Zion Williamson Split From CAA Reveals Desire To Play With The New York Knicks

Zion Williamson Split From CAA Reveals Desire To Play With The New York Knicks

NBA player Zion Williamson was supposed to be the next superstar of the NBA, his career was supposed to rival that of a young LeBron James when he was originally drafted by the New Orleans Pelicans. Yet, another injury has sidelined his promising career once again. Outside of his latest injury, word has come out that the center has also split with the sports agency he has been with since debuting in the NBA and it’s being speculated that part of it is because of Williamson’s desire to play with the New York Knicks before being drafted by the Pelicans.

According to Clutch Sports, sources have revealed that the recent split from CAA (Creative Artists Agency) was, in part because they were unable to get him on the team he allegedly wanted to play on, the Knicks. He reportedly made this known to the agency before the Pelicans selected him and he anticipated that it could happen. Although that didn’t take place, he felt that the agency could make a trade to the New York team and several years later, as he is still playing for the Pelicans, his wish to play his home games at Madison Square Garden has not happened.

That is one of the two reasons Williamson has decided to leave CAA.

Williamson also had an issue with the structure of his contract with the team. There are weight-related clauses incorporated in the contract that the center has more recently gotten a better understanding of, and it became part of the contention he had with CAA. Williamson signed a five-year, $197 million extension with the team in January 2022. The contract calls for certain weight benchmarks that he has to be under so his contract will be guaranteed for the year. That pushed the center to want to be represented by another party.

1 thought on “Zion Williamson Split From CAA Reveals Desire To Play With The New York Knicks

Leave a Reply

Categories

Discover more from The Industry Cosign

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading