'Organisational malpractice': Sports world reacts to Luka Doncic-Anthony Davis trade
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Dallas Mavericks fans leave notes and memorabilia to protest the trade of Mavericks point guard Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers.
PHOTO: USA TODAY SPORTS
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LOS ANGELES - It was just after midnight Sunday in the Eastern time zone (Feb 2, 1pm Singapore time) when the social media post from ESPN nearly broke the internet.
“The Dallas Mavericks are trading Luka Doncic, Maxi Kleber and Markieff Morris to the Los Angeles Lakers for Anthony Davis, Max Christie and a 2029 first-round pick, sources tell ESPN. Three-team deal that includes Utah,” the message on X read.
Immediately, fans and even National Basketball Association (NBA) players expressed doubts that a trade of such mega proportions could have happened. And when other media outlets quickly confirmed the news, the sports world began to process a league-shifting and an unprecedented trade involving two All-NBA players, one of whom – Doncic – is a 25-year-old global superstar who led his team to the NBA Finals last June.
The Mavericks officially announced the trade on Feb 2 morning. The Jazz received Jalen Hood-Schifino and a 2025 second-round draft pick via the Los Angeles Clippers from the Lakers. Dallas also sent a 2025 second-round selection to Utah.
Neither Davis nor Doncic had commented on the trade as of early Feb 2 morning, but after having time to process the news, some NBA players weighed in on just what the trade means: that no player is a sure thing to remain with his team with the trade deadline approaching on Feb 6.
“Gotta pack them bags just in case now a days,” C.J. McCollum of the New Orleans Pelicans posted to X. “If the Don (Doncic) got traded only lord knows.”
Phoenix star Kevin Durant told reporters gathered around him in the locker room after the Suns’ 127-108 road loss to the Portland Trail Blazers that the trade underscores that the NBA is a business.
“Players are held to a different standard of loyalty and commitment to a programme but the organisations don’t get held to that same standard from the outside world,” Durant said, adding the door has opened to allow more shockers to follow.
“You start seeing stuff like that, as an organisation, you might get a little more courage to do some stuff,” he said of teams swapping superstars.
“You see another team trade away somebody like that. This has got to be the biggest trade I’ve seen since I’ve been in the league or since I’ve been watching the sport. This is insane. So yeah, every other team might get confidence and say, ‘F**** it, I’ll trade a few of my top players if this ain’t working.’“
It was not just basketball players who reacted to the trade with disbelief.
Dallas Cowboys All-Pro linebacker Micah Parsons summed up what many athletes and non-athletes were expressing on social media.
“Yoo wtf going on in Dallas?“ he wrote.
For Emmanuel Acho, a former National Football League (NFL) linebacker, current television analyst and local product, the news hit hard.
“As a Dallas native, who went to the Mavs’ first NBA finals in 2006 and the parade in 2011, I can confidently say trading prime Luka Doncic is one of the biggest mistakes in the history of sports. This is organisational malpractice. I am sick.” REUTERS

