
Dallas Mavericks make history as white American is selected at No 1 in the NBA Draft for first time since 1977
In a move that comes as little surprise, Duke University freshman forward Cooper Flagg has been selected first overall in the 2025 NBA Draft by the Dallas Mavericks.
The Mavericks won the lottery for the draft months ago, giving them the rights to select a generational talent in Flagg - making him the first white American to be taken first-overall in 48 years.
It's hardly shocking that the Mavericks made this move. Flagg had been pegged as the top pick in this year's draft class ever since he re-classified to the Class of 2025 to join Duke a year early.
Now, months after engineering one of the most earth-shattering trades in NBA history, Mavericks GM Nico Harrison didn't surprise anyone and went with the easy choice in Flagg. However, many NBA fans took issue with Dallas winning the lottery after owning such low odds - with one fan heard screaming 'Dallas was rigged!' on the ESPN broadcast.
Flagg, a native of Newport, Maine, is the clearest-cut first-overall pick since Victor Wembanyama and the most obvious American first-overall pick since fellow Duke star Zion Williamson in 2019.
In college, Flagg was named National Player of the Year, was a consensus first-team All-American, and led the Blue Devils to the Final Four.
Yelling 'Dallas was rigged' at Adam Silver means he'll make sure it's never rigged for Dallas again pic.twitter.com/UYpU9rnSzP
— Big Cat (@BarstoolBigCat) June 26, 2025
Unfortunately for Flagg, he missed Duke's final shot of the game to blow a massive lead to Houston and failed to advance to the national title game.
Months after that loss, the Mavericks won the lottery under dubious circumstances - with many conspiracy theories popping up after Dallas was victorious despite a 1.8 percent chance of taking the top pick.
His arrival gives new hope to a Mavericks team and fanbase still reeling from the Luka Doncic trade back in February.
Losing Doncic led to the Mavs missing out of the playoffs and many Dallas fans calling for Harrison to be fired.
Now, Flagg will form an elite trio with Kyrie Irving and Anthony Davis.
However, Irving's long-term future with the team remains up in the air as he's in talks with the team on a contract extension.
Prior to the draft beginning, Flagg and other top prospects in the NBA Draft took to the red carpet - showing off their style on one of the league's biggest nights of the year.
Flagg arrived in a dark navy suit paired with a white shirt, black tie, and an expensive looking watch.
2025 NBA Draft First-Round Selections
1. Dallas Mavericks: Cooper Flagg, F, Duke
2. San Antonio Spurs: Dylan Harper, G, Rutgers
3. Philadelphia 76ers: VJ Edgecombe, G, Baylor
4. Charlotte Hornets: Kon Knueppel, G, Duke
5. Utah Jazz: Ace Bailey, G/F, Rutgers
6. Washington Wizards: Tre Johnson, G, Texas
7. New Orleans Pelicans: Jeremiah Fears, G, Oklahoma
8. Brooklyn Nets: Egor Demin, G, BYU
9. Toronto Raptors: Collin Murray-Boyles, F, South Carolina
10. Phoenix Suns (via HOU): Khaman Maluach, C, Duke
11. Portland Trail Blazers: Cedric Coward, G/F, Washington State (proposed trade to MEM)
12. Chicago Bulls: Noa Essengue, F, France
13. Atlanta Hawks: Derik Queen, C, Maryland (proposed trade to NO)
14. San Antonio Spurs: Carter Bryant, G/F, Arizona
15. Oklahoma City Thunder (via MIA): Thomas Sorber, C, Georgetown
16. Memphis Grizzlies: Yang Hansen, C, China (proposed trade to POR)
17. Minnesota Timberwolves: Joan Beringer, C, France
18. Washington Wizards: Walter Clayton Jr, G, Florida (proposed trade to UTA)
19. Brooklyn Nets: Nolan Traore, G, France
20. Miami Heat: Kasparas Jakucionis, G, Illinois
21. Utah Jazz: Will Riley, G/F, Illinois (proposed trade to WSH)
22. Atlanta Hawks: Drake Powell, G/F, North Carolina
23. New Orleans Pelicans: Asa Newell, F, Georgia (proposed trade to ATL)
24. Oklahoma City Thunder: Nique Clifford, F, Colorado State (proposed trade to SAC)
25. Orlando Magic: Jase Richardson, G, Michigan State
26. Brooklyn Nets: Ben Saraf, G, Israel
27. Brooklyn Nets: Danny Wolf, C, Michigan
28. Boston Celtics: Hugo Gonzalez, G/F, Spain
29. Phoenix Suns: Liam McNeeley, G/F, UConn (proposed trade to CHA)
30. Los Angeles Clippers: Yanic Konan Niederhauser, C, Penn State
After taking interviews with reporters, he made his way inside the Barclays Center in Brooklyn to achieve his crowning moment in front of an international television audience.
