Dallas Basketball

ESPN's Kendrick Perkins: 'Heat Need to Trade' Jimmy Butler: Should Mavs Inquire?

ESPN's Kendrick Perkins suggested that the Miami Heat should move on from Jimmy Butler, who has led the franchise to two NBA Finals appearances. If that happened, the Dallas Mavericks should definitely be interested.
ESPN's Kendrick Perkins: 'Heat Need to Trade' Jimmy Butler: Should Mavs Inquire?
ESPN's Kendrick Perkins: 'Heat Need to Trade' Jimmy Butler: Should Mavs Inquire?

ESPN is no stranger to making bold, baseless claims, as we've seen twice from Stephen A. Smith over the last week. Smith not only discredited Luka Doncic's 73-point performance in the Dallas Mavericks' win over the Atlanta Hawks last week, but he also went on the air this week and suggested that Doncic should be held accountable for the Mavs not being able to keep Jalen Brunson from going to the New York Knicks in free agency.

Smith's colleague, former NBA player Kendrick Perkins, joined the party on Tuesday by randomly claiming that the Miami Heat should move on from five-time All-NBA and five-time All-Defensive forward Jimmy Butler in order to give him a better shot at winning a title.

"I believe the Miami Heat need to do right by Jimmy and trade him to a team that actually could compete for a title this season," Perkins said on ESPN.

What Perkins seems to forget is that Butler has willed his team to two NBA Finals appearances in the previous four seasons, and last season he did it with the Heat being the No. 8 seed. Given that success, plus the fact that Butler loves Miami, it's hard to see that couple splitting up.

For the sake of having fun, though, let's say the Heat decide to trade Butler and would be open to sending him to the Dallas Mavericks. What would a trade package look like in that scenario? 

The easiest path, for salary-matching purposes, would be to include star point guard Kyrie Irving, who is averaging 25.2 points, 5.1 rebounds and 5.3 assists on near-50/40/90 efficiency, but has also missed 20 of the Mavs' 47 games so far this season due to injury. Like Miami with Butler, though, the Mavs likely wouldn't want to part ways with Irving this early, as they've yet to see what he can do alongside Doncic in a postseason setting.

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But to see that, you have to actually get to the postseason relatively healthy, and the Mavs, who are coming off a disappointing season where they missed the playoffs last year, have yet to prove they can stay healthy.

Although this particular thought exercise is merely that and nothing else, the Mavs have been linked to several other forwards and centers ahead of the trade deadline that actually warrant more attention. The deadline is one week away, and there are several names to keep an eye on for Dallas, including P.J. Washington, Kyle Kuzma, Miles Bridges and more.


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Dalton Trigg
DALTON TRIGG

Dalton Trigg is the Editor-In-Chief for Dallas Basketball, as well as the Executive Editor overseeing Inside The Rockets, Inside The Spurs, All Knicks, and The Magic Insider. He is the founder and host for the Mavs Step Back Podcast, which is a proud part of the Blue Wire podcast network. Trigg graduated from the University of Southern Mississippi’s College of Business and Economic Development with a bachelor’s degree in entrepreneurship in 2016. After spending a few years with multiple Dallas Mavericks-related blogs, including SB Nation’s Mavs Moneyball, Trigg joined DallasBasketball.com as a staff writer in 2018 and never looked back. At the start of 2022, he was promoted to the EIC title he holds now. Through the years, Trigg has conducted a handful of high-profile one-on-one interviews to add to his resume — in both writing and podcasting. Some of his biggest interviews have been with Mavs owner Mark Cuban, Mavs GM Nico Harrison, now-retired legend Dirk Nowitzki and many other current/former players and team staffers. Many of those interviews and other articles by Trigg have been aggregated by other well-known sports media websites, such as Yahoo Sports, CBS Sports, Bleacher Report and others. You can find Trigg on all major social media channels, but his most prevalent platform is on Twitter. Whether it’s posting links to his DBcom work, live-tweeting Mavs games or merely giving his opinions on things going on with Dallas and the rest of the NBA, the daily content never stops rolling. For any inquiries, please email Dalton@MavsStepBack.com.

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