The Dallas Mavericks lost to the New Orleans Pelicans 119-113 Monday night in New Orleans, the second-straight loss for the Mavericks after falling to Philadelphia on Saturday.
Dallas, TX
Micah Parsons could really climb the Cowboys record books in 2025
When it comes to record-setting starts to their careers, there are very few in Dallas Cowboys franchise history (certainly modern history) that top Micah Parsons. The only legitimate argument in this sense may be Ezekiel Elliott.
Parsons is incredible, and we have seen him have all sorts of success through his first four seasons. To date he has racked up 52.5 sacks, time will tell if that is enough to earn a massive extension, and if he keeps up this average then he is going to continue to soar up the team’s record books.
Thanks to our friends at Stathead we can really look at history to see Parsons’ place in it.
2025 could see Micah Parsons really take hold of Dallas Cowboys history
As mentioned, Parsons has 52.5 career sacks to date. That is an absurd amount in just four seasons, but remember that he also missed a few games for the first time in 2024. Shockingly, Parsons’ 52.5 is not the most that any player has ever had through their first four seasons in team history. Pro Football Hall of Famer DeMarcus Ware has him beat out by one.
While Parsons missed time in the stretch that we are talking about so did Ware. Parsons feels like a unicorn in terms of production, but Ware was absolutely incredible early on in his own right.
For what it’s worth, Ware kept pace in his fifth season with the team. Following the 2009 campaign Ware sat at 64.5 sacks which is obviously the most that anyone has ever had in team history through their first five seasons. Harvey Martin came pretty close, though.
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Parsons’ career average from a sack standpoint is 13.125, so if we assume that he notches at least 13 of them then he’ll reach 65 and take down Ware. Obviously there is more that we all want from the team than for players to achieve individual milestones, but that something like this is in reach is still pretty cool. (Also a note… it must have been an error for Parsons’ name to be listed here. I tried a few times to adjust it, but we obviously know he has not played five seasons).
If we assume that Parsons reaches that point, he will also climb into the top 10 for all-time sacks while a member of the Cowboys. He trails the outgoing DeMarcus Lawrence by nine at the moment and that would be the person he pushes out of the proverbial club.
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This is perhaps the most stunning look at what Parsons has done to this point in his career. He is sitting on 63 total games played and if he suits up for every one in 2025 then he will total 80. But even then, the next-closest to him in that sense would be a three-way tie between DeMarcus Ware, DeMarcus Lawrence and George Andrie. Funny that both Ware and Lawrence each played 141 games for the team.
We are watching the beginning of one of the all-time careers in Dallas Cowboys franchise history. What Parsons has done and what we assume he will continue to do are astonishing. Hopefully he can add a championship to everything he is accomplishing as well.
Dallas, TX
Mavericks vs. Pelicans Final Score: Dallas loses to New Orleans, 119-113
It was also a second-straight clutch loss for Dallas, as the Mavericks once again couldn’t find any answers during the high-leverage possessions during the fourth quarter. Anthony Davis led all scorers with 35 points, while Zion Williamson led the Pelicans with 24 points off the bench.
It was a really frantic game from the opening tip, with both teams pushing the paints and attacking the rim. Dallas trailed by double-digits midway through the first quarter, but eventually took a lead in the second quarter and into the locker room thanks to a throwback first-half from Klay Thompson. Thompson scored 20 points in the first half, nailing threes and doing some decent work inside the three point line as well. Davis’ half was a little uneven, even though his numbers were great, but he rebounded and scored the ball well to stabilize the Mavericks after a poor start to the game.
It looked like Dallas was going to blow things open in the third, as the Pelicans went ice cold from three, the Mavericks kept pounding the paint, and Davis continued to look like his All-NBA self. In the fourth quarter, the Mavericks let their own double-digit lead slip away, as the Pelicans finally made some threes, and then Williamson just roasted the Mavericks defense. The Pelicans went to Williamson almost every time down the floor after a three point from Jordan Poole tied the game at 98-98 midway through the quarter. Williamson either scored at the rim or got fouled. Dallas had no answer, whether that was Davis or PJ Washington.
The Mavericks couldn’t match the Pelicans intensity and they lost. A brutal loss to a bad team, one the Mavericks can’t afford if they’re serious about making a play-in run.
Here’s one major thought from the game.
Maybe the Mavericks aren’t that good
For a few weeks now I’ve had a column stewing in our content management system here at Mavs Moneyball. The title was “The Mavericks might be a good team, so what does that mean?” I’ve been wanting to write it for a while now, as the Mavericks steadied their play since the middle of November behind Davis’ return from injury, Ryan Nembhard’s surprising play at point guard, and Cooper Flagg’s continued ascension. It made sense, and even if the Mavericks weren’t truly a good team, they at least proven to be a competitive one that should make the West’s play-in bracket.
