Timberwolves center Rudy Gobert gets three-year, $110 million contract extension

The NBA’s Defensive Player of the Year will have a player option after the second season of the new deal.

The Minnesota Star Tribune
October 23, 2024 at 2:23AM
Center Rudy Gobert of the Timberwolves, right, battles Dallas' Kyrie Irving under the basket during last year's playoffs. On Tuesday, Gobert agreed to a new three-year, $110 million contract with the Wolves. (Carlos Gonzalez/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

LOS ANGELES – Multiple times this offseason, Timberwolves President Tim Connelly said it was his hope Rudy Gobert would retire with the team.

Connelly and Gobert took a step toward making that a reality Tuesday night as Gobert agreed to a three-year, $110 million extension, a source confirmed.

The center will make $43.8 million this season, and the extension starts in 2025-26. He will decline a player option for $46.7 million he had after this season but will have a player option after the second year of this new contract, a source confirmed. ESPN first reported news of the deal.

“It was about finding a win-win situation,” Gobert said after Tuesday’s loss to the Lakers. “I’m happy here. My family’s happy here. I want to win a championship here. Also, my next year contract was really high. So being able to allow the team to keep our guys, that was the win for the Timberwolves. But being able to keep me for a longer term was great for both of us.”

Gobert, 32, is playing his third season in Minnesota after picking up his fourth NBA Defensive Player of the Year award last season. His decline in salary for next season in favor of longer-term money could create a pathway for the Wolves to dip under the burdensome second apron of the salary cap, which they are exceeding this season. With that comes less punitive penalities under the collective bargaining agreement, should the Wolves stay under the second apron in future years, such as the Wolves not having draft picks frozen in trades several years into the future and not having those picks fall to the end of the first round.

The trade this offseason that sent Karl-Anthony Towns to New York for Julius Randle and Donte DiVincenzo also contributed to this, as it helped the Wolves save money in the short term while freeing up long-term roster flexibility as the team rid itself of four years of Towns’ supermax contract. This sort of roster flexibility was on Gobert’s mind when negotiating the deal, and he wanted to help the team with this goal.

“It’s about finding balance,” Gobert said. “Every year, every time I sign a contract I always try to leave a little bit for the team, be able to realize that I’m grateful being able to earn what I’m earning coming from where I come from. It’s an amazing blessing. At the same time being able to not be too greedy and leave some on the table for our competitiveness as a team. I think it’s important.”

Connelly is high on center Naz Reid, who he would like to have in a Wolves uniform after this season, when Reid has a player option. Gobert’s new deal creates a potential path for the Wolves to re-sign him should he decline a player option after this season.

“Even more at this point in my career, it’s about being where I feel at home and where I can win championships,” Gobert said. “These guys, from players to coaches to organization, embrace me and believed in me and gave me the opportunity to be the best version of myself on and off the court.”

The deal with Gobert ensures he will be with the Wolves as he enters his mid-30s and still allows the Wolves roster flexibility in the future, especially if Gobert opts out after the second year of the deal. Gobert averaged 14 points and 12.9 rebounds a season ago along with 2.1 blocks. He was the anchor of the Wolves’ No. 1 defense a season ago after coming over from Utah in a blockbuster trade in the summer of 2022.

about the writer

about the writer

Chris Hine

Sports reporter

Chris Hine is the Timberwolves reporter at the Minnesota Star Tribune.

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