
NBA Rumors: Shake Milton Gets $9M Nets Contract, Part of Knicks' Mikal Bridges Trade
The Brooklyn Nets are acquiring veteran guard Shake Milton in a sign-and-trade deal with the New York Knicks, per Shams Charania of The Athletic and Stadium.
Milton will sign a three-year, $9 million contract worth over the minimum for the 2024-25 season, which is the only year guaranteed on the deal, per Charania.
The sign-and-trade is part of the Knicks' trade of Mikal Bridges for Bojan Bogdanović and several NBA draft picks.
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"The Knicks' preference was always to expand the Bridges trade, according to league sources. The team has modeled scenario after scenario, mapping out ways to avoid a hard cap at the first apron," The Athletic's Fred Katz reported. "When the Knicks and the Nets originally agreed to the deal, New York made it clear it would return at some point with more details, a league source familiar with the negotiation said."
Milton, a midseason acquisition from the Detroit Pistons, made six appearances as a depth option for the Knicks last season.
Milton saw limited use in New York, averaging 4.5 minutes per night during the regular season and 5.5 minutes in four playoff appearances while contributing 16 total points.
But he will end up playing a key role in the Knicks' ability to acquire Bridges as the team worked to solve the salary gap of approximately $4.2 million between Bridges' and Bogdanović's salaries for the 2024-25 season.
The sign-and-trade agreement that will send Milton to Brooklyn will help the Knicks send out enough salary to avoid the first apron of salary cap restrictions, per SNY's Ian Begley and CapSheets' Yossi Gozlan.
In total, the Knicks will reportedly receive both Bridges and veteran forward Keita Bates-Diop in the trade.
The Nets will meanwhile reportedly acquire Bogdanović, Milton and Mamadi Diakite (h/t The Athletic's Fred Katz) alongside draft capital.
Those draft picks include four unprotected first-rounders between 2025 and 2031, a protected first-round pick in 2025, a second-round pick in 2025 and an unprotected pick swap in 2028, per NBA.com.
The Knicks were meanwhile able to hang on to backup guard Miles McBride, who has three years remaining on the extension he signed with the team in December.
The Knicks had "very little interest in trading" McBride, Begley reported.
McBride, who averaged 8.3 points per game in 68 appearances last season before upping his production to 11.0 points through 13 postseason contests, will remain a key part of the Knicks' depth going forward as the team looks to make it past the second round next spring.





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