64 / SPORTS ILLUSTRATED KIDS
BY CHRIS MANNIX
front-office gigs, doesn’t like it much.
Too isolated. Doesn’t encourage
collaboration. Most days, he’s down
the hall in the war room, a sparsely
decorated space in the middle of the
facility. There, analytics staffers
NOTHING
NETS
The brightest lights in
basketball’s biggest
city—suddenly,
shockingly—belong
to Brooklyn, which
reinvented its culture
and image. All that shine,
however, does not
come without risk.
as the No. 1 team in the city.
banter with scouts. Coaches pop in. If
you have an idea for improving the
team, Marks wants to hear it.
On June 30, Marks and his staff
gathered in the war room for the
opening hours of free agency. There
was confidence that the team was
positioned to land two of the biggest
names on the market: Kevin Durant
and Kyrie Irving. “Nervous
anticipation,” says Marks. Just before
5:00 came the first reports: Both
planned to sign with the Nets.
In February 2016, the Nets hired
Marks, an assistant GM in