Cooper Flagg #32 of the Dallas Mavericks is defended by LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers during the second half at American Airlines Center on January 24, 2026 in Dallas, Texas.
Cooper Flagg #32 of the Dallas Mavericks is defended by LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers during the second half at American Airlines Center on January 24, 2026, in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images)
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‘They’re Very Similar’: Jason Kidd Breaks Down The LeBron James Parallels For Cooper Flagg

DHJ Quick Take: Cooper Flagg Draws LeBron James Comparison

  • The Comparison: Jason Kidd’s observation of Cooper Flagg and LeBron James centers on “The Process”—the high-usage developmental arc required to anchor a franchise. On Easter Sunday at the AAC, that comparison moves beyond abstraction.
  • The Context: With Luka Dončić (hamstring) and Austin Reaves sidelined for Los Angeles, and the Mavericks operating without Kyrie Irving and Dereck Lively II, the usual star infrastructure has vanished.
  • The Matchup: This leaves a 41-year-old James (20.6 PPG) and a 19-year-old Flagg—fresh off a 51-point statement against Orlando—to navigate a high-stakes tactical vacuum.
  • The Technical: For Dallas (24-53), the outcome is secondary to Flagg’s growth. His 20.8 PPG rookie campaign, defined by an elevated 34.2% usage rate, mirrors the early-career burden James famously carried in Cleveland.
  • The Outlook: For the Lakers (50-27), tonight is a test of sustaining a top-seed pace through veteran depth. Regardless of the lottery implications, this is the definitive individual matchup of the 2025-26 Mavericks season.

DALLAS — Three weeks ago, before the Dallas Mavericks faced the Cleveland Cavaliers, Jason Kidd was asked about the comparisons his rookie year has drawn to one of the greatest players in NBA history. Even though LeBron James has set an incredible standard, Kidd sees parallels with Cooper Flagg.

“There are a lot of comparisons, number-wise,” Kidd said on March 15. “I understand the attention. LeBron has done it at a high level for a long time. Cooper probably has the chance to do the same as we go forward. LeBron was one of those special people who, from day one with all the attention, delivered on and off the floor. He didn’t win a championship his first year, though. He had to go through the process. They’re very similar in that they’re extremely talented.”

On Easter Sunday at American Airlines Center, that comparison stops being abstract. Kidd was asked again about the comparisons in front of the Dallas media. Kidd emphasized the ability to handle lofty expectations from Day 1, along with drawing the top on-ball defender and facing aggressive defensive schemes that come with being viewed as a star.

“I think when I was saying that, similarities just with all the excitement or the hype of being able to play the game as a teenager, and in a man’s game, and understanding the expectations on a nightly basis,” Kidd said. “Taking on the number one defender, or number two defender, or being double-teamed. And the similarities are being able to score the ball, being able to play the game at a high level, and having fun doing it.”

Flagg and James will share a floor at 6:30 p.m. CDT, when the Mavericks (24-53) host the Los Angeles Lakers (50-27) in one of the more unexpectedly compelling matchups of the season’s final stretch.

A Rookie Season That Demands the Comparison

Flagg is averaging 20.8 points, 6.6 rebounds, and 3.9 assists per game this season — numbers that have placed him comfortably inside the Rookie of the Year conversation since November. He entered Sunday’s game coming off a 51-point performance, the kind of individual statement that makes the LeBron parallels feel less like media noise and more like genuine basketball observation.

The circumstances around him have been difficult. Dallas is a lottery team. Kyrie Irving is done for the season as he continues to recover from left knee surgery. Dereck Lively II was shut down after seven games. Anthony Davis was traded to the Washington Wizards. The Mavericks have lost three consecutive games entering tonight. None of that has meaningfully slowed Flagg down.

Kidd’s framing from Cleveland is the right one: LeBron didn’t win in year one either. He went through the process.

The Los Angeles Lakers Arrive Shorthanded

What makes tonight more than a late-season formality is what happened to Los Angeles last week.

