Masai Ujiri hired Mike Schmitz as general manager of the Dallas Mavericks on Tuesday, his first personnel move since Mark Cuban handed him the president of basketball operations role in February. Schmitz, 39, spent the past three years as ESPN's lead draft analyst after eight years in the New York Knicks' front office under Leon Rose and Tom Thibodeau.
The hire is a tell. Schmitz built his reputation on international scouting and second-round extraction — he helped identify Immanuel Quickley and Quentin Grimes for the Knicks, both picks outside the lottery. He spent years filming workouts in European gyms and Australian stadiums, the kind of footage that ends up in June war rooms when teams are choosing between a Slovenian wing and a French center at pick 47. That matters for Dallas because the Mavericks owe their 2025 and 2027 first-round picks to the Knicks as part of the Kyrie Irving trade. The 2026 pick is protected top-ten but will likely convey. Ujiri and Schmitz will be working the margins until 2028.
The timing also clarifies Ujiri's mandate from Cuban. When Dallas hired Ujiri for a reported five years and north of $15 million annually, the assumption was that Luka Dončić's prime — he turns 26 in February — would anchor the next competitive window. But Schmitz's profile suggests Ujiri is building infrastructure, not chasing stars. The Mavericks have $163 million committed for next season across five players, including Kyrie Irving's $43 million player option and Klay Thompson's $33 million in year two of his three-year deal. That leaves almost no cap flexibility and a luxury-tax bill Cuban has historically avoided. The play is development and leverage, not max slots.
Schmitz's responsibilities will include scouting, player personnel, strategic planning, and what the team calls "organizational collaboration across departments" — front-office language for aligning the G League affiliate, analytics staff, and medical team under one decision tree. Worth noting that Dallas's Texas Legends have been inconsistent talent pipelines compared to Oklahoma City's Blue or Denver's Grand Rapids Gold. Ujiri hired Schmitz to fix that gap. The two overlapped briefly when Schmitz consulted for Toronto's 2019 title team during his ESPN sabbatical, a detail Ujiri mentioned in the press release but did not elaborate on.
The Knicks will receive a second-round pick as compensation under tampering rules, since Schmitz was still under contract through June. New York's front office was reportedly unhappy with the departure but did not match Dallas's offer, which includes equity participation in Cuban's broader sports holdings. The exact percentage was not disclosed, but two people familiar with the deal said it involves future broadcast-rights revenue if Cuban sells the team's RSN stake. That structure is becoming standard for GM hires in markets where ownership is diversifying.
What to watch: Schmitz will attend the Portsmouth Invitational Tournament in mid-April, his first public appearance in the role. Dallas has three second-round picks in June's draft — their own at 45, a protected pick from the Suns at 52, and a heavily protected future pick from the Pelicans that could convey as late as 2029. Ujiri is expected to hire a new head of international scouting before the draft combine in Chicago, likely someone from the Raptors' 2019-era network. The Mavericks' summer-league roster in Las Vegas will reveal Schmitz's early targets.
Cuban has not made a major hire this quickly since Donnie Nelson became GM in 2005. This one took Ujiri eight days.
The takeaway
Ujiri's first Mavericks hire signals long-term infrastructure play over star-chasing, critical for a team without first-round picks until 2028.
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