Detroit Pistons (2000–2002) Cardinal was selected the 44th overall pick in the
2000 NBA draft by the
Detroit Pistons. His career debut came on December 9, 2000, in a loss to the
Portland Trail Blazers. During his rookie season, playing in only 15 games, he had his best game against the
Toronto Raptors on April 11, 2001, scoring a season-high 9 points, 4 rebounds and a game high three steals in 18 minutes. Playing in a total of 23 games for the Pistons in two seasons, he averaged 2.1 points a game and shot over 80 percent from the
free throw line.
Washington Wizards (2002) On September 11, 2002, Cardinal was traded to the
Washington Wizards along with
Jerry Stackhouse and
Ratko Varda, for
Richard Hamilton,
Hubert Davis and
Bobby Simmons. Cardinal was waived shortly after playing in only five games for the Wizards.
Valencia (2002–2003) Cardinal spent the rest of the 2002–03 season playing in the
Spanish league for
Pamesa Valencia, winning the
ULEB Cup Championship.
Golden State Warriors (2003–2004) After returning to the NBA, Cardinal signed with the
Golden State Warriors. Cardinal had a breakthrough season with the Warriors, averaging nearly 10 points and 4 rebounds per game appearing in 76 games. He was a finalist for the
NBA Most Improved Player Award, eventually won by
Zach Randolph. On February 11, 2004, Cardinal scored a career-high 32 points against the
Phoenix Suns and just three weeks later he had his career high of 14 rebounds against the
Chicago Bulls on February 28.
Memphis Grizzlies (2004–2008) After a breakthrough season in personal numbers and playing time, Cardinal signed as a
free agent with the
Memphis Grizzlies, where he posted similar numbers from the previous season, averaging almost 6 points and 2.5 rebounds in the four seasons with the Grizzlies, while injuries diminished playing time. During the 2006–07 season, Brian held career highs of field goal percentage (.494) and free throw percentage (.926).
Minnesota Timberwolves (2008–2010) In June 2008, Cardinal was traded to the
Minnesota Timberwolves as part of an eight-player deal. Teamed with fellow forward
Kevin Love in his eighth season in the NBA under head coach
Kevin McHale and assistant coach
Jerry Sichting, a former Boilermaker, Brian averaged 3 points, 2.2 rebounds and 1.2 assists a game for the 2008–09 season. He recorded his career-high three blocks in a game against the
New York Knicks on March 13, 2009. In the 2009–10 season, while appearing in 27 games for the Wolves, he averaged a team-low 9 minutes per game and went 21–21 from the free-throw line. On February 17, 2010, Cardinal was traded to the
New York Knicks for
Darko Miličić. He was subsequently waived by the Knicks on February 19. On March 23, he was re-signed by the Timberwolves.
Dallas Mavericks (2010–2012) On September 27, 2010, Cardinal was signed by the
Dallas Mavericks. On May 8, 2011, Cardinal hit the 20th three-pointer in Game 4 of the
Dallas Mavericks and
Los Angeles Lakers series. His three-pointer tied the record for most three-pointers by a team in one playoff game with 20, which hadn't been done since the
Seattle SuperSonics did it against the
Houston Rockets on May 6, 1996. Cardinal won his first NBA championship with the 2011 Mavericks in a six-game playoff series against the
Miami Heat. He agreed to sign a new one-year contract worth the veteran minimum on December 12, 2011. His final NBA game was in Game 3 of the 2012 Western Conference First Round on May 3, 2012, in a 79–95 loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder where he recorded 3 points and 3 rebounds. The Thunder would go on to sweep the Mavericks and eliminate them from the playoffs, with Cardinal subsequently retiring from the NBA. ==NBA career statistics==