Monday 25th November 2024,
The Hoop Doctors

Greg Monroe Hasn’t Decided Whether He’ll Opt Into Last Year of Contract with Bucks

greg monroe

Greg Monroe is in the second season of his three-year deal with the Milwaukee Bucks. The assumption when he signed this pact back in 2015 was that he would opt out of its final year, this summer, and take advantage of the NBA’s salary-cap boom.

But a lot has changed since then. The value of bigs around the league has never been weirder. Monroe himself has vacillated in and out of the Bucks’ rotation, settling in as a reserve big who pummels second units.

While he should certainly be able to guarantee himself more money over the long term if he opts out, there is almost no way he matches the $17.9 million he’s slated to earn next year on an annual basis. Thus, his dilemma, which is only complicated by the fact that Milwaukee has reportedly been shopping him for roughly forever.

Not surprisingly, he hasn’t yet made a decision about what he’ll do this offseason, per USA Today‘s Charles F. Gardner:

When Monroe agreed to the deal with the Bucks in the summer of 2015, agent David Falk said it would give his client and the team some flexibility.

The rise of young stars Giannis Antetokounmpo and Jabari Parker could influence Monroe’s decision this off-season, but he said that is not on his mind yet.

“We’re definitely doing some good things right now,” Greg Monroe said. “I’m just focusing on the season anyway.

“I’m not thinking about anything like the off-season right now. There is a time and place for everything. If and when I have to make a decision, that time is not right now.”

 Monroe is averaging more minutes than any other big in Milwaukee, so there is that to consider. If the Bucks decide to trade one of John Henson or Miles Plumlee over the offseason, Monroe’s role, even if it’s off the bench could actually increase.
Still, players and their agents usually have a good idea which way the market will swing in advance of the summer. If it becomes clear to Monroe he can net a ton of guaranteed money while snagging a starting gig elsewhere, there’s a real chance he opts out and leaves Milwaukee—a team that, even with his improved play, may not actually want him.

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