The Dallas Mavericks named Kieran Kelliher chief financial officer, filling the finance role vacated when Patrick Dumont became governor following the $3.5 billion Adelson family acquisition completed in December 2023. The hire closes a ten-month gap in the CFO seat while Mark Cuban retained minority ownership and basketball operations input.
Kelliher joins alongside Mike Schmitz, who was elevated to general manager the same week. Schmitz moves up from assistant GM under Nico Harrison, who remains president of basketball operations. The tandem hires suggest Las Vegas Sands veteran Dumont is building his own front-office layer beneath the existing basketball staff rather than wholesale replacement. Kelliher's resume was not disclosed in the team's announcement, typical for CFO hires at privately held franchises where financial structure is tightly held.
The timing matters. The Mavericks are negotiating local broadcast rights after Diamond Sports' bankruptcy unwound their Bally Sports Southwest deal. League sources expect Dallas to test the direct-to-consumer model piloted by Phoenix, which launched a $24.99 monthly streaming product in October. A credible CFO signals readiness for that revenue model shift, which requires subscriber forecasting, churn management, and advertiser rate-card pricing—disciplines foreign to legacy RSN contracts. The role also encompasses the new $2.7 billion arena district development announced in February, where the Mavericks will anchor a casino-adjacent entertainment complex in downtown Dallas if Texas gaming legislation passes. Kelliher inherits oversight of that land assembly, construction financing, and tenant mix.
The Schmitz promotion is equally structural. He spent six seasons under Daryl Morey in Houston before joining Dallas in 2019. His elevation formalizes a two-executive model beneath Harrison—Schmitz managing cap mechanics, draft logistics, and trade construction while Harrison handles coach relations and player recruitment. The framework mirrors Miami's Andy Elisburg-Adam Simon pairing under Pat Riley. It also gives Dumont an internal succession option if Harrison departs, a live possibility given his close ties to Cuban, who now owns 27 percent and holds no governance rights.
Watch for Kelliher's first test when the team finalizes its streaming platform partner, expected before January. Local equity firms are circling the Mavericks' direct-to-consumer deal, offering upfront guarantees against future subscriber revenue. The CFO will model those proposals against the risk of missing projections in a market where the Cowboys and Rangers already command attention. Separately, the arena district project requires Mavericks equity as collateral for construction debt, a structure Kelliher must sign off on by March, when the legislative session opens.
The hire list is complete. Dumont now has his finance operator, Harrison has his GM deputy, and Cuban has his exit half-built. The streamlining tells you the Adelsons are not selling this franchise in the next cycle.