frankenwolf wrote:Let's take a look at the to 10 salaries in the NBA last season and see who deserves their salary:
1. Stephen Curry $48,070,014
2. John Wall $47,345,760
3. Russell Westbrook $47,080,179
4. LeBron James $44,474,988
5. Kevin Durant $44,119,845
6. Bradley Beal $43,279,250
7. Paul George $42,492,492
7. Kawhi Leonard $42,492,492
7. Giannis Antetokounmpo $42,492,492
7. Damian Lillard $42,492,492
So, is John Wall worth 47+ million? What about Westbrook? Is KD REALLY worth 44+ million? Brad Beal? The Clipper twins. who only play 1/2 of their teams games? Dame, IMO, isn't worth 43 million either.
Out of those top 10 salaries, how many of them have lead their current teams to the promised land of NBA championship? Heck, how many have been to an NBA finals? 2 of them have lead their current team to the championship and only 5 have been to the finals.
Worth is a perception number. If I perceive that LeBron James is worth 50 million, then what is to stop me from paying it? Oh yeah, the cap limits, set originally to keep owners from giving out tons of money (See KG's contract prior to cap limits). However, I am willing to pay LBJ the max, just as Glen was willing to pay KAT the max. Should the super max be reserved just for the generational talents like LeBron, MJ, Kareem, Magic, KG? Sure, but that is not going to happen as long as someone is willing to pay your star more than you perceive him to be worth. If you want to keep the star, you pay him the most you can to keep him.
This is a great post.
Also, when you mentioned Lebron and worth, we have to remember that the NBA is a business. Teams don't just get paid based on production from a player, if that player sells jerseys, tickets, draws attention to the team, brings in sponsors, etc that is good for the franchise and helps their bottom line. It would be much easier if the teams only made money for wins/production, but that's not how it works. If a player brings money to the franchise, not just by winning games, that changes their "worth" by quite a bit (though obviously winning is always good).













