Dallas Mavericks have parted ways with general manager Nico Harrison, marking the end of a turbulent tenure that saw a Finals appearance and one of the most controversial trades in franchise history.
Harrison was dismissed on Tuesday (Nov. 11), and his firing comes as the Mavericks stumble to a 3–8 start this season, despite the addition of No. 1 overall pick Cooper Flagg. The team has also been hampered by injuries to Anthony Davis and Kyrie Irving, two players central to Harrison’s “win-now” roster construction.
While Harrison oversaw two trips to the Western Conference Finals and a 2024 NBA Finals appearance, his legacy in Dallas will forever be tied to last year’s shocking decision to trade Luka Dončić to the Los Angeles Lakers in exchange for Anthony Davis. The move sparked immediate fan protests, and many within the organization questioned the direction of the team.
After the firing, the basketball world quickly weighed in. Dan Devine of Yahoo Sports wrote that the Dončić trade itself foreshadowed Harrison’s downfall.
“He explained it by saying replacing the 25-year-old Dončić with the 31-year-old Davis ‘fits our timeframe,’” Devine noted. “Forget about 10 years — we might be throwing dirt on his Mavericks tenure inside of 10 months. The lesson: life comes at you fast in the NBA, especially when you trade away a prime-aged superstar.”
Bill Simmons of The Ringer reacted on social media, joking, “Pelinka should probably wait a few hours before sending Nico the ‘Sorry dude, this sucks’ text,” referring to Lakers GM Rob Pelinka, who benefited from the Dončić deal.
Fred Katz of The Athletic pointed to the team’s dwindling fan support: “Saturday night was the first time the Mavericks failed to sell out a game in 24 years,” he tweeted.
Current Warriors forward Draymond Green shared his perspective on his podcast, saying, “The team that Nico constructed to go win a championship hasn’t been on the court.”
And on First Take, ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith offered a blunt assessment.
“Sorry for Nico Harrison, good dude,” Smith said. “But at the end of the day, you traded Luka Dončić. You can’t be 3–8 on the season with Anthony Davis already missing games and having minimal impact, while Kyrie Irving is out injured and Luka is over in L.A. averaging 40.”
Harrison’s firing signals another major shift for Dallas, which now faces uncertainty both on and off the court. The Mavericks have yet to announce an interim general manager, but owner Mark Cuban is expected to begin the search immediately.
Check out more reactions to the firing below.