Dallas, TX
Doncic and Curry clash in Dallas-Golden State matchup
Golden State Warriors (11-10, ninth within the Western Convention) vs. Dallas Mavericks (9-10, eleventh within the Western Convention)
Dallas; Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. EST
BOTTOM LINE: Luka Doncic and Stephen Curry meet when Dallas hosts Golden State. Doncic is first within the NBA averaging 33.1 factors per recreation and Curry is second within the league averaging 31.4 factors per recreation.
The Mavericks are 5-5 in convention play. Dallas is final within the Western Convention recording solely 21.2 assists per recreation led by Doncic averaging 8.4.
The Warriors have gone 8-6 in opposition to Western Convention opponents. Golden State ranks seventh within the Western Convention with 14.9 quick break factors per recreation led by Klay Thompson averaging 3.6.
TOP PERFORMERS: Doncic is scoring 33.1 factors per recreation with 8.7 rebounds and eight.4 assists for the Mavericks. Spencer Dinwiddie is averaging 17.1 factors and three.1 rebounds whereas taking pictures 47.8% over the previous 10 video games for Dallas.
Curry is scoring 31.4 factors per recreation and averaging 6.8 rebounds for the Warriors. Thompson is averaging 3.2 made 3-pointers during the last 10 video games for Golden State.
LAST 10 GAMES: Mavericks: 3-7, averaging 105.5 factors, rebounds, assists, steals and blocks per recreation whereas taking pictures % from the sector. Their opponents have averaged 107.2 factors per recreation.
Warriors: 7-3, averaging 118.3 factors, rebounds, assists, steals and blocks per recreation whereas taking pictures % from the sector. Their opponents have averaged 113.6 factors.
INJURIES: Mavericks: Reggie Bullock: out (relaxation).
Warriors: Andre Iguodala: out (hip).
——
The Related Press created this story utilizing expertise supplied by Knowledge Skrive and knowledge from Sportradar.
Copyright © 2022 ESPN Web Ventures. All rights reserved.
Dallas, TX
See how Dallas designers deck their own halls for the holidays
We never miss the chance to peek inside an interior designer’s home — and when that home happens to be decked out for the holidays, it feels like an extra-special gift. Dallas-based designers Javier Burkle, Jan Showers, Kelli Ford and Courtney Warren all offered to show off their own decor this season, and looking at the photos is like taking a master class in festive style. From a glam townhouse to a palatial estate and more, these residences offer an array of merry inspiration for your own abode.
For designer Javier Burkle, owner of Burkle Creative, more is more when it comes to seasonal splendor. He outfits his West Highland Park bungalow from top to bottom with details like wreaths that hang from curtain rods and chairs, garland that frames the kitchen cabinetry, and five Christmas trees that are each trimmed in different color schemes and themes. Even his bedroom is dressed up with festive plaid linens.
Burkle recently came up with the idea to drape garland through his living room chandelier to create a kind of sculptural installation. “You don’t have to think about just using the surfaces to decorate for the holidays,” he advises.
The garland’s adornments echo the shades of the nearby Christmas tree, which Burkle decorated with gold ribbon, dried oranges and mercury ornaments. He suggests taking notes from the existing decor in the room to inform the color story of a tree and accents. “I like it to feel like the holiday decor belongs in the room and goes with the colors. I like it to be part of the existing decor,” he says, adding that “metallics go with everything.”
In his dining room, Burkle created a moodier aesthetic, playing off the darker walls in the room. From the chandelier, velvet ribbons suspend ornaments. “All the walls are a dark grasscloth, so we went with a navy ribbon that almost feels black.” He accessorized the chairs with mini boxwood wreaths from Trader Joe’s, also attached with velvet ribbon. “I save my ribbons,” he says. “I label them with where they go. That way I don’t have to buy ribbon every year.”
