The Dallas Mavericks named Mike Schmitz general manager Tuesday, removing Nico Harrison after eight seasons and two Finals appearances. Schmitz, 37, spent the past decade at ESPN as an NBA draft analyst and international scout. Harrison leaves after constructing the roster that reached the 2024 NBA Finals but lost to Boston in five games.
Harrison joined Dallas in June 2021 from Nike, where he ran North American basketball operations. He engineered the Kyrie Irving acquisition in February 2023 for $120 million over two seasons, then extended Luka Dončić to a five-year, $215 million supermax. The Mavericks advanced to the Western Conference Finals in 2022 and the Finals two years later, but Cuban sold his majority stake to the Adelson and Dumont families for approximately $3.5 billion in December 2023, and the new ownership apparently wanted a different talent evaluation model.
Schmitz's hiring suggests Dallas is pivoting from Harrison's veteran-focused, star-pairing strategy toward younger, developmental assets. Schmitz built his reputation identifying international prospects—he profiled Nikola Jokić before the 2014 draft when most American scouts dismissed him—and his ESPN film breakdowns emphasized skill translators over college production. The Mavericks hold the 21st pick in the 2025 draft and roughly $28 million in cap space if they decline team options on two rotation wings. Schmitz's first test is whether to extend those options or chase upside in the draft, a very different calculation than Harrison's preference for proven rotation players.
The front-office restructure lands while Dončić is 26 and entering his prime, Irving 32 and on the final season of his deal. Dallas went 50-32 last season but was swept in the first round by the Clippers, raising questions about depth behind the two stars. Harrison's last move was signing Klay Thompson to a three-year, $50 million deal in July 2024, betting on shooting over athleticism. Schmitz now inherits that roster construction and must decide whether to double down or pivot toward younger wings who can guard multiple positions, a profile he championed repeatedly on ESPN.
Owner Patrick Dumont, who took operational control after his family's purchase closed, attended 14 games last season and reportedly asked Harrison for a deeper bench analytics framework. Harrison's background was brand partnerships and player relationships, not statistical modeling. Schmitz worked alongside Kevin Pelton at ESPN and co-authored prospect reports that weighted synergy data and tracking metrics, exactly the infrastructure Dumont requested. The Mavericks also hired a vice president of basketball strategy from Second Spectrum in March, signaling the analytical shift predated this move.
What to watch: Dallas has coordinator interviews scheduled for late May, and Schmitz's input on those hires will clarify whether he has full personnel authority or shares it with coach Jason Kidd. The Mavericks' 2025 second-round pick conveys to New York unless they finish top-18 in the lottery, so tanking conversations are off the table. Irving's extension talks typically begin in July, and his camp will want clarity on roster direction before committing. Schmitz's first draft board is due to ownership by June 15.
Harrison's next role will be watched closely—his Nike Rolodex includes LeBron James, Kevin Durant, and Giannis Antetokounmpo, and at least two teams with aging stars and salary-cap questions have already placed calls.
The takeaway
Dallas replaces Finals architect Harrison with ESPN scout Schmitz, signaling shift from star trades to draft development under new ownership.
mavericksfront-officegm-hirenbaownershipdraft
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