Starting next season under the rules of the new CBA, though, the penalties are much stricter for teams that exceed the luxury tax level - particularly for repeat offenders, as the Grizzlies would be if Gay remains on the roster. Under the former collective bargaining agreement rules, the team has to pay the league one dollar for every dollar it's over. This season, the Grizzlies' payroll of $74,127,785 is almost $4 million over the $70,307,000 luxury tax level. As good as Gay is, and as valuable as it is to have an athletic 6-foot-9 small forward in the starting lineup, that's a lot of money for anyone without an All-Star appearance.Īs far as Memphis is concerned, keeping him in the fold will get pretty costly starting next season. Gay, who, believe it or not, has never been an All-Star, signed a five-year deal worth a little more than $82.3 million in the summer of 2010 and is set to earn $16,460,538 this season and $17,888,932 next season with a player option in 2014-15 for $19,317,326. Today the contending Grizzlies find themselves faced with a harsh reality: The key 26-year-old might be too expensive to keep around for a title run. It's been six and a half years since the Memphis Grizzlies acquired Rudy Gay from the Houston Rockets in a draft-day trade for Shane Battier.