The Dallas Mavericks promoted Mike Schmitz to general manager, elevating the former ESPN draft analyst who joined the franchise's scouting department in 2017. Schmitz replaces the vacant title left when Nico Harrison assumed full basketball operations control as president. The move consolidates reporting lines and gives Schmitz authority over pro personnel, college scouting, and draft strategy.
Schmitz spent eight years building Dallas's draft infrastructure after leaving ESPN's draft coverage desk. He led the scouting operation that identified Dereck Lively II at No. 12 in 2023 and pushed internally for Jaden Hardy at No. 37 in 2022. Hardy is averaging 8.9 points per game this season on a rookie-scale deal worth $7.6 million over four years. Lively signed a standard rookie contract paying $16.3 million through 2027. Both picks report to Schmitz's department.
The promotion arrives as Dallas enters a narrow decision window on Luka Dončić's supermax extension. Dončić becomes eligible for a five-year, $346 million extension in July 2025. That contract would run through 2031 and carry an average annual value near $69 million—the largest in NBA history. Schmitz's draft work becomes critical because Dallas has no first-round picks in 2025 or 2027, traded to Brooklyn in the Kyrie Irving acquisition. The front office must extract value from second-round slots and undrafted signings to build around two max contracts.
Harrison remains president of basketball operations, handling trade negotiations, coaching staff, and owner Mark Cuban's direct line. Schmitz now owns the draft board and reports to Harrison. The structure mirrors Philadelphia's setup under Daryl Morey and Elton Brand before Brand's departure—a president handling veteran transactions, a GM running talent identification. Dallas has $168 million committed for 2024-25 with only $4.2 million in cap space, per Spotrac. That figure assumes the projected $141 million salary cap. Second-round picks and minimum deals are the roster margin.
Cuban sold the Mavericks to the families of Miriam Adelson and Patrick Dumont in December 2023 for approximately $3.5 billion. Cuban retained basketball operations control through 2026. The Schmitz promotion suggests Cuban and Harrison are locking the front office structure before Cuban's formal exit. Adelson's family paid cash; no debt restructuring is expected before the 2026 handoff. The franchise is valued at $4.5 billion in Sportico's latest rankings, up 28% since the sale closed.
Watch for Dallas's approach to the 2025 draft, where they hold only a second-round pick, likely in the mid-40s. Schmitz previously identified European prospects overlooked in that range; he pushed for Olivier-Maxence Prosper at No. 24 in 2023 before Dallas traded up. The Mavericks have four second-round picks between 2026 and 2028. Schmitz's board determines whether Dallas can stay competitive after Dončić's extension absorbs nearly half the cap.
The front office now has clarity. Schmitz controls the draft. Harrison controls the roster. Cuban controls the timeline until 2026, when Adelson's family assumes full governance and decides whether to extend both executives or reset again.