NBA All-Star weekend: Look back at performances from Mavs’ Luka Doncic, Dereck Lively II
‘2 for 1 .. analytics’: Best moments from Mavs star Luka Doncic at 2024 NBA All-Star Game
INDIANAPOLIS — With 1:22 left in the first half, a Western Conference 3-point shot attempt missed and Luka Doncic, rather accidently, was there to grab the offensive rebound on the bounce.
The Mavericks superstar’s ensuing slow-motion layup gave him his first points of the night, typifying the ho-hum nature of another easygoing Doncic All-Star performance during the East’s 211-186 victory over the West on Sunday night in the 73rd NBA All-Star Game in Gainbridge Fieldhouse.
Anyone who hoped Doncic might use the NBA’s biggest non-playoff stage to inject his name more prominently into the end-of-season Most Valuable Player conversation could immediately see that he had no intention of being offensively assertive – as now has been in case in all five of his All-Star appearances.
“People come in here and play 40 minutes, they don’t want to get injured,” Doncic said. “Everybody just gets out of the way. I don’t know how to fix that. I just follow the lead.”
Here’s my takeaway from Doncic’s comments: If no one is going to try to play defense in All-Star games, why should he play hard on offense?
Honestly have never thought of it that way and, you know, he has a point. https://t.co/NDGEvVhs82
— Brad Townsend (@townbrad) February 19, 2024
The “highlight” of Doncic’s 7-point, 7-assist, 7-rebound night was his uncontested third-quarter dunk that gave himself four points and cut the East’s lead to 127-105. Hey, no hating: Doncic only has one dunk as a Maverick this season.
Shortly after his dunk, Doncic missed an attempt at the rim, later sheepishly telling TNT during a timeout: “I was feeling myself too much. I don’t dunk, guys.”
After the game, Doncic laughed and said: “On the second one, I was tired.”
Considering that Doncic has averaged a career-high 37.4 minutes while averaging an NBA-best 34.2 points per game and largely carrying an injury-ravaged Mavericks team much of the season, perhaps it was common sense to essentially rest even during his 23 minutes of court time Sunday.
In five All-Star appearances, Doncic has yet to score in double-figures and has totaled 35 points – in other words, one more point than his current season average.
Appearances to the contrary, Doncic says: “Every year I’m excited to be here. All the people you see. The players you share the locker room with. It’s an unbelievable feeling.”
Fortunately for the Mavericks organization and fans, rookie center Dereck Lively II had more than enough fun for both Dallas representatives together while playing in Friday’s Panini Rising Stars games and attending as many weekend festivities as he could.
In fact, Doncic seemed to get more of a kick out of seeing Lively than anything he personally did this weekend.
“Just a great kid,” Doncic said. “He listens to everybody, never complains. And on the court he looks like he’s played 10 years already in this league, so I’m really happy that he’s on our team.”
Doncic, who turns 25 in nine days, no doubt is one of the brightest stars in the NBA constellation, but when it comes to All-Star games he’s more than content to let everyone else shine.
Naturally this weekend’s center of attention was Lakers superstar LeBron James, at age 39 making his record-breaking 20th All-Star appearance.
James was asked before Sunday’s game whether he sees his potential replacement as the face of the NBA, a mantle he accepted a few years after Michael Jordan’s retirement.
“We have a great home a group of guys in our league right now that playing spectacular basketball and also are being great off the floor, as well,” he said. “But I don’t think you just just say ‘OK, this guy is the next person to be the face’ of anything.
“You have to just let it happen organically and see what happens. But we have some great, great players in this league that can carry anything if they put their minds when they want it.”
As was the case after his previous four All-Star game appearances, Doncic will try to disappear from public view and rest as much as possible before the Mavericks’ season resumes Thursday with a home game against Phoenix.
Dallas has the same record, 32-23, as it did after 65 games in 2020-2021, when it finished 52-30 and made a run to the Western Conference finals.