During Thursday’s 139-96 loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder, Luka Dončić suffered a Grade 2 left hamstring strain and was ruled out for the remainder of the regular season. Austin Reaves, who initially downplayed discomfort after the game, was diagnosed Friday with a left oblique muscle strain and will miss the rest of the regular season as well. Marcus Smart, already sidelined with a right ankle contusion for seven consecutive games, remains out.

Jarred Vanderbilt was upgraded from questionable to available with right calf soreness.

That means LeBron James — 41 years old, still averaging 20.6 points per game this season — is the Lakers’ primary offensive option tonight. The two stars, Dončić and Reaves, combined for more than 55 points per game this season. Replacing that production, as the organization has acknowledged, isn’t something that happens overnight.

“Next man up” is the phrase. Tonight is the first real test of what that means.

What Jason Kidd Was Really Saying

Kidd’s comparison wasn’t hype. It was grounded in process — in the idea that a player who arrives with enormous talent and enormous attention has to earn everything that comes next through sustained performance, not narrative.

LeBron entered the league in 2003 with the weight of Chosen One expectations and spent his first several seasons building toward his ceiling without postseason success. He had to learn how to carry a franchise, how to manage attention at scale, how to be great when the team around him wasn’t. The process, as Kidd put it, was part of the story. Kidd sees a lot that Flagg can learn.

“You talk about winning, you talk about longevity, you talk about always improving the game, their game, each year, and then just understanding, having fun,” Kidd said. “LeBron has turned his company into a billion-dollar industry. He’s done extremely well, not just on the court, but off the court. So just understanding that it’s not easy to be a GOAT or to be considered one of the best to do it. But the biggest thing is LeBron’s put in time, worked extremely hard at his craft, and so it’s paid off, and he’s gonna go down as one of.”

Flagg is less than a year into his version of that same process. He’s doing it with a depleted roster, no second star, and the full weight of a franchise’s rebuild resting on his development. Tonight, the player Kidd compared him to walks through the door.

On the Dallas Side

Dallas will also be short-handed. Kyrie Irving (left knee surgery), Dereck Lively II (right foot surgery), and Caleb Martin (right plantar fascia) are out. Marvin Bagley III is listed as probable with a left shoulder impingement. Tyler Smith is questionable with low back spasms.

That puts the offensive load on Flagg, Klay Thompson — who leads the Mavericks in three-pointers made per game at 2.9 — and role players Max Christie, Naji Marshall, P.J. Washington, and Brandon Williams.

For the Lakers to manage tonight without Doncic and Reaves, role players such as Rui Hachimura, DeAndre Ayton, and Jake LaRavia will need to provide enough support so LeBron isn’t carrying every possession.

For the Mavericks to win, Flagg will likely need another 30-plus-point night.

Quick Take

Kidd’s LeBron comparison is going to follow Flagg for the duration of his career. Tonight is the first time it gets tested in the most literal way possible — Flagg on one end, LeBron on the other, 48 minutes to make the case. This is exactly the kind of game Dallas Hoops Journal will be watching closely from inside American Airlines Center, and it is, regardless of the standings, the best individual story on the floor.

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Grant Afseth

Grant Afseth

Senior Writer
is a Senior Writer for Dallas Hoops Journal and a lead contributor to Roundtable.io. With over a decade of experience as a credentialed journalist, Afseth provides elite tactical analysis and front-office strategy for the Mavericks, Wings, and Texas basketball. His reporting is featured across national platforms including Newsweek, RG.org, Hoops Rumors, and Athlon Sports. A primary source for the basketball community, his work is frequently cited by Wikipedia, RealGM, and Basketball-Reference. He previously served as a Mavericks and NBA reporter for Sports Illustrated's FanNation and Rockets/OnSI, as well as Ballislife, Heavy Sports, ClutchPoints, and NBA Analysis Network. During the Mavericks' 2024 NBA Finals run and the pivotal 2025 offseason—featuring his lead reporting on the Luka Dončić-Anthony Davis trade—he served as a featured insider for The Texas Standard and BBC Sport Radio. Afseth is a regular guest on Fox 4 Dallas and 105.3 The Fan. He previously reported for the Kokomo Tribune and Winsidr. Follow his real-time reporting on X @GrantAfseth.