If you have the space in your home, Burkle loves the idea of multiple trees throughout, each serving a different aesthetic purpose. He follows a more formal decor scheme for the trees in his living and dining rooms, spots where he entertains quite a bit, then saves more personal ornaments for a tree that he sets up in his closet. “This is where I hang my childhood ornaments,” he says. “I have a client who gives me a needlepoint ornament every year. I collect teddy bears from Ralph Lauren. This is the tree that has meaning and is layered with my personal collection.”
In his pool house, he shows off his Asian-inspired collection of mini ginger jars, chinoiserie-patterned ornaments and pagoda replicas. He encourages his clients to embrace color and decorate with items and pieces that speak to them. For budget-friendly ornaments — including baubles in chinoiserie styles, metallics and other solid colors — he recommends Ballard Designs. Burkle also loves layering in high-end ornaments that have been collected over time. “Keep building your collection of things that mean something to you,” he says. “Just have fun with it.”
Designer Jan Showers, owner of Jan Showers & Associates, has mastered the art of glamorous interiors. (She’s even penned three books on the subject.) Showers is known for incorporating French antiques with contemporary pieces, fine art and luxurious fabrics, all while making a home comfortable and inviting. So it’s no surprise that her townhome in the Turtle Creek neighborhood embraces a striking mix of glamor, traditional holiday decor and charming keepsakes. “I love to use the same objects year after year,” Showers says. “There are so many memories in both the tree ornaments and the special objects I use all over the house.”
In lieu of garland, Showers decorates her mantel with a collection of sparkly trees she sourced at Pottery Barn. “I found those years ago and just love them,” she says. “I never tire of them, and we always have them on my mantel in Dallas. They add sparkle and shine that I love. I also use them at my showroom in the Dallas Design District.” The trees are simple but eye-catching, and they align with the overall feel of the room. “Look at your decor and take cues for holiday decorations from that,” Showers suggests. “I also don’t like things to be overdone. There comes a time when enough is enough.” (Try these Pottery Barn trees for your own sparkly-but-tasteful mantel decor.)
Showers decorates her tree with a collection of ornaments that she purchased on her travels to London and Germany, as well as at retail stores such as Pottery Barn and Bergdorf Goodman in New York. She also incorporates meaningful pieces, like an ornament her friend and assistant gifted her with an image of her favorite dog. “I love to see it hanging on the tree,” she says. Her one non-negotiable for her holiday decor? “I prefer [warm white] Christmas lights. Nothing makes me happier during the holidays than seeing those lights on.”
To achieve a similarly chic holiday style in your own home, Showers recommends shopping locally at Madison (co-owned by designer Kelli Ford, whose home we see next), Neiman Marcus, and her own showroom off Slocum Street. At the latter, you’ll find vintage Italian Murano tree figurines — some of Showers’ personal faves. She also has an affinity for snow globes, which are also placed around her home. “CoolSnowGlobes has the best snow globes,” she says. “I love them and give them to friends for Christmas.”
Designer Kelli Ford’s shares her University Park manse with her husband — prominent banker and SMU football stadium namesake Gerald J. Ford — and the couple go all out for the holidays. There’s the nine Christmas trees throughout the residence, for example, or an elaborate poinsettia display that surrounds the appropriately festive Baroque Egg with Bow sculpture by Jeff Koons in her living room. It’s clear Ford delights in transforming her home into an over-the-top winter wonderland. “I love to start early and enjoy everything through Christmas,” says Ford. “I love traditional Christmas decor. Everything is very traditional and paired with the eclectic backdrop. It brings all the yuletide cheer.”
In her living room, Ford displays a 15-foot faux tree from online retailer Balsam Hill. “We had a real tree in the past but switched because we wanted to decorate earlier,” she says. “The large tree size works perfectly in the room and really makes a statement.”
She starts decorating the tree from the top and works her way down. “We always start with our most special ornaments that we have collected on trips and while antiquing, and then we fill in with everything else,” she says. She sources her new ornaments from Madison, the aforementioned store she co-owns with her sister Kirsten Fitzgibbons. Madison recently moved from Highland Park Village to an 8,000-square-foot showroom in the Dallas Design District, and it features furniture, antiques, gifts and holiday decor. The sisters have also co-owned design firm Kirsten Kelli since 1990.
