Trainwreck Kinda Daily: The Kyrie Irving Trade Won’t Go Well For Dallas And Why Brooklyn Is In Trouble

Mandatory Photo Credit – The Canadian Press

Kyrie Irving has been OFFICIALLY traded to the Dallas Mavericks. 

The full details below: 

Dallas’ Grade: D

Listen, that might seem harsh. But it really isn’t. 

Here are some facts about the Dallas Mavericks. 

  • Luka Doncic DESPERATELY needed support. The Mavericks have been playing with a dearth of talent for basically his entire tenure. 
  • The Mavericks, historically speaking, have had trouble convincing free agents to play in Dallas. It was a problem when they had Dirk and it has remained a problem. They had to try and kidnap DeAndre Jordan! Mark Cuban was scouring the city for him! Free agents are literally hiding from Cuban rather than signing with him in free agency.
  • The NBA free agent class is not loaded with star talent and every team looking for a star has been waiting with bated breath to see who would be the next one available. 

The Mavericks specifically, might have been the most desperate team in this scenario. 

Luka Doncic is a singular talent in the league and the rest of the roster around him is SCARSE. 

It was a drastic misstep to not lock up Jalen Brunson when they were in extension talks last season, especially when they had no plan in place to replace him. 

The problem is with adding Irving you have three huge caveats 

  • He’s an expiring contract and they can’t even begin extension talks with him until June. 
  • He’s been… how do I say this nicely… flippant in the past about his desires (teammates, location, team, beliefs, literally anything)
  • He and Doncic on the floor in a playoff series will be a PROBLEM defensively. Like a gigantic, can’t possibly avoid talking about it when mentioning this team problem. 
  • Like guys, they won’t stop anyone. 
  • And they just traded their best defender for Kyrie. 
  • And oh yeah, he’s KYRIE IRVING. TEAM KILLER. 
  • KYRIE HAS NOW LEFT TEAMS WHO HAD LEBRON JAMES, JAYSON TATUM AND KEVIN DURANT ON THEIR ROSTER. THAT’S THE MOST IMPRESSIVE HIT LIST IN NBA HISTORY. 

Luka and Kyrie will be very fun. And I respect Mark Cuban for taking a big swing to keep his franchise player happy and give him a co-star. 

Kyrie Irving just isn’t that guy. 

The Mavs will lose before the West Finals and Kyrie will be a Laker in the off-season. 

And the clock keeps ticking on Luka as a Maverick. 

Brooklyn’s Grade: C

Brooklyn maximized a bad situation, but it’s a situation that they put themselves in. 

Trainwreck Kinda Daily: The Kyrie Irving Trade Won’t Go Well For Dallas And Why Brooklyn Is In Trouble 1

Going all the way back to the summer, Durant and Irving both requested trades and then rescinded them going into training camp. 

We have known about Kyrie’s discontent with Joe Tsai, Sean Marks and the rest of the organization for some time now. This isn’t news. It stems all the way back to 2020, when Irving refused to be vaccinated and continued until the final trade request and subsequent trade. 

Kevin Durant is what made it work. Durant is a generational talent whom the Nets have catered their entire organization to. 

Irving was just a part of the price to obtain Durant. They were originally acquired as a package deal. They were the prizes of the 2019 free agency, so when the Nets were able to get both!? We thought it was gravy. 

I’ve yet to type the name James Harden, but he HAS to be mentioned as a part of this Irving-Nets eulogy. 

The Nets traded away the farm for Harden, and it never worked with him. It came as close as Kevin Durants big toe, but even in that game 7 against Milwaukee, Irving was out and Harden was playing with a severely injured hamstring, an issue that’s stayed with Harden. 

They traded Harden for Ben Simmons and now it’s being reported that Simmons has “zero value” across the league. 

And now Irving is gone, replaced by Spencer Dinwiddie (who was traded away from Brooklyn during this entire three-year debacle, but remains a serviceable guard), Dorian Finney-Smith (an actual 3 and D defender that can help the Nets this season) and future picks , the Nets should be reprimanded for how poorly they have managed some of the most valuable assets in the NBA. 

They’re operating like it’s NBA 2K in real life. There’s a reason those guys are in ever deal you propose to the trade finder. 

For this year? The Nets honestly don’t change much to me. Sure they miss Irving’s scoring ability, but will ridding the distraction of Kyrie be a gain for the locker room who has been through turbulent times in the past?

Dinwiddie, Curry and Cam Thomas will get increased opportunities and they will be better and more flexible defensively because of Finney-Smith. 

Essentially, the Nets will go as KD goes.

And while they’ll miss Irving’s scoring punch, they’ve managed to build a roster of great shooters, solid wing defenders and have a stable Big Man in Nic Claxton to hold down the interior. 

The East is tough at the top, with Philly, Boston and Milwaukee presenting challenges and rosters that may be too much for KD and crew to overcome. 

But if anyone can overcome that in the East, it’s Durant. 

And this roster is now built specifically to optimize him as a player offensively and defensively. 

For all of the fans that have called KD soft, a snake, and whatever other hating ass comment they’ve had since he left OKC, they get their wish. KD is on his own. No other stars to rely on. The team is solid around him, but he is the engine and all blame and all credit will be given to him, whether that’s just or unjust. 

…or he gets traded by Thursday ?‍♂️

The post Trainwreck Kinda Daily: The Kyrie Irving Trade Won’t Go Well For Dallas And Why Brooklyn Is In Trouble appeared first on Trainwreck Sports.

