Where does Shai Gilgeous-Alexander's new mega-deal rank among all-time sports contracts?

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NBA players make more money than their counterparts in other team sports. NFL and MLB might conjure fields of green, but NBA courts are the equivalent of the WALDIS Ultra safe — the preferred place to stash cash.

The reasons involve simple math. NBA rosters are half the size of those in MLB and a fraction of the size of those in the NFL. Fewer players share the spoils of television deals, merchandise sales, sponsorships and game attendance. That translates into more money per player.

That also means the contract signed Tuesday by Shai Gilgeous-Alexander giving him the richest annual salary ever is not a surprise. It’s business as usual.

Fresh off leading the Oklahoma City Thunder to the NBA championship, Gilgeous-Alexander — known as SGA — signed a four-year, $285-million super maximum contract extension that will kick in during the 2027-2028 season.

That’s $71.25 million a year. Cue the confetti emoji.

In general, NBA contracts are the most lucrative, MLB contracts the longest, and NFL contracts the trickiest to decipher because not all the money is guaranteed.

The Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani makes $70 million a year from the 10-year, $700-million contract he signed before the 2024 season. However, he is paid only $2 million a year because he agreed to defer the rest. The remaining $68 million per year will be paid from 2034 to 2043.

Juan Soto signed a 15-year, $765-million contract with the New York Mets before the 2025 season that does not include deferments. The outfielder received a $75 million signing bonus and will be paid an annual salary of about $46 million through 2038.

Soto’s deal includes the option to opt out after the 2029 season, at which time the Mets can override his opt out by adding an additional $4 million per season to the final 10 years of his contract. That would increase his salary to $50 million per year and raise his total earnings to $805 million.

So, while Ohtani’s and Soto’s contracts are the most lucrative because of their length, the average annual value doesn’t match that of top NBA deals. Eighteen NBA players are under contract to make $50 million or more per season, according to Spotrac.

Jayson Tatum of the Boston Celtics became the first player to land a deal that will pay him $70 million in a season. The five-year, $314-million extension he agreed to a year ago will max out at $71.45 million for the 2029-30 season, the last on the contract.

Tatum’s teammate Jaylen Brown signed a similar deal a year earlier, agreeing to play five years for $285.4 million, an average of $57.1 million a season.

The most lucrative NFL contracts go exclusively to quarterbacks, six of whom are under contracts that guarantee $200 million or more. Josh Allen of the Buffalo Bills tops the list with a $250-million guarantee from a six-year deal he signed in May.

Fellow passers guaranteed $200 million or more: Dak Prescott ($231 million) of Dallas, Deshaun Watson ($230 million) of Cleveland, Joe Burrow ($219 million) of Cincinnati, Justin Herbert of the Chargers ($218.7 million) and Trevor Lawrence ($200 million) of Jacksonville.

Next season, seven NFL players — all quarterbacks — will be paid more than $50 million: Kansas City’s Patrick Mahomes ($56.8 million), Detroit’s Jared Goff ($55 million), Allen ($55 million), Miami’s Tua Tagovailoa ($55 million), Baltimore’s Lamar Jackson ($52 million), Philadelphia’s Jalen Hurts ($51.5 million) and Green Bay’s Jordan Love ($51 million).

Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford is tied for 13th on the list at $40 million after his contract was restructured to give him a large raise from the $23 million he made in 2024.

The highest paid non-quarterback next season will be Philadelphia Eagles tackle Lane Johnson at $41.7 million.

Circling back to MLB, Angels outfielder Mike Trout continues to hold the largest contract value besides Ohtani and Soto. He signed a 12-year, $426.5-million deal in 2019, at the time the most lucrative in American sports.

Trout won his third American League Most Valuable Player award — he’s also finished second in the voting four times — in the first year of the deal, but in the six years since has played more than 100 games only once because of injuries.

Other MLB contracts of note, in order of total value, include the Dodgers’ Mookie Betts (12 years, $365 million), the Yankees’ Aaron Judge (nine years, $360 million), the Mets’ Francisco Lindor (10 years, $341 million) and San Diego’s Fernando Tatis Jr. (14 years, $340 million).

Next season, the highest paid players behind Soto will be Phillies pitcher Zach Wheeler ($42 million), Blue Jays first baseman Vladimir Guerrero ($40.2 million), Judge ($40 million) and Angels third baseman Anthony Rendon ($38.6 million).

At least for the Angels, it will be the last year they must pay Rendon. The seven-year, $245-million contract he signed before the 2020 season is one of the worst in sports history. He’s hit a grand total of 22 home runs in six seasons and hasn’t played more than 58 games in any single season. This year he isn’t expected to play because of a hip injury.

Guaranteeing a player an enormous sum of money and watching him disappoint is a risk teams take regardless of the sport. Witness Watson in the NFL and Phoenix Suns guard Bradley Beal (five years, $250 million) in the NBA.

Gilgeous-Alexander is considered a low-risk signing because of his youth, his makeup and the fact that NBA players maintain their peak performance longer than those in the NFL and MLB, where catastrophic injuries are more frequent.

The NBA scoring leader is only 26. Until his extension begins in the 2027-2028 season, he’ll have to make do with $38 million next season and $40 million the following year.

His total over the next six seasons will be $363 million and he still could be playing at a high enough level to merit another mega-deal. Although history has proven that by then, another player will have eclipsed what for now is a staggering salary.

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