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Donnie Nelson

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Donnie Nelson
Personal information
Born (1962-09-10) September 10, 1962 (age 62)
Iowa City, Iowa
NationalityAmerican
Career information
High schoolWorcester Academy
(Worcester, Massachusetts)
CollegeWheaton (1982–1986)
Coaching career1986–2002
Career history
As coach:
19861994Golden State Warriors (assistant)
19951998Phoenix Suns (assistant)
20002002Dallas Mavericks (assistant)
Career highlights and awards
As executive:

Donn Charles Nelson (born September 10, 1962) is an American basketball executive who previously held general manager and president of basketball operations roles for the Dallas Mavericks of the National Basketball Association (NBA). He is the son of Hall of Fame basketball coach Don Nelson. In a 2007 Sports Illustrated article ranking the NBA's personnel bosses from 1 to 30, Nelson was ranked 2nd.[1] In a 2009 Yahoo Sports article, Nelson was ranked the third-best general manager of the decade after producing nine 50-plus-win seasons in a row and the first finals appearance in franchise history in 2006.[2] Nelson assembled the Mavericks team that would later win the 2011 NBA championship. Having served since 2005, Nelson was the longest-tenured general manager in the NBA at the time of his parting with the Mavericks in 2021.[citation needed]

Nelson is one of the co-owners of the Texas Legends, the NBA G League affiliate of the Mavericks, located in the Dallas–Fort Worth suburb of Frisco.[3]

Early life

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Donnie Nelson is the second of four children, and the only son, of basketball coach Don and Sharon Nelson. He was born in Iowa City during his father's final year at the University of Iowa, and was raised in Natick, Massachusetts when his father played for the Boston Celtics. As a teenager, Nelson also took up basketball, playing in high school for Worcester Academy.[4] However, a broken ankle reduced his playing efficiency.[5]

Wishing to remain close to his mother after his parents' breakup, Nelson gave up on playing basketball in Iowa or Indiana. Instead, he attended Wheaton College, a Division III school in Illinois where his older sister Julie studied.[4] Despite being an All-America basketball player with Wheaton, he asked his father not to make any calls for a professional tryout. The summer after his freshman year, Nelson joined the Athletes in Action team, traveling first to South America and then to Europe.[5] The experience made Nelson interested in bringing international players to the NBA, a trademark of his subsequent career.[6] He graduated in 1986.[5]

Career

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Nelson's first NBA work experiences were with his father's teams. Nelson worked as a regional scout of the Milwaukee Bucks between 1984 and 1986, and then served as the top assistant to his father with the Golden State Warriors from 1986 to 1994. Nelson also worked as a part-time scout starting in 1987.[4]

While playing in Lithuania SSR capital Vilnius, Nelson met Šarūnas Marčiulionis, with whom he struck a friendship despite the language barrier. Once Nelson told his father about Marčiulionis and his skills, the Warriors would draft him in the sixth round of the 1987 NBA draft.[5] After the 1988 Summer Olympics, Marciulionis invited Nelson to Lithuania. For three months, he lived in Marciulionis's apartment in Vilnius, staging a series of basketball clinics around the increasingly restive republic. Eventually, Nelson would fly to Moscow to sign Marčiulionis in 1989, making him the first Soviet Union-born player in the NBA.[7][8]

When his father resigned from Golden State in 1995, Nelson also left the organization.[9]

From 1995 to 1998, Nelson was an assistant coach with the Phoenix Suns. He was a major influence in getting the team to pick Steve Nash.[10]

Dallas Mavericks

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Nelson's tenure with the Dallas Mavericks began on January 2, 1998, when his father hired him as an assistant coach.[11] In the 1998 NBA draft, Nelson arranged for the Mavericks to draft little-known German Dirk Nowitzki and bring in Nash, who saw limited minutes in Phoenix, through a three-team trade. Both players would win the Most Valuable Player Award. The draft-day trades for Nowitzki and Nash marked the first time in NBA history that two future MVPs were acquired in the same transaction.[12] As he did with Marčiulionis and Eastern Europe in the late 1980s, Nelson opened the league to a traditionally closed market when he made the Mavericks draft the first Chinese player to ever play in the NBA, Wang Zhizhi, in the 2001 NBA draft.[6][11]

During the 2001–02 NBA season, Nelson was interim head coach of the Mavericks while his father recovered from cancer treatment, leading the team to a 15–8 record. He was promoted to president of basketball operations in July 2002, and he took over as general manager on March 19, 2005, when his father stepped down as coach and general manager.[11]

