NBA

Chris Bosh Just Cashed the Last of His Bobby Bonilla-Type Checks From the Heat That Paid Him More Than Larry Bird and Magic Johnson Made Their Entire Careers

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Deferred payments are more common than you think in professional sports, but some are certainly more notable than others.

The most high-profile case, of course, belongs to six-time MLB All-Star Bobby Bonilla, who turned the $5.9 million he was owed by the New York Mets following the 1999 season into $29.75 million by deferring payment for more than a decade. He’s been cashing $1.19 million checks every July 1 since 2011 and will continue to do so until 2035.

So that’s the case most sports fans know.

One you may not, however, is that of two-time Miami Heat, checks that paid him nearly twice the amount Bonilla will end up making.

Chris Bosh just cashed the last of his Bobby Bonilla-type checks from the Miami Heat

Chris Bosh | Takashi Aoyama/Getty Images

An 11-time NBA All-Star with the Toronto Raptors and Miami Heat, Bosh saw his Hall of Fame NBA career come to a heartbreaking conclusion after a blood clot condition affected his ability to take the floor. He appeared in just 97 regular-season games during his final two seasons in South Beach — his final two seasons in which he played, that is — and sat out the entire 2016-17 campaign.

On June 2, 2017, the NBA ruled the clotting issues to be a career-ending illness, which allowed the Heat to remove Bosh’s contract from their salary cap. But that could only happen if Miami released him, which Pat Riley did a short time later.

However, Bosh still had millions of dollars remaining on the five-year/$118 million guaranteed contract he’d signed in 2014, which would have kept him in Miami through the 2018-19 season had he stayed healthy.

But instead of having to fork over all that money at once or even over the two seasons he was supposed to play, a Bobby Bonilla-type deal was reached. For a 60-month span from November 1, 2017, to November 1, 2022, Bosh would receive twice-monthly checks in the amount of $434,393.

To save you the trouble of finding the calculator on your phone, that’s $52,127,160 that Bosh has been paid in the last five years without playing a game. To put that in some historical perspective, that’s more than double what Magic Johnson made in his with the Lakers.

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Luke Norris
Sports Editor

Luke Norris began his sportswriting career in 2013 and ed Sportscasting in 2020. The former Section Editor of the NFL and Motorsports sections, he now spends his time here in the role of Senior Writer-Programmer. His well-rounded sports knowledge allows him to cover the NFL, NBA, PGA Tour, MLB, boxing, WWE, and NASCAR for Sportscasting. Luke is an avid golfer who finds inspiration in the way sports can bring people together and provide a distraction from the real world. He hopes to provide a little entertainment or an escape from the real world with every article he writes, even if only for a few minutes. In addition to his work here at Sportscasting, Luke's work has appeared on  The Sportster, Inquisitr, GiveMeSport, FanSided, Yahoo! Fox Sports, and Sports Illustrated.

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Luke Norris Sports Editor

Luke Norris began his sportswriting career in 2013 and ed Sportscasting in 2020. The former Section Editor of the NFL and Motorsports sections, he now spends his time here in the role of Senior Writer-Programmer. His well-rounded sports knowledge allows him to cover the NFL, NBA, PGA Tour, MLB, boxing, WWE, and NASCAR for Sportscasting. Luke is an avid golfer who finds inspiration in the way sports can bring people together and provide a distraction from the real world. He hopes to provide a little entertainment or an escape from the real world with every article he writes, even if only for a few minutes. In addition to his work here at Sportscasting, Luke's work has appeared on  The Sportster, Inquisitr, GiveMeSport, FanSided, Yahoo! Fox Sports, and Sports Illustrated.

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