Conversations this week included the former spy turned Chupacabra hunter, Brian fact-checking a quote on a Harwood District building, and Dallas Mavericks CEO Cynt Marshall’s impending retirement. We ...
The impact of Cynthia Marshall’s leadership is unmeasurable, writes Froswa Booker. High-profile leadership roles are not the ...
In 2018, Cynt Marshall, who retired as an executive at AT&T the year before, became the first Black woman CEO in NBA history.
Cynthia 'Cynt' Marshall, a pioneering figure in the sports industry, has announced her retirement as the chief executive ...
Dallas Mavericks chief executive officer Cynthia Marshall is retiring at the end of the calendar year, she announced Tuesday.
Cynt Marshall will retire as CEO effective Dec. 31 and will remain in the consultant role through December 2025.
The team announced that her last day will be December 31, 2024, but she will stay on as a consultant through December 2025.
A few days ago, Marshall was said to be in negotiations with Mavericks governor Patrick Dumont about extending her contract ...
Cynt Marshall joined the organization in March 2018, becoming the first Black female CEO in NBA history. She was hired by ...
Marshall became the NBA's first Black female CEO when then-Mavs-majority owner Mark Cuban hired her in 2018. During her ...