Dallas Mavericks guard Kyrie Irving. Petre Thomas-USA TODAY Sports

Are Mavericks doomed to repeat history with Kyrie Irving?

The Mavericks went all-in on the Kyrie Irving-Luka Doncic duo. But they may have repeated an error from four years ago.

Since the deadline deal that sent Irving to Dallas, the Mavericks are 7-9. They're just 3-6 in the games where Doncic and Irving have taken the court together. With 10 games remaining, Dallas is in seventh place, but one game away from falling out of the play-in entirely.

Part of the reason Dallas dealt two players and three picks for Irving was to ease the disproportionate scoring load that fell on Doncic's shoulders. The Mavs thought they could maximize their young star by pouncing when a controversial All-Star became available. Now, he's having trouble staying on the court.

That was also the idea behind trading for Kristaps Porzingis in 2019. The Mavericks traded two first-round picks, plus 2017 lottery pick Dennis Smith Jr. to New York for the All-Star big man, even though he was out for the rest of the season.

Porzingis being out became a theme. Ultimately, he and Doncic only shared the court for 110 games in three years, before Dallas traded him to Washington last year. They were better with KP, going 67-43 when he played and 51-42 when he sat, but that's simply a lot of missed games for a player with a max contract.

But a max contract is also what it will likely take to bring back Irving, who has all the ability in the world, except availability. Since signing a four-year deal in 2019, Irving has played in 156 of a possible 298 games (52.3 percent). That's very close to Porzingis, who played 54.2 percent of his Dallas games.

The Mavericks need to make a difficult decision on Irving's free agency this summer without much of a chance to see how he and Doncic look together. They've each had high-scoring nights, but often the highlights are of the two stars taking turns with moments of individual brilliance, not working together.

Plus, the bill for these trades eventually comes due. The Knicks got a young, cheap starting guard in Quentin Grimes with one of the Porzingis picks. If the Mavs miss the playoffs, they'll get a lottery pick this year. (It's top-10-protected.)

So far, Irving has been a model citizen in Dallas. Maxi Kleber said, "He's a very, very great teammate," while Marc Stein reported that Irving had "won admirers in the locker room." Perhaps this gambit will work out. But Dallas should be worried about Irving in the training room, not just the locker room.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Steelers agree to deal with veteran CB
Bruins captain out for Game 4 vs. Panthers
Veteran WR announces retirement from NFL
Mavericks come from behind to down Thunder, take 2-1 series lead
Stars continue road dominance with Game 3 win over Avalanche
Watch: Paul Skenes wastes no time showing why Pirates drafted him No. 1 overall
Watch: Braves were one out away from first no-hitter in 30 years
Roman Wilson hopes to become Steelers' next 'great' WR
Chargers sign veteran edge-rusher
Justin Allgaier dominates at Darlington for first win of 2024
'Great mind': One-time NBA champion endorses candidate for Lakers HC job
Celtics respond with impressive road win vs. Cavaliers in Game 3
Hurricanes' power play finally comes through with season on the line
Watch: An outstanding first half by Donovan Mitchell keeps the Cavaliers alive in Game 3 vs. Celtics
Tigers lose veteran starting pitcher to injury
Watch: Minor league baseball game interrupted by turtle delay
Paul Skenes experiences the Pirates' incompetence in just one game
Rangers ace continues to be plagued by nerve irritation in thumb
Cowboys hint at timeline for extension talks with offensive star
Steelers first-round pick has already 'apologized' to new locker mate

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.