Dallas Basketball

Kyrie Irving supports Luka Doncic after recent criticism from Mavericks front office

Irving still stands by his "hermano" after the Lakers trade.
May 11, 2024; Dallas, Texas, USA; Dallas Mavericks guard Luka Doncic (77) celebrates with Dallas Mavericks guard Kyrie Irving (11) during the second half against the Oklahoma City Thunder during game three of the second round for the 2024 NBA playoffs at American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images
May 11, 2024; Dallas, Texas, USA; Dallas Mavericks guard Luka Doncic (77) celebrates with Dallas Mavericks guard Kyrie Irving (11) during the second half against the Oklahoma City Thunder during game three of the second round for the 2024 NBA playoffs at American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images | Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

In this story:


Luka Doncic has been the subject of a lot of bad press since being traded to the Los Angeles Lakers, most of it coming from the Dallas Mavericks. Since that trade, he's been called overweight, out-of-shape, a bad culture fit, a bad defender, and more. That has left the former Mavericks superstar a little shocked, as he never thought he'd leave Dallas, especially in this manner.

But Kyrie Irving is having none of that. Irving did a sit-down interview with ESPN's Malika Andrews during the All-Star Weekend in San Francisco and was asked what he thinks about everything that's come out from the front office since that trade.

READ MORE: Ex-NBA All-Star gives bold take regarding Mavericks trading Luka Doncic to Lakers

Kyrie Irving
Feb 15, 2025; Oakland, CA, USA; Shaq's OGs guard Kyrie Irving (11) of the Dallas Mavericks talks to media members during the NBA All Star-Practice at Oakland Arena. Mandatory Credit: Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images | Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

"Part of our job is to deal with the public space, but there were real relationships that were built behind the scenes that will transcend just the basketball court," Irving said to Andrews. "Coaching and upper management, and I know that ... we not only had two years together, but we got to know each other as well. Hopefully, we can tailor back on some of the public criticism aspects of it and really just maintain the kindness and the compassion that we have for each other that's real every day, not just one moment or a soundbite that ends up being described as something that could be taken out of context. That's what I feel like is going on right now; people are highly emotional."

Irving has somehow been the biggest voice of reason during this situation, which seems wild given what the public perception of him was when he was traded to Dallas two years ago. But he's emerged as a leader in the locker room, on the court, and in the media. He has understood the emotions from every side and even said in this interview that he's just taking things one day at a time as he processes the emotions.

Doncic and Irving became very close in their two years together in Dallas, even calling each other "hermanos" (Spanish for "brothers"). To see this pairing split up is likely difficult for both sides to deal with.

READ MORE: Mavericks center among best young players in NBA

Stick with MavericksGameday for more FREE coverage of the Dallas Mavericks throughout the 2024-25 Season

Follow MavericksGameday on Twitter and Austin Veazey on Twitter

More Dallas Mavericks News


Published
Austin Veazey
AUSTIN VEAZEY

Austin Veazey joined NoleGameday as the Lead Basketball Writer in 2019, while contributing as a football writer, and started as editor for MavericksGameday in 2024. Veazey was a Florida State Men’s Basketball Manager from 2016-2019. Follow Austin on Twitter at @EasyVeazeyNG

Share on XFollow EasyVeazeyNG