Golden State Warriors
superstar Stephen Curry has clinched a new five-year deal worth US$201 million,
the richest contract in NBA history, ESPN reported on Friday.
AFP
report continues:
Curry,
who recently helped the Warriors to their second NBA Finals crown in three
years, is the first player to break the US$200 million barrier, ESPN said,
citing the player’s agent Jeff Austin.
News
of the agreement wipes away any uncertainty concerning the future of Curry, who
had been on a four-year contract worth a relatively modest US$44 million until
his new deal.
Despite
being one of the league’s highest profile stars, Curry had languished way down
the pecking order of the NBA’s best-paid players.
According
to the basketball-reference.com website, Curry had been the 82nd best-paid
player in the league, earning just over US$12.1 million last season.
That
figure is dwarfed by the league’s highest-earner, LeBron James, who stands to
earn US$33.3 million next season and US$35.6 million in 2018-2019.
According
to a survey of the world’s best paid athletes released earlier this month by
Forbes, Curry had earned an additional US$35 million in endorsements to go
alongside his US$12 million salary.
However,
his new deal would make him the world’s fourth highest paid athlete — in terms
of annual salary and winnings — placing him behind Real Madrid star Cristiano
Ronaldo (US$58 million), Barcelona’s Lionel Messi (US$53 million) and the NFL’s
Andrew Luck (US$47 million) on Forbes’ 2017 list.
‘Never
count another man’s money ’
Curry’s
existing contract had been agreed when there were still doubts about his
long-term fitness, with the player thought to have issues concerning the
durability of his ankles.
However,
those doubts have been obliterated during a series of dazzling seasons for the
Warriors that have helped him become a four-time All-Star.
He
was named NBA Most Valuable Player during the Warriors’ championship winning run
in 2014-2015 and the following season became the first player in history to win
the award in a unanimous vote.
He
averaged 25.3 points per game this regular season and has led the league in
three-point field goals for five straight seasons.
That
remarkable run of scoring included 402 three-pointers in 2015-2016 — a
single-season record. No other player had passed 300 threes in a season before
Curry.
In
an interview earlier this year, Curry had shrugged off his disparity in
earnings with the NBA’s best-paid players.
“One
thing my pops always told me is you never count another man’s money,” Curry
told The San Jose Mercury News.
“It’s
what you’ve got and how you take care of it. And if I’m complaining about US$44
million over four years, then I’ve got other issues in my life,” he said,
referring to his current deal.
Curry
also revealed he had been aware he was way down the list of NBA high-earners
when he signed the deal in 2012, but was happy simply to have the security of a
long-term contract.
“My perspective was, ‘Man, I’ll be able to take care of my family with this. Blessed to be able to know I’ll be playing at least in the NBA for four years and see where it goes from there,” he said.
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