Brightest stars in NBA history top list of strangest contracts ever signed
The NBA is a great league.
What other sport gives us fashion icons, reality TV stars, potential hostage situations and that unforgettable Mark Madsen dancing moment?
NBA culture is filled with odd quirks and crazy stories. In fact, Aug. 25, 2015, marks the 50-year anniversary of another great NBA moment: When Bill Russell signed the richest contract in basketball, a deal that just happened to be worth one dollar more than Wilt Chamberlain's salary.
That’s right, Bill Russell—11-time champion and namesake for the NBA Finals MVP award—was also a giant troll. Now, Russell had his reasons for wanting more money than Wilt. The two had an epic rivalry, one that Russell dominated in terms of team success, but lost in terms of name recognition.
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Russell asking to be paid more than Chamberlain got us thinking of other great contract stories from NBA history. Here are just a few of our favorites:
Michael Jordan
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Perhaps the most famous contract clause in the NBA: Michael Jordan’s “For the Love of the Game” clause. The Bulls were never really in a position to negotiate with the greatest player to ever dribble a basketball. Jordan asked for a clause allowing him to play basketball any time, anywhere, because he just loved hooping that much.
The clause is no joke. NBA teams often try to stop players from engaging in physical activity in the off-season. (You may remember Monta Eliis earning a 30-game suspension from who else, the Warriors, after a moped injury in the off-season.) But no one stops Michael Jordan from stepping on a basketball court.
Magic Johnson
In 1981, Magic Johnson signed a 25-year, $25 million extension with the Lakers. The crazy deal was to keep Johnson a Laker for a long, long time, running from 1984 to 2009. Johnson would eventually sign new deals with Los Angeles, to compensate for the years he wasn’t the highest paid player in the league. The deal—thought up by the late, great Jerry Buss—certainly helped keep Magic a Laker for life.
Chris Webber
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Chris Webber left his Fab Five teammates at the University of Michigan early so he could join the NBA before it instituted a cap on rookie salaries. As a result, Webber signed one of those ridiculous '90s rookie contracts, a 15-year, $74 million deal with the Golden State Warriors. However, Golden State gave Webber a player opt-out after one season.
It was a huge mistake. Webber hated playing center for coach Don Nelson. He immediately used his opt-out as leverage, and forced a sign-and-trade after one season in Golden State. And the Warriors didn’t fully recover until Stephen Curry got to town.
Joe Smith
The Timberwolves may have never lost Kevin Garnett if it weren’t for Joe Smith. The Timberwolves signed Smith to a one-year deal worth less than $2 million after the 1999 lockout, a weird deal considering Smith had an $80 million offer from the Warriors, where he played his first three seasons. As it turns out, Minnesota planned on signing Smith to three one-year deals, maximizing cap space, and using Smith’s Bird Rights after the third year to sign him to a large extension.
The NBA found out about the under-the-table agreement. The Timberwolves lost multiple first-round picks. Smith’s contracts were voided, taking away his Bird Rights, and eventually causing his departure from Minnesota. The Timberwolves couldn’t restock their roster for much of the mid-2000s, and soon Garnett was gone.
Best NBA Players by Jersey Number
00 — Robert Parish
0 — Russell Westbrook
1 — Oscar Robertson
2 — Moses Malone
3 — Dwyane Wade
4 — Adrian Dantley
5 — Kevin Garnett
6 — Bill Russell
7 — Pete Maravich
8 — Kobe Bryant
9 — Bob Pettit
10 — Walt Frazier
11 — Isiah Thomas
12 — John Stockton
13 — Wilt Chamberlain
14 — Bob Cousy
15 — Vince Carter
16 — Bob Lanier
17 — John Havlicek
18 — Dave Cowens
19 — Willis Reed
20 — Gary Payton
21 — Tim Duncan
22 — Elgin Baylor
23 — Michael Jordan
24 — Rick Barry
25 — Mark Price
26 — Kyle Korver
27 — Jack Twyman
28 — Arron Afflalo
29 — Paul Silas
30 — Bernard King
31 — Reggie Miller
32 — Magic Johnson
33 — Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
34 — Shaquille O’Neal
35 — Kevin Durant
36 — Rasheed Wallace
37 — Nick Van Exel
38 — Viktor Khryapa
39 — Jerami Grant
40 — Shawn Kemp
41 — Dirk Nowitzki
42 — James Worthy
43 — Jack Sikma
44 — Jerry West
45 — Rudy Tomjanovic
46 — Bo Outlaw
47 — Andrei Kirilenko
48 — Nazr Mohammed
49 — Shandon Anderson
50 — David Robinson
51 — Reggie King
52 — Jamaal Wilkes
53 — Artis Gilmore
54 — Horace Grant
55 — Dikembe Mutombo
56 — Francisco Elson
57 — Hilton Armstrong
61 — Bevo Nordmann
62 — Scot Pollard
70 — Frank Selvy
71 — Willie Naulls
72 — Jason Kapono
73 — Dennis Rodman
76 — Shawn Bradley
77 — Gheorghe Muresan
83 — Craig Smith
84 — Chris Webber
85 — Baron Davis
86 — Semih Erden
88 — Nicolas Batum
89 — Clyde Lovellette
90 — Drew Gooden
91 — Dennis Rodman
92 — DeShawn Stevenson
93 — Metta World Peace (Ron Artest)
94 — Evan Fournier
96 — Metta World Peace (Ron Artest)
98 — Jason Collins
99 — George Mikan
Anthony Carter
Another story that changed the course of NBA history. In June 2003, point guard Anthony Carter’s agent Bill Duffy forgot to file Carter’s opt-in clause with the Miami Heat. Carter went from making $4.1 million to nothing overnight, as he became a free agent, where his market value was much less than his Heat contract.
The Heat were gifted a huge jump in cap space, which they used to sign free-agent forward Lamar Odom. Odom joined rookie Dwyane Wade to lead the Heat to the playoffs. The next year, in 2004, Odom was part of a trade with the Lakers that sent Shaquille O’Neal to Miami.
Shaq won his fourth and last championship in Miami. Odom was a key player in Kobe Bryant’s fourth and fifth championships. And all because Anthony Carter’s agent forgot to file some paperwork.
Chandler Parsons
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Looking at Chandler Parsons, you would not be surprised to hear the man enjoys a night or two out on the town. And that’s exactly where Parsons was when he signed his three-year offer sheet with the Dallas Mavericks in 2014. Somehow, Parsons signing his contract at the club while partying with Mark Cuban is only the second-most bizarre free-agent story the two have been a part of, as both factored heavily in this year’s DeAndre Jordan saga.
Gilbert Arenas
In the aftermath of their NBA championship, it’s easy to forget how bleak the Warriors’ existence used to be. Their future looked a little bright in the early 2000s, when second-round pick Gilbert Arenas proved to be a draft steal. But Arenas’ second-round status meant Golden State didn’t have control over him like they would a first-round pick.
In 2003, Arenas became a free-agent and signed a six-year, $80 million deal with the Wizards. The Warriors couldn’t match the deal. The situation led to a new rule, known as the Gilbert Arenas Provision, making it much easier for teams to retain their successful second-round picks.