The Los Angeles Lakersâ 140â126 win over the Utah Jazz on Tuesday night didnât just push them to 11â4âit widened the gap between two franchises forever linked by the blockbuster deal that sent Luka DonÄiÄ to Los Angeles and brought Anthony Davis to the Dallas Mavericks. A new viral statistic made that divide impossible to ignore.
A graphic posted by ClutchPoints on X formerly known as Twitter revealed that Deandre Aytonâwho joined the Lakers as a buyout signingâhas logged more total minutes this season than Davis, the supposed centerpiece of Dallasâ post-DonÄiÄ era. Through 14 games, Ayton has played 425 minutes. Davis? Just 415 minutes across 14 appearances since the February trade.
Aytonâs Durability Highlights Dallasâ Problem
Ayton has quietly become one of Los Angelesâ most reliable pieces. The 27-year-old is averaging 16.5 points and 8.8 rebounds while shooting a career-best 69.9% from the field in 30.4 minutes per game. His latest performanceâ20 points, 14 rebounds, and 10-for-13 shooting against Utahâreinforced how seamlessly he has meshed with DonÄiÄâs playmaking.
Availability has been Aytonâs biggest advantage over Davis and the foundation of the comparison that has dominated NBA discussion. For the Lakers, Ayton has been stable, productive, and present.
For the Mavericks, Davis has been the opposite.
Davisâ Tenure Clouded by Injuries and Internal Turbulence
The 32-year-old has appeared in only five games this season and hasnât played since Oct. 29, when a calf strain forced him out of Dallasâ win over the Indiana Pacers after just seven minutes. He averaged 20.8 points and 10.2 rebounds in those contests, but production has taken a backseat to his availability issues.
Dallasâ season has unraveled during his absence. After Wednesday nightâs heartbreaking loss to former Mavericks guard Jalen Brunson and the New York Knicks, the team dropped to 4â12, sinking further in a crowded Western Conference.
Internally, the franchise has been just as chaotic. Last week, team governor Patrick Dumont fired general manager Nico Harrison, sparking widespread speculation that the organization could explore moving Davis before the deadline.
But on Wednesday, minority owner Mark Cuban attempted to slam the door shut on that idea.
âWe wonât. We want to try to win,â Cuban told The Athletic when asked whether Dallas planned to trade Davis.
Cuban added that while he now serves as âan adviserâ to Dumont, the Sands Corporation executive âmakes all the final decisions.â A Mavericks team source echoed that structure, confirming Dumont holds ultimate authority as the team navigates a shaky start and a roster stuck between contention and retooling.
Still, the disconnect is hard to ignore. Davis hasnât been available. Dallas keeps losing. And the trade chatter has already taken root because the on-court trajectory hasnât matched the front officeâs public optimism.
Luka Soars in LA While Dallas Searches for Answers
Meanwhile, DonÄiÄ has turned the Lakers into a legitimate threat again. Heâs averaging 34.6 points, 9.0 assists, 8.5 rebounds, and 1.9 steals per game, anchoring Los Angeles to the No. 4 seed and drawing early MVP consideration. His pairing with Ayton has looked effortless, productive, and sustainableâeverything Dallas hoped for when it bet its future on Davis.
Thatâs why the AytonâDavis comparison isnât just a viral stat. Itâs a reminder of the widening gap between what the Mavericks imagined and what has actually unfolded. Los Angeles made a gamble thatâs paying off nightly. Dallas made a gamble that hasnât taken the floor in weeks.
And until Davis returnsâand producesâthe harsh reality wonât change.
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