mark cuban

Mark Cuban announces plan to give $35 million in bonuses to Dallas Mavericks employees

The announcement comes shortly after Cuban finalized his sale of the majority of the team to the Las Vegas Sands

Rich Fury/Getty Images

FILE – Mark Cuban attends the 2019 NBA Awards at Barker Hangar on June 24, 2019 in Santa Monica, California.

Working for Mark Cuban seems like a good bet.

The billionaire and now-former majority owner of the Dallas Mavericks announced to his team's employees that he would be dishing out $35 million in bonuses, according to multiple reports.

Cuban sold his majority stake in the NBA franchise to the families that run the Las Vegas Sands casino company for $3.5 billion this past December. The deal gives the "Shark Tank" mogul a minority ownership stake in the team and will allow him to continue running basketball operations.

"As a thank you for all your hard work making the Mavs an amazing organization, each of you will be receiving a bonus from myself, and the Adelson and Dumont families," Cuban's message to employees read, according to ESPN's Tim MacMahon. "In total, we will be paying out approximately $35 plus Million Dollars in bonuses to you all."

The message goes on to say that the amount of pay will be calculated with a "framework that took into consideration how long you have worked for the Mavs."

Cuban's sale of the Mavs came as a shock to the NBA world, given that he is known as a basketball junkie. He is routinely seen courtside for Mavs games.

Part of Cuban's reasoning for selling the team was to facilitate a partner to help get a new arena and casino in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, with an aim toward downtown Dallas.

Sports Connection

Connecting you to your favorite North Texas sports teams as well as sports news around the globe.

Blake Snell, Dodgers agree to five-year, $182M contract: Reports

How to watch the Raiders vs. Chiefs NFL Black Friday game

Although gambling remains illegal in Texas, it has been a pursuit of the Las Vegas Sands and Resort company to get a casino in the Lone Star State for some time.

"It's a partnership. They're not basketball people, I'm not real estate people. That's why I did it," Cuban told NBC Dallas-Fort Worth after the sale was approved.

The sale was also announced shortly after Cuban said he would be leaving "Shark Tank" after season 16, citing the time taping takes from his family as his reason.

"I feel like in doing 'Shark Tank' all these years," Cuban told the hosts of Showtime's "All the Smoke" podcast at the time, "we've trained multiple generations of entrepreneurs that, if somebody can come from Iowa or Sacramento or wherever, and show up on 'Shark Tank' and show their business and get a deal, it's going to inspire generations of kids."

By not accepting insurance plans and skirting around the regulations that come with them, Mark Cuban's Cost Plus Drugs has been selling prescription drugs at prices that beat the average pharmacy chains. Insurance expert Paul Seegert joins LX News to discuss Cuban's pharmacy company.
Exit mobile version