LOS ANGELES — The Austin Reaves contract gives the Los Angeles Lakers a major piece for their post-transition future, with the 26-year-old guard agreeing to stay in Los Angeles on a four-year maximum deal worth $185 million, according to ESPN’s Shams Charania.
Reaves’ agents at AMR Agency, Aaron Reilly and Reggie Berry, confirmed the agreement. The move also makes him the highest-paid undrafted player in NBA history, surpassing the benchmark previously held by Fred VanVleet. Big money. Real leverage.
Austin Reaves contract and the Lakers’ salary cap plan
The Lakers moved quickly to secure one of their most valuable players and avoid the risk of losing him to a rival such as the Detroit Pistons. Reaves had declined a $14.9 million player option for next season, clearing the way for the larger agreement.
In the first year of the new deal, Reaves will earn $41.3 million. Even with the huge salary jump, the Lakers do not expect the agreement to damage their summer flexibility under the salary cap.
That is because the front office had already built Reaves’ $20.9 million cap hold into its planning. The contract will be finalized after the Lakers finish using the rest of their available room to chase other free agents.
It was a calculated bet. And it worked.
Presidents of basketball operations and general manager Rob Pelinka said keeping Reaves had been a priority for the franchise’s future. The talks intensified over the final 10 days before the deal came together.
“He started his journey here as a Laker and has made it clear to us that he wants that journey to continue here,” Pelinka said in an end-of-season interview, as quoted by ESPN. “We want that adventure to continue in the purple and gold. He represents the work ethic we value.”
How Austin Reaves contract fits the Lakers’ offense
Reaves’ role has grown from a reserve shooter into a central playmaker. Early in his career, the Lakers mostly used him as a spot-up threat in the corners. Last season showed a different skill set altogether.
He handled more pick-and-roll possessions, changed pace well with the dribble, and eased the load on LeBron James as the team’s primary creator. That matters. The Lakers now have more ways to attack.
Head coach JJ Redick can use Reaves as a full-time point guard or a secondary shooting guard. His pull-up jumper and ability to draw fouls in the paint have become key tools, especially when the offense stalls late in games.
For a Lakers team that has too often struggled in fourth quarters, that kind of shot creation is valuable.
Numbers behind the Austin Reaves contract
The four-year agreement also includes a player option in the 2029-30 season, giving Reaves control over his next move as the league’s salary ceiling is projected to rise sharply with the NBA’s new media rights deal.
Reaves backed up the payday with production. Last season, he averaged 23.3 points per game while shooting 49 percent from the field and 36 percent from three-point range. He also contributed 5.5 assists, 4.7 rebounds, and 1.1 steals per game.
| Stat Category | Regular Season | Playoffs |
|---|---|---|
| Points per Game (PPG) | 23.3 | 20.0 |
| Assists per Game (APG) | 5.5 | 5.8 |
| Rebounds per Game (RPG) | 4.7 | 4.2 |
| Field Goal Percentage (FG%) | 49% | 47% |
Those numbers underline why the Lakers were willing to commit so heavily. Reaves can score, set up teammates, and give the offense a steady hand when defenses tighten.
His season was not smooth, though. Reaves appeared in only 51 regular-season games because of calf and oblique injuries. The latest setback forced him to miss the start of the first-round playoff series against the Houston Rockets, and his absence briefly unsettled the Lakers’ backcourt.
Even so, he pushed to return before fully recovering. After intensive rehab, Reaves still averaged 20.0 points and 5.8 assists in six playoff games. The Lakers eventually fell in the second round to the collective force of the Oklahoma City Thunder.
Now healthy again and locked in long term, Reaves is set to anchor the Lakers’ next push for an NBA title. The next question is simple: can Los Angeles build enough around him to turn this expensive bet into a championship run?
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