SportsTop Story

Mavs’ No-Brainer: Cooper Flagg Caps Off Dallas’ Duke-Centric Blueprint

Mavs’ No-Brainer: Cooper Flagg Caps Off Dallas’ Duke-Centric Blueprint/ Newslooks/ WASHINGTON/ J. Mansour/ Morning Edition/ The Dallas Mavericks selected Cooper Flagg as the No. 1 overall NBA Draft pick, bolstering their “Duke plan” strategy. Flagg joins Kyrie Irving and Dereck Lively II to form a trio of Duke alumni with high expectations. GM Nico Harrison emphasized both short-term championship goals and long-term development around Flagg.

Cooper Flagg, right, shakes hands with NBA commissioner Adam Silver after being selected first overall by the Dallas Mavericks In the first round of the NBA basketball draft, Wednesday, June 25, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Adam Hunger)

Cooper Flagg Drafted by Mavericks: Quick Look

  • Draft Surprise: Dallas selected Cooper Flagg No. 1 after winning the lottery with just a 1.8% chance.
  • Duke Trio: Flagg joins Kyrie Irving and Dereck Lively II to solidify Dallas’ “Duke plan.”
  • Luka Fallout: The pick comes months after Dallas traded Luka Dončić to the Lakers for Anthony Davis.
  • Future-Oriented: GM Nico Harrison emphasizes a balanced “win now and win later” strategy.
  • Flagg’s Role: The 18-year-old rookie will develop among proven veterans in a system that values defense.
  • Irving’s Deal: Irving re-signed on a 3-year, $119M contract, securing veteran leadership.
  • Team Philosophy: Mavericks aim to blend youthful energy and championship experience.
Cooper Flagg heads for the stage after being selected first overall by the Dallas Mavericks In the first round of the NBA basketball draft, Wednesday, June 25, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Adam Hunger)

Mavs’ No-Brainer: Cooper Flagg Caps Off Dallas’ Duke-Centric Blueprint

Deep Look

DALLAS (AP) — General Manager Nico Harrison said he expected a mid-first-round pick—around No. 11—when preparing for last night’s NBA draft. But when luck struck and the Mavericks won the lottery with just a 1.8% chance, everything changed. Their follow-up move? A resounding no-brainer: taking Cooper Flagg with the first overall pick.

“Not too much,” Harrison quipped, laughter nearly audible as he shrugged off the sudden pivot.

Dallas’ strategy feels eerily familiar. Just over 24 hours earlier, the team secured Kyrie Irving—a former Duke standout and the No. 1 pick in 2011—with a lucrative contract extension. Now the Mavericks are rooting their foundation in “the Duke plan”: pairing one-and-done college stars from Duke with proven veterans.

Already on the roster is Dereck Lively II, selected 12th overall in 2023. Add Irving and Flagg, and Dallas is assembling three Duke alumni, all in their first year of availability.


The Path to the Pick: From Tanking to Triumph

  • Luka then lottery: After trading superstar Luka Dončić for Anthony Davis, the Mavericks pivoted to building around veteran core and future prospects.
  • Injury-induced lottery entry: Kyrie Irving’s season-ending ACL tore on March 3—short-circuiting Dallas’ playoff push and landing them the Championship Lottery.
  • Smart timing: With Davis and Irving sidelined, the Mavs dropped into the lottery. A win that once seemed impossible is now a generational pivot point.

Fitting Flagg into the Dallas Rebuild

“We had a great week,” Harrison said. Although he declined details on negotiations, he confirmed new conversations with Kyrie and key players are positive.

Flagg is Dallas’ second No. 1 pick ever, following Mark Aguirre in 1981. Unlike Aguirre—who was left stranded on an expansion team—Flagg joins a Mavericks squad already stacked with seasoned talent. Head Coach Jason Kidd, drafted second overall by Dallas in 1994, now presides over what is shaping up to become a dynasty-in-waiting.


Blending Present and Future

“We’ll be able to win when he’s having good games and also win when not having his best,” Harrison explained, highlighting their patient but balanced championship approach.

Still, Harrison hasn’t abandoned the present for the future. The team’s strategy remains to “win now and win in the future.” With Irving’s new deal (three years, $119 million with a player option) secured, Dallas ensures experience while confronting the unknown: “Eventually, it’s going to be Cooper’s team,” Harrison admitted. “We don’t when that transition will happen.”


What Flagg Brings: Versatility, Defense, Duke Pedigree

Flagg—a physical marvel at 6‑8 with top-end athleticism—fits the Dallas blueprint as a versatile, two-way threat. Harrison praised his defensive chops while maintaining they will let him develop on his own terms.

Originally slated to graduate high school this year, Flagg accelerated to Duke and led them to the Final Four—a remarkable leap for a teenager. He leaves Duke with high expectations and joins a veteran core.


The Luka Trade and the Wider Vision

When Dallas flipped Luka Dončić for Anthony Davis, many fans reacted with shock and outrage. But Harrison insisted nothing changed “Our immediate goal hasn’t shifted,” he recalled, “but the style of play has—with a bigger emphasis on defense.”

In retrospect, the lottery felt necessary to legitimize the vision: losing Doncic stung, but drafting Flagg restored faith in Dallas’ direction.


Final Word: The Duke Dynasty Begins

Dallas now stands on the cusp of building a championship team anchored in Duke-trained talent, seasoned veterans, and championship aspirations. Nico Harrison’s “Duke plan” has yielded no fewer than three players from Cameron Indoor, and each brings unique promise.

With Irving’s veteran leadership, Davis’ title pedigree, Lively’s interior defense, and Flagg’s burgeoning two-way brilliance, the Mavericks offer a striking contrast to the single-superstar era they just exited. They’re not just rebuilding—they’re reimagining, with a blueprint few could have predicted: a league where Duke isn’t just a college powerhouse, but the font of a new NBA dynasty.


Bottom line: The NBA’s draft-lottery gods smiled on Dallas. Harrison’s pivot from a projected No. 11 pick to securing Cooper Flagg as the first overall choice completes an engineered haul built around three Duke stars, proven veterans, and a renewed commitment to defense—even as they chase immediate success.

Let me know if you want a player-by-player breakdown of how Irving, Davis, Lively II, and Flagg could mesh next season.

More on Sports

Previous Article
U.S. Stocks Near Record Amid Earnings Strength
Next Article
Maine Native Cooper Flagg Becomes NBA No. 1 Pick for Mavericks

How useful was this article?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this article.

Latest News

Menu