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Mark Cuban fined $600,000 by league for tanking talk

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Did Cuban cross a line with tanking comments? (1:09)

SportsNation reacts to Mark Cuban's tanking comments after the Mavericks owner was fined $600K by the NBA. (1:09)

Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban has been fined $600,000 by the NBA for saying his team should tank this season.

Cuban called tanking "brutal" but acknowledged that he told his team that it would be best to lose for the rest of the 2017-18 season.

Commissioner Adam Silver said in a statement that the fine was for "for public statements detrimental to the NBA."

Cuban told Julius Erving on the "House Call with Dr. J" podcast Feb. 18 that he shared his opinion with the team recently.

"I'm probably not supposed to say this, but, like, I just had dinner with a bunch of our guys the other night, and here we are, you know, we weren't competing for the playoffs. I was like, 'Look, losing is our best option,'" Cuban said on the podcast. "Adam [Silver] would hate hearing that, but I at least sat down and I explained it to them. And I explained what our plans were going to be this summer, that we're not going to tank again. This was, like, a year and a half tanking, and that was too brutal for me. But being transparent, I think that's the key to being kind of a players' owner and having stability."

"I earned it,'' Cuban told The Associated Press when asked about the latest fine. "I got excited talking to Dr. J and said something I shouldn't have.''

Responding to Cuban's tanking comments, Mavs star Dirk Nowitzki said Wednesday that he'll "never stand for losing on purpose. That's not who I am."

"I've been around too long," Nowitzki said. "We're all competitors. I think the young guys, when you're out there, you've got to compete. If you don't, you lose market value. You might get hurt. There's all these things that can happen if you don't play your minutes hard. That's my advice to all the young guys -- play your minutes hard, get better and whatever happens, happens.

"I think players never play to lose in this league. It might happen, but we don't play for it. I still love to compete. That's one big reason why I'm still out here -- because I enjoy being out there and playing against some of these guys that are half my age and trying to be out there and help the guys win or help the guys get better or improve and use my experience."

In May, Cuban said the Mavericks looked to lose as much as they could at the end of last season once the team was out of postseason contention. Dallas finished with the ninth-worst record in the NBA and didn't improve its draft position through the lottery.

The Mavericks (18-40) have the third-worst record in the NBA but are among a logjam of seven teams with fewer than 20 wins. The team with the worst record will have a 25 percent chance of making the No. 1 pick in June's draft.

Starting with the 2019 draft, the three teams with the worst records will share a 14 percent chance of getting the No. 1 overall pick, lessening the incentive to lose at the end of the season.