In advance of Monday's meeting in Dallas, I sent some questions about the Mavericks to Jonathan Tjarks of SBNation Dallas. My questions along with his answers are below, after the jump. Be sure to keep an eye on SBNation Dallas for my answers to his questions as well.
These Q&As are always fun and informative. There's nothing like getting the scouting report first hand from the guys that know the team best. Enjoy.

Steve Perrin: Dirk Nowitzki was lackluster in the first month of the season after being exhausted from the NBA Finals and EuroBasket. He took 10 days off to rest his knee and get in shape, and has now averaged 26 on 55% shooting over the last five games since returning to the lineup? Is he back? Is he all the way back? Is he 2011 Finals MVP back?
Jonathan Tjarks: I'm not sure he will be totally "back" until the playoffs. He's a player who depends on his timing and needs his legs under him, which is going to be hard to do in the NBA's 5-games in a week format this season. There are nights where he looks like his old self and there are nights where he's dragging his leg around and not getting the proper lift on his shots. The good thing for Dallas is this is a much deeper team offensively than last year, so even on nights when Dirk's not giving you much, they can stay competitive.
SP: Dallas' championship seemed to feed as much as anything on the team's chemistry. Tyson Chandler on defense, J.J. Barea off the bench, even timely threes from Peja Stojakovic were all key elements of that playoff run. What are the odds that the team can find the same kind of cohesiveness with those guys gone?
JT: I wouldn't say so much the chemistry as it was Tyson Chandler. Until you watch him on a nightly basis, it's hard to appreciate how good a player he is b/c his stats aren't all that incredible. He was every bit as important as Dirk for that team last season; he was basically all 3 current Dallas centers in one player: Haywood's ability to hold position in the low post, Mahinmi's ability to slide his feet across the lane and protect the rim and Wright's ability to catch and finish on offense while also knocking down his free-throws.
Everyone else the Mavericks lost was fairly replaceable, but without Chandler's two-way play at the center position, this team isn't going to be winning a title. A good example was the Dallas/Portland game on Saturday: the Trail Blazers went small in both OT's, putting Aldridge at the 5 and sticking him on Dirk and having Wallace play the 4. Last year, when they did that, Chandler absolutely destroyed them on the offensive glass in Game 5, getting 13 offensive rebounds and pretty much ending the series after Brandon Roy's Game 4. None of Dallas' centers are doing that this year.
SP: The acquisition of Lamar Odom was supposed to be a big part of shoring up the bench after the departure of Chandler and others. Unfortunately, he's having the worst year of his career, currently shooting 36%. Lamar is a former Clipper, and we know he is one of the more emotional players in the league, and something is not right with the guy right now. Play pop psychologist for a moment -- what's going on in Lamar Odom's head?
JT: The biggest adjustment for Odom has been his role: in LA, he played the 4 with either Gasol or Bynum at the 5 and took bigger players off the dribble from the high post. Dirk is obviously eating up most of the minutes at 4 in Dallas, and neither player has the athleticism to play good interior defense at the 5, which forces Odom to the 3.
It's taken him awhile to adjust to playing as a 3, where his advantage isn't in quickness, it's in height. Also, playing two old guys at the 3/4 positions means you need an athletic center like Mahinmi or Wright at the 5 not another 30+ player like Haywood. Odom has started to make the adjustment in his game and post up smaller 3's while letting Dirk step out to the 3-point line and spot up. The trio of Mahinmi or Wright/Dirk/Odom has become one of the best Mavericks line-ups and it can be absolutely deadly by the end of the year.
Long story short, I think most of the things that are happening on the court can be explained in X's and O's and not so much pop psychology.
SP: The Mavericks have seven key contributors (and Brian Cardinal) over the age of 30. In the compressed schedule of the 66 game schedule, how big a factor is age going to be for this team in the second half of the season?
JT: Huge, that's why Dallas needs its younger players on the perimeter (Delonte West and Rodrigue Beaubois) and on the interior (Brandan Wright and Ian Mahinmi) to play well. You never really know what you're going to get from that many guys in their 30's in such an absurd season and you've got to make sure they're getting adequate rest. Carlisle's given every guy on the roster significant minutes at some point this year and he definitely has not settled on a crunch-time line-up yet.
SP: Somewhat related to the last question, it's an open secret that the Mavs plan to clear the decks and make a run at free agents Dwight Howard and Deron Williams this summer. If they amnesty Brendan Haywood and find a taker for Shawn Marion, they could conceivably have enough cap space to sign both of them, but it would mean losing everyone on the current roster save Dirk, Roddy Beaubois and Dominique Jones. This type of high wire act has never really been done before -- trying to repeat as champions while simultaneously starting over. Can this actually work? Back to team chemistry for a moment, this can't be good for it, right?
