December 22, 2024
The Mavericks unveiled a statue on Christmas Day honoring Dirk Nowitzki, the franchise's all-time leader in scoring and games played who...

DALLAS — On the night of Dirk Nowitzki’s final home game in 2019, Dallas Mavericks governor Mark Cuban promised to have the “biggest, most badass statue ever” erected in front of the American Airlines Center to honor the legend.

“It’s a promise that gives me joy to deliver on, because you earned it,” Cuban told Nowitzki on Christmas morning, minutes before the nearly 24-foot-high statue was unveiled steps from the street renamed a few years ago as Nowitzki Way.

The white bronze statue is a sculpture of Nowitzki’s iconic one-legged fadeaway jumper, the same shot that is featured as silhouettes near the left block on both ends of the American Airlines Center court. The shot became known as “The Dirk” while Nowitzki climbed to the sixth spot on the NBA’s all-time scoring list, and it has become part of the repertoire of several current players, including the two stars who faced each other on that same floor Sunday afternoon, the Los Angeles Lakers’ LeBron James and the Mavericks’ Luka Doncic.

“It had to be a fadeaway one-legger,” James said of Nowitzki’s statue after the Mavericks’ 124-115 win over the Lakers. “It had to be. No question about it. Dirk is a legend. He’s an icon. I think he’s the greatest international player ever. I put him right there with Manu [Ginobili]. But what he brought here, what he brought to this city … that boy was cold, man. Dirk was cold.”

Doncic and several other Mavericks attended the ceremony, as did Dallas coach Jason Kidd, a former teammate of Nowitzki’s.

“One more stop: the Hall of Fame,” Kidd said, referring to Nowitzki’s certain inclusion in the next Basketball Hall of Fame class as a first-ballot selection.

Artist Omri Amrany created the statue, one of several he has made to honor NBA legends, including Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Wilt Chamberlain, Jerry West, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Shaquille O’Neal. The statue is rich with details, using the shoes and uniform that Nowitzki wore while leading the Mavericks to the 2010-11 NBA championship, the franchise’s lone title.

At the base of the statue, it reads: “Loyalty never fades away,” a tribute to Nowitzki spending his entire career in Dallas, setting an NBA record by playing 21 seasons for one franchise.

“I just kind of sat down, like, ‘What do people associate you with in Dallas?'” Nowitzki said. “It was these two things. It was the fadeaway and the loyalty. We kind of combined that. It was just a fun fact that it was 21 letters for the 21 years.”

ESPN’s Dave McMenamin contributed to this report

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