DALLAS, TX — In a move that defies logic, math, and several NBA bylaws, the Dallas Mavericks have somehow secured the number one overall pick in the upcoming NBA Draft, just months after trading generational superstar Luka Dončić to the Los Angeles Lakers for what sources are calling “a half-eaten churro and a second-round pick in 2041.”
The basketball world is stunned, confused, and a little concerned after reports surfaced that Mavericks GM Nico Harrison may have “engaged in a variety of deeply sexual and morally questionable acts” to make the pick materialize, including, but not limited to, “an interpretive lap dance for Adam Silver while reciting the NBA Constitution backward in Latin.”
Multiple anonymous league sources confirm that Harrison’s actions involved a mysterious briefcase labeled “Pick Enhancer” and a flight to a private island known only to those who have both a trust fund and a burner phone.
Adding to the confusion, former Mavericks owner Mark Cuban — now a minority stakeholder and part-time Shark Tank escapee — reportedly “pulled several strings,” including making a deal with the Illuminati, promising Elon Musk naming rights to the American Airlines Center, and allegedly hypnotizing a league accountant using only his eyebrows and the phrase “blockchain synergy.”
With the #1 pick secured under circumstances that can best be described as morally bankrupt and legally murky, Dallas will select Duke’s prodigious forward Cooper Flagg, a 6’9” athletic anomaly who dunks like a caffeinated kangaroo and stares into cameras like he’s communicating with ancient Nordic gods.
“We are gonna get our guy and this is gonna be a new era,” said Harrison, while being forcibly escorted away from the podium by league investigators. “Cooper Flagg will be the future of Dallas basketball — pale, powerful, and possibly part cyborg.”
Flagg’s inevitable arrival marks a bold, confusing chapter for the Mavericks, who now hope to build around a teenage mutant basketball prodigy instead of the former Slovenian MVP who will be moonwalking to titles in L.A. alongside LeBron James’s hologram.
As for the rest of the league? Executives are watching closely, nervously clutching their dignity and Googling “how to ethically influence draft lottery results.”
The NBA has yet to comment officially, but insiders say a new rule — the “Dončić Displacement Act” — may be introduced next season to prevent “franchise-altering voodoo” from determining the fate of teenage millionaires.