
The acquisition of Lamar Odom in December 2011 was initially heralded as a masterstroke by the Dallas Mavericks' front office. After winning back-to-back championships and then earning the NBA's Sixth Man of the Year award with the Los Angeles Lakers, Odom's limited production in Dallas led to bitterness with owner Mark Cuban, who once claimed he did not get his money's worth from the player.
And whereas the now 46-year-old once wanted to wash locker rooms with the Mavericks owner, Odom now appears more willing to move on.
[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fDe_11-4koc[/embed]
"Man, this white man has got it in his heart to get his point across. He needs to kick me in the shin. You know, Mark Cuban's time has passed. I forgive you. But if it wasn't your cousin sitting right here next to you, I would have put him in the locker and washed the locker with him. Yo, I was going to wash the locker room with him," he said on the Cousins Podcast. According to HoopsHype.
Odom came to Dallas after a stellar season, during which he averaged 14.4 points, 8.7 rebounds and 3.0 assists. He was shipped to Dallas for essentially nothing more than an $8.9 million trade exception and a future first-round selection.
However, the transaction quickly turned into a basketball and public relations disaster. Dealing with personal issues including the previous loss of his infant son and drug use, Odom's on-court production reached career lows of 6.6 points, 4.2 rebounds and 1.7 assists per game, while shooting a massive 35.2% from the floor. Cuban reportedly constantly harassed Odom from his courtside seats, openly criticizing his conditioning and labeling him a "waste of money."
Odom's career apparently never took off again. He was sent to the Los Angeles Clippers the following season as part of a four-team deal. Odom averaged four points, 5.9 rebounds and 1.7 assists per game in the 2012–13 campaign before stints in Spain and China.

