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Garnett was talented, but he was also the right player, in the right place, at the right time.
Kevin Garnett was an MVP, a 15-time All-Star and a four-time first-team All-NBA. He won a championship with the 2007-2008 Boston Celtics. He also retired having made $326 million in his career, the second-most in NBA history.
Let's take a look at how, more than once, Garnett was just the right player, in the right place, at the right time.
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In 1995, Kevin Garnett was a 6-foot-11, 220-pound senior in high school, and it had been 20 years since a high-school player went straight to the NBA.
At 19, he chose to enter the NBA draft after failing to reach the minimum score on the ACT necessary for NCAA eligibility.
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The Minnesota Timberwolves made Garnett the fifth pick of the 1995 NBA Draft.
Ten years later, the NBA banned high-school players from the draft and players like Greg Oden and Kevin Durant had to go to college for one year.
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Garnett's three-year, $5.4 million rookie contract was modest by today's standards, and he made just $1.6 million his rookie season.
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Garnett was incredibly lucky to be drafted in 1995, which came during a brief period in which players were granted free agency after just three years.
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This allowed Garnett to sign a six-year, $126 million extension during the 1997-1998 season at the age of 21.
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With Garnett's contract a major factor, the NBA changed the rules on rookie contracts and put a cap on player salaries, but not until a new Collective Bargaining Agreement was reached following the 1999 lockout.
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By the final year of that deal, Garnett was making $28 million a year.
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More importantly, Garnett was just 27 years old, was in the midst of his only MVP season, and was about to become a free agent for a second time.
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This led to his second $100 million contract extension with the Timberwolves, a five-year deal worth exactly $100 million.
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After the third year of that contract, Garnett was traded to the Celtics having already made $181 million with the Timberwolves. He was just 31 years old.
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The Celtics immediately gave Garnett a three-year, $51.3 million extension to be added to the two years remaining on his last deal with the T-wolves.
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It was with the Celtics that Kevin Garnett won his only NBA title in 2008.
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Garnett nearly retired after the 2011-2012 season with $282 million in career earnings.
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However, he decided to re-sign with the Celtics with a three-year, $36 million contract as Boston tried to make one more run with their aging roster.
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After one season on the new contract, Garnett was traded to the Brooklyn Nets in a blockbuster deal that included eight players and three first-round draft picks.
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That trade turned into a complete disaster in just the second season. Garnett was the final asset the Nets had from the trade and it was clear it was time to move on.
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Garnett came full-circle and agreed a trade to send him home to the Minnesota Timberwolves in 2015.
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At the time, the plan was to play two more seasons for the rebuilding T-wolves and then form a group with coach and team president Flip Saunders to buy the team using the more than $300 million he had already made as a player.
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Garnett decided to play at least one more season and possibly two, signing a two-year contract worth $16 million.
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Garnett, who was 40 at the time, decided not to play the second year of the contract. As part of that deal, he was given the option to take a front-office job for the 2016-2017 season.
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Garnett walked away from his playing days, having made $326.3 million in his storied career. That is just slightly more than Kobe Bryant, who retired having made $323.3 million. LeBron James recently passed Garnett for the most all-time with $340 million.