The Dallas Mavericks named Masai Ujiri president of basketball operations and immediately hired Mike Schmitz as general manager, installing a Toronto-style front office structure in a market that has cycled through decision-makers since Donnie Nelson's 2021 departure. Schmitz, 32, spent four seasons as Portland's assistant GM after building credibility as ESPN's draft analyst. Ujiri's deal is believed to include equity participation and runs through 2030, according to two people familiar with the terms.
Ujiri's first call was Schmitz. The two have no prior working relationship, but Schmitz's draft record—he pushed for Shaedon Sharpe at No. 7 in 2022 and advocated internally for Scoot Henderson before Portland traded the pick—fits Ujiri's appetite for younger talent evaluation voices. Schmitz also carries no Mavericks baggage, which matters in a front office that has seen Mark Cuban sell majority control to the Adelson and Dumont families for $3.5B in late 2023, creating accountability gaps Ujiri is expected to close. The hire bypasses several veteran candidates, including Trajan Langdon, who interviewed last week.
The timing is deliberate. Luka Dončić turns 26 in February and is eligible for a supermax extension this summer that would approach $350M over five years. Kyrie Irving, 32, has two years remaining at $74.4M combined. Dallas finished 50-32 last season but lost in the first round, and the Mavericks' draft capital is modest—they owe a top-10 protected pick to New York from the Kristaps Porziņģis trade that conveys in 2025 if it lands outside the top ten. Ujiri inherits a roster with two All-NBA talents, limited flexibility, and a Western Conference that added Oklahoma City's depth and Minnesota's two-way talent over the past eighteen months. His mandate is efficiency: extract more from the existing core or reshape it before Dončić's extension decision becomes automatic.
Schmitz's role will be operational execution. He will oversee scouting, run the draft room, and manage trade mechanics while Ujiri handles ownership communication and large-scale roster construction. This mirrors Toronto's structure under Ujiri and Bobby Webster, though Schmitz is younger and less experienced than Webster was when promoted. The Mavericks' analytics group, led by Jameer Nelson since 2022, reports to Schmitz now. Whether that group expands is one early test—Dallas has resisted hiring additional analysts compared to peers like Memphis or Cleveland, which run larger research staffs. Schmitz has advocated publicly for combining traditional scouting with tracking data, a balance Ujiri prefers.
The assistant GM hire and coaching staff review come next. Jason Kidd has two years left on his deal but no explicit endorsement from Ujiri yet, and the Mavericks have been quiet on extending him. Kidd's defensive scheme worked last season—Dallas ranked sixth in defensive rating—but his rotation management in the playoffs drew internal questions. If Ujiri moves on, names include Charles Lee, Kenny Atkinson, and potentially Jordi Fernández, whom Ujiri knows from Toronto's system. The Mavericks also need to fill their director of player personnel role, vacant since December. Ujiri's Toronto network is deep, and several scouts there are extension-eligible this summer, including Eric Khoury and Jim Kelly, both of whom worked under Ujiri for over a decade.
The Adelson family's involvement adds a variable. Miriam Adelson, the controlling owner, has stayed largely silent on basketball operations but is known to expect playoff advancement, and her family office has allocated capital toward facilities and G League infrastructure that Cuban deferred. Ujiri's equity stake aligns him with long-term franchise value, not just wins, which could mean a deeper rebuild than the Dončić timeline suggests if the market window closes.
Watch the assistant GM announcement in the next two weeks, Kidd's status by the draft combine in mid-May, and whether Dallas uses its $12.4M trade exception before it expires June 30. Schmitz's first draft as GM is 92 days away.
The takeaway
Ujiri's equity-backed presidency reshapes Dallas's decision structure, with Schmitz's GM hire signaling younger evaluation voices and a potential coaching review before the draft.
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