Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Luka Dončić–Anthony Davis trade

On the night of February 1–2, 2025, three National Basketball Association (NBA) teams—the Dallas Mavericks, Los Angeles Lakers, and Utah Jazz—concluded a blockbuster sports trade. The trade centered on Mavericks combo guard Luka Dončić and Lakers forward-center Anthony Davis, who were principally exchanged for each other. It was the first time in NBA history that two reigning All-NBA Team players were traded for each other midseason.

At the time of the trade, Dončić, who led the Mavericks to the NBA Finals in 2024, and had made five consecutive All-NBA First Teams, had established himself as the cornerstone of the franchise. The popular perception was that the Mavericks would never trade him. Some journalists have called the transaction one of the most unexpected trades in NBA and American sports history. The broad consensus is that the Lakers won the trade. The Mavericks stated that they traded Dončić to improve the team's defense, although leaks also noted concerns regarding Dončić's weight and salary. Mavericks fans reacted negatively to the trade and protested it after the announcement, with some calling for the firing of general manager Nico Harrison.

Background

Luka Dončić

At the age of 19, Luka Dončić was drafted by the Atlanta Hawks 3rd overall in the 2018 NBA draft. In a draft-night trade, he was dealt to the Dallas Mavericks for the 5th overall pick (Trae Young) and a 2019 1st round pick.[1] When he joined the NBA, he was one of the most coveted prospects in basketball due to his accomplishments at Real Madrid, where he was the 2017–18 EuroLeague MVP and led his team to the EuroLeague title.[2][3][4][5] Dončić's arrival was seen as the beginning of a new era for the Mavericks, as the illustrious career of team legend Dirk Nowitzki was coming to a close. Nowitzki played one season with Dončić before retiring in 2019.[6]

Dončić quickly became the face of the franchise, winning the 2018–19 NBA Rookie of the Year award. In 2019–20, he was selected to his first All-Star team and All-NBA First Team,[7][8] and led the Mavericks to the 2020 NBA playoffs.[9] In 2022, the team reached the Western Conference Finals for the first time since their 2011 championship run.[9] In 2024, the team reached the NBA Finals, losing in five games to the Boston Celtics.[10] Despite the loss, Dončić became just the second player in NBA history to lead the playoffs in total points, rebounds, and assists.[11]

During Dončić's six-and-a-half seasons with Dallas, he made the All-NBA First Team five times and the NBA All-Star Team five times. Dončić became the first player in NBA history to make five All-NBA First Teams through age 24.[12] Along with Larry Bird, George Gervin, and Tim Duncan, he is one of only four players to earn five All-NBA First Team selections in their first six seasons since the ABA–NBA merger.[13] He is the Mavericks' franchise leader in career triple-doubles,[14] and holds the record for most points in a Mavericks season.[15] In 2022, Dončić signed a five-year, $215 million maximum contract with the Mavericks, including a player option for 2026–27.[16]

Anthony Davis

Anthony Davis was drafted by the New Orleans Pelicans 1st overall at the 2012 NBA Draft after winning the 2012 NCAA Division I championship with the Kentucky Wildcats.[17] Davis played seven seasons with the Pelicans, during which he made the All-NBA First Team three times. During the 2018–19 season, Davis announced he would decline to extend his contract with the Pelicans and requested a trade,[18] and the Pelicans subsequently traded him to the Los Angeles Lakers during the 2019 offseason (with the Pelicans receiving Lonzo Ball, Brandon Ingram, Josh Hart and three first-round draft picks).[19]

The Lakers won the 2020 NBA Finals in Davis' first year with the team, with Davis playing an integral part of the team serving as the main co-star alongside LeBron James.[20] The Lakers had not achieved much playoff success since their 2020 title other than making the Conference Finals in the 2022–2023 season. Davis also helped the Lakers win the inaugural NBA Cup during the 2023–24 season.[21] After joining the Lakers, Davis made the All-NBA First Team in 2020, the All-NBA Second Team in 2024, and the All-Defensive First Team in 2020 and 2024. He was an NBA All-Star in 2020, 2021, 2024, and 2025.[22] However, he was plagued with injuries during the 2020–21, 2021–22, and 2022–23 seasons.[23] In 2023, he signed a three-year, $186 million maximum contract extension that tied him to the Lakers through 2028, which was the largest extension in NBA history at the time by annual dollar value.[24]

