"It was all out of love." - Chris Paul's brother CJ, when asked why Chris once pulled a knife on him.

 
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5  -  Kevin Garnett - PF/C, 6'11, 253
Boston Celtics - Acquired via trade in July 2007
       Date of birth: 05/19/1976
       Country: USA
     Drafted (NBA): 5th pick, 1995
     Out of: Farragut Academy HS
  NBA Experience: 17 years
  Hand: Right

When: Where:
June 1995 - July 2007 Minnesota Timberwolves (NBA)
July 2007 - present Boston Celtics (NBA)


Date
League
Transaction
2nd October, 1995 NBA Signed four year, approx. $5.6 million rookie scale contract with Minnesota.
1st October, 1997 NBA Signed a six year, $126 million extension with Minnesota.
1st October, 2003 NBA Signed a five year, approx. $105 million extension with Minnesota. Included early termination option after 2007/08 season.
31st July, 2007 NBA Traded by Minnesota to Boston in exchange for Al Jefferson, Gerald Green, Sebastian Telfair, Ryan Gomes, Theo Ratliff, cash, the return of Minnesota's 2009 first round pick (#6, Jonny Flynn), and Boston's top 3 protected 2009 first round draft pick (#28, Wayne Ellington). Concurrent to the trade, Garnett declined his 2008/09 ETO, and signed a three year, $56,496,132 extension.
14th July, 2012 NBA Re-signed by Boston to a partially guaranteed three year, $36 million contract.


From blog:


   Current Trade Kickers
2010-06-11

[...] You only get one trade kicker per contract; that is to say, if you sign a contract with a trade kicker in it, the trade kicker is only applied to the first trade that contract is in and not to any subsequent contracts. (The exception is with sign and trades, where the first trade - the sign and trade - is ignored, and the trade kicker is applied to the next subsequent trade. This is why Peja is listed above.)

Because of that, there are a good many players whose current contracts featured trade kickers that have already been invoked. Here they are now, along with the value of their kicker. Note: only currently-being-paid contracts are listed, and the player doesn't necessarily have to be on an NBA roster any more.

- Tony Battie (10%)
- Mark Blount (15%)
- Bruce Bowen (lesser of 15% or $300,000)
- Devin Brown (10%)
- Greg Buckner (5%)
- Kevin Garnett (15%)
- Drew Gooden (5%)
- Eddie House (7.5%)
- Steven Hunter (7.5%)
- Zydrunas Ilgauskas (15%)
- Mike James (5%)
- Jared Jeffries (15%)
- Amir Johnson (15%)
- Mikki Moore (12.5%)
- Shaquille O'Neal (15%)
- Quentin Richardson (7.5%)
- John Salmons (15%)
- Bobby Simmons (10%)
- Etan Thomas (15%)
- Damien Wilkins (10%, only up to $1.2 mil)

[read full post]


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Note: Non-US teams that the player has played for are, unless stated otherwise, from the top division in that nation. If league or division name is expressly stated, it's not the top division. The only exceptions to this are the rare occasions where no one league is said to be above the other, such as with the JBL/BJ League split inJapan.

In the event where more than one agent is listed, this is because the player has more than one agent. This is rather commonplace - a lot of times, a player will sign with a big agency, and they will have both primary and secondary agents from within that agency to handle their affairs. (Where that happens, the primary agent is listed first.) Also, foreign players tend to have both American and domestic agents. Where the details of such are known, they are listed.


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