JT: I'm not the biggest Jason Kidd fan in the world, but one thing I do have to give him credit for is establishing a very professional tone in the locker room. He's the emotional leader of the team, and when you have two first ballot Hall of Famers in Kidd and Dirk buying into Carlisle's system 100%, as well as vets with a lot of skins on the wall in Terry and Marion, everyone else is going to have to fall in line.
Dallas is a team full of 30-something veterans who really know the game and aren't concerned with individual stats at all. So guys like DeShawn Stevenson last year and Vince Carter and Delonte West this year understand they have to play their position. They know this is not the place where fits are going to be tolerated. As a fan, it's definitely nice not to have to worry about the team's professionalism and the difference is noticeable when teams like Sacramento come into town.
As for the future, if Dallas can get Deron Williams and Dwight Howard, you do it and worry about team chemistry later. The Clippers are a perfect example of this -- how many rotation players do y'all still have from beginning of last year -- just Blake, Foye and Jordan? These are professional basketball players; if their games complement each other, they'll figure out how to get along with each other.
0 recs | 17 comments
lets trade cook+foye for marion
clips03bg - February 12, 2012 via Android app
any day
kikyexcel - February 12, 2012
Better yet, GRANDFATHER GOMES & trade Bledsoe /Thompkins to Portland for Bantum,
Nothing personal. I like Gomes as person but he simply does not belong on this team… Also, since every team needs a mascot, we can keep Cook for the rest of the year, Most importantly, keeping Foye gives us that veteran 3rd guard that we’ll need during the conference finals.
Gmann - February 12, 2012
why would portland take gomes if they waived him two years ago?
T_Silk - February 12, 2012
I think he means
Trade Thompkins and Bledsoe for Batum and amnesty Gomes in the off-season. I’d do that in a heart beat but the only reason the Blazers would do this is because they don’t aren’t willing to resign Batum in the off-season.
ClipperChuck - February 13, 2012
ahhh i did not catch that.
I would love this. I actually suggested something like foye and bledsoe for batum right after Chaunceys injury but it was ruled unlikely very quickly. I dont know though, sounds like Batum was quite irked when he didnt get an extension.T_Silk - February 13, 2012
He's a RFA
so they can match any offer for him (like the Clips and DJ). He probably asked for 10mil+ a year but the Blazers probably feel no team can/will offer him that much.
Still if he played on a team that didn’t have Gerald Wallace ahead of him he’ll put up very good numbers.
He’s pretty much Danilo Gallinari but plays fewer minutes.
Batum vs. Gallinari
ClipperChuck - February 13, 2012
Tjarks sounds pretty smart
But how does he pronounce his name?
pipedreams - February 12, 2012
Same way it's spelled
duh.
Steve Perrin - February 12, 2012
lol
kikyexcel - February 12, 2012
Good question with Odom, Steve.
Most of us aren’t a fan of Odom’s behavior, usually from the old Clipper days.
It’s too bad Djark didn’t talk about what’s in Odom’s head (even though it’s really hard to assess what’s going on in people’s head mentally.) I thought that what affected Odom’s game was more mental than X’s and O’s. It’s a good outlook from Djark, but I still think having his run in with the Laker’s organization has affected his game (one reason for him thinking of an early retirement for a year.) Going off topic really quick, one has to think what is going on inside Odom’s head in general.. Why would he want to retire for a year just because he got traded and doesn’t he think that would wipe out alot of his value? He may be tall and “atheletic”, but he’s aging fast and he can’t let his emotions overcloud his judgement.
I mean, being emotional is one of the reasons he was sent for practically nothing..
JackduhSun - February 12, 2012
yeah...
The Xs and Os answer may be part of it…. but we’re 25 games in. Besides, you don’t completely lose your ability to hit shots because you’re in a different situation. There’s something else happening with Lamar, for sure.
Steve Perrin - February 12, 2012
I don't buy it.
If Odom was able to play the 3, he would’ve done it for the Lakers. He hasn’t been able to play SF since his days w/ LAC (questionable even then). He’s thrived everywhere as a 4. I love watching him struggle.
Gordon for President - February 13, 2012
I agree
I thought we’d see him play center like he did for team USA on occasion, especially since he was the only other big man to join the Mavs once they lost chandler. I think there’s so few offensive centers in the league you could probably get away with odom at center for stretches. Always thought odom was infinitely more impressive when he’d drive to the basket rather than standing back shooting 3’s like he got in a habit of doing with the clips.
osamu - February 13, 2012 via iPhone app
that reminds me of a though I had
considering the average big man in the league is become smaller Blake should virtually unstoppable in the future. The day of the near 7’ foot PF that can bother Blake with his length is setting (Duncan,Pau, Zbo,Brand,…).
BelgianClipper - February 13, 2012
near 7" foot , Elton Brand?
KidJustin - February 13, 2012
ZBo?
Steve Perrin - February 13, 2012
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