• Loading stock data...
Tuesday, October 21, 2025

‘Never Seen This’: The Mavs Are Running Out of Players

A wave of injuries combined with the team’s salary cap situation has forced them to play with eight players.

Klay Thompson
Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

The Dallas Mavericks are running out of players, and they might not be able to add any more.

The team entered Sunday’s game against Phoenix with nine available players, one more than the league minimum, and finished it with seven. 

A collision between Dwight Powell and Kessler Edwards took both out of the game causing coach Jason Kidd to make his final substitution with six minutes left in the fourth quarter, which is virtually unheard of. Phoenix won 125–116. Edwards returned to the game, while Powell didn’t, but is expected to play Monday against San Antonio. The situation left the Mavericks with just one player taller than 6-foot-6 in Naji Marshall.

Never seen this,” Jason Kidd, the Mavericks head coach said after the game. “Never been in a game where we could not take someone out to rest them because we had no one to put in.”

Powell is expected to play Monday, which would give the Mavericks the league minimum to avoid forfeit, but the team’s options to bring in players are limited. 

The situation is a byproduct of both the team’s terrible injury bug and the league’s new collective bargaining agreement.

The Mavericks have faced significant injuries since trading Luka Dončić to the Lakers in a February stunner. Anthony Davis, the key return in the trade, got injured in his first game with the team and Kyrie Irving went down last week with an ACL tear. They are part of an extensive inactive list that includes Daniel Gafford (right knee sprain), Jaden Hardy (right ankle sprain), Kai Jones (left quad strain), Dereck Lively II (right ankle stress fracture), Olivier-Maxence Prosper (right wrist sprain), and P.J. Washington (right ankle sprain).

None of those players will be back Monday. While the Mavericks are eligible to apply for multiple hardship waivers and have an open roster spot, the team’s salary cap situation has them hard-capped, preventing them from doing so. The Mavs are just $51,148 beneath the CBA’s first apron, which is too cheap to sign a player to a 10-day contract that pays roughly $120,000. 

We can’t sign anybody,” Kidd said after Sunday’s game. 

Kidd, who is a Hall of Fame point guard, joked that he and assistant coach Jared Dudley, a fellow NBA veteran, were “too expensive” to be signed to the roster and give the team some minutes. 

This past offseason, the team acquired Klay Thompson in a sign-and-trade from the Warriors, which hard-capped them to the $178 million first apron line after sending out salary in a trade. 

After the deadline, the Mavericks were just $171,000 below the first apron after trading for Davis and Caleb Martin in what was supposed to be another deep playoff run after making the NBA Finals a year ago. The team got Davis to waive his $5.9 million trade kicker, which gave them cap flexibility, but not Martin’s, which was $1 million. Had Martin waived his, the Mavs would have enough cap flexibility to sign more players. 

Martin made his Mavericks debut on Sunday after battling a hip injury with the Sixers before he was traded. He played on a minutes restriction, which was part of Kidd’s short bench. 

The Mavericks are hamstrung with their two-way players, too, as the deadline to sign players to one for the rest of the season was March 4. The Mavericks could have converted Edwards to a standard NBA deal, but now they may have to wait until the offseason. Two-way players can only be active for a maximum of 50 games in a season and Edwards has been active for 44 meaning he may run out by next week. 

Two-way players aren’t eligible for postseason play, but that might not be an issue for Dallas. Sunday’s loss dropped the team to 32–33, which is 10th in the Western Conference and just a game and a half ahead of the 11th-place Suns, who now own the tiebreaker over them. 

Injuries to Davis and Gafford prompted the team to sign Moses Brown to a 10-day contract in February, which expired March 1, leaving the remaining $51,148 below the apron, roughly $70,000 short of the space needed for another 10-day contract. 

Brown played well in his short stint, but was too expensive to be re-signed to another 10-day deal. His six NBA seasons exceed the four-year maximum to qualify for a two-way contract, too. The Mavericks now can’t sign another player to a standard contract until April 10, which is the last day to waive a player on an expiring contract. The team has 15 games until then. Waiving a player could give the roster a fresh body–for the final two games of the season.