NBA commissioner Adam Silver announced the official choice at 8:10pm ET, marking a new era in Mavericks basketball.
Flagg, alongside his parents, put a Dallas cap on and walked on stage to meet his moment in front of a packed arena and likely millions watching around the world.
Flagg's selection was obvious, but for months mock drafts projected a pair of Rutgers stars would follow behind him.
Guard Dylan Harper had long been believed to be the second-overall pick, with teammate forward Ace Bailey right behind him at third overall.
However, in the weeks leading up to the draft, questions surrounding Bailey began to pop up when he became the only American draft prospect to not take a meeting with any NBA teams.
He cancelled a workout with the Philadelphia 76ers, the team with the third overall pick, leading many to wonder if the swingman may fall down the draft board - potentially in a manner similar to that of Shedeur Sanders in the NFL Draft.
Harper, for what it's worth, did not have any surprises come his way - with the San Antonio Spurs selecting him second overall.
While Rutgers did not make the NCAA Tournament, Harper's on-court play was phenomenal as he averaged 19.4 points, 4.6 rebounds, and 4.0 assists per game.
An elite scorer ant two-way player, Harper showed bright spots throughout the season and was tabbed by many as the best guard in the draft class.
As time ticked on, the tension built around Bailey's selection. His camp tabbed him as top-three pick, but this was his last chance to match those expectations.
It never came. The 76ers, possibly put off by Bailey's bold choice, took the equally talented Baylor guard VJ Edgecombe with the third overall pick.
Edgecombe overcame injury early in his freshman season at Baylor to drop 15.0 points, 5.6 rebounds, 3.2 assists.
But that meant shock and for Bailey, who was likely to not be taken by the Charlotte Hornets, the team with pick No. 4.
With that pick, the Hornets took Flagg's Duke teammate Kon Knueppel - an elite and consistent shooting guard.
Bailey's fall proved to only be small, with the Utah Jazz eventually selecting him fifth overall. Despite his blasé attitude toward meeting with teams, Bailey's ability is clear - averaging 17.6 points and 7.2 rebounds per game.
Rounding out the top-10, the Washington Wizards took star Texas freshman guard Tre Johnson sixth overall. After him, the Pelicans drafted Jeremiah Fears from Oklahoma - adding a ninth guard to their roster.
The Brooklyn Nets had the first truly shocking pick of the night when they selected Egor Demin out of BYU. A Nets roster that already had solid starting guards in D'Angelo Russell and Cam Thomas decided to bulk their depth at that position rather than a position of need, like a big man.
The last pick in the top ten was the first center of the night: Khaman Maluach, a fourth Duke freshman. He was picked by the Houston Rockets, but will be going to Phoenix as part of the trade for Kevin Durant.
Throughout the evening, a number of trades were agreed upon which the NBA will later confirm after the draft ends.
The Portland Trail Blazers traded down to the 16th pick, giving the Memphis Grizzlies pick No. 11. At 11, Memphis took Washington State swingman Cedric Coward.
Portland then used that 16th pick to make the most surprising and controversial selection of the evening, when they took a project center in China's Yang Hansen - despite already having three centers on their roster, including the expiring contract of DeAndre Ayton and an All-Rookie Team selection in Donovan Clingan.
Two picks later, the New Orleans Pelicans decided to trade up to the 13th pick and sent the Atlanta Hawks pick No. 22. New Orleans drafted Maryland center Derik Queen 13th, while Atlanta took Asa Newell at No. 23.
Later in the night, the Washington Wizards moved down to pick No. 21 as the Utah Jazz jumped up to pick No. 18. The Jazz took Florida guard and Final Four Most Outstanding Player Walter Clayton Jr. Three selections later, the Wizards took Illinois swingman Will Riley.