Timeline and rationale

Trading Dončić

Shortly after the trade, Nico Harrison told the press that "defense wins championships" and that Davis was "one of the best two-way players in the league."[25] He added that Davis exemplified "the culture that we want to create."[25] Harrison, who used to work for Davis' sponsor Nike, has known Davis since the latter was in high school.[26]

In addition, it was reported that the team was unhappy about Dončić's conditioning and diet[25] and disagreed with Dončić about his strength and conditioning regimen.[27][28] Harrison, "a notorious nutrition devotee," was reportedly worried that Dončić's poor conditioning would lead to future injuries.[29] Following the trade, team governor Patrick Dumont said he wanted players who "worked really hard, every day" and that "if you want to take a vacation, don't do it with us." When asked about whether Dončić lacked those winning qualities, Dumont avoided the question, saying that "there's a lot of things that come into play," and "we're focused on [team culture]."[30]

Dončić's salary amplified the Mavericks' perceived risks. According to The Athletic, the Mavericks did not want to offer Dončić the $345 million supermax contract he was eligible for at the end of the season.[29] In addition, provided that Davis waived his $6 million bonus for being traded (which he did),[26][31] moving Dončić's current salary would get the Mavericks out of the luxury tax.[32][33] Dumont rejected suggestions that the Mavericks were categorically unwilling to offer supermax extensions or that they traded Dončić to avoid paying the luxury tax. He called the trade "a risk-allocation decision."[30]

Negotiations

In January 2025, Mavericks general manager Nico Harrison reached out to Lakers general manager Rob Pelinka about a potential Dončić trade. Pelinka initially thought Harrison was joking.[34] On January 7, Pelinka and Harrison met at the Hotel Crescent Court's coffee shop to begin negotiating the trade.[35] According to an unnamed Lakers source, the Mavericks initially asked for rookie Dalton Knecht and multiple first round picks in addition to Davis, but Pelinka convinced Harrison that Dončić's conditioning issues warranted a smaller return.[36] "To get Dallas out of the luxury tax while still being cap-legal from L.A.’s end,"[32] the Lakers and Mavericks paid the Utah Jazz one second-round pick each to take on outgoing Laker Jalen Hood-Schifino's salary.[28] Jazz CEO Danny Ainge was brought into the trade one week before it happened and did not know Dončić was involved until 30 minutes before the news broke.[28]

The Mavericks declined to hold an open auction for Dončić. Harrison worried that if Dončić knew he was on the trading block, he could force himself to a particular team by threatening to trigger his 2026 opt-out clause if traded to the wrong team.[28] Harrison wanted to negotiate with only teams that could send back a star player in return.[37] ESPN reported that Harrison negotiated with only the Lakers,[28] although The Athletic reported that the Mavericks had informally shopped Dončić to at least one other team.[29]

The trade

Shortly after midnight (ET) on February 2, 2025, ESPN's Shams Charania broke the news and revealed most of the pieces in the deal.[38] The Salt Lake Tribune's Andy Larsen later added that the Jazz paid Dallas and Los Angeles nominal amounts of cash.[39]

To Los Angeles Lakers To Dallas Mavericks To Utah Jazz

Early games

Both players were injured at the time of the trade. Dončić had not played since straining his calf during the Mavericks' Christmas Day game.[40] Davis had missed the last two games with an abdominal strain.[41]

Davis made his Mavericks debut on February 8, in a home game win against the Houston Rockets. In the first half, he recorded 24 points, 13 rebounds, 5 assists, and 3 blocks.[41] However, he suffered an adductor injury in the third quarter and was expected to miss multiple weeks.[42] Dončić made his Lakers debut on February 10, in a home game win against the Utah Jazz. Dončić played 23 minutes, scoring 14 points and collecting four assists.[43] Mavericks legend Dirk Nowitzki attended the game at Dončić's invitation, explaining that he felt bad for Dončić.[6] The first Lakers-Mavericks game since the trade took place on February 25 in Los Angeles. The Lakers defeated the Davis-less Mavericks 107–99, with Dončić recording a triple-double.[44]

Analysis

The Lakers were overwhelmingly considered the winners of the trade. CBS Sports' Brad Botkin gave the trade an "A+" grade for the Lakers and an "F" for the Mavericks, stating that he believed the Mavericks were "better positioned to win a championship... but they still get an 'F' because you can't trade Luka Dončić, not unless your hand is forced."[45] ESPN's Kevin Pelton gave the Lakers an "A" and the Mavericks an "F," writing that while Davis was a good player, Dončić was younger and had not yet reached his peak years.[46][47] SB Nation's Ricky O'Donnell gave the Lakers an "A+" and the Mavericks a "D+."[48] The Mirror stated that the trade was the worst in all of NBA history, with "no close second."[49] Some compared the trade to other historical trades such as the Wayne Gretzky trade from the Edmonton Oilers to the Los Angeles Kings in 1988.[50]