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Sleazy Trump destroyed hope of national glory in a single phone call



First, full disclosure: I’m not a soccer fan. I'm a football fan, and a diehard Pittsburgh Steelers fan. So, having said that, let’s start with a hypothetical.

Say the Steelers are heading into a playoff game and their best defensive player just got suspended for a hit the league ruled illegal.

Team owner Art Rooney doesn't like the call. So he picks up the phone, calls NFL commissioner Roger Goodell directly, and leans on him to “take another look.” Two days later, the league reverses course. The suspension is lifted. The player suits up. The Steelers win.

If that happened, I'd be thrilled, and I would not be asking a single question about how it all went down. Because Art Rooney owns the Steelers. Roger Goodell runs Rooney's league. That's a phone call between people inside the same house, playing by rules (well, I would hope they are) that belong to them.

Nobody outside that room would have any right to be outraged, except, of course, if you were a Baltimore Ravens fan. But I digress.

Now here's a real story about how another phone call went down.

Last Thursday, U.S. striker Folarin Balogun picked up a red card during Team USA's win over Bosnia and Herzegovina. It was a foul serious enough to draw an automatic one-match ban, which would have kept him out of tonight’s knockout match against Belgium.

Balogun is the team's leading scorer at this World Cup. Losing him for a win-or-go-home game felt, to a lot of American fans, like a gut punch. Donald Trump decided to meddle. He called FIFA president Gianni Infantino and asked him to "review" the card. My bet? Trump didn’t say the word "review."

On Sunday, FIFA announced the suspension was being set aside, not overturned outright, mind you, but "suspended for a probationary period," a wobbly phrase that bounces off the head and goes out of bounds. It all screams corruption, which America, and the world now knows, is Donald Trump’s middle name.

In the Oval Office on Monday, Trump bragged about what he did. Balogun will start against Belgium tonight, and the world is seething with anger — or at least most of the world.

Now, here's the difference from my Steelers story: Donald Trump doesn't own Team USA. He isn't its coach, its federation president, or anyone with legitimate standing to intervene in a disciplinary process.

I highly doubt Trump is even a soccer fan because it’s not bloody and gory like a UFC match.

He's, gallingly, the President of the United States, and he’s calling the head of an independent global sports body four days before his own country's must-win game. It reeks of favoritism, stacking the deck, and dissing every other team in the tournament.

Let’s do another hypothetical.

What if Belgium's star goalkeeper, Thibaut Courtois, received a red card during the team’s win over Senegal, and Belgium’s Prime Minister, Bart De Wever, called Infantino and asked him to review Courtois’ red card? That request would stand a snowball's chance in hell.

The last time something like this happened, when a red card suspension was famously bypassed following presidential intervention, was during the 1962 World Cup, when Brazilian star winger Garrincha was cleared to play in the final after political pressure.

There is a reason the last time this happened was 64 years ago, and I don’t think I need to explain why.

Once the suspension was lifted, all hell broke loose.

This time, Belgium's football federation called the reversal "unprecedented, incomprehensible and unjustifiable." They appealed the decision, but guess what? They were denied. Go figure!

Former English soccer star and BBC analyst Wayne Rooney called it "an absolute disgrace." Another English former star and current NBC Sports analyst Gary Neville said it "absolutely stinks."

Once politics — or, in this case, the sleazy Trump — gets involved, who knows where or how it stops?

None of this should surprise anyone who's watched Infantino suck up to Trump. He slavishly and ridiculously handed Trump the tournament's first-ever "Peace Prize" last December and has spent months building political cover for him. Infantino runs a federation about to post record profits hosting the biggest live sports event on earth, and Trump is his money ticket because the games are happening here in the U.S.

If Infantino said no to Trump, would Trump sic FCC Chair Brendon Carr on him and threaten the cash cow of broadcasting rights? Maybe that’s a bit of an exaggeration, but who knows what the impulsive Trump would do?

It’s a wash, though, since Infantino would change Trump’s diaper if he were asked to.

What makes this so combustible is that it's split fans into three camps. So once again, Donald Trump sows unparalleled division.

American fans who just want their team to win are thrilled because Balogun is irreplaceable, and losing him felt like getting robbed.

Other American fans, the ones who think the undisciplined Trump has no business anywhere near a disciplinary ruling, are embarrassed, and plenty of them are openly rooting for Belgium tonight because Donald Trump inserted himself, again, into a situation where he does not belong.

And fans overseas, many already furious at what Trump's tariffs and uncalled-for Iran war have done to their economies, see this as one more example of the evil Trump being the loathsome Trump. They hate America and Americans because they voted for Trump.

Tonight, they're not just rooting against a soccer team. They're rooting against Trump and against a country they feel put him back in office.

We have now drifted so far away from whether the original red card was the right call. If the U.S. wins tonight, plenty of people around the world will say it wasn't earned, and that with Trump’s intervention, the U.S. cheated.

The U.S. will be the team the whole world roots against.

If the U.S. loses, just as many will call it karma. Either way, the team can't win without controversy. Trump made sure of that, then made it worse by bragging about it afterward, thanking FIFA for "reversing a great injustice."

Whatever the final score says tonight in Seattle, it won't tell the real story. The real story is that once again, everything Donald Trump touches ends up poisoned by Donald Trump, and a tournament that was supposed to belong to the world now has his dirty fingerprints all over it.

If anyone deserves a red card — a permanent one — it’s Donald Trump.

Outdated regulations? GONE. Useless laws? Get ’em out of here.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nUEco4wGfj4 Outdated regulations? GONE. Useless laws? Get 'em...