The Fords’ winding staircase is covered in lush faux garland, which Ford layers with pinecones, berries, bells and ornaments. “This gives the garland a full and lush feel,” she explains.
Ford utilizes multiple types of faux garland around her home, including pine and magnolia leaves, and she loves a flocked look as well. “Do not be afraid of flocked trees and garland,” she says. “They add a quiet and cozy serenity while also bringing the outside Christmas wonderland in.” (Shop flocked garland and wreaths at retailers including Williams Sonoma, Pottery Barn and Balsam Hill.)
Ford also loves to showcase her holiday collections, like the Byers’ Choice figurines which sit on her entry hall table. “They still make these, but a large portion of my collection is vintage,” she says. “Putting these out each year is one of my favorite things and truly gets me in the spirit.”
“During the holidays, anything goes,” says designer Courtney Warren of Courtney Warren Home. “If it’s not fun, you shouldn’t do it.” Warren certainly lives that philosophy to the fullest in her own home.
For her personal Christmas tree, Warren started with a white tree, which she adorned with bows in black-and-white stripes and pops of color, as well as glass baubles in creamy white and jewel tones. “[Glass ornaments] look so pretty with the light shining through,” she says. (You can find similar ornaments at Neiman Marcus or Anthropologie.) The bows deliver something extra.
“Bows are definitely having a moment,” Warren says. “I got the ribbon colors that I wanted, and I started with the black ribbon first. I made loops and attached them to the tree’s branch and tied them in a bow.” From there, she placed her ornaments. “Once the bigger items were placed, I started filing in the gaps with the smaller ones,” she says. “There are some glittery silver branches coming out of the tree, and I do those last.” If she still has holes to fill, she’ll grab more ornaments. “It’s like a big puzzle,” she says.
Her tree sits on a riser, which is a way to achieve the right scale for the room. “It’s a six-and-a-half-foot tree, so when I put it on the ground it’s too short,” she says. Instead of a traditional tree skirt, she styled the tree with a bright pink blanket. “You don’t have to do a tree skirt,” she says. “There are also tree collars and baskets. Maybe you have a cute blanket with pom poms to wrap around the tree. Your creativity can help you stay on budget.”
If you like the idea of a bold, non-traditional tree but aren’t sure about how it will look as the centerpiece of your living space, consider putting it in another room, like a playroom or bedroom. Then go with your more traditional tree in the place of honor. “I love a family tree that is red and green,” Warren says. “The handmade ornaments hold so many memories. With social media we feel so much pressure to have perfect, gorgeous trees. But remember that every tree is beautiful in its own way. … Do what you love. If that means non-traditional colors or a different theme in every room, go for that. Christmas should be fun and jolly and festive.”
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Dallas, TX
Texas Trees a five-year plan to make South Dallas more green
Anamelia Jaramillo has lived in Jubilee Park for almost 20 years and is concerned about the heat getting worse every summer.
She fears her air conditioning system failing because her husband has diabetes and can be vulnerable to extreme heat.
“I wish we didn’t have to have the A/C running all day long, but it is impossible to survive in the summer without it,” said Jaramillo, 54, after attending a Zumba class at Jubilee Park on Nov. 11.
In 2023, more than 20 people died in Dallas and Tarrant counties from heat-related illnesses as Texas saw record heat waves and triple-digit temperatures, according to the counties’ medical examiners. The lack of trees and green spaces, such as community gardens and parks, in an urban area contributes significantly to the ‘urban heat island effect,’ as buildings, roads, and other hard surfaces absorb and retain more heat.
Dallas’ District 7, where most of the neighborhoods participating in the South Dallas Greening Initiative are located, was ranked the third-highest priority for tree canopy, according to the Dallas Tree Equity Mapping Report published in 2022 by the Texas Trees Foundation.
