

The Dallas Mavericks stunned the NBA world by winning the 2025 NBA Draft Lottery on Monday, earning the No. 1 pick in the draft and the right to presumably draft Duke star Cooper Flagg.
The Mavericks ranked 11th out of the 14 teams in the lottery and had just a 1.8 percent chance of landing the top selection. By comparison, the NBA’s three worst teams this past season — Charlotte, Utah and Washington — each had a 14 percent chance at the pick. As The Athletic’s Zach Harper wrote in his instant reaction to the news, “the lottery gods are shining on the Mavs.” (You can check out the odds for every pick here).
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The lottery has often been the subject of conspiracy theories, dating back to the first iteration in 1985, when the New York Knicks moved up from the No. 3 spot to land Georgetown star Patrick Ewing. The 2025 lottery won’t do anything to quiet folks who operate in that camp, though, for what it’s worth, the NBA did post the entire process on social media. You can watch it here if you have 13 minutes to spare.
Watch the 2025 #NBADraftLottery Presented By State Farm pic.twitter.com/bL6MMdnFSS
— NBA (@NBA) May 12, 2025
Regardless, the whole thing drew a host of comments from across the sports world, from writers to broadcasters to the players themselves.
Lakers star LeBron James, whose team landed Luka Dončić from Dallas in the much-criticized trade that sent Anthony Davis to the Mavs, had a simple tweet reaction to the whole thing:
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
— LeBron James (@KingJames) May 12, 2025
Many pondered whether the Mavs were rewarded by the league for sending their superstar to the big-market Lakers. LeBron himself has pointed out a similar scenario that played out when the Cavs landed the No. 1 pick after he left Cleveland for Miami in 2011.
Did the NBA reward the Mavs for sending Luka to the Lakers? I’m not saying it, but I’m not not saying it.
— Chris Vannini (@ChrisVannini) May 12, 2025
The #Mavs win the lottery, will pick No. 1 and can now draft Cooper Flagg.
Reverse karma? Irony? Not sure what’s happening.
— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) May 12, 2025
Former NFL quarterback Chase Daniel, who hails from Texas and who, apparently, is a Mavs fan, rejoiced:
This is an amazing sight to a #MFFL ….thought we were done for when we traded Luka.
NBA is rigged and I love it!! pic.twitter.com/t3lzPQWerY
— Chase Daniel (@ChaseDaniel) May 12, 2025
But in our NBA Draft Lottery live blog, The Athletic’s Mike Vorkunov shared a story from 2019 that poured water on the idea that the lottery is rigged.
“After nearly every lottery of import, some kind of conspiracy theory comes to the fore,” he wrote. “Well, if you’ve ever wondered if it’s possible to rig the lottery, I did the work for you. Here’s a 2019 story on whether it’s possible to rig the NBA lottery — or as an NBA person asked me when I got on the phone to talk about the story: ‘So you’re asking about committing a felony?’”
So maybe what it all comes down to is a little bit of luck. It is called a lottery after all.
(Photo of former Mavericks star Rolando Blackman: Nam Y. Huh / Associated Press)
This news was originally published on this post .
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