On Tuesday, Day 3 of NBA free agency, the Mavericks remained on pause on the Danny Green front, while he and the rest of the NBA continued to wait for Kawhi Leonard to decide whether he's going to remain in Toronto or jump to one of the Los Angeles teams.

The widespread expectation in recent days had been that if Leonard remains a Raptor, so, too, will Green, a Mavericks free agent target.

That isn't necessarily the case. Green's podcast co-host and longtime friend Harrison D. Sanford said Tuesday on 105.3 FM The Fan that Green has reached the point where "he's considering not waiting" for Leonard's decision.

Sanford later tweeted that the only three teams in the mix for 6-6, 32-year-old Green are Dallas, Toronto and the Los Angeles Lakers.

Meanwhile, according to a league source, the Mavericks agreed to terms with restricted free agent Dorian Finney-Smith on a three-year, $12 million contract.

While making little noise in unrestricted free agency so far -- only agreeing to terms with guard Seth Curry on a four-year, $32 million deal -- owner Mark Cuban and president of basketball operations Donnie Nelson just as quietly have been busy locking in Dallas' own free agents.

In the last 72 hours, Dallas has given contract extensions to Finney-Smith, Maxi Kleber (four years, $35 million), Dwight Powell (three years, $33 million starting in 2020-21, J.J. Barea (one year, $2.5 million) and, of course, most notably of all, gave restricted free agent Kristaps Porzingis a franchise-record five-year, $158 million contract.

As a result, the franchise is establishing an intangible it glaringly has lacked since the breakup of the 2010-11 NBA title team: continuity.

When the NBA signing moratorium ends on Saturday and Mavericks players sign their new deals, Dallas will have eight players under contracts ranging from three to five years. Half of those deals, including team options in the cases of Kleber and Luka Doncic, are for at least four years.