The Mavericks' rationale for the trade was questioned in the press. Commentator and NBA Hall of Famer Reggie Miller called the leaks about Dončić's conditioning a "character assassination," although he clarified that he did not know for certain whether the Mavericks were the source. He said that while he "was critical of [Dončić's conditioning] too," Dončić still produced at a high level.[51] The Ringer's Rob Mahoney noted that while Dončić had a reputation for low defensive effort, "Dallas has allowed fewer points when Luka’s been on the floor this season, and dominated opponents in those minutes overall."[33] Ricky O'Donnell said that "if Dončić isn’t worth the supermax, no one is."[48]

Some analysts did credit the Mavericks. An unnamed NBA executive told The Athletic that while the Lakers paid an "insanely discounted price" for Dončić, "defensively, [the Mavericks] can be the equal or better than anyone in the league in the short term."[52] FOX Sports' Colin Cowherd said that while the trade did not make "historical sense," Dončić's high salary and perceived injury troubles helped explain the trade.[53] Yahoo Sports' Morten Jensen said the Lakers won the trade but strongly praised Davis, although he counseled that the Mavericks' new Davis-Kyrie Irving core "will have a short window to win a title."[54] Former NBA All-NBA Team member Baron Davis said that the trade "unlocks Kyrie to go and be Kyrie again."[55] However, Irving tore his ACL on March 3, prematurely ending his season.[56]

With respect to the Lakers, some pundits noted that the Lakers lacked balance, as they had traded away their only elite defensive big man.[33][57][58] Pelinka dealt for Charlotte's Mark Williams, but the trade was later rescinded due to a failed physical.[59] Other pundits questioned the fit between Dončić and LeBron James, two ball-dominant scorers.[32][60] In addition, ESPN's Brian Windhorst noted that the Lakers were taking a risk with the trade, as Dončić had only one and a half guaranteed years left on his contract.[61]

Reaction and aftermath

NBA and sports media

I've been covering the NBA for 37 years. Almost nothing that happens – deals, free agent signings, coach hirings/firings – rises to the level of, as the great Ben Bradlee used to call them, "Holy S--t" stories. You just get used to the unexpected. This is a "Holy S--t" trade. (David Aldridge)[62]

The unexpected nature of the trade shocked the NBA community. NBA.com's Steve Aschburner and Vox's Dylan Scott called the trade the most astonishing in NBA history,[63][64] and Fox Sports even called it the most shocking trade in American sports history.[65] Aschburner said that "even the most click-thirsty, fringe-media blogger would have scoffed at [the idea] a few hours earlier."[63] Laker legend Magic Johnson wrote that in his 45 years in the NBA community, "this Luka and A.D. trade is the biggest trade I’ve seen between two superstars essentially in their prime."[66] According to the Elias Sports Bureau (via ESPN), the trade was "the first time that two reigning All-NBA players have been traded for each other midseason."[67]

The trade was met with great disbelief, as Dončić "was assumed to be untouchable."[65] Magic Johnson said that Dončić, like LeBron James, was one of "the best passers who [has] ever played."[68] Ricky O'Donnell wrote that "you don't trade a player like [Dončić] for anything,"[48] and John Hollinger said that "generational 25-year-olds ... aren't moved until their third contract, if they move at all."[32] Shams Charania wondered whether he had been hacked when he received the news,[69] and several NBA figures reacted the same way when he broke the story, including SportsCenter anchor Phil Murphy, Indiana Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton, and NBC Sports' Kurt Helin.[70][71][38] Other journalists and players expressed their astonishment, including ESPN's Stephen A. Smith,[72] New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson,[71] and Knicks forward Josh Hart.[71] Phoenix Suns guard Devin Booker initially thought the reports were about Minnesota Timberwolves center Luka Garza and not Dončić.[67] NBA Commissioner Adam Silver declined to comment on the merits of the trade, saying that the Mavericks "have a philosophical belief on what's necessary to ultimately be champions, and I'm not in a position to second guess that."[73]

