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Andrew Bynum Wants 80 Million Dollars

Andrew Bynum will be entering the final year of his rookie contract next season, one that will pay him about $3.7M. League rules allow the Lakers to negotiate an extension this summer, and although Bynum himself said he would take less than a max deal, not surprisingly, his agent is saying otherwise.

"He was talking as a 20-year-old," Lee said in a telephone interview Monday. "He had not consulted with his representatives. I think the Lakers know how we feel about this."

They've got a decision to make. The question is whether they believe in him the way I believe in him. It's their decision to make if they want him there for the future."

This is a bit of a dilemma for the Lakers, no? Sure, Bynum looked like he was beginning to live up to his potential before going down with that knee injury this season. But a maximum contract extension would mean the Lakers signing young Andrew for five more years and a total of $80M. Personally, I think there's no way you can make that kind of commitment to Bynum at this point, and really, it isn't necessary for the Lakers to do so.

Bynum is still under contract for one more year, so there's no need for the team to roll the dice like this without seeing how Andrew will hold up once he comes back from his knee injury. Remember, this is an injury that was supposed to have Bynum back on the court in eight weeks; instead, it kept him out of action for the rest of the season: over four months. The Lakers can offer a more reasonable extension as a show of good faith to Bynum, if the 20-year old really wants to secure some more guaranteed dollars before next season. But offering a max deal to a player who hasn't shown what he can do yet over a full season could potentially be salary cap suicide, and with Bynum under contract through next year, it's a move that the Lakers really don't need to make.

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