The Dallas Mavericks named Mike Schmitz general manager on Monday, handing the 32-year-old former ESPN draft analyst control of scouting, player personnel, strategic planning, and cross-departmental collaboration. The hire centralizes decision-making in a front office that has operated without a traditional GM since Nico Harrison took the president of basketball operations role in 2021.
Schmitz joined Dallas as VP of strategic planning last summer after seven years covering the draft for ESPN, where his film breakdowns and combine measurements built a reputation for granular evaluation. He inherits a scouting infrastructure that helped Dallas land Dereck Lively II at pick 12 in 2023 and Olivier-Maxence Prosper at 24, both rotation pieces in last season's Finals run. The Mavericks have four second-round picks between 2025 and 2027 and a $17.3M trade exception expiring in July, the kind of asset base that rewards precision more than volume.
The promotion signals a shift from Dallas's distributed personnel model under Harrison, who had been splitting evaluation duties among assistant GMs Michael Finley and Jamahl Mosley without a clear hierarchy. That structure worked while Luka Dončić was on a rookie deal and Kyrie Irving's trade cost mostly salary filler, but it left ambiguity on who owned draft night and midseason trade calls. Schmitz now owns those decisions outright, reporting to Harrison but carrying the GM title that creates external clarity for agents and rival front offices negotiating trades. The Mavericks have $178M in guaranteed salary for 2025-26 before re-signing Derrick Jones Jr. or P.J. Washington, the two key rotation free agents from the Finals team. Jones is expected to command $12M annually on the open market; Washington closer to $16M. Schmitz's first substantive decision will be how much runway to preserve under the second apron ($188.9M for 2024-25), which hard-caps the roster and limits trade flexibility.
The hire also centralizes video and analytics pipelines that had been reporting to separate department heads. Schmitz spent his ESPN tenure building a proprietary film database and will now integrate those tagging systems with Dallas's Second Spectrum tracking data and Synergy feeds. The Mavericks have invested in player-tracking since 2019 but had not fully embedded those insights into draft models or trade valuations, a gap Schmitz is expected to close. One Western Conference executive noted Schmitz's combine measurements and defensive tracking had become informal reference points during pre-draft calls, the kind of credibility that smooths the transition from media to operator.
Watch how Dallas approaches the June 26-27 draft with two second-rounders (picks 44 and 58 as of now, pending trades) and whether Schmitz pushes to consolidate those into a late first to preserve a standard four-year rookie deal with a team option. The Mavericks have not picked in the first round since 2023, and their next unencumbered first-round pick is 2029. Watch also for coordinator and assistant GM hires under Schmitz—his ESPN network includes 15-plus current front office staffers who worked as scouts or analysts before transitioning to NBA roles. The Mavericks have three open assistant GM slots and typically fill those around the draft.
Schmitz inherits a Finals roster with $94M committed to Dončić and Irving through 2027, the kind of competitive window that does not forgive draft misses or bad second-apron math. The median tenure for an NBA GM in their first front-office role is 3.2 years; the runway is the length of Lively's rookie deal.