Districts 4 and 6 ranked as the first and second highest priority for tree canopy, and the organization has been deploying some of their programs to plant more trees in these areas. Early this year, the Texas Trees Foundation released its plan to tackle the lack of trees in the Southwestern Medical District as part of its initiatives to combat the urban heat island effect.
Texas Trees, through the South Dallas Greening Initiative, also is working in the Jubilee neighborhood to address the area’s lack of trees to combat the extreme heat affecting residents’ health and quality of life. The nonprofit is providing thousands of trees to the almost 50,000 residents of Fair Park, Mill City, Queen City, Wheatley Place and adjacent neighborhoods over five years. Jubilee Park is just below Interstate 30 and north of Fair Park.
Chandler Stephens’ father, Calvin W. Stephens, has owned two vacant lots in South Dallas since the 1980s. The younger Stephens has been talking with the nonprofit Texas Trees about working together on his vision to create a community garden.
Stephens dreams of having a green space in every corner of South Dallas to improve residents’ quality of life.
“I can see [the initiative] as something that will prolong the community’s livelihood. Not only with addressing the urban heat island issue but just by providing greenery,” Stephens said. “Plants and our health is so linked to the health of the earth and the planet.”
The Dallas Comprehensive Environmental Climate Action Plan established protocols for adapting to climate change challenges in 2020. It states that Dallas needs approximately 735,000 trees to reach a goal of 37% tree canopy cover and, specifically, mitigate the urban heat island effect.
Since Its founding in 1982, Texas Trees has planted an estimated 1.5 million trees across the Dallas-Fort Worth region. In 2023, the Dallas-based nonprofit secured a $15 million grant from the Reduction Act through the U.S. Forest Service’s Urban and Community Forestry program for the South Dallas Greening Initiative.
The project, however, is part of a long-term solution to extreme heat, and many of Jubilee’s residents want to see more.
“I am in favor of the initiative and for them to plant more trees in the area, but we also need help with how to pay the electricity bills,” Jaramillo said.
In any community, including South Dallas, trees may not be at the top of each resident’s list of the needs they see for their community, said Elissa Izmailyan, chief strategy and operations officer with Texas Trees.
“We are showing up with a commitment to help and the ability to offer trees and urban forestry education but realize that we’re entering a landscape where there are a lot of other needs and priorities,” Izmailyan said.
“So first, we need to be sensitive to that broad range of priorities and capacities. Second, we need to think about how our offering intersects with other needs in a way that’s additive.”
The project will have several components beyond planting trees in the community, Izmailyan said.
The first phase has been to reach out to the community and work with nonprofits and organizations in South Dallas to establish a trusting relationship and understand the community’s needs and wants.
That’s where partnerships with local organizations come into play, as well as involvement with community leaders.
The Jubilee Park and Community Center is a nonprofit that works to restore equity and resources for the 3,000 residents of the Jubilee neighborhood. The community center has been around for almost 30 years and offers education, health, food access and after-school programs.
Emily Plauche, Texas Trees’ community greening manager, said the initiative includes an educational component that teaches residents about trees, their benefits, how to care for them, green jobs, and other measures that can be taken to combat extreme heat.
“So there’s always going to be other needs or things that arise, too, and we can’t necessarily, with our money, purchase that. But we can help advocate and get the city involved and bring other people to the table who have some of these potential solutions,” Plauche said. “We are deeply committed to the well being of the community.”
Texas Trees will work with some of the area’s schools to boost green spaces and tree planting on the campuses. The organization already runs a program across the city focusing on schools needing more canopy.
Marissa Castro Mikoy, president and chief executive officer at Jubilee Park, said over the years, Texas Trees has helped plant over 150 trees on their campus, and they can see the benefits to the community, from providing shade to beautifying the park.
Benefits of trees
In April, Dallas shared findings from a study that identified at least 10 neighborhoods as ‘urban heat island spots.’ Some of these spots have less green space, and the temperature is 10 degrees hotter in these areas than in other parts of the city.
Trees can help reduce the urban heat island effect and improve people’s and the environment’s health in several ways.
