Brandon Roy was a professional basketball player. Roy’s height is 6 ft 6 in. Roy was born on July 23, 1984, in Seattle, Washington. Roy’s weight is 211 pounds. This article takes a deep dive into Brandon Roy’s net worth.
Image Credit: Keith AllisonIn high school, Brandon Roy played basketball for Garfield High School (Seattle, Washington) (Seattle, Washington). Roy played basketball in college with Washington Huskies men’s basketball (2002-2006) and started playing professionally in 2006-2011, 2012. In the 2006 draft, Roy was chosen number 6 in round 1 by the Minnesota Timberwolves. Roy left the game of basketball in 2013.
Roy played for the Portland Trail Blazers during 2006-2010 as well as the Minnesota Timberwolves in 2012. Some of the highlights of Brandon Roy’s career included: 3× NBA All-Star, All-NBA Second Team, All-NBA Third Team, NBA Rookie of the Year Award, NBA All-Rookie First Team, Consensus first-team NCAA Men’s Basketball All-Americans, Pac-10 Conference Men’s Basketball Player of the Year, First-team List of All-Pac-12 Conference men’s basketball teams, No. 3 Retired numbers; Pac-12 Conference Men’s Basketball Hall of Honor, and Naismith National HS Coach of the Year.
Player annual payments range between a few thousand dollars and millions of dollars per annum, depending on a number of considerations. Although on average, NBA players earn a salary of nearly $2 million, a few with D-league crossover contracts are paid as little as $50,000. The salary cap for NBA players is around $100 million, although currently nobody makes anywhere near that amount. The top players in the league earn approximately $35 million. Outside of the National Basketball Association, yearly earnings can be under $20,000 per year for minor league teams.
So what is basketball player Brandon Roy’s net worth in 2018? Roy earned a career high salary of around $18 million in ’14. Our estimate for Brandon Roy’s net worth as of 2018 is: $35 million
Looking for other basketball players? Check out these basketball net worth articles: Danilo Monteiro Martins, Jim Baechtold, Vytenis Lipkevičius, Wesley Johnson, Terrance Thomas, Kouta Camara, Chris Taft, Jim Pollard, Mikhail Torrance, Octavius Ellis, and Toni Katić.