The Dallas Mavericks named Mike Schmitz general manager on Tuesday, elevating the team's director of player evaluation to replace Nico Harrison in the top basketball operations role. Schmitz, 37, spent four seasons with Dallas after joining from ESPN's draft coverage desk in 2021. His first major decision arrives in 47 days when the Mavericks hold the 12th pick in June's draft.
Schmitz's promotion follows Harrison's February departure to join the Portland Trail Blazers as president of basketball operations. Dallas maintained Mark Cuban's organizational skeleton through the ownership transition—Las Vegs Sands heir Patrick Dumont and the Adelson family purchased Cuban's majority stake for $3.5 billion in December 2023, closed in January 2024. Schmitz now reports directly to CEO Cynt Marshall and answers to a governing board that includes three Adelson family members. Harrison had reported to Cuban.
The hire matters for three reasons. First, Schmitz built Dallas's international scouting infrastructure, the same pipeline that landed Luka Dončić in 2018 and Dereck Lively II at pick 12 last summer. Lively started 62 games as a rookie, posted a 73.4% field-goal percentage, and became the youngest Maverick to start a playoff game since 1986. Schmitz's draft board drives roughly $18 million in rookie-scale salary decisions annually—critical for a team carrying $178 million in payroll against a $140.6 million luxury-tax threshold. Second, the Mavericks operate $37.4 million into the tax this season, paying a $57 million penalty. Schmitz inherits negotiations for Kyrie Irving's $43 million player option and decisions on three expiring veteran contracts totaling $22 million. Third, Dallas sits fifth in the Western Conference at 38-28, half a game behind the Clippers. Schmitz's first trade deadline as GM arrives in 355 days—but his first roster crunch is April's buyout market and whether to convert two-way guard Jaden Hardy's deal into a standard NBA contract, which would cost $2.1 million and trigger additional tax.
Schmitz's background is unusual for a sitting GM. He never played professionally, never worked in an NBA front office before Dallas, and built his reputation publishing 1,847 draft breakdowns on ESPN+ and appearing on 312 episodes of various ESPN draft shows between 2017 and 2021. His hiring reflects the Mavericks' bet that modern scouting—film study, biometric modeling, international access—translates to cap management and veteran talent evaluation. It also reflects the Adelson family's preference for internal continuity over external star hires. When Harrison left, Dallas interviewed zero external candidates. Schmitz's $1.8 million annual salary, per front-office comparables, sits 40% below the league average for GMs on tax-paying teams.
The immediate test is June's draft. Dallas holds pick 12 and no second-rounder after trading it to Charlotte for P.J. Washington at February's deadline. The 2025 class is considered weak after the top five—most mock drafts have Dallas choosing between Duke forward Khaman Maluach and Rutgers guard Dylan Harper if both slide. Schmitz's track record: he lobbied for Lively over Gradey Dick last June, for Jaden Hardy in the second round in 2022, and reportedly opposed the Christian Wood signing in 2022 (Wood was traded to the Lakers nine months later). His hit rate on international players—he studied under European scout Ryan Blake—will determine whether the Mavericks can continue adding $4 million rookie-scale talent while paying Dončić $43 million and Irving $43 million through 2027.
Schmitz's first front-office meeting as GM is Thursday in Dallas. On the agenda: summer-league roster construction, where the Mavericks will send 12-14 players to Las Vegas in July, and preliminary extension talks for Lively, who becomes eligible for a rookie-scale extension in 14 months. The Mavericks also face a head-coaching decision—Jason Kidd's deal runs through 2026, but two assistants, Sean Sweeney and God Shammgod, are expected to interview for head-coaching roles this summer. If either leaves, Schmitz will oversee his first coordinator hire.
The Adelson family, through spokesperson Andy Abboud, declined to comment on Schmitz's contract length or performance benchmarks. Marshall's statement called Schmitz "the right leader for our next chapter." The Mavericks' next chapter includes $312 million in committed salary through 2026, a $2.8 billion arena renovation breaking ground in October, and Dončić's $215 million supermax extension kicking in next season. Schmitz now manages all three.