“The art of communication is the language of leadership.”
– James Humes
In the holy-shit-we’re-all-passionate world of professional sports, few things get fans more richter-scale rattled than sudden, seismic change. Firing a beloved coach. Trading away a generational superstar. In these moments, it’s not just the decision that defines the executive who made the call—it’s how they choose to address and explain it.
This past week gave sports fans both sides of the coin; a masterclass in leadership communication—and a cautionary tale. On one side, Denver Nuggets president Josh Kroenke, standing tall at a live press conference. Kroenke was camera-ready, vulnerable, and unflinching while owning a shocking pair of firings just days before the NBA playoffs. On the other, Dallas Mavericks GM Nico Harrison emerged from two and a half months of radio silence after trading away Luka Doncic, one of the most gifted players of his generation, in a press session that was initially off-camera, almost off-the-record, and ultimately wayyyy off-message.
The difference in delivery? Night and day. One instilled confidence in a worried Nuggets fanbase. The other left the steadily declining number of Mavs fans shaking their heads hard enough to induce migraines. This is a tale of two leaders—and why transparency isn’t just good PR, it’s essential to keeping your fanbase happy.
Kroenke: The Tale of Transparency
Josh Kroenke did the unthinkable—he fired the coach and GM who brought Denver its first NBA championship, and did so while the team was still good. It’s the kind of move that would typically be buried in vague statements and generic gratitude (see Mavericks, Dallas).
Instead? Kroenke faced the music.
In a 30-minute press conference held in full view of cameras and media, Kroenke was frank, reflective, and (here’s the kicker) accountable.
“…Neither one of them deserved it, so for that I apologize,” Kroenke said, opening his remarks with something few executives or billionaires dare utter—an admission of culpability.
He didn’t dodge questions. He didn’t gaslight the fans. He explained that a long-term internal toxicity had begun to seep irrevocably into the organization due to irreconcilable differences between Coach Michael Malone and GM Calvin Booth. And though the team had just ripped off an eight-game winning streak before the All-Star break, he was considering changes then, and even before then.
“I think that those eight games masked a trend that was going on behind closed doors,” he said.
Kroenke’s words there and throughout are textbook leadership transparency. Over his half hour, he invited us all into his decision-making process. He walked reporters through his own doubts (“I balked twice before pulling the trigger”), and grounded his rationale in both qualitative data and locker-room dynamics.
Even when asked about soliciting the advice of star player Nikola Jokić, Kroenke threaded the needle perfectly between respecting player input, protecting that player’s interests, and owning executive responsibility:
“I’d be the dumbest guy in basketball if I wasn’t asking [Jokić] for his opinion… but it’s my responsibility to make those decisions.”
The entire conversation was measured, humble, and honest—a rare blend in sports leadership. Fans didn’t riot. They listened. Even the folks who’d entered in as doubters walked away better informed about the full picture.
Meanwhile…
Harrison: A Mixed-Signal Masterclass
Now, let’s fly south to Dallas… Sorry, DLLS friends…
To be fair, Nico Harrison had a much bigger fire to put out. He didn’t just change leadership. He traded Luka Doncic. It was nonsensical on its surface. Imagine the Warriors trading Steph Curry, the Bucks moving on from Giannis, or (gasp) the Nuggets deciding they were tired of Jokic. That kind of player, a Doncic-level player, is the franchise.
Harrison addressed the media early on and poorly, and then went to ground on an official level for a WHILE. When Harrison recently re-addressed the media for nearly an hour, the delivery apparently felt like a hostage event in the loading dock of an arena. No cameras. Audio access was granted at the last second. The optics screamed, “We don’t want you to actually pay attention to this.”
And when Harrison did speak? He buried his message in corporate jargon, vague optimism, and repetition. His core justification?
“Defense wins championships.”
Said seven or eight times. A valid point—if you’re building around a core defensive identity. But Harrison never addressed the defensive prowess at the end of last season with Doncic leading the team. He repeated his phrase like a malfunctioning mantra, using it to plug every hole in logic. Traded away a generational 25-year-old MVP-caliber star with a decade of dominance ahead of him? Defense wins championships. Sacrificed the team’s draft capital until 2030? Defense wins championships. Fans livid, demanding accountability? Defense wins championships. Any regrets about this? No, DEFENSE WINS CHAMPIONSHIPS.
It became the catchphrase of his press conference. And it never came close to landing or rationalizing the question he was being asked.
To make matters worse, Harrison failed to articulate any real plan beyond his talking points. When asked if he contacted other teams before making the Luka trade, his answer boiled down to: We had our guy (Anthony Davis) and moved fast.
“We had an opportunity to do this quietly, without the interference… and so we did it.”
Translation: We skipped transparency when it counted most. And got less than we could have from the one team we dealt with.
Tone, Timing, and Trust
The gulf between these two leaders wasn’t just in what they said—it was in how and when they said it.
Josh Kroenke met the press head-on within days of a tough decision. He gave clarity, context, and showed emotional range—from gratitude to guilt to guarded optimism.
Nico Harrison gave a set of poor platitudes straight away and then went to ground for 10 weeks. When he did finally speak again, it was to roll those same platitudes back out, insist he had no regrets, and that the fans just didn’t understand yet.
“Every trade I’ve made has been met with scrutiny,” Harrison said. “Eventually I’ll earn the trust of this community.”
It’s an interesting and fallacious point. Harrison made some sweeping and eyebrow raising trades over time to help get his team into the championships. But where he misses the mark is in how he believes he’ll earn that trust. Even as he keeps parroting points that made no sense in terms of truth – Doncic might not sign a supermax? – Irrational. Bottom line, trust isn’t earned through hindsight. It’s earned in the moment—by being visible, being human, and being HONEST with people when the moment is hard. Kroenke knew that. Harrison still has no clue.
It’s Not Just Strategy. It’s Storytelling.
Both Kroenke and Harrison made bold, risky moves. That’s part of being a high-level executive. But only one of them fully owned the story in real time.
The Denver Nuggets are heading into the playoffs with a new GM and interim coach—but the vibe around the team is energized. Why? Because Kroenke addressed the elephant in the room, gave the leaders and players below room to breathe, and invited fans into the reasoning.
The Dallas Mavericks, meanwhile, are trying to convince their fan base to “trust the process” without any reasonable rationale that explains that same blueprint. While the Mavericks made it out of their first play-in game, Nico hasn’t taken the pressure or the spotlight off the club AT ALL. Harrison seemed to hope the controversy would just blow over on its own. Spoiler: it didn’t.
The Heat of the Moment
In leadership, moments of disruption are also moments of definition.
Josh Kroenke used his moment to create clarity and calm. Nico Harrison used his to offer confusion and clichés. Twice.
So, if there’s anything to take from this, maybe it’s this… if you’re leading anything—whether it’s a team, a company, or your local Dairy Queen—let this be your reminder: people will forgive a bad decision you own before they’ll forgive being kept in the dark.
Not meaning to play favorites or kiss asses here, as Denver certainly has its fair share of confused or non-communicative pro sports owners here in town (koff, Monfort). But in a moment of turnover that could have still been a raging conversational fire for the Denver Nuggets, Josh Kroenke quickly tamped down the flames and got his team back to business. 10 weeks after starting a bonfire of of his own, Nico Harrison still can’t seem to stop lighting matches near gasoline. Will the Mavericks pay for that? They already have… and they will only continue to, and dearly.