Kleber made only 43 regular-season appearances during the 2023-24 season, averaging just 20.3 minutes per game, the fewest he has played since his rookie season. He basically put up career-low numbers across the board, posting 4.4 points, 3.3 rebounds, 0.7 blocks and 0.7 three-pointers. The addition of Daniel Gafford and the ascension of Dereck Lively saw Kleber used sparingly down the stretch, serving as purely a backup four. That trend should continue this season, which could result in Kleber's playing time dipping to closer to 15 minutes per game. His ability to spread the floor should ensure he sticks in the rotation, but for fantasy, managers can safely ignore him in essentially every format. Read Past Outlooks
$Signed a three-year, $33 million contract extension with the Mavericks in September of 2022.
Personal Bio/PreCareer Summary
Maximilian "Maxi" Kleber was born in Wurzburg, Germany in 1992. He is from the same hometown as former Mavericks great (and former teammate) Dirk Nowitzki. Kleber played youth basketball with TG Veitshochheim, SC Heuchelhof and TG Wurzburg before turning pro during the 2011-12 season. Kleber was the Mavericks' nominee for the February 2020 NBA Cares Community Assist Award for "his continuous charitable and philanthropic efforts to empower children and families throughout the year." Among his community contributions, Kleber has served holiday meals, broken in new basketball courts and visited children in hospitals after games. He has also provided community tickets to HopeKids, an organization that provides ongoing events, activities and a powerful support community for families who have a child with cancer or some other life-threatening medical conditions, in Dallas. Learn more about Kleber by following him on Twitter (@MaxiKleber) and Instagram (@maximilian.kleber). As a teenager, Kleber made his way through German leagues before coming to the NBA. He made his professional debut in 2011-12 for s.Oliver Baskets in his hometown of Wurzberg as part of the Basketball Budesliga. He was a bench player in his first season and played 7.0 minutes per game, but he played significant minutes in his second season, where he averaged 9.9 points and 6.7 rebounds. After the season, he declared for the NBA Draft, but he subsequently withdrew his name. Kleber moved to Spain for the 2014-15 season and provided 11.5 points and 6.5 rebounds for Obradoiro CAB. After a year away from his home country, the 6-foot-10 center signed with Bayern Munich. In his first season, Kleber averaged 8.0 points and 4.9 rebounds and followed that up in his last year with Bayern with 9.0 points, 5.3 rebounds and 1.8 assists. Kleber has also played for the German National Team and appeared in the 2014 EuroBasket qualification rounds. He signed with the Dallas Mavericks in July 2017.
ANALYSIS Despite Naji Marshall filling in as the starting power forward in P.J. Washington's (knee) absence thus far, Kleber will get the spot start and play for the first time since Oct. 26. The big man has appeared in only two regular-season games this year due mainly to a right hamstring strain, and he averaged 2.5 points, 2.5 rebounds and 1.5 assists across 15.5 minutes per game.
2024 NBA Per Game Split Stats - Starting/Off Bench
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2024 NBA Per Game Split Stats - Days Rest
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2024 NBA Per Game Split Stats - Vs Opp
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2024 NBA Per Game Split Stats - By Result
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Advanced Stats
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Stat Review
How does Maxi Kleber compare to other players?
This section compares his stats with all players from the previous three seasons (minimum 200 minutes played)*. The bar represents the player's percentile rank. For example, if the bar is halfway across, then the player falls into the 50th percentile for that stat and it would be considered average.
True Shooting %
An advanced statistic that measures a player's efficiency at shooting the ball that takes field goal percentage, free throw percentage, and three point percentage into account.
Effective Field Goal %
A statistic that adjusts field goal percentage to account for the fact that three-point field goals count for three points while field goals only count for two points.
3-Point Attempt Rate
Percentage of field goal attempts from three point range.
Free Throw Rate
Number of free throw attempts per field goal attempt.
Offensive Rebound %
An estimate of the percentage of available offensive rebounds a player grabbed while they were on the floor.
Defensive Rebound %
An estimate of the percentage of available defensive rebounds a player grabbed while they were on the floor.
Total Rebound %
An estimate of the percentage of available rebounds a player grabbed while they were on the floor.
Assist %
An estimate of the percentage of teammate field goals a player assisted while they were on the floor.
Steal %
An estimate of the percentage of opponent possessions that end with a steal by the player while they were on the floor.
Block %
An estimate of the percentage of opponent two-point field goal attempts blocked by the player while they were on the floor.
Turnover %
An estimate of turnovers committed per 100 plays.
Usage %
An estimate of the percentage of team plays used by a player while they were on the floor.
Fantasy Points Per Game
NBA Fantasy Points Per Game.
Fantasy Points Per Minute
NBA Fantasy Points Per Minute.
True Shooting %
50.0%
Effective Field Goal %
50.0%
3-Point Attempt Rate
40.0%
Free Throw Rate
0.0%
Offensive Rebound %
0.0%
Defensive Rebound %
16.9%
Total Rebound %
8.6%
Assist %
11.7%
Steal %
0.0%
Block %
3.0%
Turnover %
0.0%
Usage %
7.0%
Fantasy Points Per Game
9.3
Fantasy Points Per Minute
0.6
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Total
Per Game
Per 36
NBA Historical Fantasy Stats
How are these ratings calculated?
Our historical fantasy ratings are standard scores calculated using 8-Category settings with 12 teams and 13 players per team.
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NBA Per Game Historical Fantasy Stats
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NBA Per 36 Historical Fantasy Stats
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Historical ADP
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Mavericks Depth Chart
Our full team depth charts are reserved for RotoWire subscribers.
Average Fantasy Points are determined when Maxi Kleber was active vs. non-active during the season. Click here to view average fantasy points for a different time period.
