Dallas Mavericks WiretapMavs Give Up On Abdul-WahadOne of the strangest careers in Mavericks history came to a close Friday when Tariq Abdul-Wahad was waived amid jokes that most people thought it had happened two years ago. The Frenchman had not seen action since the 2003 playoffs, when he rarely played and was kept on the playoff roster instead of a point guard named Avery Johnson. That was Abdul-Wahad's biggest contribution in four seasons with the Mavericks. The 6-6 swingman played 18 regular-season games and eight in the playoffs, but spent far more time being a headache to the organization. "The point guard was mad then," Johnson said Friday of being left off the playoff roster in '03. "But now, what a blessing for Nellie [former coach Don Nelson] to put me on the staff. It lit more of a match in me to coach." Owner Mark Cuban said the relationship with Abdul-Wahad "wasn't pleasant" for the Mavericks. That's an understatement. The team claimed Abdul-Wahad could not play because of a knee injury. Abdul-Wahad thought he was healthy enough. The argument was never settled and Abdul-Wahad spent much of the last two seasons in France. "He wasn't a key factor at any point," assistant coach Del Harris said. "That knee is a tough injury. We never felt he got to a position where he could play. He expressed a will to play. But that same injury has been so difficult on [Jamal] Mashburn and [Penny] Hardaway. It's just a tough injury. We never felt like he could play with that." Abdul-Wahad refused to work with the Mavericks for a buyout of his remaining contract. As such, he will be paid the guaranteed portion for the next two seasons, $3.656 million this season and $1.968 million in 2006-07. Only half his contract was guaranteed this season with one-fourth guaranteed next season. Read the Full Story Discuss Send Feedback Buy Tickets Mavs Set To Waive Abdul-WahadSeeing that it happened to him twice, coach Avery Johnson said one of the toughest parts of his job is waiving players. "That's one of the things I struggle with," said Johnson, and he'll have to do it two more times before the Oct. 31 deadline. The Mavs have to cut their roster from 17 to 15 by then. Tariq Abdul-Wahad will be waived, and free agent Kaniel Dickens probably would be as well. Johnson said he likes to talk to the player being waived beforehand and let him know the Mavs are there to help. "You don't want to just let a guy go and leave him out there," Johnson said. "We're here to service the player. If we cut a guy, it's not like he can't call us and ask us to send film of some preseason game he played in. Whatever we can do to help." Read the Full Story Discuss Send Feedback Buy Tickets Mavs' Daniels May Be Marquee Player
This is, after all, a player whose next triple-double will be his first. But considering the way the third-year guard is sizzling through the preseason, Johnson's optimism about Daniels is understandable. The 6-6 Daniels is healthy, happy and reminding the Mavericks of what they missed last season when he fought injuries. "Marquis is part of that second unit that comes in with energy and makes things happen," Jason Terry said. "If he got enough minutes, he's definitely the type of player who could give you those kind of [triple-double] numbers." In four preseason games, Daniels has led the Mavericks in scoring once, rebounding once, steals three times and assists once. That diversity is what has the Mavericks so excited. "What really amazes me is that he doesn't even look like he's moving very fast," Dirk Nowitzki said. "But he's able to get to the basket and finish. He's a pleasure to have out there." Read the Full Story Discuss Send Feedback Buy Tickets Mavericks Oct 2005 Archive
|