There was a moment in the fourth quarter with two minutes remaining, when the Mavericks cut the lead down to one point with a corner three from Maxi Kleber to make it a 92-91. The home crowd gave its loudest ovation for a team missing its superstar Luka Doncic. It was the kind of shot that could swing the momentum in the Mavericks’ favor and give a gut-wrenching loss to the Utah Jazz who could potentially lose yet again after having a double-digit lead.
But that moment was short-lived and the cheers from the crowd turned into collective anxiety as they watched their determined but limited team come up short to the Jazz in a 99-93 loss. This game was a reminder that the postseason is about superstars. Debatably, there isn’t another team in this 2021-2022 postseason that desperately needs its superstar more than the Mavericks. Collective effort from competent role players who play to their strengths can win games but not a series. (I’m sure 2007 Golden Warriors We believe era have something to say about that.)
Take a look at Utah for a moment. Their best player Donovan Mitchell got off to a slow start and didn’t score till 5:19 in the second quarter. Their role players Bojan Bogdanovic and reigning sixth man of the year Jordan Clarkson kept them afloat in the first half. Their role players did their job knowing at some point their All-Star was going to put his stamp on the game. He came out in the third quarter aggressively looking for his shot and found his way to the rim without much resistance. He finished the game as the leading scorer with 32 points.
For all intents and purposes, the Mavericks did what they could with the circumstances they’ve been given. Jalen Brunson was looking for redemption as last postseason deficiencies loomed over him. The shocking February trade for Spencer Dinwiddie was for this moment, to have another shot creator and guard size alongside Doncic and Brunson. Dinwiddie and Brunson scored the Mavs’ first 10 points and finished collectively with 46 points, more than the team altogether. But there were crucial moments in the game, where the offense became stagnant and getting to the rim wasn’t ineffective because Rudy Golbert was waiting in the paint. The Jazz had no problems playing the Mavs upfront and colliding in the paint when the Mavs found its 5 ft. from the rim. They dared rookie Josh Green to shoot open-wide threes. Kleber knocked down a crucial three but was mostly ineffective offensively. Mitchell and Bogdanovic took turns going at Davis Bortans who was defensive liability as much as he was offensive weapon.
The Mavericks defense kept them in the game despite being outrebounded 55-34. They held the second most three-point attempts-and-made team to only 7-out-of 22. The Mavs had more free-throw attempts but left eight points at the charity stripe with 26 out-of-34 to Jazz 20 out-of-23. They had their chances to win but was missing their star power to propel them for a win.
Unlike the Jazz who had Mitchell to help get over hump, the Mavs points-by-committee system couldn’t compensate for Doncic’s absence.
Doncic’s pending return will remain as the focal point of the Mavs postseason. Until then, they must rely on each other to make it a series. Perhaps, they can have a miracle like the We Believe Warriors.