The offer is too low? Should the Cavaliers backcourt sign this contract?
According to Cleveland Honest Man reporter Chris Fedor, the Cleveland Cavaliers have issued a three-year, nearly $40 million extension offer for restricted free agent Collin Sexton. But Sexton was clearly a little receptive to the content of the offer, believing he deserved a big contract with an average salary close to or even more than $20 million. The problem at hand is that no team in the market has a strong interest in Sexton, and the only teams with enough salary space to offer him a satisfactory offer are the San Antonio Spurs and Indiana Pacers, but it is clear that these two teams will not be willing to offer him a similar contract.
For Sexton, he now had only two options left. Either accept a contract with a much lower overall salary than expected and accept a result of earning millions less each season in the coming seasons, or accept the Cavaliers' previous offer for his 7228448 qualifications, stay with the Cavaliers for another year and become a full free agent next summer.
However, for the vast majority of players, voluntarily giving up super contracts worth tens of millions of dollars and gambling heavily on their careers is obviously a very risky thing. Not to mention that Sexton had just suffered a serious injury last season and had missed almost the entire season. In case he can't get back to his current state in the new season, let alone a contract of tens of millions, whether he can get a full middle-class or even a mini-middle-class contract is a question mark.
Not sure how Sexton will make his choice in the end, will he accept this offer that is much lower than expected?
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