Minutes
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Past Fantasy Outlooks
2023
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
Kleber has been a borderline fantasy player throughout his career, and it looks like that's what's going to happen again this season. The versatile big man has developed into a solid stretch-five for Dallas, but he's really not asked to do much with Luka Doncic and Kyrie Irving swallowing so much usage. Kleber is coming off his worst campaign since his rookie season, averaging 5.9 points, 3.6 rebounds, 1.4 assists, 0.8 blocks and 1.1 threes across 25 minutes. He was barely relevant in the three years prior, averaging 7.7 points, 5.4 rebounds, 1.3 assists, 0.9 blocks and 1.6 threes. He's never played more than 26 minutes a night in any of his six seasons. That looks like his role in the upcoming season as well because Dallas added Grant Williams and Richaun Holmes. If anything, Kleber is looking at a reduced workload and could fall out of the rotation altogether at times if he's not knocking down some threes and protecting the rim. All of that makes him impossible to trust from a fantasy perspective, and he should only be drafted in the deepest of formats.
Kleber is an excellent complement to Luka Doncic in the Mavericks' lineup. His floor spacing and solid defense allow him to play power forward and even small-ball center. Last season, he averaged 7.0 points, 5.9 rebounds, 1.2 assists and 1.0 blocks in 24.6 minutes. His three-point shooting was down to only 32.5 percent, but he has been an above-average outside shooter throughout his career. Kleber shot 47.6 percent from three on 4.5 attempts over 14 playoff games. Due to this, he should progress back towards his normal shooting percentage of 35 to 40 percent from three. With the additions of Christian Wood and Javale McGee, he might see a slight decrease in his minutes. However, if he can shoot a high percentage from three, he will find minutes due to his floor spacing. Kleber will be a viable option in deeper leagues that value three-point shooting, blocks, and rebounding.
Kleber continued to occupy a sixth-man role in the frontcourt for the Mavericks last season. He's also been a great insurance policy for when Kristaps Porzingis suffers an injury. He saw 26.8 minutes per game last season and averaged 7.1 points, 5.2 rebounds, 1.4 assists and 1.2 combined steals-plus-blocks. That led to him ranking 194th in per-game fantasy production. Kleber's role shouldn't change dramatically heading into 2021-22. However, there's a chance for a slight decrease, as the Mavericks added Moses Brown and Reggie Bullock during the offseason, who could potentially steal a few minutes from Kleber. Ultimately, Kleber is a low-usage offensive option who gets a bump when players ahead of him are injured, so he doesn't serve much of a use in anything but deep fantasy formats. In a best ball format, it could make sense to draft Kleber if you also drafted Porzingis earlier.
The German big man continued to improve in his third career NBA season, posting career highs across the board. While he started in just 21 of his 74 games, he played 25.5 minutes per game, up significantly from his 21.2 minutes the previous season. His points per game jumped from 6.8 to 9.1, corresponding to a jump from 11.6 to 12.8 on a per-36-minute basis. Kleber's usage rate remained quite low at 13.9 percent, but his shot breakdown and effectiveness changed. He shot 4.3 three-pointers per game, up from 3.1 in 2018-19, and increased his percentage from beyond the arc from 35.3 percent to 37.3 percent. That doesn't appear to be a fluke but rather a reflection of an overall improvement in his shooting stroke, as his effectiveness at the free-throw line jumped significantly for the second straight season, coming in at 84.9 percent. His non-scoring contributions were modest, as his 5.2 rebounds per game ranked just fifth on the team, but a 6-foot-10 big man with his ability to knock down threes at a high clip should remain a useful rotation player going forward.
Kleber recorded career highs in points (6.8), rebounds (4.6), combined blocks/steals (1.6) and threes (1.1) across 21.2 minutes in his second season with Dallas. The big man defends well, can stretch the floor with his three-point shooting and can play forward or center. Those abilities landed him a four-year, $35 million extension this offseason to stay with the Mavericks. Though Kleber played the most minutes of his career last season, his role may shrink in year three given the acquisition of Kristaps Porzingis. Kleber will battle Dwight Powell for the starting center job, but Powell seems to have the inside track. Kleber could see more run if Porzingis isn't fully healthy, but for now, the former seems to be the odd man out in the frontcourt. As a result, he can likely go undrafted in standard leagues.
Kleber surprisingly pushed for a sizable role in the frontcourt as a rookie. He picked up 36 starts across 72 games, though that didn't necessarily turn into standard league production for Fantasy purposes. Kleber still only averaged 5.4 points and 3.3 rebounds across 16.8 minutes. Looking forward to the 2018-19 season, Kleber could find playing time even harder to come by. The Mavericks added star center DeAndre Jordan this offseason and also bring back Dwight Powell and Dirk Nowitzki in the frontcourt. In addition, Harris Barnes often gets run at the power forward position, so Kleber is likely only going to get spot minutes for much of the year. Go ahead and avoid Kleber for Fantasy purposes in his second season.
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Remains out Wednesday
CDallas Mavericks
Hamstring
November 5, 2024
Kleber (hamstring) is out for Wednesday's game against Chicago.
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Latest Fantasy Rumors
Could return in NBA Finals
CDallas Mavericks
May 27, 2024
The Mavericks are optimistic Kleber could return to action if the team reaches the NBA Finals, NBA reporter Marc Stein states.
ANALYSIS Kleber had a shot at returning during the Western Conference Finals, but it seems that door is closing fast with the Mavericks holding a 3-0 series lead over the Timberwolves. Kleber could make a return in the NBA Finals, though the medical staff has yet to confirm that. The versatile big man has been sidelined since separating his right shoulder in the final game of the first-round series against the Clippers on May 3.