LeBron James wants you to know he is underpaid by Heat

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http://www.freep.com/usatoday/article/1885161&usatref=sportsmod?odyssey=mod|newswell|text|Sports|p
February 1, 2013


LeBron James wants you to know he is underpaid by Heat

by Adi Joseph, USA TODAY Sports

LeBron James has never signed a maximum-level contract. He is the ninth highest-paid player in the NBA. He makes the exact same amount as Miami Heat teammate Chris Bosh.
So when the defending NBA MVP and Finals MVP says he is underpaid, well, he's right.
But Forbes estimates James hauls in about $40 million a year in endorsements to go along with his $17.5 million salary. When you're making almost $60 million, no one wants to hear you complain about money. Even if your beef is reasonable.
"I have not had a full max deal yet in my career - that's a story untold," James told ESPN on Friday. "I don't get (credit) for it. That doesn't matter to me; playing the game is what matters to me. Financially, I'll sacrifice for the team. It shows for some of the top guys, it isn't all about money. That's the genuine side of this, it's about winning. I understand that.
"If you want the truth, if this was baseball, (my salary would) be up. I mean way up there," he added.
Again, he's right. New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez raked in $29 million last season for mediocre production. His salary comes from a 10-year contract extension signed in 2008. James signed his six-year deal (with opt-out clauses) with the Heat in 2010.
That deal infamously came when he joined forces with Dwyane Wade and Bosh in Miami. In order to bring three stars together and still have cap space for a decent supporting cast, the Heat gave Wade, Bosh and James less money than they could have made elsewhere.
That cap-space issue is what James is harping on, even if he chose his words poorly. The deal the players agreed to after last season's lockout substantially limited the length and size of even maximum contracts. Gone are the days when Juwan Howard could earn $20 million a year. Major League Baseball still operates without a salary cap.
But James also chose not to take the biggest possible contract, which would have come from staying with the Cleveland Cavaliers. And moving to Miami helped increase his name-recognition factor, albeit not all in a good way.
Still, James says he took the lesser value to give the Heat a better team. And he says even the bigger contract wouldn't have equaled his actual value to a team.
"I don't think my value on the floor can really be compensated for, anyways, because of the (collective bargaining agreement)," James told ESPN.
Yes, he's still right. And there are 58 million reasons most people won't care.



Copyright 2013 USATODAY.com
 

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whole lot more underpaid workers who dont make millions out there so well ..............
 

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http://www.freep.com/usatoday/article/1885161&usatref=sportsmod?odyssey=mod|newswell|text|Sports|p
February 1, 2013


LeBron James wants you to know he is underpaid by Heat

by Adi Joseph, USA TODAY Sports

LeBron James has never signed a maximum-level contract. He is the ninth highest-paid player in the NBA. He makes the exact same amount as Miami Heat teammate Chris Bosh.
So when the defending NBA MVP and Finals MVP says he is underpaid, well, he's right.
But Forbes estimates James hauls in about $40 million a year in endorsements to go along with his $17.5 million salary. When you're making almost $60 million, no one wants to hear you complain about money. Even if your beef is reasonable.
"I have not had a full max deal yet in my career - that's a story untold," James told ESPN on Friday. "I don't get (credit) for it. That doesn't matter to me; playing the game is what matters to me. Financially, I'll sacrifice for the team. It shows for some of the top guys, it isn't all about money. That's the genuine side of this, it's about winning. I understand that.
"If you want the truth, if this was baseball, (my salary would) be up. I mean way up there," he added.
Again, he's right. New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez raked in $29 million last season for mediocre production. His salary comes from a 10-year contract extension signed in 2008. James signed his six-year deal (with opt-out clauses) with the Heat in 2010.
That deal infamously came when he joined forces with Dwyane Wade and Bosh in Miami. In order to bring three stars together and still have cap space for a decent supporting cast, the Heat gave Wade, Bosh and James less money than they could have made elsewhere.
That cap-space issue is what James is harping on, even if he chose his words poorly. The deal the players agreed to after last season's lockout substantially limited the length and size of even maximum contracts. Gone are the days when Juwan Howard could earn $20 million a year. Major League Baseball still operates without a salary cap.
But James also chose not to take the biggest possible contract, which would have come from staying with the Cleveland Cavaliers. And moving to Miami helped increase his name-recognition factor, albeit not all in a good way.
Still, James says he took the lesser value to give the Heat a better team. And he says even the bigger contract wouldn't have equaled his actual value to a team.
"I don't think my value on the floor can really be compensated for, anyways, because of the (collective bargaining agreement)," James told ESPN.
Yes, he's still right. And there are 58 million reasons most people won't care.



Copyright 2013 USATODAY.com

Obviously in a free market system with less restraint (like baseball) he would get 50-60Ms a year easy....
 

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I heard the owner of the Heat saying they lose money yearly and went on to explain why teams like Knicks make money. I forgot the explanation but it had to do with the venue or something along those lines.
 

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I heard the owner of the Heat saying they lose money yearly and went on to explain why teams like Knicks make money. I forgot the explanation but it had to do with the venue or something along those lines.

It mostly has to do with local TV revenue actually.
 

I never ever got beat-I just run out of Money
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He isn't GOD, he should be thankful for what he makes. The guy makes millions a year and has more money than 100 families can spend in a life time and he feels like he is under paid. Let him get a $50,000 a yr. job and then he can talk about struggling and being under paid. These talented greedy athletes are ungrateful for what they have.
 

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I have no problem with athletes getting paid for what the market will bare.
 

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So what? Jordan was underpaid for years too. Part of the reason he is underpaid is so he can have great talent around him.
 
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People get pissed if athletes spit the routine lines

People get pissed if athletes tell the truth

You can't win.
 

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Not like LeBron's NBA salary is $3.5M per year --- he's still making very close to max salary.

Big picture, he's better off anyway. Guys like LeBron and Jordan don't make their money from NBA salary --- they make their money from endorsements. The more games (and championships) they win, the more endorsements they'll receive.

If taking less money allows the Heat to build a better roster, then it's a win-win for LeBron's bank account.
 

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I did not read one word of that story where I heard James complaining. All he was doing was stating 100% true facts. What's the issue here? Is it all of a sudden wrong to state facts?
 

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he is underpaid....but i don't see where the problem is....he took the paycut to win a championship.....

give him another 10 million and take away his ring and put him on the utah jazz....you can't have it both ways lebron....we know you are the best and underpaid, but that was on you, not us.....carry on
 

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he will be back in cleve in a couple yrs and then if he wins a title there finally he will be considered greatest.. until then who knows puff_>>

-murph
 

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he is underpaid....but i don't see where the problem is....he took the paycut to win a championship.....

give him another 10 million and take away his ring and put him on the utah jazz....you can't have it both ways lebron....we know you are the best and underpaid, but that was on you, not us.....carry on

Maybe I need to Read the story again. I don't see anywhere in the story where he is complaining or wanting it both ways. All he was doing was making factual claims with no hint of complaining
 

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Maybe I need to Read the story again. I don't see anywhere in the story where he is complaining or wanting it both ways. All he was doing was making factual claims with no hint of complaining

i too may need to reread....i don't think he is complaining but it sounded to me like he wanted to be appreciated and celebrated in miami by fans (which they already do) for taking less than a max deal
 

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i too may need to reread....i don't think he is complaining but it sounded to me like he wanted to be appreciated and celebrated in miami by fans (which they already do) for taking less than a max deal

No I think he was just making the point that if his salary was driven purely by supply/demand economics he would make a shit ton more.
 

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