Johnny Fontane wrote:There have been exceptions but in this day and age, most agents convince their clients to take the biggest amount of money offered. I don’t see him saying trade me to the Heat or nowhere. This isn’t a Lillard situation where Lillard already made hundreds of millions and was already on a long term deal when he asked for Heat
De'Aaron Fox already has made 187.5 million in his career, so he does have generational wealth, and he and Bam are buddies who played together at Kentucky and worked well together, so he has motives for Miami.
But he would pass up maybe 57 million on his next contract to go to FA. Kings can offer 229 mill for 4 years with supermax, anyone else can offer 172 million for 4 years. I do see why a player would be convinced to stay.
But for this second or third wave of players in the supermax era, I do wonder if either players or executives, having seen the effects of giving supermax to guys that aren't really on that tier, makes them think differently. Basically, it is a killer contract that dooms player and franchise if the player is not truly a superstar (and possibly if they are):
- Jaylen Brown: Probably not this level of player, but signed it while the team was already a contender, but Boston is already looking at what they have to do to break up the team long term as a result.
- Russell Westbrook: A few triple double seasons that went nowhere special then passed around teams ever since.
- Stephen Curry: Worth it, true MVP calibre superstar, but still necessitated killing the splash brothers eventually. Signed at a time the Warriors were in every finals.
- Giannis Antetokounmpo: Another true MVP calibre superstar, signed after winning a championship. Still, this team is in quite a cap hell, given two supermax contracts.
- Damian Lillard: Probably not quite an MVP calibre superstar, but not far off, but signing a supermax on a team that has battled to make the playoffs since left him in purgatory for a long time.
- Nikola Jokic: True MVP calibre superstar, signed on a contender, but that supermax also has contributed to expunging the role players that helped them win a championship and they have struggled to stay a contender, in part due to salary cap.
- Luka Doncic: True MVP calibre superstar, Dallas seem to be in a good place. Luka seems like the type of player this contract is meant for, a heliocentric superstar you can surround with role players.
- Bradley Beal: Probably the level of player and level of team most similar to De'Aaron Fox. A contract that destined awashington for mediocrity and made Beal a poison contract. Phoenix took a chance on him but are mediocre.
- Karl Anthony Towns: This year he is finally playing near the tier required, though Minnesota paid him to keep their franchise together and ultimately had to move him for Randle when the cost of the team blew out, in part because they traded for another supermax (Gobert) and knew they'd soon be paying for another (Edwards). It has worked out pretty well for him though on the type of team that can afford to live in the 2nd apron (Knicks)
- Devin Booker: Another player who is really not on the superstar tier, and now they team is mediocre after paying him, Beal and KD.
- Joel Embiid: Surely a soon to be regrettable purchase, even though he is(was) an MVP calibre superstar, though I am sure he will not survive the injuries and be one of the worst contracts.
- John Wall: Another desperation signing, not a true superstar and doomed Washington to mediocrity.
- Rudy Gobert: His supermax caused the split of Utah, and then the breakup of KAT and Edwards, and now Minnesota is not the contender they were a year ago.
I want De'Aaron Fox, but he is somewhere in that Booker, Beal, Wall, Gobert, Westbrook, Brown league, with a possibility of being in the Lillard or Towns tier that knocks on the door, but he is no Curry, Giannis, Jokic, Luka or Embiid. All the guys in that bottom tier is basically out of the league (Wall, Westbrook) or on a mediocre team in part because their supermax has handcuffed the team (Booker and Beal, Gobert) other than Brown, who got the contract in part because Boston knew they'd needed to for title aspirations, knowing full well it will cause problems down the line.
I wonder if Sacramento will choose to offer a contract that size when looking at what it causes, and whether Fox may have some hesitancy given what has happened to the guys on his tier that have signed while on mediocre teams. It is only a "players won't turn down that money" problem if he gets offered supermax, which I don't think is a given?