The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Enormous raises, big expectatio­ns await some this NBA season

- By Tim Reynolds

BOCA RATON, FLA. » Miami guard Tyler Johnson has already seen what his new-and-much-improved paychecks from the Heat will look like this season.

Frankly, he’s still stunned.

“It’s surreal,” Johnson said.

Virtually every player in the NBA is a millionair­e. But a handful like Johnson, Denver’s Nikola Jokic and Orlando’s Aaron Gordon are seeing their salaries rise to a different stratosphe­re this season, enormous raises that may come with an enormous rise in expectatio­ns.

When getting paid like stars, it stands to reason that fans — and their teams — will expect star efforts.

“I feel like some people would feel the added pressure, but I don’t,” said Gordon, who signed a $76 million extension with Orlando over the summer. “I’m just going to go out there and play the game that I love to play with teammates that I love to play with. I know they’ll be there to help take the pressure off me and I’m going to help take the pressure off them.”

According to figures reviewed by The Associated Press, there are 11 NBA players who in line for raises of $11 million or more this season. Many of them are former high draft picks cashing in on non-rookie deals for the first time, and a couple others are establishe­d stars whose deals went from “big” to “really big” this summer.

No one saw more of a salary leap than Jokic, who made $1.5 million last season and will collect $25.5 million this season. Jokic is an enormous talent and making his first All-Star team is among his goals this season, but the Nuggets aren’t burdening him with significan­tly higher expectatio­ns because of the big pay raise.

The way they see it, he’s already earned the payday.

“The contract is the contract,” Nuggets coach Michael Malone said. “But the great thing is about Nikola Jokic — yes, he’s making a lot more money, but it’s not going to change who he is. He’s a humble kid from Sombor, Serbia, who just wants to play basketball and wants to make his teammates better.”

Jokic is the biggest part of some big increased-salary commitment­s by the Nuggets. Gary Harris got a $14 million raise, going to $16.5 million this season.

And Jokic said he’s not going to change.

“I’m going to be the same way I was three years ago,” said Jokic, who hails from a nation where the average worker takes home the equivalent of about $8,000 a year. “It worked really good for me so I’m going to keep it that way.”

Many of the biggest-raise getters are former high draft picks cashing in on nonrookie deals for the first time, like Joel Embiid with Philadelph­ia, Andrew Wiggins with Minnesota and Zach LaVine with Chicago.

Embiid’s salary rose $19.4 million to $25.5 million. Wiggins got a $17.9 million raise to $25.5 million, LaVine is getting a $16.3 million jump to $19.5 million, and Gordon will make $21.6 million — an increase of $16.1 million from last year.

They were all lottery picks, now paid like lottery winners.

Chris Paul and Paul George — long-establishe­d stars — also got $11 million raises, both now making over $30 million. Chicago’s Jabari Parker ($20 million, a raise of $13.2 million) and Houston’s Clint Capela ($13.8 million, a raise of $11.5 million) also are in the big-raise club.

Heat guard Dwyane Wade knows what that first big payday is like. He has free advice to players like Johnson and Gordon.

“What you’ve got to understand is that just because you’re getting $15 million more now, you don’t need to live $15 million richer,” said Wade, who has collected about $200 million in NBA salaries.

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 ?? JOHN RAOUX — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Orlando Magic’s Mohamed Bamba (5), Aaron Gordon (00) and Jonathan Isaac (1) joke around before posing for a photo at the team practice facility for the NBA basketball team media day Monday in Orlando, Fla.
JOHN RAOUX — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Orlando Magic’s Mohamed Bamba (5), Aaron Gordon (00) and Jonathan Isaac (1) joke around before posing for a photo at the team practice facility for the NBA basketball team media day Monday in Orlando, Fla.

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