Mavs Owner Patrick Dumont Was Convinced That Luka Doncic Was A Terrible Business Investment

NBA Insider points at Patrick Dumont as the key reason why Mavericks traded Luka Doncic in the first place.

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Jun 27, 2025; Dallas, TX, USA; Dallas Mavericks governor Patrick Dumont arrives at a press conference at the Dallas Mavericks Practice Facility. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

As the Mavericks decided to part ways with their former general manager, Nico Harrison, the NBA world ponders the aftermath of the decision on the franchise. While reports highlight Harrison’s erroneous judgments during his tenure, some players and experts have stepped up in Nico Harrison’s defense as well.

Patrick Dumont, the owner and governor of the Mavericks, recently confessed that trading Luka Doncic was a mistake for the franchise, and Harrison’s firing indicated that the ownership blamed him for their current predicament.

However, NBA Insider Tim MacMahon says that Dumont also played a key role in initiating the decision to trade Doncic and doesn’t want to blame himself by accepting his own mistake.

This adds to the narrative that Harrison was made the scapegoat of a situation where the Mavericks’ ownership was equally responsible. MacMahon went on the ‘105.3 The Fan’ radio show and spoke his mind on the Mavericks’ recent news.

“I think that he realized it last year, and it was a rude awakening,” pondered MacMahon. “Patrick Dumont is a businessman. He understands the bottom line. And they were bleeding revenue last year, just bleeding revenue.”

“Forget the emotion, forget the outrage that AD got hurt again last year in his first game after rushing back. He was sold on Luka Doncic being a terrible business investment,” MacMahon further added.

“We can’t give this guy a supermax, no way it’s going to be worth it,” said MacMahon on what Dumont likely thought at the time of trading Doncic. “He came to realize that not only is Luka a supermax player, but the supermax is a great investment because Luka is what drove the business of the Mavericks.”

Doncic was eligible for a $345 million supermax extension with the Mavericks when they decided to trade him. Dumont and the rest of the Mavericks’ management reportedly had their skepticism about giving him that much money.

MacMahon also called the 24-year sellout streak “phony,” which recently ended in October after the Mavericks failed to have a sold-out arena for the first time since 2001.

“Dude, you looked around that arena last year, attendance plummeted, and all the associate revenue that goes along with that. The jersey sales, their TV subscription product, they were really tanking and bleeding money.”

“Billionaire dudes don’t like admitting that they made colossal mistakes, and firing Nico is a public admission that Dumont made a historic mistake less than one year into being a governor of an NBA franchise. That’s something he has to live with and learn from,” said MacMahon in conclusion.

MacMahon, in other words, pointed to Dumont putting aside his ego to essentially publicly admit his historic mistake in less than one year after he became the governor of the Mavericks.

The Mavericks are currently 3-9 for the season and will face the Clippers next in their second fixture of the NBA Cup. Trading Anthony Davis and initiating a total rebuild of the franchise is on the table for the franchise’s next steps. It will be interesting to see how Dumont plans the Mavs’ road to recovering from his colossal mistake.

 

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Chaitanya Dadhwal is an NBA Analyst and Columnist at Fadeaway World from New Delhi, India. He fell in love with basketball in 2018 after seeing James Harden in his prime. He joined the sports journalism world in 2021, one year before finishing his law school in 2022. He attended Jindal Global Law School in Sonipat, India, where his favorite subject was also Sports Law.He transitioned from law to journalism after realizing his true passion for sports and basketball in particular. Even though his journalism is driven by his desire to understand both sides of an argument and give a neutral perspective, he openly admits he is biased towards the Houston Rockets and Arsenal. But that intersection of in-depth analysis and passion helps him simplify the fine print and complex language for his readers.His goal in life is to open his own sports management agency one day and represent athletes. He wants to ensure he can help bridge the gap in equal opportunity for athletes across various sports and different genders playing the same sport.
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