE: The History of the Mavs

I don't want to interrup, but I have to say that your stories are very good, very interesting.
__________________
Chiwas is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-15-2003, 10:00 AM   #31
NewMexiMav
Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2003
Posts: 426
NewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to behold
Default The History of the Mavs

Nice thoughts, Chef Ed.

It's true, Roy probably had a bigger impact (both good and bad) on the fortunes of the franchise than anyone. Obviously, Dirk is the huge impact player now, and fortunately the impact is all good.

You bring up a good side note on the Mavs PA, radio and TV broadcasters over the years. I, too, miss Kevin McCarthy. Humble Billy gives me a headache, but that's today's NBA. I'd would love to have Jim Durham call a season for us now that we're good. His immense talents were wasted all those year's that we sucked. Going way back, I even miss Dave Barnett.

Guys I don't miss:

Allen Stone (Ugggh)
Jim Haller (Ugggggggh)
Ted Davis (sorry, I was never a fan)

Guys I wish I could say I don't miss:

Bob Ortegel
NewMexiMav is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-16-2003, 11:57 AM   #32
Chiwas
Guru
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 13,363
Chiwas is infamous around these partsChiwas is infamous around these parts
Default RE: The History of the Mavs

We can now write in the blank chapter "summer 2003".
__________________
Chiwas is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-13-2004, 12:11 PM   #33
Chiwas
Guru
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 13,363
Chiwas is infamous around these partsChiwas is infamous around these parts
Default RE:The History of the Mavs

Quote:
Originally posted by: XERXES
Mostly its a tear-jerker.
Dang true.
__________________
Chiwas is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-14-2004, 09:49 AM   #34
Novice#41
Golden Member
 
Novice#41's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2001
Posts: 1,375
Novice#41 is a splendid one to beholdNovice#41 is a splendid one to beholdNovice#41 is a splendid one to beholdNovice#41 is a splendid one to beholdNovice#41 is a splendid one to beholdNovice#41 is a splendid one to beholdNovice#41 is a splendid one to beholdNovice#41 is a splendid one to beholdNovice#41 is a splendid one to beholdNovice#41 is a splendid one to beholdNovice#41 is a splendid one to behold
Default RE:The History of the Mavs

Quote:
Also, the first Maverick preseason game was held in Oklahoma (Tulsa or OK City, I forget which). Don Carter and his wife sat courtside. It was the first basketball game Mrs. Carter ever attended on any level.
as far as i read the tales from DM...

Donald Carter had never been to an NBA game when he started pursuing a franchise. So he wasn't doing it to satisfy his love of basketball. And even though he was a multimillionaire businessman, he wasn't trying to pad his fortune or raise his profile. For Carter, it was simply a gift - to his hoops-loving wife, Linda, and to the city of Dallas, which he thought deserved to be considered "big-league" in every way.
...

... Don met his future wife, Linda. She was only a year removed from playing basketball at Duncanville High, and several of their first dates were at a tournament there. For many years, the only picture in his wallet showed her in a basketball uniform.


that's what I've always said... it's all about women, sport and money [img]i/expressions/face-icon-small-wink.gif[/img]...


re the logo....

The logo underwent 77 revisions before it was unveiled. The italicized M was meant to depict movement. Blue and green were chosen for the colors because they represented a "North Texas countryside scheme," Sonju said.



i still love it !!!

__________________
Novice#41 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-15-2004, 08:35 PM   #35
OutletPass
Diamond Member
 
OutletPass's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 4,844
OutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really niceOutletPass is just really nice
Default RE:The History of the Mavs

Glad that you popped this thread back up....the game the other day reminded me of something that happened years ago.

There was some cause for concern because there was a hockey game in the arena in LA at 1pm and they were late in getting the Mavs basket up before the game. They thought that the game might be delayed a bit.

What happened with the Mavs famous "Slip and fall" game was this....(sorry, I don't remember the year):

The Mavs were playing one evening and very early in the game, players began sliding around all over the place...after 3 or 4 players went down for no apparent reason...the officials called a timeout...as things developed, they finally figured out that condensation was coming up from the ice rink pipes under the basketball flooring.

Since there was no way to remedy it, the game was called and replayed later.

