As the Dallas Mavericks sit at 19-35 and 12th in the Western Conference entering the All-Star break, the organization is positioned to focus beyond the season as opposed to chasing a championship.
The conversation is no longer centered on salvaging this season. It is about shaping the next one — and whether Kyrie Irving will have the opportunity to begin building on-court chemistry with Cooper Flagg before a more competitive 2026–27 campaign.
Irving has made clear how he views the rookie.
“Cooper is just an amazing player, and that’s not even just gassing it,” Irving said. “At 19 years old, doing the things that he’s doing within our league is very special… I don’t want to mince my words either. He’s doing things that some of the greats, even before him, didn’t do. He’s chasing history.”
For a nine-time All-Star entering his 15th season, that endorsement carries weight beyond routine praise.
Cooper Flagg’s Rookie Season Validates Dallas Mavericks’ Long-Term Vision
Flagg has averaged 20.4 points, 6.6 rebounds, and 4.1 assists in 49 games while shooting 48.2% from the field. At 19 years old, he has logged 34.1 minutes per game and frequently initiated offense amid Dallas’ injury disruptions.
His 49-point, 10-rebound performance earlier this season underscored the scoring ceiling. More importantly, his expanded playmaking responsibilities have validated internal projections about his ability to handle tempo and decision-making at the NBA level. When factoring in his continually growing impact as a scorer by getting to his spots, off-hand finishing, and leveraging his size, he’s exceeded expectations.
Since Irving tore his left ACL on March 3, 2025, the Mavericks are 26-48 in regular-season games. The record reflects not just Irving’s absence, but the broader instability that followed.
Now, with Dallas in the midst of a nine-game losing streak and seven games out of the final play-in spot, the question is not whether Flagg is ready for the moment. It is whether Irving will have the opportunity to join him on the floor before this season closes.
Kyrie Irving and Cooper Flagg Pairing Viewed as Future Backcourt Core
League sources previously told DallasHoopsJournal.com that the Mavericks see strong long-term potential in pairing Irving with Flagg once Irving returns.
That belief was reinforced when Dallas traded Anthony Davis in a move that reset both roster structure and long-term salary commitments. While the deal was driven by financial flexibility and asset accumulation, sources indicated it also clarified the franchise’s direction — orienting the roster more cleanly around Flagg’s timeline, with Irving viewed as a natural complement.
Internally, Irving is regarded as a score-first guard who is most efficient when he is not required to organize every possession. Flagg’s ability to initiate offense, make early reads, and dictate pace is viewed as a mechanism to unlock those advantages.
Rather than asking Irving to function as a full-time initiator, the Mavericks envision Flagg handling much of the early offense while Irving attacks space, punishes rotations, and closes possessions.
Head coach Jason Kidd articulated that vision earlier in the season in Mexico City, when he spoke specifically about how Irving and Flagg’s skill sets are designed to complement one another. Rather than framing the pairing around positional labels, Kidd emphasized spacing, scoring gravity and ball-handling versatility — traits he believes make the two interchangeable and difficult to scheme against.
“Kai is going to be a perfect fit with Cooper Flagg, when you talk about his skillset of being able to dribble and score,” Kidd said. “He also creates space on the floor for Cooper, and vice versa. We just can’t wait to get Kai back, at some point. Hopefully it’s in the year of ’25 — not ’26. We’ll see what happens, but I think those two will be a perfect match in the backcourt.”
Kyrie Irving ACL Recovery Timeline Shapes Dallas Mavericks’ 2026–27 Outlook
Whether Dallas gets an early preview of that pairing depends entirely on Irving’s recovery. He has not appeared in a game this season. During a recent Twitch livestream, he said he plans to clarify his status after the All-Star break.
“I’ll give you guys an update after the All-Star break,” Irving said. “Whether it’s this year or next year, it doesn’t really matter. I’ll speak when the time is right.”
Sources told DallasHoopsJournal.com that going into the All-Star break, Irving consistently participated in workouts with assistant coach Phil Handy and engaged in competitive one-on-one sessions with members of the coaching and development staff. During multiple recent sessions observed by DallasHoopsJournal.com, Irving moved fluidly through sustained drills and live-ball sequences, showing explosiveness and comfort changing directions.
Multiple sources indicated Irving is expected to be physically capable of playing after the All-Star break. The Mavericks’ first game following the break falls just shy of the one-year anniversary of his injury — a timeline consistent with conservative ACL recovery benchmarks.
Irving has acknowledged the mental and physical demands of the process, noting that long-term rehabilitation tests more than just strength and conditioning. He has described the experience as both physically taxing and emotionally uneven, particularly when balancing competitive instincts with medical caution.
“It’s not easy,” Irving said. “It’s not easy to come back from any injury, but you gotta be mentally, spiritually, physically ready. And the frustrating portion has been not being able to push myself to that brink, where you’re just dog tired.”
He has also emphasized patience, consistently pushing back against rigid timelines and comparisons to other players’ recoveries. Irving has stressed that the goal is not simply to return, but to return fully confident in his movement, rhythm, and overall game.
“For me, my advice, the best advice I got is just take your time. No timeline is going to be perfect. Don’t compare it to anyone else and just enjoy the process.”
Before the injury, Irving averaged 24.7 points, 4.8 rebounds, and 4.6 assists in 50 games during the 2024–25 season, earning his ninth All-Star selection while shooting 47.3% from the field and 40.1% from three-point range.
Financial Flexibility, 2026 NBA Draft Lottery Pick Position Dallas Mavericks to Build Around Both Stars
With Dallas positioned closer to development than contention this season, any late return would likely serve a purpose beyond standings.
Shared minutes between Irving and Flagg would allow the Mavericks to begin establishing spacing dynamics, tempo control, and late-game decision-making patterns ahead of 2026–27.
The Anthony Davis trade created additional financial flexibility, and with a projected lottery pick in the 2026 NBA Draft, Dallas will enter the offseason with meaningful tools to build more cleanly around both players.
Even without appearing in games, Irving has been intentional in mentoring Flagg and other young teammates. In multiple practices, DallasHoopsJournal.com observed the two working through footwork drills and one-on-one post technique, with Irving offering guidance on pacing, balance, and reading defenders.
For now, the timeline remains Irving’s to define publicly.
But internally, the organization’s direction is clear: the future is centered on the intersection of Irving’s experience and Flagg’s ascension.
If the two share the floor before the season ends, it will not be about saving this campaign. It will be about laying the foundation for the next one.
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