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Sources: Kidd, Mavs agree; Harrison to be GM

The Dallas Mavericks have agreed to terms with Hall of Fame point guard Jason Kidd to be their head coach and longtime Nike executive Nico Harrison to be their general manager and run the franchise’s basketball operations, sources told ESPN’s Tim MacMahon on Friday.

Kidd, who had two stints with the Mavericks during his playing career and starred on the 2010-11 championship team, has had the support of Mavericks legend Dirk Nowitzki and others who have been advising team owner Mark Cuban. Nowitzki recently returned to the franchise as a special adviser to assist Cuban in the searches for a new lead basketball executive and coach in the wake of the departures of Donnie Nelson and Rick Carlisle.

Sources told ESPN’s Tim MacMahon and Adrian Wojnarowski on Thursday that Kidd had begun the early stages of assembling a coaching staff.

Harrison, who has been pursued by other teams for front-office roles, has well-established connections with players throughout the NBA stemming from his two decades with Nike. He has a strong relationship with Luka Doncic, having played an instrumental role in the Mavericks star shifting from Nike to the Jordan Brand in the fall of 2019.

Mavericks vice president of basketball operations Michael Finley is expected to remain with the franchise and work alongside Harrison, sources told MacMahon.

Carlisle, who resigned after a 13-season tenure as Mavericks coach before taking the Indiana Pacers job Thursday, offered an unsolicited endorsement of Kidd as his replacement.

“My hope is that Jason Kidd will be the next coach of the Mavs because he and Luka have so many things in common as players,” Carlisle told ESPN. “I just think that it would be a great situation for Luka, and I think it would be an amazing situation for Jason. I’m the only person on the planet that’s coached both of those guys and that knows about all of their special qualities as basketball players. To me, that just would be a great marriage, but that’s just an opinion.”

Kidd has a career record of 183-190 as a head coach. He coached the Brooklyn Nets in 2013-14 and the Milwaukee Bucks from 2014 to 2018. Kidd, who has spent the past two seasons as an assistant coach with the Los Angeles Lakers, has a 9-15 career playoff record, advancing to the second round in his lone season with the Nets.

The 48-year-old Kidd, a 10-time All-Star who won five assists titles, was drafted by the Mavericks with the No. 2 overall pick in 1994. He was traded to the Phoenix Suns in December 1996 and returned to Dallas in February 2008 after stints with the Suns and then-New Jersey Nets.

Kidd spent five seasons with the Mavericks during his second stint in Dallas, forging strong relationships with Cuban and several others who remain in the Dallas front office and support staff.

Kidd’s departure from Dallas in the 2012 offseason was acrimonious with Cuban — Kidd changed his mind after agreeing to re-sign with the Mavericks and instead joined the New York Knicks in free agency — but they long ago smoothed out any hard feelings stemming from that exit.

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