CHICAGO — Rick Welts was there, 40 years to the date earlier, when the NBA draft lottery got started. He worked for the league then and was in the room when that first one took place.
And it seems he has spent much of the four decades since debunking the rumors that the 1985 lottery was rigged so the New York Knicks would get Patrick Ewing.
Given all the extraordinary measures — including witnesses, accountants, videotaping of the event — that goes into running such a thing, it’s reasonable to conclude that the 2025 lottery wasn’t fixed, either.
But it might fix the Dallas Mavericks.
‘‘The fun starts now," Welts, the team’s CEO, said Monday night after the Mavs won this year’s lottery and got the chance to draft Duke phenom Cooper Flagg with the No. 1 overall pick next month.
More accurately, perhaps, the fun resumes now — after a few months that were anything but fun.
Flagg worked out at the combine in Chicago on Tuesday, going through some shooting and sprinting drills as well as getting measured. He is scheduled for a news conference in Chicago on Wednesday.
If Dallas selects Flagg — it’s difficult to think there’s any other option at this point — he would join a team that currently has two other former Duke players in Kyrie Irving and Dereck Lively.