Meanwhile, Asa Newell (L) and Liam McNeeley (R) were some surprise names to fall down
While Bailey's fall was a surprise, it wasn't as shocking as some other slides and selections.
For starters, the Brooklyn Nets entered Thursday night with a whopping four first-round picks. Many experts believed they would trade away at least one of them.
But instead, Brooklyn used all four. After picking Demin, they took French guard Nolan Traore at 19th overall, Israeli guard Ben Saraf at 26th, and Michigan big man Danny Wolf at 27.
As for the biggest slides of the night, most mock drafts projected that Georgia forward Asa Newell and UConn wing Liam McNeeley would be selected somewhere with in the first 20 picks.
Instead, Newell - mocked at No. 19 by ESPN - fell all the way down to No. 23 when he was picked by the New Orleans Pelicans (set to be traded to the Atlanta Hawks).
Then there's McNeeley, whose camp didn't expect him to fall below No. 21 according to CBS's Matt Norlander.
But McNeeley fell far - getting finally selected 29th overall by the Phoenix Suns, but will actually be going to the Charlotte Hornets.
For the first time in years, the first and second rounds of the draft were not completed in the same night. Round 2 of the draft begins at 8:00pm ET on Thursday.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
After early low attendance, Atlanta fans turn out at CWC
June 30 - ATLANTA -- At a FIFA Club World Cup match on June 19, Lionel Messi -- arguably the greatest player in the history of the sport -- scored a go-ahead free kick to give Inter Miami a 2-1 victory over FC Porto. While Messi delivering a winning goal is not surprising, what is unexpected is that the match at Mercedes-Benz Stadium drew only 31,783 fans, less than half of the venue's 71,000-seat capacity. Indeed, attendance started off slowly for the American debut of the Club World Cup in Atlanta, an issue not lost on Chelsea head coach Enzo Maresca. "I think the environment was a bit strange," Maresca said after his Premier League team's 2-0 victory over Los Angeles FC on June 16. "You know, the stadium was almost empty. Not full." Through four matches at Mercedes-Benz Stadium -- two remain before the tournament's semifinals and final are played in East Rutherford, N.J. -- Atlanta has seen an average turnout of 39,971 per game. The low mark came in the Chelsea victory, which drew only 22,137 spectators. "It was very surprising to see how many empty seats there were for that game," Chelsea supporter and Atlanta native Chris Barbieri said. "The fans that were there were into the game and made the most of the 3 p.m. Monday start, but it wasn't the environment I was expecting, at all." Atlanta, one of 11 American cities chosen last September to host the event, is hoping to present itself as a site worthy of next summer's World Cup, part of which will take place at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Attendance has improved in the latter days of the event, with Sunday's match in Atlanta between Paris Saint-Germain and Inter Miami -- a 4-0 win by PSG -- drawing 65,574 fans. The previous version of the Club World Cup, held in Saudi Arabia in 2023, was met with positive reviews, with 50,248 fans setting the tournament's opening-game attendance record for a Al Ittihad FC-Auckland City FC match. So, as critics question whether Atlanta and other sites will draw for the World Cup next year, FIFA maintains that everything is on track. "The appetite of the tournament speaks for itself," the organization said in a statement. "Fans from 168 countries have already purchased tickets ... a clear sign of global anticipation and reach." A possible explanation for the low attendance floated in a June 12 New York Times story is the increased presence of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) at the matches. In a since-deleted Facebook post by the CBP, the group stated officers would be "suited and booted ready to provide security for the first round of games." FIFA president Gianni Infantino dismissed the notion that the agents played a role in suppressing attendance numbers. "No, I don't have any concerns about anything in the sense that we are very attentive on any security question," Infantino said. "Of course the most important thing for us is to guarantee security for all the fans who come to the games -- this is our priority." --Jack Batten, Field Level Media


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Reports: Blazers C Deandre Ayton to be free agent after buyout
June 30 - The Portland Trail Blazers will buy out the final year of center Deandre Ayton's contract and make him a free agent, multiple media outlets reported on Sunday night. Ayton, 26, is owed $35 million for the coming season to complete a four-year, $132 million contract that he had signed while with the Phoenix Suns. Instead, he will hit free agency on Monday and be in much higher demand than in Portland, which picked centers Donovan Clingan (No. 7 in 2024) and Yang Hansen (No. 16 in 2025) in the first round of the two most recent drafts and also has veteran Robert Williams III. Ayton averaged 14.4 points, 10.2 rebounds, 1.6 assists and 1.0 blocks in 40 games (all starts) last season, his second with Portland that was shortened by a season-ending left calf injury. He is averaging for his career 16.4 points, 10.5 rebounds, 1.6 assists and 1.0 blocks in 398 regular-season games (391 starts) for the Phoenix Suns (2018-23) and Blazers. He was third in NBA Rookie of the Year voting in the 2018-19 season, when he made the All-Rookie first team. The Suns selected Ayton with the first overall pick of the 2018 NBA Draft out of the University of Arizona. Portland acquired him as part of a three-team trade with Milwaukee and Phoenix that sent All-Star guard Damian Lillard from the Trail Blazers to the Bucks on Sept. 27, 2023. ESPN first reported news of the buyout on Sunday night. --Field Level Media