The Mavericks won their first NBA championship in 2011. Nelson acquired the core group of players on the 2011 championship Mavs roster through trades and draft picks. All-Star Tyson Chandler, 2008–09 Sixth Man of the Year Jason Terry, Hall of Fame point guard Jason Kidd, four-time All-Star Shawn Marion, two-time All-Star Caron Butler, and Brendan Haywood were acquired through trades. Nelson was also responsible for adding 2007 MVP, 2011 NBA Finals MVP, and 14-time All-Star Dirk Nowitzki via trade on NBA draft night.[citation needed]

Nelson advocated for the Mavericks to draft future MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo (Greece) in 2013, only to be rebuffed by owner Mark Cuban.[13]

As the Mavericks established an NBA G League (D-League) team in Frisco, Texas, a suburb north of Dallas, Nelson was named co-owner. The Texas Legends began to play in the 2010–11 season.[3]

In 2020, Nelson finished in 8th place for the Executive of the Year Award.[14]

Nelson and the Mavericks "mutually agreed to part ways" on June 16, 2021, ending Nelson's 24-year tenure with the franchise.[11] In March 2022, Nelson sued the Mavericks for wrongful termination. The lawsuit was dropped in 2024 after the parties resolved the dispute out of court.[15]

Olympics

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Since 1990, Nelson has served as an assistant coach for the Lithuania national basketball team. In 1991, as Lithuania had just been re-established as an independent state, the Lithuanian Basketball Federation could not rely on public funding. Knowing of Marčiulionis's struggles, Nelson helped get sponsors for the Lithuanian team's 1992 Summer Olympics campaign, which included rock band Grateful Dead.[16] In that period, the Lithuanians won three bronze medals in four Olympics, a silver medal in EuroBasket 1995 and a gold medal in EuroBasket 2003. In appreciation for his contributions, Nelson was awarded the Medal of the Order of the Lithuanian Grand Duke Gediminas in 1995 and the Commander's Grand Crosses of the Order for Merits to Lithuania by the President of Lithuania in 2004. He also serves as Honorary Ambassador for the League of Industries.[17]

In 1994, Nelson served as a scout for USA Basketball at the World Championships in Toronto. Dream Team II went undefeated on their way to capturing a gold medal that year.[citation needed]

Nelson has also served as the chief advisor for the China national basketball team. During his two years of service, they equaled their all-time-best Olympic finish (8th) in Athens and won the gold medal at the 2005 Asian Championships.[citation needed]

Personal life and charitable endeavors

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Nelson is married to Lotta and has two children.[3]

Nelson has been involved with several charitable efforts. He worked with the NBA's African Top 100 campaign, an outreach program providing educational opportunities to challenged African athletes. He is the founder of the "Global Games" in Dallas, which gives area high school kids a chance to test themselves against the top Junior National teams in the world. He also helped create the Assist Youth Foundation, who offers opportunities for underprivileged kids in the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex and across the globe.[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^ Ranking the league's personnel bosses from 1-30, published June 26, 2007
  2. ^ Yahoo Sports NBA
  3. ^ a b c "Owners' Bios'". Texas Legends. Archived from the original on December 22, 2014. Retrieved October 22, 2012.
  4. ^ a b c "The Nelsons: Love and basketball". Archived from the original on January 27, 2015. Retrieved May 26, 2016.
  5. ^ a b c d "A Soviet Hoopster In the Promised Land (Published 1989)". The New York Times. November 5, 1989. Archived from the original on June 22, 2023.
  6. ^ a b Operation Yao Ming: The Chinese Sports Empire, American Big Business, and the Making of an NBA Super star
  7. ^ 'I Have To Open People's Eyes'
  8. ^ "New World Order". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on August 6, 2012.
  9. ^ Report: Warriors' Nelson To Resign Today
  10. ^ Dave Feschuk, Michael Grange (2013). Steve Nash: The Unlikely Ascent of a Superstar. Random House. ISBN 9780307359490.
  11. ^ a b c d Townsend, Brad (June 21, 2021). "With little emotion and no explanation, the Mavericks parted ways with Donnie Nelson after 24 years with the franchise". Dallas Morning News. Retrieved November 29, 2023.
  12. ^ NBA Sunday Insider: Where the international look began
  13. ^ Wells, Adam. "Mark Cuban Says He Is Reason Mavericks Passed on Drafting Giannis Antetokounmpo". Bleacher Report. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
  14. ^ "Lawrence Frank wins 2019-20 NBA Basketball Executive of the Year Award". NBA.com.
  15. ^ McMahon, Tim; Marks, Bobby (November 4, 2024). "Donnie Nelson's suit vs. Mavericks 'dismissed with prejudice'". espn.com.
  16. ^ Jenkins: Marciulionis' Impact Goes Beyond Basketball
  17. ^ Donnie Nelson honored in Lithuania.