
Speculation began to grow on Friday that San Antonio Spurs superstar Victor Wembanyama might be willing to take a discounted contract to help give the team further financial flexibility to build a winner around him.
That is what he ended up doing, even if it still results in him getting a $252 million extension over five years.
According to ESPN's Shams Charania on Friday, Wembanyama's deal is a maximum rookie-scale contract extension that includes a player option in the fifth year.
While it might be hard to wrestle with the idea of a $252 million max contract being some sort of a favor to the Spurs, it kind of is.
Potentially a significant one.
According to Charania's report, Wembanyama could have taken the 30% supermax escalators in his contract, potentially pushing its total value to $303 million. He instead opted to take the 25% maximum.
It is the third-largest rookie extension in NBA history, trailing the matching $269 million contracts signed by Cade Cunningham with the Detroit Pistons and Evan Mobley with the Cleveland Cavaliers.
The contract also helps the Spurs avoid the luxury tax over the next two seasons, and they could still delay the tax clock by trading De'Aaron Fox before then.
The Spurs should avoid the luxury tax over the next two seasons with Victor Wembanyama locked into the 25 percent max.
— Yossi Gozlan (@YossiGozlan) July 10, 2026
Their tax clock is now expected to start in 2028-29 when Stephon Castle starts his next deal.
They could delay it further if they trade De’Aaron Fox by then. https://t.co/NG5u9zKSSk
It may not seem like a huge savings in the context of a $252 million deal, but every little bit of savings in a salary-capped league helps the organization.
Wembanyama is already one of the best players in the NBA — if not actually the best player — and has helped rapidly transform the Spurs into a championship-level team.
He led the Spurs to the NBA Finals this past season, only his third in the league, where they lost to the New York Knicks in five games.
He averaged a career-best 25 points per game this season, while leading the league in blocks (3.1 per game) for the third consecutive year. He also took his first career Defensive Player of the Year Award, while also finishing third in the league's MVP voting.
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