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The NBA is checking if the Milwaukee Bucks broke the rules when they re-signed their player Gary Trent Jr.
A person who speaks for the NBA told The Athletic newspaper: “The NBA is continuing to look into it.”
The worry is that the Bucks may have found a sneaky way to pay Trent more money than the rules normally allow.
Important Point: The NBA is reviewing this deal for possible “salary cap circumvention” — that just means trying to get around the rules about how much teams can pay players.
Last weekend, the Bucks surprised everyone in the NBA world. They agreed to give Trent:
Trent is 27 years old. He just finished his second year in Milwaukee. Last season, he scored:
Those were his lowest numbers since his very first year in the league (he has played 8 years total).
Trent used to sign much smaller contracts with Milwaukee. Here is the simple timeline:
Summer 2024: He signed a 1-year contract for the minimum money (the smallest allowed) to join the Bucks.
Summer 2025: After drawing interest from other teams, he stayed with the Bucks on a small raise:
When the signing was announced, many team bosses were confused. The big payday did not match:
Also, The Athletic reported that rival team executives had expected this deal for months. Many thought the Bucks would pay Trent a lot to thank him for signing cheap last year.
Some people around the league wonder if there was a secret plan:
From a money-rules view, the Bucks used something called Early Bird rights.
In simple words, Early Bird rights let a team re-sign a player for a first-year salary that is:
…whichever is bigger.
But there is a catch:
Trent only qualified for this starting this summer, so this was the first time Milwaukee could use it.
The most similar cheating case happened with the Minnesota Timberwolves in 1999:
Why were they punished so hard?
We do not know if the NBA would need the same written proof to punish the Bucks with Trent.
The NBA is reviewing the Bucks’ new 4-year, $64 million deal with Gary Trent Jr. because it looks unusual compared to his play and past pay. The league is checking if there was a secret agreement to pay him less before and more now, which would break salary cap rules. The Bucks used Early Bird rights, which only became available this summer. A similar past case (Joe Smith) led to big punishments, but only because there was written proof.
Q1: What does “salary cap circumvention” mean in kid terms?
A: It means a team tries to break or sneak around the rules for how much they can pay players.
Q2: Why couldn’t Trent get this big contract last year?
A: Because he had not been with the Bucks for two straight years yet. The Early Bird rule needs that time first.
Q3: What is Early Bird rights?
A: A rule that lets a team pay a player more than usual to keep him, after he has been on the team for two years without leaving.
Q4: What happened to the Timberwolves in the Joe Smith case?
A: They lost three first-round draft picks because they had a written secret deal to pay him later with cheat-like contracts.
Q5: Is Trent definitely in trouble?
A: Not yet. The NBA is still looking. They need proof, and we don’t know if they have it.