They provide shade and block incoming solar radiation, lowering temperatures by several degrees. They also release water vapor, which can help cool temperatures. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, trees sequester carbon from the atmosphere in their wood and roots, absorb gases and provide a place for harmful air particles to land.
At the same time, according to the U.S. Forest Service, trees provide mental health benefits such as stress reduction, improved mood, and a sense of well-being due to increased exposure to nature.
Cities across the country and the world have documented the long-term effects of planting trees strategically in urban areas.
In Chicago, Illinois, according to studies, neighborhoods with higher tree canopy cover have experienced temperature reductions of up to 2.7–3.8°C compared to areas with little or no tree canopy.
Similarly, in Medellin, Colombia, temperatures fell by 2°C in the first three years of their program installing green corridors, and officials expect a further decrease of 4 to 5C over the next few decades, even taking into account climate change, the Secretary of Environment of Medellin reported.
Limitations
Trees are one solution that can help residents in South Dallas combat extreme heat, but Castro Mikoy said the initiative needs to be combined with other solutions to the area’s problems.
Displacement, making ends meet, and food insecurity are some issues facing South Dallas residents that make heat waves even more damaging for them.
Silvia Herrera, 48, a Jubilee resident, avoids turning on lights and household appliances during the day in the summer to keep her home cooler and reduce her electricity bills. She said her bill is around $500 in the peak summer months.
“You have to make decisions such as when you turn on the A/C and what things to avoid to spend less energy so the bill [electricity] is not too high because then I can’t pay for it,” Herrera said.
Planting trees and having the ecosystem to purchase, transport, and maintain them can also be expensive. The South Dallas Greening Initiative was able to come to life because of the grant Texas Trees secured. Not all cities or organizations can afford this type of solution, which is a limitation to replicating this program everywhere.
Community First
Through the five-year plan, Brittani Hite, strategic director of Ethos Equity Consulting, which is working with Texas Trees on the initiative, said there should be no surprises for the residents.
The project is for the community and by the community, said Hite.
“We understand that the solutions are already within the community,” Hite said. “South Dallas residents know what they want. They know what they need, but because of environmental and ultimately systemic racism, unfortunately, we lack green spaces, trees and other basic necessities in our city’s Black and brown neighborhoods.”
From Hite’s perspective, the conversations of the Jubilee moms after the Zumba classes to Stephen’s dream of having community gardens that work with the wants and needs of the South Dallas community will have an impact on finding the right solution.
María Ramos Pacheco wrote this story as part of a climate solutions fellowship with the Solutions Journalism Network. Did you know that what you just read was a solutions journalism story? It didn’t just examine a problem; it scrutinized a response. By presenting evidence of who is making progress, we remove any excuse that a problem is intractable.
Dallas, TX
Mavericks Rally From Down 15 To Beat Grizzlies, 121-116, Likely Advance in NBA Cup
The Dallas Mavericks played their final qualifying game of the NBA Cup on Tuesday night against the Memphis Grizzlies, entering the night with a good chance to make the NBA Cup’s Knockout Round as long as they won the game against Memphis.
Dallas also got a lot of players back who missed Sunday night’s win against the Portland Trail Blazers, as Kyrie Irving, Klay Thompson, and Dereck Lively II all returned to action on Tuesday, and they were only missing Naji Marshall and Dante Exum.
With a mostly healthy lineup again, the Mavericks started Luka Doncic, Kyrie Irving, Klay Thompson (who was on a minute restriction), PJ Washington, and Dereck Lively II. Memphis started Ja Morant, Desmond Bane, Jaylen Wells, Jaren Jackson Jr., and Brandon Clarke.
READ MORE: Dallas Mavericks Nearly Traded For NBA Champion, Recent Report Re-Affirms
This was back-and-forth action early on, with four lead changes in the first five minutes. Luka Doncic had seven early points for the Mavs, while Jaren Jackson Jr. had eight for Memphis, but a bucket by Dereck Lively II after having his shot blocked by Jackson gave Dallas a 16-15 lead midway through the quarter. This game had a playoff atmosphere early.
