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Dallas Mavericks
Location: Dallas, TX | Arena: American Airlines Center (19,200) | Owner: Mark Cuban | GM/Basketball Operations President: Donn Nelson
Head Coach: Rick Carlisle | Titles: 0
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Verbal agreement in place for Carlisle to coach Mavs

 

DALLAS -- Rick Carlisle will be the new coach of the Dallas Mavericks, a decision expected for nearly a week but slowed by contract negotiations.

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The papers aren't signed yet, but team owner Mark Cuban confirmed in an e-mail to the Associated Press on Friday night that a verbal deal is in place.

The contract "will be signed tomorrow (Saturday)," with a news conference Wednesday because Cuban will be out of town until then.

Reached late Friday, Carlisle said: "Whatever Mark told you is what's going on. I'm not going to make any comments about it right now."

Carlisle was the only candidate the Mavericks interviewed after firing coach Avery Johnson the morning after their second straight first-round playoff exit.

Cuban had never fired a coach or hired a coach from outside the organization. While he and Donnie Nelson, the team's president of basketball operations, considered other candidates, they settled on Carlisle pretty quickly. A few interviews later, they began working on the contract and things dragged on.

This is Carlisle's third time as head coach and his first stint in the Western Conference, where having Jason Kidd and Dirk Nowitzki doesn't guarantee making the playoffs. Carlisle went 281-211 over two seasons in Detroit, then four in Indiana. He made the playoffs his first five years, then lost his job with the Pacers after missing out in 2007.

Although Dallas has won at least 50 games and been in the playoffs eight straight years, the club is getting older and has a maxed-out salary cap, meaning it will take some creative deals to shake up the roster.

Rick Carlisle is the only candidate the Mavericks interviewed after firing Avery Johnson. (Getty Images)  
Rick Carlisle is the only candidate the Mavericks interviewed after firing Avery Johnson. (Getty Images)  
Kidd was hoping for a coach who would encourage more of a free-flowing offense, while Nowitzki wanted someone who would still emphasize defense. Other players probably wanted someone with a looser grip than the controlling Johnson, but that's not necessarily the case with Carlisle.

Carlisle, 49, was the Coach of the Year in his first year in charge with the Pistons. He made the conference finals the next two years -- with Detroit, then Indiana. The Pistons fired him and replaced him with Larry Brown. Carlisle ended up leading the Pacers to a franchise-record for wins, but they lost to Brown and Detroit a series shy of the NBA Finals, which the Pistons went on to win.

After winning 61 games his first season in Indiana, his teams won fewer games each season, bottoming out at 35 finals in his final year.

Still, the man who fired him from that job is now running the Knicks and considered hiring Carlisle there. He also was considered for the Chicago job.

A native of upstate New York, Carlisle was the co-captain of the Virginia team that made the Final Four in 1984, the year after Ralph Sampson left. He was a first-round pick of the Boston Celtics and was a backup on their 1986 championship team.

He spent three seasons with the Celtics, one with the Knicks and was briefly with the Nets in 1989. He broke into coaching that year with New Jersey, working under Bill Fitch and Chuck Daly. He spent the next three seasons working for Portland, then went to Indiana to be an assistant under his old Celtics teammate Larry Bird.

Bird guided the Pacers to the NBA Finals in 2000, then resigned. Isiah Thomas was hired over Carlisle, who wound up getting his big break with the Pistons.

The Mavericks are only two years removed from the NBA Finals and one season beyond a 67-win campaign that included Nowitzki being named league MVP. Yet after the two quick playoff exits, Cuban decided things must change for them to keep pace with the old guard like San Antonio and with up-and-comers like New Orleans.

AP NEWS
The Associated Press News Service

Copyright 2007-2008, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserved
 
Talk Back
Reputation:97
Level:Superstar
Since:Oct 30, 2006

May 10, 2008 2:21 pm
I'm not going to sit here and say that Rick Carlisle does not know the game of basketball because he does. As an avid Pacers fan, I remember how Larry Bird was the motivator for the team as a coach, but Carlisle was the brains behind the Pacers 3 trips to the Eastern Conference Finals and a trip to the NBA Finals. The problem I have with C ...(more)
Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Oct 23, 2006

May 10, 2008 1:18 pm

In my mind not a good choice. Carlisle showed with both Detroit and Indiana that he can't take very talented teams to a title (not even the championship series). I would question if Dallas is "Really Talented", so Cuban just decided to hire a coach that would lead them to 50+ wins in the season and a bow out in the playoffs before the finals. Huh? and that is an upgrade? and ...(more)

Reputation:96
Level:Superstar
Since:Apr 29, 2007

May 10, 2008 12:18 am
Why was Cuban so gung-ho on Carlisle?  To not even entertain other candidates is obsurd.  You woulda thought that Phil Jackson was unemployed and fishing by the way they went after a head coach.  For a coach that has no personality, I'm shocked that Cuban fell in love w/  this guy.  But hey, if he can get the team to buy into his system (which isn't for a ...(more)
Reputation:89
Level:All-Star
Since:May 19, 2007

May 10, 2008 3:20 am

avery  was coattail coach after don nelson left. the mavs best move would be  del harris he,s a proven head coach and he,s been to to the finals with houston. what a dummy mark cuban is.it goes to show money is not everything.

 

 

 

DUMMY!!

Reputation:49
Level:Rookie
Since:Apr 16, 2008

May 10, 2008 9:33 am
bad choice.
 
 
 
 
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