It is all a matter of perspective. For the guy with no money, $1,000 is a fortune. For the guy making $50,000, $10,000 is a hugh amount of money. For the guy making $500,000, $100,000 is a fortune, and so on. Just because these guys are on a different scale of salary than I am does not mean that they don't sweat the 250,000 difference or so in state taxes. I think they do.
That said, you have a strong point. First, there are those guys that care more about winning than others, and will take a pay cut to win. Is Maggette one of them? I don't know. Also, there is more money in winning. If you team wins, you are more valuable the next year, rightly or wrongly.
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Is food more expensive if you make a million
than if you make 100,000? That's kinda silly.
Sorry, that's just how I feel. If you have the
right decision makers (i.e. agents etc) at your
side, you
should be able to make it last.
I'm stressing "should" here.
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Food is more expensive if you make millions. Those with bunches of money tend to eat at fancier establishments that cost more. Regardless, I understand your point of view. From the perspective of about 99% of the people posting here, $5m is a bunch of money. For others with multi-millons, it does not seem as much. Rightly or wrongly (wrongly from my point of view) the NBA players have quite expensive lifestyles that involve spending millions per year. Since they are not going to be able to play forever, if they want to maintain a million-per-year lifestyle, they have to make tons of money now. While I also don't agree with it, I understand the mind-set of why many NBA players are all about the money now. While we might not care much about the difference between $5 and $6 million - seeing it as butt load of money regardless - the NBA players don't see it as nearly as much of a windfall, and are probably far more sensitive to the difference.