Tammy Sutton-Brown was a professional basketball player who played Center . Sutton-Brown was born on January 27, 1978, in Markham, Ontario. Sutton-Brown’s height is 6 ft 4 in. This article takes a deep dive into Tammy Sutton-Brown’s net worth.
In high school, Tammy Sutton-Brown played basketball for Middlefield Collegiate Institute(Markham, Ontario). Sutton-Brown played basketball in college with Rutgers Scarlet Knights women’s basketball (1997-2001) and started playing professionally in 2001. In the 2001 draft, Sutton-Brown was chosen number 18 in round 2 by the Charlotte Sting. Sutton-Brown left the game of basketball in 2012.
Sutton-Brown played for the Charlotte Sting during 2001-2006 as well as the Kumho Life Falcons in 2001-2002. Later, Sutton-Brown played for the VBM-SGAU Samara throughout 2002-2003, the Kumho Life Falcons over 2003-2004, the USK Prague during 2004-2005, and the VBM-SGAU Samara during 2005. Some of the highlights of Tammy Sutton-Brown’s career included: WNBA Finals, 2× WNBA All-Star Game, 5× Turkish Women’s Basketball League champion, 3× Turkish Women’s Cup Basketball winner, 2× Turkish President Cup winner, and Women’s Korean Basketball League champion.
Basketball annual payments vary between a few thousand dollars and millions of dollars per annum, depending on a number of factors. Although on average, NBA players make a salary of approximately $2 million, some with D-league crossover agreements are paid as little as $50,000. The salary cap for NBA players is around $100 million, although currently no player earns anywhere near that much money. The top players earn close to $35 million. Outside of the National Basketball Association, annual payments can be under $20,000 annually for minor league teams.
So what is basketball player Tammy Sutton-Brown’s net worth in 2018? Our estimate for Tammy Sutton-Brown’s net worth as of 2018 is: $6 million
Looking for other basketball players? Check out these basketball net worth articles: Miranda Ayim, Parrish Casebier, Maurizio Gherardini, Eric Turner, Cadarian Raines, Trey McKinney-Jones, Scott Thompson, Marcus Cousin, Aníbal Moreira, Slobodanka Radović, and Rytis Vaišvila.