It might be time to tap the brakes on that idea, at least for now. Dallas has lost three out of its last four games, with two of them being to Utah and New Orleans, both teams looking toward the lottery than a playoff push. The Mavericks are now 11-19 and two games back of 10th place. While there’s still plenty of time for the Mavericks to make a push, the schedule is only getting harder: the Mavericks play six of their next nine games on the road, with the schedule evening out after the Mavericks were gifted so many home games to start the season. Dallas is dreadful on the road, only 3-9.
Some of that magic from a few weeks ago feels like it’s wearing off. Davis has still been good, but his defensive effort waxes and wanes as he’s relied on to be the team’s primary scorer. Nembhard has cooled off considerably, and the Mavericks are once again mixing and matching point guards every night to try and find a combo coach Jason Kidd likes as Brandon Williams has gone AWOL from the three point line. Flagg is still awesome, but he’s 19. Daniel Gafford and PJ Washington haven’t made sustained impact, with both dealing with some nagging injuries. The Mavericks are still playing hard as hell, but they don’t seem to have something else to rely on. It’s great to play harder than the other team most nights, but you have to be better at more than that to consistently win games. This is the NBA — playing hard should be the bare minimum, not a bonus. Other teams will play hard, like the Pelicans did in the fourth quarter, and once a team matches the Mavericks effort level, they have shockingly little counters past that. Kidd even went back to the double-big lineup in the fourth with Davis and Gafford together, and the Pelicans predictably roasted that grouping. But it feels like Kidd is at times just shuffling deck chairs on the Titanic.
Perhaps the Mavericks will hit another good shooting stretch, or Flagg will level up his game once more. But the Mavericks aren’t guarding well, they aren’t shooting well, and they are running into teams that are playing just as hard as they are. It’s a tough combination, and even if the Mavericks can find a way to regain some of that edge they had before this losing stretch, 11-19 is an awfully big hole to climb out of, especially with Dallas’ schedule being so road heavy to close the season.
Make one thing clear: the Mavericks aren’t tanking. They’re still playing hard. But it’s easier than ever to imagine some veteran trades getting done as we inch closer to February’s deadline.
Dallas, TX
25-year-old man killed in Southeast Dallas shooting
DALLAS – A man was shot and killed in southeast Dallas on Sunday afternoon.
What we know:
The shooting happened around 4 p.m. in the 100 block of S. Murdeaux Lane.
Responding officers found 25-year-old Matthew Moore with a gunshot wound.
He was taken to the hospital, where he later died.
What we don’t know:
Dallas police haven’t released any information on the events leading up to the shooting.
There’s no word on a motive, a suspect, or an arrest.
The Source: The information in this story comes from the Dallas Police Department.
Dallas, TX
Dallas’ 12 most popular food and restaurant stories in 2025
The food word for 2025 was beef.
In a glance at the 50 most-read Dallas-Fort Worth restaurant stories in 2025, we obsessed over burgers, we cried at the loss of longtime steakhouses, we binged on barbecue and we beefed about Michelin’s lack of attention.
The French company’s restaurant reviews in Texas dominated our food-news coverage last year — Michelin’s first year in the Lone Star State. Now in 2025, we were ready to see how well these out-of-towners got to know North Texas food.
What a mis-steak.
One big story from Michelin in 2025 was that French-Italian restaurant Mamani earned 1 Michelin star after being open for less than 2 months.
Shafkat Anowar / Staff Photographer
Fort Worth restaurants were ignored almost completely. Michelin didn’t seem to appreciate our Mexican or Tex-Mex food. The list of seven “value-driven” restaurants honored with a Bib Gourmand didn’t change at all from 2024.
Just two new D-FW restaurants were added to the Michelin Guide Texas, one of which was a brand-new French-Italian restaurant that earned a surprise star.
Related
As we look back at Dallas’ most high-profile food-news stories, there’s plenty to grumble about. But we also had the opportunity to tell the stories of the people behind the food.
Greg Artkop is driving across Texas to eat barbecue. Here, he’s at Smokey Joe’s BBQ in Dallas.
Chitose Suzuki / Staff Photographer
There’s Greg Artkop, the barbecue fanatic traveling tens of thousands of miles this year to eat smoked meat. You met Drew Stephenson, who earned the nickname the Michelin Man for his obsessive visits to Texas’ 1-star Michelin restaurants. We told you about Petey Feng, the line cook detained by ICE who is getting support from high-profile Dallas chefs. We went behind the scenes with Mariano Martinez and his history-changing margarita.
Also in 2025, Dallas diners seem hungrier than ever for world-class food. Chefs are up for the challenge. But can we cool it with the prices? We’ll keep talking about that in 2026.
We look now at a dozen of 2025’s most popular food stories on dallasnews.com — the ones you clicked on most.
No, not the beef!

