Dan Z wrote:I agree, but my point is that if he's been smart he can live a comfortable middle class lifestyle even if his NBA career fell apart.
With that in mind why not take a chance for a better contract instead of going the safe route? I think there's a good chance he gets a solid deal even if he only has an ok season.
That's clearly what he will likely do and it is what most people do.
So here I'm creating two choices with financially equivalent outcomes (ie, if you add up the range of possibilities * probabilities you get the same value as the early offer). You don't have to use these numbers as what you'd agree on what the fair range of possibilities is, but if you could agree on what a reasonable set of odds are (and there is enough examples of players that you could probably mathematically do this), then comparing:
130M guaranteed is a fair market value hedge to:
1% chance 28M (career ending event happens)
4% chance 70M (significant value change due to poor play / injury / both)
30% chance 130M (on the track he's on now)
40% chance 150M (shows enough improvement that there's an additional 5M by waiting
15% chance 185M (shows big improvement and is near max guy)
If it were me, I would take the hedge. The practical financial outcome of my life is so much higher at 130M vs 28M or 70M and the gap between 150 and 130 is irrelevant, and the gap between 130 and 185 is not nearly as important to me.
But as I noted (and as you would also seem to prefer) the vast majority of players will take the 2nd bucket rather than the first. Young people especially will overlook the dismiss the low odds events of really poor outcomes.
Guys like DeMarcus Cousins and Nerlons Noel are some examples of guys who had chances to sign early and didn't and completely F'd themselves. Not sure that Isaiah Thomas had a chance to sign earlier but another guy who got hurt right before big money.
Bobby Portis is a guy who ended up in the 2nd bucket, the Bulls offered him 4/64 and he's presently signed to break even with that deal over 7 years instead of 4. Dennis Schroder is another guy who turned down an offer from the Lakers and never remotely had a shot at it again.
At any rate, it's high stakes stuff where sometimes you win and sometimes you lose. If Giddey shoots 25% from three this year and doesn't improve his defense, he's probably in that "MLE or less value" bucket. That's not really that absurd of a possibility.
Again, generally with these hedging scenarios, players pass on them and I'm not sure that people ever can agree on the probability table or that the hedges offered are really always fair, but typically, I'd say early extensions usually overpay the player and assume the good outcome.