How Jaylen Brown’s All-NBA snub highlights a voting system with too much at stake

After Jaylen Brown blistered the Pacers in Boston’s Game 2 victory Thursday night, all the talk was about his All-NBA snub and how it supposedly served as the fuel for his 40-point fire. Brown downplayed this theory: “We’re two games from the Finals, so honestly I don’t got the time to give a f—,” he said of the All-NBA conversation. 

Maybe he’s telling the truth. Something tells me he isn’t. Pro athletes, certainly the best of them, will hunt for the tiniest seeds of motivation. And there’s nothing wrong with that. Brown has every right to believe he should’ve made at least third-team All-NBA. He’s obviously not alone in that sentiment. 

Why didn’t he make it? First of all, Jayson Tatum — who made the First Team — is regarded as Boston’s superstar while the rest of the team is assigned more of an aggregate valuation. To a degree, I actually agree with this. And you can argue that there are 15 players more deserving of selection over Brown. I would’ve put Brown on the third team over Domantas Sabonis at the very least, however.

Another potential reason that Brown was left off a 2024 All-NBA team is that he made second-team All-NBA in 2023, which earned him roughly an extra $100 million on the record-breaking five-year max contract he signed with Boston last summer that could end up being worth over $300M. 

Let me restate that: Jaylen Brown is going to make an extra one hundred million dollars because he made an All-NBA team in 2023. Had he not made an All-NBA team, the Celtics only could’ve paid him $189M over four years. 

The reason for this massive pay bump lies in the CBA weeds that qualify a player to make 35% of the total salary cap rather than maxing out at 30% if he makes All-NBA in the year of the extension, or in two of the previous three years. 

So let me ask you: If you were a voter and you were choosing between two players with relatively equal All-NBA cases, but one of them had already gotten the full super-max money and one of them still needed the All-NBA distinction to secure top dollar, would the…


Source link : https://www.cbssports.com/nba/news/how-jaylen-browns-all-nba-snub-highlights-a-voting-system-with-too-much-at-stake/

Author : Brad Botkin

Publish date : 2024-05-25 18:00:45

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