The Guardian
2 hours ago
- The Guardian
Emma Hayes: ‘As for managing England one day, I'll never say never'
Hi Emma, you seem like you've taken to the US like a duck to water. But what food or drink from back home are you missing? Antony, Staffordshire I always miss a roast dinner, roast chicken. And the milk. The milk is different over there so when you have a cup of tea, it's just not the same because the milk is not the same. It alters the quality of the tea so, listen, that's tough for me. How's life in America been treating you? Is the infrastructure for women's football noticeably more developed there? And the million-dollar question: what happens when your new team face England in the World Cup final in 2027? Tom Stubbs, BrusselsFirst of all, I love being there. The cultural approach to the girls' and women's game is more ingrained in the US, because they've been doing it for longer in terms of providing opportunities. That's noticeable, and the US approach to women's sport stands out, not just soccer, but with basketball too. As for that hypothetical for 2027, well, you're saying we're in the World Cup final so I'm excited! If you give me that option today, I'll bite your hand off. I want to be in the World Cup final competing to win a World Cup so, whoever you're facing, it's going to be a top, top side, and I don't get emotional about it – it's England but I'm repping the USA so my focus is on the USA. What sets good coaches apart from great coaches? Amalia, Australia Number one: to be a great leader, I think you have to show great empathy and a great understanding, that helps you connect with people. Yes, natural emotional intelligence levels will help, but you have to develop the skills to be able to bring the best out of people. Number two: have clarity in your vision, so that everybody can align to that and they know what they're signing up to. And number three: don't be afraid to be vulnerable with them. You can't always be right, so remember that they're partners with you, you go along the journey of coaching teams where, even as the leader, the team's insights and their guidance should form a part of the narrative, because they play the game, they know it, and their experiences of it are equally as valid as your direction as the leader. What are you most looking forward to about the Women's Euros? Kevin, BirminghamThe closeness in games. I want to see more games being tougher to win, that's what I'm most looking forward to, because then coaching comes into it. You get to see more coaching when the matches are tighter. Who is the USWNT player who has most surprised you since you became manager of the national team? Kiaan, Manchester I couldn't name just one, oh my goodness, they all did. I went there not sure what to expect from their level and I was so pleasantly surprised on the whole. Yes, I think there's a gap in experience between the top group and this generation that I'm bringing through, but I'm just so pleasantly surprised, their attitude, their approach, their coachability, all of it. As someone who understands the global game and its power to unify, what do you think US Soccer should be doing to help rural communities, like ours in western Montana, grow the game where there are no lights, few coaches and limited infrastructure but a deep hunger to play? Nick Lawyer, MontanaIn the US, so much focus is about 'pay to play' and I hope that, with the Soccer Forward legacy programmes of 26 and 31 [the 2026 men's World Cup and the 2031 women's World Cup] that we're really started to develop more connections with communities that don't have the same access to the sport, so I hope the work that Soccer Forward are doing helps to address some of that. Do you feel the USWNT players who play in the NWSL are at a competitive disadvantage to those playing in Europe? Rob Coughlin, ChicagoI think both the NWSL and the European leagues are competitive, but they are different experiences. The Champions League offers something that the NWSL cannot, at this moment in time, but that is changing. The parity in the NWSL, week-in, week-out, and the competitiveness of the league, ensures there is always a top fixture every week, so it's the diversity piece that's different. In Europe you get the Champions League but the development of the Concacaf W Champions Cup – which Gotham FC recently won – will help to bridge that gap. In your vision to remake women's soccer in the US, what are the top-three actions you most want and hope to see from NWSL clubs? Luke, Portland The first will be to just keep adding to their own staff, so they're providing the players