Several NBA executives expressed shock at the fact that the Mavericks negotiated exclusively with the Lakers, and argued that Dallas could have obtained a much larger return for Dončić in an open auction. Two anonymous executives said that "it probably would have been the biggest haul in NBA history" and that "every team in the league would have offered everything they could." However, one executive echoed the Mavericks' point that if Dončić had known about the trade, he might have tried to "dictate terms" (that is, force himself to a specific team).[74] Dylan Scott said that although Davis was an "excellent player," the overall package the Mavericks received for Dončić was "not much compared to previous blockbuster NBA trades."[64] Zach Harper acknowledged Davis' accolades but cautioned that "maybe four or five players in the NBA" would constitute fair value for Dončić. He noted that the Rudy Gobert and Mikal Bridges trades included multiple draft picks.[60]

Dallas

Mavericks fans widely panned the trade.[75] After the news broke, a group of fans gathered outside of the American Airlines Center to protest the trade; some fans called for Harrison to be fired, and others staged a mock funeral, bringing a coffin for Dončić.[76][77] Some Dallas fans endorsed a conspiracy theory alleging that the Mavericks were intentionally alienating their fanbase so that they could better justify moving the team to Las Vegas, where the Adelson family does much of its business.[78] However, team governor Patrick Dumont and NBA Commissioner Adam Silver both rejected the allegation and said that the Mavericks intended to stay in the Dallas area.[30][73] (The Adelson-Dumont family has purchased land in nearby Irving, and Mavericks sources said that the family plans to build an entertainment district anchored by a casino and a new Mavericks arena provided that Texas legalizes casino gambling.[79]) Several fans cancelled their season tickets; the Mavericks stated that at least one such season ticket holder had received a refund.[80] Texas Governor Greg Abbott also expressed surprise about the trade.[81] However, the Dallas home crowd cheered for Davis during his first game as a Maverick.[41]

With respect to Mavericks players, Klay Thompson said it was a "joy to play with [Dončić] in those 22 games," but added that the team would welcome Anthony Davis "with open arms."[82] Kyrie Irving said that "It's still a grieving process right now. I miss my hermano." However, he added that he was glad to finally be teammates with his good friend Davis.[83]

Former Mavericks majority owner Mark Cuban disliked the trade[84][85] and publicly denied being involved in it.[86][87] Cuban had previously said that he would rather divorce his wife than trade Dončić.[28] However, he had surrendered control over basketball operations after the 2023–24 season,[88][89][28] and did not learn about the trade until Harrison had already agreed to it.[84]

Los Angeles

Lakers fans reacted to the trade positively. One fan noted that he was "sad to see AD go" but was "happy for Luka. He's a good player." Another fan added "we got a good deal. Thank you, Texas."[90] The Los Angeles Rams and the Los Angeles Kings' Anže Kopitar (a fellow Slovene) welcomed Dončić to Los Angeles.[91][92]

LeBron James thought that the trade was a "hoax" at first, adding that it "still pretty much didn't seem real."[93] He said that while "my emotions were all over the place" at first, Dončić "has been my favorite player in the NBA for a while now."[94] Lakers coach JJ Redick, who played with Dončić in 2021, stated that the experience the two had given them both a "head start."[95] Redick, who has been described as a "fan and historian" of the NBA, described the trade as a "once in a lifetime opportunity."[96]

Dončić and Davis

Dončić was upset by the trade. At his first press conference after joining the Lakers, he said that he had expected to "spend my whole career" in Dallas and that "loyalty is a big word for me."[97] Nico Harrison said that Dončić did not respond to his calls or texts immediately after the trade and that "he probably doesn't want to talk to me."[98] Former Maverick Chandler Parsons claimed that Dončić cried after learning about the trade.[99] Dončić said that he would take the "high road" with respect to criticism of his conditioning.[97] However, his father Saša criticized the Mavericks on Slovenian television for trading him without his knowledge and for leaking critical stories about him.[100]

The media highlighted that due to NBA rules on eligibility for the supermax extension, the trade cost Dončić as much as $116 million.[101][67] It was reported that Dončić would have accepted a supermax offer from Dallas.[28]

Davis was more accepting of the trade. In his introductory press conference with the Mavericks, he said that he understood that Mavericks fans were upset, because "I get who Luka was to this franchise, to the city ... just how I know what I meant to the city of L.A." He expressed his appreciation for Harrison's faith in him, saying that "it's my job to ... give the fans hope and reassurance on why Nico brought me here."[102] He waived his $6 million bonus for being traded, stating that he wanted to help the Mavericks get "continuously better."[26]

See also

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