DALLAS — The Washington Wizards are acquiring Anthony Davis in an eight-player trade with the Mavericks that includes draft picks for Dallas, a person with knowledge of the deal said Wednesday.
The move is a signal the Mavericks are moving on from the widely criticized trade that sent superstar Luka Dončić to the Los Angeles Lakers for a package headlined by Davis last year.
Former general manager Nico Harrison, whom the Mavericks fired in November, engineered the middle-of-the-night deal that angered fans. Trade speculation had surrounded Davis ever since Harrison was let go after a slow start to the season.
The Wizards are sending Khris Middleton, AJ Johnson, Malaki Branham and Marvin Bagley III to the Mavericks along with two first-round draft picks and three second-rounders, the person told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the NBA had yet to approve the deal.
Washington is getting three guards from Dallas in Jaden Hardy, D’Angelo Russell and Dante Exum.
The Wizards have made a stark shift recently from their rebuild after losing 67 and 64 games the last two seasons. They traded for Trae Young last month and now add Davis to a group of young players that includes big man Alex Sarr, the No. 2 pick in 2024.
It’s not clear if Young or Davis will play much this season, which could be for the best given the Wizards would lose their top draft pick this year if it falls outside No. 8.
Still, a deal like this suggests Washington is ready to move on from the phase of waiting for lottery luck. A 2026-27 team with Davis, Young, Sarr and other complementary players could be interesting in the Eastern Conference, although health is always a concern with Davis.
The 10-time All-Star has been out since Jan. 8 with a left hand injury and wasn’t expected to return before the All-Star break later this month.
Harrison’s Dončić-for-Davis deal was so heavily criticized because he took on the big man with an extensive injury history while giving up a generational talent in his prime. Dončić was 25 at the time of the trade.
As might have been expected, Davis appeared in just 31 of a possible 84 games over two partial seasons with the Mavericks, including two play-in tournament games last season.
The 32-year-old’s ailments included a core muscle issue and a calf strain before he injured his hand while defending a driving Utah Jazz foward Lauri Markkanen last month.
The trade is a big step for Dallas toward making Cooper Flagg the next face of the franchise after Dončić. The No. 1 pick set an NBA scoring record for a teenager with 49 points against the Charlotte Hornets last week, and the 19-year-old rookie is on a three-game streak of 30-point games, another league first for the under-20 group.
Flagg, who is averaging 20.1 points a year after leading Duke to the Final Four as just the fourth freshman to be named AP men’s basketball player of the year, doesn’t turn 20 until next season.
The Mavericks lost all three games in Flagg’s current 30-plus run and are on a five-game skid, a season worst. Dallas is 12th in the West at 19-31, making it increasingly unlikely that guard Kyrie Irving will play this season. The nine-time All-Star tore the ACL in his left knee last March.
Dallas is likely to miss the playoffs for the second consecutive season since Dončić and Irving led them to the 2024 NBA Finals. The Boston Celtics won that series in five games.
Harrison traded Dončić believing that Davis, an elite player at both ends of the court, could pair with Irving to keep the Mavericks in contention for several years. Instead, Davis and Irving shared the court just once before Davis exited with an aggravation of his abdominal injury in the third quarter of his Dallas debut. Irving injured his knee less than a month later.
AP’s Noah Trister in Washington contributed.