How Allen Iverson Was Saved By Reebok From Going Broke

Authored by basketballforever.com and submitted by dropstop
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We all know how easy it is for an NBA player to run out of money pretty quickly after retirement. It’s pretty simple actually. Those huge pay checks encourage the sort of unsustainable lavish lifestyle that only really works if you’re able to invest and save.

Players like Kobe Bryant are renowned for their smart decisions when it comes to saving, whereas others like Allen Iverson…less so.

Over the course of Iverson’s career he earned a staggering $200 million. $155m from his salary and another 40m-50m in endorsements. He allegedly traveled with an entourage of as many as 50 people at times. He showered friends and family, especially his mother, with cars, jewelry, houses and expensive vacations.

How did Iverson manage to go broke?

Firstly, there’s always ways for celebrities to claim bankruptcy but that doesn’t necessarily mean they have no money. This is sometimes done in an effort to settle debts and start a clean financial sleight. However, in Iverson’s case, his bankruptcy was very much a by product of his spending habits.

Aside from showering his entourage with gifts he couldn’t afford and including them in a lifestyle fit for a king, he apparently had a habit of keeping his money in dozens and dozens of garbage bags around his mansion. Some would occasionally go missing. At one point in his career he arrived back at an airport and had forgotten where he parked his car so apparently ditched the car and bought a new one.

Allen’s financial situation came to light in 2012 after a judge ordered him to pay $900,000 to a Georgia jeweler but apparently Iverson didn’t have the funds to cut the check.

In a December 2012 court filing, Iverson told a judge in Georgia that his monthly income is $62,500 but that his expenses were $360,000! The breakdown was as follows:

– $125,000 goes to paying back various creditors and mortgages.

Dude’s spending money on enough groceries to end world hunger but somehow manages to spend the same amount on restaurants…yet is still as skinny as ever. That is some sort of supernatural gift he has.

So how has Reebok helped him?

In 2001, Iverson made a decision that would inevitably save him from his future self. He signed a very unique endorsement deal with Reebok. In addition to paying $800,000 a year for life, Reebok set aside $32 million in a trust fund that Allen will not be able to access until he turns 55 in the year 2030. This deal came to light when Allen’s ex-wife filed for divorce. As a result of the divorce, Allen will inherit half the trust fund in 2030.

At 45, Iverson is eligible to start drawing on an NBA pension that maxes out at 10 years of active duty, or take whatever’s there as lump sum. He will be entitled roughly to $8,000 per month ($800 per x 10).

NBC reported that his lump sum will be between $1.5 million and $1.8 million. Alternatively, he can elect to take monthly checks of approximately $14,000 per.

The recently inducted Hall of Fame member just needs to play his cards right and sure enough he’ll be back in a pretty good spot again. However, he’ll need to keep those expenses down if he wants to make sure he never ends up broke again!

hammertime4525 on November 8th, 2017 at 01:52 UTC »

Imagine having a bad day and then realizing, "huh, when I turn 55 I get $32 million just for being alive and wearing free clothes."

hells_cowbells on November 7th, 2017 at 23:03 UTC »

This reminds me of the Bobby Bonilla contract. $1.19 mil per year from 2011-2035.

thr33beggars on November 7th, 2017 at 20:19 UTC »

I'm not a contract lawyer or anything but that seems like a very good deal.