PLANO -- In mid-May, Mavericks CEO Cynthia Marshall told The News that she believed the investigation into workplace behavior in the franchise's front office might conclude by the end of that month.
On July 10, NBA commissioner Adam Silver told reporters that he expected the investigation to conclude within the month.
So why have the results of the investigation, which was sparked by a February Sports Illustrated story that described a Mavericks "corporate culture rife with misogyny and predatory sexual behavior," still not been made public?
A Mavericks source on Wednesday told The News that the extra time is a result of the investigators, led by New York-based attorneys Anne Milgram and Evan Krutoy, "being as thorough as humanly possible, dotting their i's and crossing their t's.