Morton’s was once one of Dallas’ priciest steakhouses.
RALPH SMITH STUDIO
I couldn’t have guessed that the Dallas Morning News‘ top-read food story of 2025 would be about a 40-year-old steakhouse. Morton’s was “one of the best” steakhouses in Dallas in its heyday, The News said. It was a fancy place for a sophisticated meal, before Uptown Dallas was studded with beefy restaurants on every block. When Morton’s closed in late 2024, nostalgic Dallasites shared stories by the dozens.
“I fashioned a lot of what I do at Bob’s after the original Morton’s,” said Bob Sambol, of Bob’s Steak and Chop House in Dallas. Plenty of others in Dallas did, too.
‘Deadly’ fettuccine
Many of us went hunting through our fridges in September 2025 after the USDA warned of the dangers of heat-and-eat pastas sold at Walmart and Trader Joe’s. In this widely read Associated Press story, people were informed of exactly what to look for on the label to avoid the threat of listeria. Cajun chicken fettuccine Alfredo and linguine with meatballs and marinara had never seemed so scary.
End of an era

The Meddlesome Moth was open in the Dallas Design District for 15 years.
Juan Figueroa / Staff Photographer
When the Meddlesome Moth’s owner Shannon Wynne announced to The News in early 2025 that he “couldn’t afford to stay” in the Dallas Design District, his comments set off a wave of concern from restaurateurs and diners that continues today.
On one hand, it’s exciting to see neighborhoods like the Dallas Design District become beacons for nationally known restaurants like Carbone and Delilah. On the other, rent prices in this neighborhood and others are going up by the year, and local operators are concerned they’ll be priced out entirely.
The Meddlesome Moth was a pioneer in the Design District, serving gastropub fare for 15 years. It closed in May 2025. Its iconic stained glass windows are still looking for a new home.
Fieri still on fire

Food Network celebrity Guy Fieri cooked with Dallas chef Taylor Rause for an episode of ‘Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives.’ Here, they make sauerkraut dark chocolate cake.
Food Network / Citizen Pictures
The latest season of Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives featured an impressive seven Dallas-Fort Worth restaurants, and News readers wanted all the details. We were pleased to see Food Network icon Guy Fieri visit some true local gems, like Chinese restaurant Hello Dumpling in East Dallas, barbecue joint Slow Bone in the Design District and vegan taco shop El Palote Panaderia in Pleasant Grove.
Yes, the beef!