This Mavericks team has won six straight games and is 3-0 since the acquisitions of Daniel Gafford and P.J. Washington. It remains to be seen whether this team can gel as seamlessly during the final 27 regular-season games as the ‘21-’22 team after the additions of Spencer Dinwiddie and Davis Bertans.
Conversely last year’s team, despite the February acquisition of Kyrie Irving, finished 38-44 and missed the playoffs. Does that put more onus on this season’s stretch run?
“Every year is big,” Doncic said. “Every year I want to win the championship. So every year it’s the same goal. I think our team is really good, so we’ve just got to get through the last part of the season with good motivation.”
Perhaps it was rookie optimism, or maybe it was the excitement of his first All-Star weekend, but Lively said he believes the Mavericks have the attention of Western Conference contenders.
“I feel like we’re the darkhorse that everybody doesn’t want to look at,” he said, “but we’re in the back of their minds.”
Find more Mavericks coverage from The Dallas Morning News here.
Paige Bueckers on the Wings season
WNBA star Paige Bueckers joins Sports Seriously to talk about the how her Dallas Wings are performing this season, as well as her partnership with Verizon.
Sports Seriously
HARTFORD, CT — UConn women’s basketball legends Paige Bueckers and Azzi Fudd returned to the state that made them champions.
Then the pair experienced something they were used to at PeoplesBank Arena — winning — but it took a comeback of epic proportions.
Bueckers and Fudd helped the Dallas Wings defeat the Connecticut Sun, 86-83, on Thursday, July 2, before a near sellout crowd of 14,579. The Wings rallied from a 24-point deficit to stop the Sun’s two-game win streak.
“It was (a) great crowd, it was a great environment,” Bueckers said of the fans, who cheered loudly as the Wings made their comeback. “It felt like a home game in a sense.
“It’s great to play back here in Connecticut. I love it here.”
UConn played half of its home games at the Hartford arena. Bueckers lost just one game and Fudd two over their careers here. They both wore UConn gear for their pregame tunnel fits.
The Wings outscored the Sun 51-40 in the second half. Bueckers had 11 of her team-high 25 points in the fourth quarter. She added seven rebounds and seven assists. Fudd had both her baskets in the frame and finished with four points, four rebounds and five assists.
Bueckers said the adjustments at halftime were pretty simple.
“Making shots, sometimes it’s as simple as that,” Bueckers said. “We were shooting just about 30% at the half and we felt very confident in the shots that we were getting. … Just sticking with what works.
“We got a lot of people step up, take open shots, be aggressive and get to the free-throw line more in the second half.”
Bueckers had two and-ones down the stretch that fueled the comeback.
“The first one … (Leila) Lacan jumped a pass on the inbound, so I was just trying to create something. … I just felt contact and kind of threw it up,” Bueckers said “The second one, my teammates just did a really good job of spacing the floor and just me just trying to be aggressive, hunt for a shot.”
Fittingly, Bueckers scored her first 3-pointer of the game off an assist from Fudd. Several former UConn teammates showed up to cheer on their friends. Fudd shared before the game that Jana El Alfy braided her hair before the game. Allie Ziebell, Ashlynn Shade and Gandy Malou-Mamel were also in the crowd.
“The five years we both had (at UConn), they showed up every single night,” Fudd said of the fans, including her former teammates. “It just was such an incredible experience … they’re part of the reason that it’s the basketball capital of the world.”
The basketball capital has produced many of the best players in the W. Bueckers’ popularity has continued to skyrocket since her time at UConn. In her second season in the WNBA, she was voted an All-Star starter on Thursday. Bueckers was the leader in fan balloting with 1,045,051 votes. Former Huskies Breanna Stewart and Gabby Williams were also voted starters for the All-Star Game, which will take place in Chicago on July 25.
This could be the final game for Bueckers and Fudd in Connecticut. The Sun will be relocated to Houston next season. Bueckers suggested the Wings play an exhibition game at Gampel Pavilion, in Storrs, Connecticut, in the future.
