Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 16
NBA Probes Bucks' $64 Million Gary Trent Jr. Deal for Cap Circumvention
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 16

NBA Probes Bucks' $64 Million Gary Trent Jr. Deal for Cap Circumvention

3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jul 16

Summary

  • A league spokesperson said the NBA is still reviewing Milwaukee’s four-year, fully guaranteed $64 million contract with Gary Trent Jr. for possible salary-cap circumvention.
  • The scrutiny centers on how Trent, 27, jumped from a one-year minimum deal in 2024 and a two-year, $7.5 million pact in 2025 to a much richer contract after averaging just 8.1 points last season.
  • Rival executives had expected Milwaukee to reward Trent for previously taking below-market money, fueling questions about whether there was a prior handshake agreement tied to the Bucks’ roster-building around Giannis Antetokounmpo.
  • Early Bird rights let the Bucks pay Trent at this level only after two straight seasons with the team, a timing quirk that has made the structure itself a focus of the probe.
  • The closest precedent is Minnesota’s Joe Smith case in 1999, when the Timberwolves lost three first-round picks after an under-the-table arrangement was documented in writing.

Insights

How can the league prove an illegal deal with only circumstantial evidence against the Bucks?
With two teams under investigation, is the NBA finally declaring war on unwritten 'handshake deals'?