Does anyone else remember that game ?
__________________
Gimme Two - One's just not enough.
OutletPass is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-19-2012, 08:40 AM   #36
Murphy3
Guru
 
Murphy3's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2001
Location: sport
Posts: 39,425
Murphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond repute
Default

bump.. was just looking for prior LaGarde references in the forum. Interesting thread. It's good to see a post from NewMexiMav
Murphy3 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-19-2012, 09:20 AM   #37
Bayliss
Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Posts: 16,054
Bayliss has a reputation beyond reputeBayliss has a reputation beyond reputeBayliss has a reputation beyond reputeBayliss has a reputation beyond reputeBayliss has a reputation beyond reputeBayliss has a reputation beyond reputeBayliss has a reputation beyond reputeBayliss has a reputation beyond reputeBayliss has a reputation beyond reputeBayliss has a reputation beyond reputeBayliss has a reputation beyond repute
Default

Chef Ed.......

Murphy, you on a nostalgia trip?
Bayliss is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-19-2012, 09:25 AM   #38
Murphy3
Guru
 
Murphy3's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2001
Location: sport
Posts: 39,425
Murphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond reputeMurphy3 has a reputation beyond repute
Default

I made reference to LaGarde in another thread..someone referenced how rare of an occurrence it was to see him mentioned. So, I did a quick search and found a handful of threads that referenced him. This one was kinda interesting mostly because of the people that posted in it.. so I bumped it.
Murphy3 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-19-2012, 09:45 AM   #39
Male30Dan
Diamond Member
 
Male30Dan's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Waco, TX
Posts: 8,141
Male30Dan has a reputation beyond reputeMale30Dan has a reputation beyond reputeMale30Dan has a reputation beyond reputeMale30Dan has a reputation beyond reputeMale30Dan has a reputation beyond reputeMale30Dan has a reputation beyond reputeMale30Dan has a reputation beyond reputeMale30Dan has a reputation beyond reputeMale30Dan has a reputation beyond reputeMale30Dan has a reputation beyond reputeMale30Dan has a reputation beyond repute
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by OutletPass View Post
Now some statistical history (current through 2003)...this is from Patricia's....and you'll see why some of us LOVED the Aguirre, Blackman, Harper, Perkins, Davis, Vincent, Ellis and Donaldson teams.

Special note: Aguirre shot at a 49.2% clip and Ro shot at a 49.7% pace...while with the Mavs.

Points
16643 Rolando Blackman
13930 Mark Aguirre
12597 Derek Harper
10044 Michael Finley
7623 Brad Davis
7394 Dirk Nowitzki
6766 Sam Perkins
6464 Jay Vincent
5660 Jim Jackson
4809 Steve Nash

Points Averaged
24.6 Mark Aguirre
20.5 Michael Finley
20.1 Dirk Nowitzki
19.9 Jamal Mashburn
19.6 Jim Jackson
19.2 Rolando Blackman
19.1 Chris Gatling
17.0 Adrian Dantley
16.9 Jay Vincent
16.6 Sasha Danilovic

Games Played
883 Brad Davis
872 Derek Harper
865 Rolando Blackman
566 Mark Aguirre
490 Michael Finley
484 James Donaldson
471 Sam Perkins
439 Shawn Bradley
367 Dirk Nowitzki
330 Steve Nash

Games Started
781 Rolando Blackman
620 Derek Harper
527 Mark Aguirre
470 Michael Finley
467 James Donaldson
423 Sam Perkins
422 Brad Davis
343 Dirk Nowitzki
301 Steve Nash
255 Shawn Bradley

Minutes
29684 Rolando Blackman
27985 Derek Harper
21402 Brad Davis
19742 Michael Finley
19154 Mark Aguirre
15657 Sam Perkins
15597 James Donaldson
13029 Dirk Nowitzki
10736 Steve Nash
10566 Shawn Bradley

Minutes Averaged
40.3 Michael Finley
36.3 Jim Jackson
35.7 Jason Kidd
35.5 Dirk Nowitzki
35.1 Jamal Mashburn
34.6 Dennis Scott
34.3 Rolando Blackman
33.8 Mark Aguirre
33.8 Geoff Huston
33.7 Sasha Danilovic

Field Goals Made
6487 Rolando Blackman (6487-13061)
5441 Mark Aguirre (5441-11060)
4899 Derek Harper (4899-10454)
3933 Michael Finley (3933-8764)
2874 Brad Davis (2874-5630)
2580 Jay Vincent (2580-5356)
2540 Sam Perkins (2540-5321)
2532 Dirk Nowitzki (2532-5448)
2134 Jim Jackson (2134-4820)
1716 Steve Nash (1716-3671)