“It’s just like a family, this whole entire state supporting us … loving women’s basketball, loving everything about it,” Bueckers said. “We feel the support across the world, too.
“This will always be a second home.”
Ross Tower, a 1.1 million-square-foot, 45-story tower at 500 North Akard Street, appears to be up for sale.
Matt Murphy, the director of Cushman & Wakefield’s Texas office advisory group, said in a LinkedIn post that the tower is being marketed to investors. Ross Tower has recently undergone a modernization through a $14 million capital improvement program that upgraded the building’s elevator system, improved common areas and replaced the cooling tower, according to the post.
The building is 60 percent occupied, according to Murphy, and features tenants like the Dallas Regional Chamber, CoStar, Munsch Hardt and Grant Thornton, according to the Dallas Morning News. The asking price wasn’t listed by Murphy in the LinkedIn post, and the outlet noted that the Dallas Central Appraisal District pegged the property at upwards of $99 million for tax purposes.
Recent bets on Downtown Dallas properties cite their proximity to Uptown, where the city is seeing a flourishing financial district. A key enticement for prospective buyers looking to bolster the tenant roster, according to the post, is that the in place rents are 15 percent below market.
In the post, Murphy said that the combination of lower rents for class A space, available square footage with companies exiting downtown, and the thriving Uptown Dallas area just a few blocks away, give the tower solid fundamentals for the right buyer.
The tower is currently owned by a partnership that includes Bandera Ventures of Dallas, HPI Real Estate and Second City Real Estate. The joint venture purchased the tower in 2015, and it was renovated in 2018, according to the post.
The tower was named Lincoln Plaza until 2013, and was formerly the headquarters of multinational oilfield products company Halliburton. Ross Tower is the 14th tallest building in the Dallas skyline.
As Uptown’s Y’all Street continues to grow, building owners are beginning to look at cashing in on the influx of new companies as an option. Hillwood Urban is currently exploring a sale of Victory Commons One, who just signed Scotiabank as a new tenant.
— Hunter Cooke
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DALLAS – After Norway won on Tuesday at Dallas Stadium, its star player has one more stop to make before heading out of town.
Erling Haaland and his teammates visited a Western wear store in the West End.
It’s already changing things for the store owner.
What we know:
Just hours after the Norway’s star striker helped his team advance in the World Cup, Haaland had one more goal in Texas – becoming a cowboy.
He and several of his teammates visited Wild Bill’s Western Store in Downtown Dallas.
The store’s owners Cody and Julie Newport told FOX 4 they got a heads-up about the special guest and had part of the floor roped off when Haaland walked in.
He ended up buying multiple hats. He traded cleats for cowboy boots and swapped his jersey for a shirt that says, “Y’all can kiss my Dallas.”
What they’re saying:
“Did he know anything about cowboy hats?” FOX 4’s Peyton Yager asked the store’s owners.
“No. He knew nothing,” Cody Newport said. “Actually, he was sitting in this chair. And we had someone fit him for a cowboy hat.”
Wild Bill’s owners said Haaland and his teammates gravitated to some of their beautiful exotics.
Haaland also purchased a buckle with a longhorn for his belt and branded his initials and jersey number onto his purchases.
“He was saying this is literally the only time I have and the only time in Dallas,” Julie Newport recalled. “He had an amazing time, and we gave him that.”
“We exude the Dallas welcome, the southern hospitality. For him to want to come in and hang out is everything,” Cody Newport said.
Big picture view:
Haaland shared photos of his visit to Wild Bill’s on social media, earning millions of views and likes.
That “Y’all can kiss my Dallas” shirt is nearly sold out in the store, with many of Haaland’s fans snagging gear of their own. And online sales are rolling in.
The store expects a new shipment of the shirt on Thursday to replenish the racks.
The owners said that normally their customers are 90% tourists. But after Haaland’s post, they are starting to see customers come in from North Texas.
The Source: FOX 4’s Peyton Yager gathered information for this story by interviewing the owners of Wild Bill’s Western Store in Dallas.
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