Dallas Mavs Legend Dirk Nowitzki Reveals Gruesome Details on Caron Butler’s 2011 Knee Injury: 'This Guy's Built Different'

Caron Butler missed the Dallas Mavericks’ epic 2011 championship run due to a knee injury he suffered earlier that season. Dirk Nowitzki joined “All The Smoke” and shared some gruesome details from that injury.
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When people talk about the Dallas Mavericks’ epic 2011 championship run, the impact of Caron Butler often gets overlooked. Butler only played 29 games that season due to suffering a knee injury nearly halfway through the year, but according to Mavs legend Dirk Nowitzki, Butler's toughness might have rubbed off on his teammates even though he wasn't playing.

"Going into that '10-11 season, we felt like we had a good team. I don't think we were necessarily favorites, but we felt like we had some veterans and we had a good start to the season. And then I got hurt right around Christmas time, so I was out, I was hurt," Nowitzki told former NBA players Matt Barnes and Stephen Jackson on the latest episode of "All The Smoke."

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"And then New Year's Day, I'll never forget. We're in Milwaukee - that's where Caron is from - and I'm sitting out in a suit because I'm not playing, and Caron goes up for a rebound and just screams and lays on the ground."

What Nowitzki saw next was something he wasn't prepared for, but it showed him just how tough Butler was.

"So we're all rushing over there, and I see, literally... he tore his patella tendon, and his kneecap had dislocated, so it sat on top of his thigh. I'm like trying to dry heave, it was nasty, and so our trainer is like 'oh my God, oh my God, we need wheelchair, wheelchair,'" Nowitzki said.

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"And that was one of the toughest things I've seen. I mean, Caron is pretty tough, so he heard 'wheelchair,' and he's from Wisconsin, his grandmother was there, his family. He was like, 'I'm not getting out of her in a wheelchair.' So I watched him push his kneecap down by himself ... and he walked out on his own power. I said, 'this guy's built different.'"

The Mavs went on to complete a magical title run that season, going through the likes of Kobe Bryant and Pau Gasol's two-time defending champion Los Angeles Lakers in the second round, Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook and James Harden's up-and-coming Oklahoma City Thunder in the Western Conference Finals, and LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh's star-studded Miami Heat in the NBA Finals.

Butler was unfortunately never the same player after that injury, even though he played five more seasons with five different teams before retiring, but his contributions to the Mavs both on and off the court were greatly appreciated by his teammates. And most importantly, he still ended up with a championship ring ... and he has a pretty cool story to go along with it.



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Dalton Trigg
DALTON TRIGG

Dalton Trigg is the Editor-In-Chief for Dallas Basketball, as well as the Executive Editor overseeing Inside The Rockets, Inside The Spurs, All Knicks, and The Magic Insider. He is the founder and host for the Mavs Step Back Podcast, which is a proud part of the Blue Wire podcast network. Trigg graduated from the University of Southern Mississippi’s College of Business and Economic Development with a bachelor’s degree in entrepreneurship in 2016. After spending a few years with multiple Dallas Mavericks-related blogs, including SB Nation’s Mavs Moneyball, Trigg joined DallasBasketball.com as a staff writer in 2018 and never looked back. At the start of 2022, he was promoted to the EIC title he holds now. Through the years, Trigg has conducted a handful of high-profile one-on-one interviews to add to his resume — in both writing and podcasting. Some of his biggest interviews have been with Mavs owner Mark Cuban, Mavs GM Nico Harrison, now-retired legend Dirk Nowitzki and many other current/former players and team staffers. Many of those interviews and other articles by Trigg have been aggregated by other well-known sports media websites, such as Yahoo Sports, CBS Sports, Bleacher Report and others. You can find Trigg on all major social media channels, but his most prevalent platform is on Twitter. Whether it’s posting links to his DBcom work, live-tweeting Mavs games or merely giving his opinions on things going on with Dallas and the rest of the NBA, the daily content never stops rolling. For any inquiries, please email Dalton@MavsStepBack.com.