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Home»Basketball»Stats Rundown: 5 numbers to know from the Mavericks’ 124-104 loss at the Los Angeles Lakers
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Stats Rundown: 5 numbers to know from the Mavericks’ 124-104 loss at the Los Angeles Lakers

News RoomBy News RoomFebruary 13, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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Stats Rundown: 5 numbers to know from the Mavericks’ 124-104 loss at the Los Angeles Lakers

At the intersection of futility and ethical tanking, there you’ll find the 2025-26 Dallas Mavericks (19-35).

The Mavericks dropped their ninth straight loss on Thursday, this time to the Los Angeles Lakers (33-21) at Crypto.com Arena, 124-104. Dallas’ nine-game losing streak is now the franchise’s longest since the Mavs dropped 14 straight in the 1998-99 season. With the All-Star Break immediately following Thursday night’s game, the Mavericks have a real chance to lose every game for a full calendar month, as their schedule resumes on Feb. 20 at the Minnesota Timberwolves. Dallas last won a game on Jan. 22 in a 123-115 decision over the Golden State Warriors within the friendly confines of American Airlines Center.

Naji Marshall (foot) and Daniel Gafford (ankle) went down late in Thursday’s game and did not return, starting their All-Star Break a little early. Marshall and Max Christie led the Mavericks with 19 points apiece in the loss.

12-2: Dueling runs to open the game

The Lakers embarked on an early 12-2 run after P.J. Washington hit a floater in the lane to tie the game at 2-2. LeBron James scored eight of the Lakers’ 12 points during the run, including a 29-foot 3-pointer from the left wing that forced the Mavericks into their first timeout of the game, trailing 14-4 just 3:10 into the game.

Dallas responded with a 12-2 run of its own after the early timeout. After turning the ball over twice to fuel the Lakers’ run, Naji Marshall stopped the bleeding with a reverse layup through the teeth of the LA defense to make it 14-6. Two minutes later, he stole the ball from Jake LaRavia and found new teammate Khris Middleton trailing the break, wide open at the top of the key for a 3-pointer to tie the game at 16-16 with 6:50 left in the first.

The Mavs and the Lakers played a fast-paced last half of the first quarter despite both teams employing a zone defense in the halfcourt and without the best players on each roster on the floor. Los Angeles took a 36-31 lead after one, behind 14 points and six assists from James.

11-0, then 12-0: Dueling second-quarter runs

The Lakers were clinging to a one-point lead midway through the second when LaRavia and Marcus Smart sparked an 11-0 LA run, extending the lead to 55-43 with 5:15 remaining before the break. James found Smart for a cutting layup, resulting in James’ eighth assist of the game to start the run. LaRavia scored the next five before Smart dished a couple of assists of his own to keep the run going. Despite his effectiveness during the second-quarter run, Smart started the game shooting just 3-of-12 from the field and 0-of-7 from 3-point range.

LaRavia scored seven points on 3-of-4 shooting in the second after drawing the start in Luka Dončić’s absence (hamstring) and going scoreless in the first quarter.

Then, right on queue once more, the scrappy, short-handed Mavs responded with a 12-0 run to end the first half. Marshall was the architect once more. He scored seven points during the run and assisted on two more buckets to bring Dallas to within 64-63 at the break.

Marshall led the Mavs with 16 points, four dimes and two steals at halftime, while James turned back the hands of time on the other end of the floor to lead the Lakers with 18 points and eight assists in the first half. After turning the ball over five times in the first quarter, the Mavericks gave it away just twice in the second to help them claw their way back in it.

The Lakers’ scoreless stretch lasted 4:16 of game time, from the end of the second quarter through the first minute and change of the third.

19: Mavericks’ third-quarter points

Dallas couldn’t find a bucket after briefly taking the lead early in the third quarter, though. The Mavs shot just 5-of-13 from the field in the last 8:40 of the third and got trucked, 26-11, the rest of the way. The Lakers took a 96-82 lead into the fourth quarter, as the unsung four-headed monster of Luke Kennard, Jarred Vanderbilt, Maxi Kleber and Jaxson Hayes combined for 21 of LA’s 32 points in the third.

After scrapping hard to keep up with the short-handed Lakers, the Mavericks were all out of juice in the third. They once again turned the ball over five times in the frame.

55.8%: Lakers’ shooting from the field

The Mavericks just couldn’t get stops against a Lakers’ squad missing its most talented scorer. That was the bottom line on Thursday. The Mavs are driving the most ethical tank in the NBA right now. Even if they wanted to win, they just can’t. They are unable to field a winning basketball team. You almost know the result before the game tips off.

The Lakers shot 13-of-21 (61.3%) from the field in the fourth quarter to coast to the easy win and usher in the All-Star Break.

28/12/10: LeBron James’ first triple-double of 2025-26

James may have scored just 12 points in the final three quarters, but his 28 points, 12 assists and 10 boards gave him his first triple-double of the 2025-26 season, his 23rd in the NBA. Just remarkable. It was his 123rd career triple-double and the third of his career against the Mavericks. He stayed in the game a little longer than he otherwise might have and grabbed his 10th rebound of the game with 1:26 to play.

“It’s pretty cool to be able to still play at this level,” James said in his televised postgame interview.

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