The Brooklyn Nets will offer Austin Reaves a five-year maximum contract worth approximately $245 million when free agency opens in July, according to league sources. The Nets join at least two other teams preparing max sheets for the 26-year-old Lakers guard, who becomes a restricted free agent after averaging 18.4 points and 5.2 assists this season.
Reaves signed a four-year, $54 million extension with Los Angeles in July 2023, structured with an opt-out after Year 2 that he is expected to exercise. The Lakers hold matching rights but face a luxury tax bill that could exceed $400 million if they retain their current roster and match a max offer. General manager Rob Pelinka has told associates the team will match any offer sheet, but ownership has not confirmed willingness to absorb the tax penalty. The Lakers are already projected to pay $89 million in luxury tax for the 2024-25 season.
The Nets enter the offseason with $68 million in cap space after trading Mikal Bridges and moving Ben Simmons' expiring contract. Owner Joe Tsai has authorized basketball operations president Sean Marks to pursue a primary ball-handler, preferably under 28 years old, who can anchor the offense through the next competitive window. Reaves fits the profile and carries the added advantage of forcing a Lakers decision that could reshape the Western Conference.
The restricted free agency mechanism means Brooklyn must wait for Los Angeles to decline matching before signing Reaves. The Lakers have three days to match once the Nets submit a signed offer sheet. If Los Angeles declines, Reaves cannot be traded for one year under CBA rules, locking him into Brooklyn's core alongside Cam Thomas and Nic Claxton. If the Lakers match, the Nets pivot to secondary targets including Collin Sexton and Immanuel Quickley, both unrestricted.
The move also carries sponsor implications. Reaves holds endorsement deals with Rigorer and Bose, neither with exclusivity clauses. The Nets' jersey patch sponsor, Webull, has inquired about athlete partnerships tied to the roster, according to a person familiar with the discussions. A Reaves signing would trigger conversations about a co-branded marketing campaign aimed at the 25-to-40 male demo that tracks both NBA and retail trading platforms.
Agent Aaron Reaves of Equity Sports Group declined to comment. He has handled three restricted free agency max negotiations since 2019, all of which the incumbent team matched. The Lakers have not publicly addressed their offseason cap strategy, but Pelinka told reporters in April that "keeping the core together" remains the priority. LeBron James, who becomes a free agent with a $52 million player option, has privately advocated for retaining Reaves, per sources.
The Nets are also monitoring the Lakers' draft plans. Los Angeles holds the No. 21 pick in June and is exploring trades to move into the lottery. If the Lakers signal willingness to attach future draft capital to salary dumps, it would indicate preparation to clear space for a Reaves match. Brooklyn's front office is tracking those discussions.
The Nets' max offer is expected to include a 15 percent trade kicker, standard for restricted free agency poison pills. The Lakers can match the full amount, including the kicker, but doing so would push their luxury tax bill past $100 million for the second consecutive season. Owner Jeanie Buss has historically resisted sustained tax payments, preferring to reset below the threshold every two to three years.
Free agency begins July 1. Offer sheets can be signed starting July 6. The Lakers' three-day match window begins the day the Nets formally submit the agreement to the league office.
The takeaway
Brooklyn's max offer forces Lakers into a **$245M** commitment or lose their second-best playmaker while Tsai gets his under-28 ball-handler either way.
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