Field Goals Attempted
13061 Rolando Blackman (6487-13061)
11060 Mark Aguirre (5441-11060)
10454 Derek Harper (4899-10454)
8764 Michael Finley (3933-8764)
5630 Brad Davis (2874-5630)
5448 Dirk Nowitzki (2532-5448)
5356 Jay Vincent (2580-5356)
5321 Sam Perkins (2540-5321)
4820 Jim Jackson (2134-4820)
3707 Jamal Mashburn (1529-3707)

Field Goal Percentage[listing more as I'm not using a minimum]
1.000 Chucky Brown (1-1)
.667 Howard Wright (2-3)
.551 James Donaldson (1621-2944)
.550 Donnell Harvey (22-40)
.548 Calvin Booth (46-84)
.533 Chris Gatling (309-580)
.525 Eduardo Najera (337-642)
.517 Jim Grandholm (30-58)
.517 Tom Sluby (30-58)
.511 Christian Laettner (165-323)
.510 Brad Davis (2874-5630)
.503 Bill Garnett (311-618)
.500 Ralph Drollinger (7-14)
.500 Joao Vianna (1-2)
.499 Adrian Griffin (179-359)
.497 Rolando Blackman (6487-13061)
.494 Pat Cummings (885-1793)
.494 Oliver Miller (76-154)
.492 Mark Aguirre (5441-11060)

3-Pointers Made
705 Derek Harper (705-2030)
604 Michael Finley (604-1661)
568 Dirk Nowitzki (568-1504)
465 Steve Nash (465-1111)
369 George McCloud (369-972)
306 Hubert Davis (306-674)
275 Jamal Mashburn (275-876)
270 Brad Davis (270-840)
240 Jim Jackson (240-715)
233 Mark Aguirre (233-765)

3-Pointers Attempted
2030 Derek Harper (705-2030)
1661 Michael Finley (604-1661)
1504 Dirk Nowitzki (568-1504)
1111 Steve Nash (465-1111)
972 George McCloud (369-972)
876 Jamal Mashburn (275-876)
840 Brad Davis (270-840)
765 Mark Aguirre (233-765)
718 Jason Kidd (224-718)
715 Jim Jackson (240-715)

3-Pointers Percentage[listing more as I'm not using a minimum]
1.000 Greg Dreiling (2-2)
.529 Jim Grandholm (9-17)
.454 Hubert Davis (306-674)
.450 Marty Byrnes (9-20)
.419 Steve Nash (465-1111)
.407 Wang Zhizhi (48-118)
.404 Mike Iuzzolino (113-280)
.398 Howard Eisley (107-269)
.396 Stan Pietkiewicz (19-48)
.386 Johnny Newman (22-57)
.380 George McCloud (369-972)
.378 Dirk Nowitzki (568-1504)
.376 Dale Ellis (117-311)
.371 Nick Van Exel (152-410)
.368 Scott Brooks (42-114)
.367 Sasha Danilovic (22-60)
.365 Morlon Wiley (76-208)
.364 Michael Finley (604-1661)
.363 Lucious Harris (109-300)
.363 Tim Legler (74-204)

Free Throws Made
3501 Rolando Blackman (3501-4166)
2815 Mark Aguirre (2815-3793)
2094 Derek Harper (2094-2804)
1762 Dirk Nowitzki (1762-2078)
1629 Sam Perkins (1629-2002)
1605 Brad Davis (1605-1933)
1574 Michael Finley (1574-1941)
1303 Jay Vincent (1303-1661)
1152 Jim Jackson (1152-1425)
1029 James Donaldson (1029-1352)

Free Throws Attempted
4166 Rolando Blackman (3501-4166)
3793 Mark Aguirre (2815-3793)
2804 Derek Harper (2094-2804)
2078 Dirk Nowitzki (1762-2078)
2002 Sam Perkins (1629-2002)
1941 Michael Finley (1574-1941)
1933 Brad Davis (1605-1933)
1661 Jay Vincent (1303-1661)
1425 Jim Jackson (1152-1425)
1352 James Donaldson (1029-1352)

Free Throws Percentage[listing more as I'm not using a minimum]
1.000 Chucky Brown (1-1)
1.000 Howard Carter (1-1)
1.000 Tom Garrick (2-2)
1.000 Roger Phelgley (2-2)
1.000 Stevin Smith (1-1)
1.000 Bruno Sundov (2-2)
1.000 Kurt Thomas (3-3)
1.000 Howard Wright (2-2)
.917 Ed O'Bannon (11-12)
.900 Jim Farmer (9-10)
.897 Steve Alford (78-87)
.893 Steve Nash (912-1021)
.875 Myron Jackson (7-8)
.859 Kelvin Upshaw (55-64)
.857 Bob McCann (12-14)
.857 Jim Spanarkel (751-876)
.856 Hubert Davis (243-284)
.850 Alex English (119-140)
.849 Tracy Moore (118-139)
.848 Dirk Nowitzki (1762-2078)
.842 Sasha Danilovic (48-57)
.840 Rolando Blackman (3501-4166)
.840 Sam Cassell (42-50)
.840 Adrian Griffin (68-81)