Doncic then hit a three-pointer and a couple of free throws to give him 12 in the quarter and extend their lead up to four. The scoring would dry up from there, as Dallas went scoreless for two minutes, and a putback dunk with the clock winding down from Memphis gave them a 26-25 advantage heading into the second quarter. Doncic was 3/4 in the opening quarter, every other Mav was just 5/15.
The second quarter started with a Dereck Lively posted over Jaren Jackson on a lob; then Lively had another dunk in transition on the next possession to put the Mavs back up three. Klay Thompson would get on the board with an elbow jumper soon after that, too. Doncic hit a three a minute later to go up six, their biggest lead of the game to this point, 38-32.
After a Grizzlies timeout, Luka hit back-to-back shots to give him 20 for the game and the Mavs a nine-point lead, and Dallas would eventually lead by 10. Memphis would respond with a 12-0 run, capped off by a three-pointer by rookie Jaylen Wells, giving them a 50-48 lead, but PJ Washington came right back down to hit a three to retake the lead. Dallas held the lead the rest of the half, going up by as much as four in the closing minutes of the half and taking a 60-57 lead into halftime, led by Luka Doncic’s 24 points.
READ MORE: How Mavericks Can Advance to Knockout Round of NBA Cup
Memphis started the second half on a 10-0 run in the first three minutes of the half. Dallas finally got on the board and scored six points in the span of about 30 seconds to get back within one. But the Mavs just could not score after that, with just 12 points in the quarter through the first eight minutes. That allowed Memphis to open up an 82-72 lead following a made three by backup center Jay Huff.
The Mavs started to score some points, but they couldn’t get any stops on defense, and the Grizzlies would take a 95-82 lead into the fourth quarter. Ja Morant had four points in the final eight seconds of the period to extend that lead.
A transition three by PJ Washington would briefly cut the lead to single digits early in the fourth quarter, but they couldn’t get the lead under nine for the longest time. It wasn’t until an and-one converted by PJ Washington with about six minutes to go that the lead went down to six. But the good news was the Mavericks were already in the bonus.
The lead would stay around six for a few minutes before Luka Doncic hit a free throw to cut it to five, but Ja Morant came right back and hit a contested three. After a Luka Doncic three-pointer, Dereck Lively hit two free throws to cut the lead to three with a little over two minutes remaining. Doncic was then fouled 90 feet from the basket while in the bonus, hitting both before Spencer Dinwiddie hit a transition three to take a two-point lead. Dinwiddie hit another on the next possession from the exact same spot to go up by five.
PJ Washington would hit a clutch three after a Desmond Bane bucket to go up 119-113 with 26.1 seconds remaining. Ja Morant would miss a three-pointer, and Kyrie Irving would ice the game with free throws. The Mavericks would go on to win 121-116 and should advance to the knockout stage of the NBA Cup. It was an 18-5 run to close the game for the Mavs to win the game.
Luka Doncic led the way with 37 points, 12 rebounds, and nine assists but was a shaky 10/16 from the free-throw line. After him, there were five other Mavs in double figures: PJ Washington (18 points, eight rebounds, seven assists), Dereck Lively II (17 points, 11 rebounds, three blocks), Spencer Dinwiddie (16 points), Daniel Gafford (11 points), and Kyrie Irving (10 points, just 3/14 shooting).
Dallas won this game because they shot 44 free throws to Memphis’ 14. That kept Dallas alive when the offense looked shaky, as they ended with 25 turnovers.
Ja Morant had 31 points, Desmond Bane had 19, Jaren Jackson Jr. had 16, Santa Aldama had 15, and Jaylen Wells had 10.
The Mavericks will travel to play the Wizards on Thursday night.
READ MORE: Mavericks Connected To Possible Jimmy Butler Trade
Stick with MavericksGameday for more FREE coverage of the Dallas Mavericks throughout the 2024-25 Season
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