Kidd pushed back on the eight-player minimum and said he believes if the Mavericks had five players, they’d have to play with five, with foul-outs resulting in technical fouls.

“You’ve got to laugh or else this will drive you crazy,” Kidd said Sunday. 

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Christie's

Lou Gehrig’s $4M Jersey and the Exploding Sports Memorabilia Market

An ultra-rare sports collection is about to hit the auction block.

Blue Jays $280M Payroll Pays Off With a Trip to the World..

Toronto is back in the Fall Classic for the first time in 32 years.
Apr 5, 2025; San Antonio, TX, USA; Auburn Tigers head coach Bruce Pearl talks with his players against the Florida Gators in the semifinals of the men's Final Four of the 2025 NCAA Tournament at the Alamodome.

Bruce Pearl: ‘The One Thing’ I Miss About Coaching

FOS interviewed ex-Auburn coach on his move to TNT Sports.

ESPN’s ‘MNF’ Doubleheaders Will End—If NFL Equity Deal Clears

ESPN is broadcasting its fourth “MNF” doubleheader this season.

Featured Today

@chef__tezz/Instagram

Inside the NFL’s Private Chef Network

Private chefs are the unsung architects of player performance.
October 18, 2025

How Vanderbilt Went From SEC Doormat to Dark Horse CFP Candidate

After beating LSU, Clark Lea said: “Internally, we expect to win.”
May 27, 2025; Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; Indiana Pacers guard T.J. McConnell (9) shoots a three point basket over New York Knicks guard Josh Hart (3) during the third quarter of game four of the eastern conference finals for the 2025 NBA Playoffs at Gainbridge Fieldhouse
October 18, 2025

NBA Stars Swap Wine With League Friends and Foes

A wine-exchange tradition emerged from the bubble season’s close quarters.
May 25, 2025; Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; Derek Jeter walks the red carpet on Sunday, May 25, 2025, ahead of the 109th running of the Indianapolis 500 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway
October 16, 2025

The Players’ Tribune Is Still Kicking 11 Years Later

Founder Derek Jeter is still closely involved in the publication.

Financial Behemoth Dodgers Win NL Pennant, Eye History

The biggest spenders would be MLB’s first repeat champion in 25 years.
Jun 15, 2025; Montreal, Quebec, Canada; Mercedes driver George Russell (63) and Mercedes driver Kimi Antonelli (12) celebrate their first and third place at the F1 Canadian Grand Prix at Circuit Gilles-Villeneuve.
October 15, 2025

Mercedes F1 Team Rides With Russell, Antonelli Despite Verstappen Link

Russell took the Formula One seat at Mercedes in 2021.
October 16, 2025

For Yankees, It May Be ‘Business As Usual,’ but Title Drought Lingers

GM Brian Cashman says a salary cap is not at the forefront of his mind.
Sponsored

How Jenny Just Is Shaping the Future of Sports Ownership

Jenny Just on bringing her investment experience to sports ownership.
October 13, 2025

RAJ Sports Withdraws Lawsuit Over Trail Blazers Stake

RAJ Sports had sued the Cherng family, owner of Panda Express.
October 13, 2025

Titans Turnover: Brian Callahan Firing Adds to Pattern of Instability

Tennessee fired coach Brian Callahan six games into his second season.
Cleveland Browns quarterback Dillon Gabriel (5) throws as quarterback Shedeur Sanders (12) looks on during rookie minicamp May 9, 2025, in Berea.
October 9, 2025

Browns Paying $41.6M to 8 QBs, but Only 2 Are on Their..

Cleveland traded Joe Flacco to the Bengals this week.
October 9, 2025

The Yankees’ $319M Roster Flopped. Now Comes the Hard Part: 2026

The MLB club’s current contracts limit its flexibility somewhat for next year.