Mavs Notes: Flagg, Kyrie, Washington, Poulakidas
Kyrie Irving won’t play for the Mavericks this season as he continues his recovery from a torn ACL, but he has been a valuable mentor off the court to Cooper Flaggthe rookie forward said in an interview with ESPN’s Malika Andrews (YouTube link).
“(Irving) was that top pick and was kind of thrown into the fire. He stepped in as a great vet for me and was there kind of giving me guidance,” Flagg said of Irving (hat tip to The Dallas Morning News). “There was definitely times where I was shaken up. I never lost that much in my life. Just to hear him say that and tell me that I’m doing everything I need to be doing, just to stay with it and stay positive, it definitely helped me out a lot.”
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After the Cavaliers dominated the Mavericks in Dallas on Friday, the Mavs surprisingly returned the favor in Sunday’s rematch in Cleveland, writes Mike Curtis of The Dallas Morning News. Head coach Jason Kidd made an adjustment to the starting lineup, with P.J. Washington sliding up to center in a small-ball lineup in part because Daniel Gafford was out because of an illness. Washington had an excellent performance, becoming the third player in Mavs history to record at least 20 points, 10 rebounds (Washington had 11), five steals and a block in a game. “He’s willing to do whatever it takes out there and he’s so strong,” said Flagg, who had 27 points, 10 assists, six rebounds and two blocks. “It helps our coverages and flying around the court and speeding up on both sides of the floor. I thought that was huge for us…It just gave us a different look and different way to attack their bigs.“
Washington explained why he thought the lineup change was so effective after the game, per Grant Afseth of DallasHoopsJournal.com. “I think I’m a mismatch. I can create for others, I can pass, I can set screens and pop. It’s not really what happens every day in the NBA — it’s a lot of rolling centers,” he said. “Me at the five popping opened up a lot of space on the floor for us to get some closeouts and ball reversals to get some good shots. I think it was good for us.” Kidd stuck with the same starting five for Monday’s back-to-back in New Orleans, Afseth tweets.
Two-way player John Poulakidas provided a spark off the bench in Sunday’s win, according to Curtis. The undrafted rookie out of Yale scored his first career points during the victory, finishing with 10, including eight in a span of 60 seconds late in the third quater. “I’ve been dreaming about having this type of opportunity since I was very little and to be living it right now is just very surreal to me,” Poulakidas said. “I’m just trying to be grateful for every opportunity I get every single day.”
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