Brock Purdy vs Tyrese Haliburton: Who Makes More Money?

I thought it was going to be about how much over their career. Pretty simple math otherwise.
 
Haliburton is surely making significantly more from Puma than all of Purdys endorsements combined.
 
The Hali 1 shoe bringing in big money? Probably

For Tyrese? You betcha.

Plus being a pretty good nba player for a long career is very very very valuable.

Brock will be lucky to make as much as somebody like Harrison Barnes, let alone Hali.
 
For Tyrese? You betcha.

Plus being a pretty good nba player for a long career is very very very valuable.

Brock will be lucky to make as much as somebody like Harrison Barnes, let alone Hali.
Brock makes 53 mil per year, Barnes 18, my math says that is not much of a comparison. I would take either though.
 
Paying those Cali taxes takes a pretty big hit (12.3%) and .38 % from city
 
Paying those Cali taxes takes a pretty big hit (12.3%) and .38 % from city
You know NFL players, like many employees, who make their money in different states, pay taxes in all the states they play. So, in reality all NFL players have to pay those awful Cali taxis sometimes. Add that to the top marginal rate of 37%, players are easily paying 50%. Has to be an absolute mess to file. Airline pilots and crew have a special exception where they only pay in their home state and a state where they perform 50% or more of their flying. First learned of these joys when living in one state and working in another.
 
You know NFL players, like many employees, who make their money in different states, pay taxes in all the states they play. So, in reality all NFL players have to pay those awful Cali taxis sometimes. Add that to the top marginal rate of 37%, players are easily paying 50%. Has to be an absolute mess to file. Airline pilots and crew have a special exception where they only pay in their home state and a state where they perform 50% or more of their flying. First learned of these joys when living in one state and working in another.
For sure. Just playing in Philly Purdy has to pay 3.43% tax on the income he earned that day to the city.
 
You know NFL players, like many employees, who make their money in different states, pay taxes in all the states they play. So, in reality all NFL players have to pay those awful Cali taxis sometimes. Add that to the top marginal rate of 37%, players are easily paying 50%. Has to be an absolute mess to file. Airline pilots and crew have a special exception where they only pay in their home state and a state where they perform 50% or more of their flying. First learned of these joys when living in one state and working in another.

It's not really that hard and if you set stuff up correctly you aren't paying all those taxes.
 
You know NFL players, like many employees, who make their money in different states, pay taxes in all the states they play. So, in reality all NFL players have to pay those awful Cali taxis sometimes. Add that to the top marginal rate of 37%, players are easily paying 50%. Has to be an absolute mess to file. Airline pilots and crew have a special exception where they only pay in their home state and a state where they perform 50% or more of their flying. First learned of these joys when living in one state and working in another.
I assume that income can be subject to a state taxation only once, so if 50% of a players income is earned outside of the player's
resident state, only 50% would be taxable in the resident state. What I don't know is what happens when a player is injured and doesn't make the trip to an out-of-state location.

I also don't know what happens if:
The city tax is deduction or credit to the state tax, and​
The arena is located in a suburb of a taxing city.​
 
I assume that income can be subject to a state taxation only once, so if 50% of a players income is earned outside of the player's
resident state, only 50% would be taxable in the resident state. What I don't know is what happens when a player is injured and doesn't make the trip to an out-of-state location.

I also don't know what happens if:
The city tax is deduction or credit to the state tax, and​
The arena is located in a suburb of a taxing city.​

If they don't actually go to the state for the game like they are on injured reserve then all income is the home state.

It's really pretty simple because the W2 designates what states have the player has to file in.
 
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You know NFL players, like many employees, who make their money in different states, pay taxes in all the states they play. So, in reality all NFL players have to pay those awful Cali taxis sometimes. Add that to the top marginal rate of 37%, players are easily paying 50%. Has to be an absolute mess to file. Airline pilots and crew have a special exception where they only pay in their home state and a state where they perform 50% or more of their flying. First learned of these joys when living in one state and working in another.
Yeah, but what fraction of an NFL player's work days are game days? I would think most would be practice days so the state where the practice facility is has the biggest effect on taxes.
 
Yeah, but what fraction of an NFL player's work days are game days? I would think most would be practice days so the state where the practice facility is has the biggest effect on taxes.
They get gameday checks. That's how their contracts are structured. There might be some proration to handle bye weeks and such.
 

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