Dinwiddie will return to a bench role with the Mavericks in Wednesday's game against the Timberwolves, Grant Afseth of DallasHoopsJournal.com reports. After being a starter for the Mavericks for the last three games,
The Dallas Mavericks lost their third consecutive game on Wednesday night to the last-place team in the NBA’s Western Conference New Orleans Pelicans 119-116. The nature of the defeat is what drew attention, however.
Taking a look at three moves the Dallas Mavericks must make as the 2025 NBA Trade deadline quickly approaches.
It appears the Dallas Mavericks will not protest the results of Wednesday’s controversial loss to the New Orleans Pelicans.
The New Orleans Pelicans defeated the Dallas Mavericks on Wednesday night in a 119-116 nailbiter. The key moment of the game came in the final seconds of the fourth quarter when Mavs guard Spencer Dinwiddie, with his team trailing 117-116, got a layup opportunity in transition that would have given Dallas the lead.
Also questionable are Dereck Lively II (ankle), Quentin Grimes (back spasms) and Naji Marshall (illness). Three others have also already been ruled out: Dwight Powell (hip), Jaden Hardy (ankle), Dante Exum (wrist).
The NBA acknowledged in its Last Two Minute Report that officials should have called a goaltending at the end of the
Kyrie Irving scored 25 points, Spencer Dinwiddie and P.J. Washington Jr. added 16 apiece and the Dallas Mavericks beat Oklahoma City 106-98 as Thunder All-Star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander missed his first game of the season.
Dejounte Murray scored 30 points, Trey Murphy III blocked Spencer Dinwiddie’s layup for the lead with 4 seconds left and the New Orleans Pelicans outlasted the injury-depleted Dallas Mavericks 119-116.
The NBA's two-minute report won't help the Mavericks fans' belief that they were robbed of a win on Wednesday.
DALLAS (AP) — Kyrie Irving scored 25 points, Spencer Dinwiddie and P.J. Washington Jr. added 16 apiece and the Dallas Mavericks beat Oklahoma City 106-98 Friday night as Thunder All-Star Shai ...
The Philadelphia 76ers are at the point where becoming sellers at the NBA trade deadline might be the best route for them. The Sixers are the No. 11 seed in the Eastern Conference and are just a couple of games outside the NBA's sixth-worst record.