with all the professional services in and around them in a deeper way. The second is, keep attracting the best quality to the NWSL, because it helps our own players develop when they're playing in the best training environments with the best players. And expansion, because I think expansion is another step in the right direction, showing that the game is developing. What skills should young American players with national-team ambitions be practising in their back yards? Marissa, DenverHit the ball against the wall, practice one-v-ones, do rebound balls – you develop your own technical stuff by practising a lot of your tight-area skills and ball control. What can young players do to increase their tactical awareness and knowledge of the game, particularly if they harbour ambitions of being a coach themselves when they are older? Chris Wragg, BournemouthThere are a couple of things: watch football and try and watch it through the lens of a coach, not as a fan. Educate yourself, but outside of England – don't just go to your run-of-the-mill location, go to somewhere like Barcelona's innovation hub and see if you can do some positional play coach education courses, and go other countries where you can experience different coach education because that's just one example. Thanks for all the wonderful work you did at Chelsea. First, would you like to manage England one day? Second, have you dropped the F-bomb on US live TV yet and, if so, what was the reaction? Peter Collins, LondonFirst of all, I'm always sceptical that people can't use the F-bomb in the right context, but I'd say I think I've refrained from it for now – I've been working on that! As for managing England one day, I'll never say never. If the world's most expensive footballer cost around £200m – Neymar's fee when moving to Paris Saint-Germain – how much is the world's best football manager worth? Rick, LondonA manager, like a player in many regards, is someone 'on the team' but it is someone who is heading that up, and you can see with the fees for managers as they stand, when buying them out of contracts, the transfer fee isn't at that same amount as players but they certainly are expensive amounts. I don't think managers' fees will ever be that of a player, because of marketing reasons, which is also why players' transfer fees are that high. You can sell players' shirts but we don't sell managers' shirts so I don't think their fees will ever meet that same level. Do you think Chelsea paying record-transfer fees season after season is good for the Women's Super League? You were against WSL introducing fair-spending levels, was this because it would have stopped Chelsea efforts in winning the Champions League? Ted Harvey, Ipswich I know Naomi Girma is worth at least $1m, at least! She's the best. Sign up to Moving the Goalposts No topic is too small or too big for us to cover as we deliver a twice-weekly roundup of the wonderful world of women's football after newsletter promotion How bittersweet was it seeing Arsenal win the Champions League? Bitter because you probably would have preferred it to be Chelsea who won but also sweet because you were assistant coach to Vic Akers last time Arsenal won the trophy in 2007. Also, when you and Renée Slegers talked before the final, what advice did you give her? Ingrid, New ZealandIt was far from bittersweet. Arsenal were a massive part of my life since I was 10, I coached there for a long time, so I was delighted for them. I brought Renée to England as an academy player in 2006 so I've had a strong relationship with her and I'm so impressed with her. I think she's incredible, she did an amazing job, and yes we did speak in the week leading up to the game, but she doesn't need my help. She's got that under control and I'm very happy to see an English team win it. Your coaching career goes back to when there were a lot more independent clubs run without the backing of a pre-existing men's team. Now only two in the WSL and WSL2 run independently. Do you think this will ever change, or are the majority of successful women's team going to be operated by men's clubs? Liam, Newcastle-under-LymeI think we're potentially going to see more independent teams, yes, and that's a good thing. Both can exist, but having strong independent women's teams with strong ownership can only aid the development of the game. Thomas Tuchel resigns tomorrow – do you want the job? Do you even get the job? David, SurreyNo, I do not. I love my job. Do you envision it being possible for a female coach to manage in a top-five men's league or an international men's team in your lifetime? Bryan, PortlandYes, I do see that happening, but I always think these questions should be asked of owners, not of managers. What is the one common question/trope that you wish the media would stop asking in press conferences?' Ruth, Ontorio Any comparison to the men's game or 'when are you going to coach in the men's game', like it's the be-all and end-all. I love working in women's sports. When I get those two questions, I wish I could put a pin in the balloon in the room. I see that Finland recently called-up a 51-year-old. Do you need an 80-year-old? Ann Steiner, ArizonaWhenever you want a game, Ann, give us a shout! I'll put you on the bench.