Offensive Rebounds
1296 James Donaldson
1259 Mark Aguirre
1226 Sam Perkins
1001 Rolando Blackman
964 Roy Tarpley
921 Shawn Bradley
917 Popeye Jones
772 Jay Vincent
700 Michael Finley
623 Terry Davis

Defensive Rebounds
3293 James Donaldson
2541 Sam Perkins
2531 Dirk Nowitzki
2082 Rolando Blackman
2032 Shawn Bradley
1985 Mark Aguirre
1958 Michael Finley
1839 Roy Tarpley
1704 Jay Vincent
1645 Derek Harper

Rebounds
4589 James Donaldson
3767 Sam Perkins
3244 Mark Aguirre
3083 Rolando Blackman
2994 Dirk Nowitzki
2953 Shawn Bradley
2803 Roy Tarpley
2658 Michael Finley
2476 Jay Vincent
2245 Popeye Jones

Rebounds Averaged
14.3 Dennis Rodman
10.0 Roy Tarpley
9.5 James Donaldson
8.8 Popeye Jones
8.2 Dirk Nowitzki
8.2 Pat Cummings
8.0 Sam Perkins
7.9 Chris Gatling
7.8 Lorenzo Williams
7.6 Richard Washington

Assists
5111 Derek Harper
4524 Brad Davis
2748 Rolando Blackman
2232 Steve Nash
2163 Mark Aguirre
2012 Michael Finley
1590 Jason Kidd
1087 Jim Jackson
854 Sam Perkins
851 Jay Vincent

Assists Averaged
8.7 Jason Kidd
6.8 Steve Nash
5.9 Derek Harper
5.1 Brad Davis
4.9 Geoff Huston
4.9 Robert Pack
4.4 Allan Bristow
4.3 Mike Iuzzolino
4.2 Nick Van Exel
4.1 Michael Finley

Fouls
2040 Brad Davis
2012 Derek Harper
1718 Mark Aguirre
1405 Rolando Blackman
1393 Sam Perkins
1368 Shawn Bradley
1181 Jay Vincent
1060 Kurt Nimphius
1029 James Donaldson
1034 Dirk Nowitzki

Disqualified
35 Shawn Bradley
26 Kurt Nimphius
24 Mark Aguirre
21 Doug Smith
19 Brad Davis
16 Sam Perkins
15 Popeye Jones
15 Roy Tarpley
15 Jay Vincent
15 Lorenzo Williams

Steals
1551 Derek Harper
712 Brad Davis
668 Rolando Blackman
616 Michael Finley
502 Mark Aguirre
485 Sam Perkins
371 Jason Kidd
365 Dirk Nowitzki
317 Roy Tarpley
303 Shawn Bradley

Turnovers
1771 Derek Harper
1746 Mark Aguirre
1720 Rolando Blackman
1311 Brad Davis
1063 Michael Finley
907 Jim Jackson
811 Steve Nash
810 Jay Vincent
787 Sam Perkins
691 James Donaldson

Blocks
1113 Shawn Bradley
615 James Donaldson
475 Kurt Nimphius
444 Sam Perkins
355 Dirk Nowitzki
346 Herb Williams
329 Roy Tarpley
311 Lorenzo Williams
271 Derek Harper
258 Rolando Blackman
Man how these numbers have changed.
__________________
Male30Dan is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-19-2012, 11:55 AM   #40
NewMexiMav
Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2003
Posts: 426
NewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to beholdNewMexiMav is a splendid one to behold
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Murphy3 View Post
bump.. was just looking for prior LaGarde references in the forum. Interesting thread. It's good to see a post from NewMexiMav
Gee thanks Murph! My posts in this thread were my very first back in August of 2003. Time flies doesn't it? I guess I need to jar myself out of lurker mode more often. I'm just not a volume poster.

The thing I think is cool about this thread is that we were all expressing our fondest memories of our beloved Mavs while still eight years away from a championship. What a great ride it's been, and even though the breakup of the championship roster has been painful to endure, I am excited to witness the next chapter of Mavericks basketball!
NewMexiMav is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Tags
hey! look at me!


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump




All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:53 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.