White Castle sliders are small. Better order a few.
Shafkat Anowar / Staff Photographer
For the first time in 105 years, fast-food burger joint White Castle will enter the Lone Star State. We broke the news that White Castle’s first stop in Texas would be in The Colony, just down the street from home decor megastore Nebraska Furniture Mart. We’ll have more on this brand expansion into Texas in 2026. For now, we’ll leave you dreaming of griddled onions, a hallmark of White Castle’s sliders.
Salad and Gone

Salad and Go’s salads cost $8 to $10, making them among the affordable healthy-eating options in D-FW.
Jason Janik / Special Contributor
When Salad and Go announced it was closing dozens of locations across Texas and Oklahoma, our Claire Ballor followed up with a list of which drive-throughs would close permanently. Your reactions were delightful surprises to all of us on the food team: Y’all love a drive-through salad! Part of the allure of Salad and Go is its low prices, to be sure. (We’re regular customers, too.)
Here’s some news you can use: Even though 18 Salad and Gos closed in D-FW, two-dozen stayed open.
Shutting the screen door
Remember The Big Board? Customers at The Porch could find daily specials here.
Stewart F. House / Special Contributor
The Porch closed on Henderson Avenue in Dallas this year, a sudden move for the comfort-food restaurant. The company said the restaurant experienced a “perfect storm of losses” this year, despite efforts to drum up new customers with $5 cocktails. When The Porch closed, it was one of the last standing restaurants from an era when Henderson Avenue was at the center of the Dallas dining scene.
A moment for halal barbecue

CJ and Sabrina Henley, pictured here at Yearby’s Barbecue and Waterice in Pilot Point, moved the restaurant to Plano.
Juan Figueroa / Staff Photographer
Your top barbecue story from 2025 comes from Ballor, about Yearby’s relocation from Pilot Point to Plano. Its halal barbecue is some of the best in the state, and it earned a spot on Texas Monthly’s 50 Best list. The menu includes brisket, chicken and meatloaf — just no pork.
Consider stopping in to the new Plano restaurant over the holidays. Hours are Friday, Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
So long to Hong Kong

Hong Kong Restaurant was open on Garland Road in Dallas since 1962.
Pon Family
Dallas’ longest continuously operating Chinese restaurant, Hong Kong, closed in mid-May 2025 after more than 60 years. For some Dallas-born neighbors, Hong Kong was their first foray into egg foo yung and yu dow gai ding. In fact, local middle schoolers took field trips there after learning about China in social studies class.
With Hong Kong Restaurant’s closure, a significant piece of Chinese-American food history is gone in Dallas.
Winner, winner, chicken dinner

It’s family-style food at Babe’s.
David Woo / Staff Photographer
Babe’s Chicken Dinner House serves some of the best Southern food in the United States, Southern Living said. I think we can all see why that’s worth reading about! The writer said the food “brought a guest to tears — of joy.”
Remembering Chris Carpenter

Chris Carpenter was a partner at Hendy’s on Henderson in Dallas. He died Aug. 10, 2025.
Courtesy
Dallas bar partner Chris Carpenter died at age 41 — a surprise to friends and family. He opened Hendy’s on Henderson about a month prior, and customers saw him there nightly, leading the team. He had become a significant operator in the Dallas nightlife and bar scene.
“He lived fully, loved deeply and led with a rare combination of passion and generosity,” said Cote Bona, one of his best friends and a business partner in Hendy’s.
Bulldozing Sambuca

The former Sambuca was bulldozed in Uptown Dallas in October 2025, leaving a pile of rubble in the shadow of Hotel Crescent Court. Today, the debris is cleared.
Chase Hanna
It’s been years since we’ve been to dinner-and-a-show restaurant Sambuca, as it closed on Dallas’ McKinney Avenue in 2018. The building stood empty at a busy Uptown Dallas intersection since then. In October 2025, excavators bulldozed Sambuca. Crews cleared the debris and laid grass in its place — so pretty and neat that it’s almost like Sambuca was never there. It isn’t clear yet what will happen to this prime piece of Dallas real estate.
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