The Athletic Football Show: A show about the NFL - SPECIAL No Free Lunch feed drop: The Hidden Costs of NFL Rookie Contracts w/ Vita Vea
Episode Date: July 19, 2025No Free Lunch is a new podcast in The Athletic podcast network. Hosted by former NFL star Ndamukong Suh, No Free Lunch talks to athletes and experts about how the most successful people in sports mana...ge their money and grow their wealth.On this episode, Ndamukong talks with his former teammate and current Tampa Bay Buccaneer Vita Vea. They discuss what goes into rookie contracts - specifically the cost of being a young player in the NFL. From fines and rookie dinners to helping family and offseason training— players can have a lot of expenses. Ndamukong and Vita also discuss the importance of building the right financial team to help with budgeting and investing.Host: Ndamukong SuhExecutive Producer: Grace Piro DeliaProducer: Danny SellersEditor: David CaputoInstagram: @nofreelunchshowTik Tok:@nofreelunchshowhttps://www.youtube.com/@NoFreeLunchWithSuh-------T. Rowe Price proudly sponsors No Free Lunch. The views expressed in this podcast are those of the podcast participants and do not necessarily reflect those of T. Rowe Price. Their sponsorship supports the platform and does not imply endorsement of specific content or perspectives.The information provided on this podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or legal advice. Always consult with a qualified financial and/or legal professional before making any legal or financial decisions or investments.Mercury is a financial technology company, not a bank. Banking services provided through Choice Financial Group, Column N.A., and Evolve Bank & Trust; Members FDIC.#nfl #money #finance #jordan Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Joining us now, it is the host of the No Free Lunch podcast here on the Athletic Podcast Network.
It's Indycan Sue.
Domican, how you doing, man?
I'm doing good, boss.
How are you?
I'm doing very well.
I appreciate you taking the time to do this.
I have really enjoyed the show up to this point, excited for more people to learn about it.
Before we dig into the podcast specifically, I want to ask you a specific memory of mine and whether or not you have any recollection of it.
In the fall of 2009, the Nebraska football team came to the.
University of Missouri for a night game on a Thursday or so.
The weather was disgusting.
Mizzou was ranked at the time.
And I think that there was a decent amount of enthusiasm about that team with Blaine
Gabbard as a starter.
And you and that Nebraska team came in and absolutely stomped on that Blaine Gabbard
led offense.
You had a big game.
I think you caused a fumble.
I think you had a sack.
But the part of the game, I'm curious if you remember this, the power went out in the
stadium and there was no sound or jumbo-tron for like a huge chunk of the game. Do you remember this at all?
I do. The power piece I don't fully remember, but what I do recall, it was a amazing night game.
I remember I had an interview that morning with Aaron Andrews. I was excited for the game. I think it was my
first time of getting hype about the Heisman. So I was a little nervous, just to be honest.
but I was like, man, we got to go set the table and take over the north
to hopefully get to at the end of the day to the big 12 championship.
And so I was like, man, we got to go win this game.
And it's a big rivalry of Missouri on the north side, as I mentioned.
And so in the midst of that game, like D-Line and Coach Carr at the time,
loved to challenge us.
And this was before NIL and all those particular pieces.
Like, you guys might get a pizza dinner if you guys take care of business and somebody gets a turnover.
So no big money, none of those big things.
But that's kind of how they motivated us for lack of better words.
And Blaine Gabbert, who ended up being a teammate later on in our careers, he was a young pup.
And we wanted to get after him.
And he quote unquote, let me catch an interception from him.
And I got a couple sacks on him as well.
I covered that game.
I covered that Mizzou team during my one year covering the Mizzou football team.
And it was kind of eerie when there was a huge storm.
And so the AV in the stadium wasn't really working.
And so it was just crowd noise.
And there was something like strangely primitive about it, but also strangely romantic.
And watching you just like Godzilla-like destroy a college football offense with no sound,
there was just like something weirdly primal and brutal about it.
And among all of the obviously very real memories I have of you that season,
that one is going to stick with me just for a very long time because I had an up close and personal look in the rain at what you were going on to do that year.
So I assume you remembered some of it.
I wasn't sure if you remembered all the details.
Yeah, no, there was there was actually one other play during that game that I really, really enjoyed.
And I love seeing it played back even until this day.
But I was getting to the quarterback and about to hit Blaine.
And he throws a bubble screen, if I'm not mistaken.
And I plant my right leg in the ground and start to the left.
And the receiver catches the ball.
And as soon as he catches it up in the air because he like threw it a little high to him,
he catches in the air.
And as soon as he catches it, I'm immediately hitting him.
And for lack of better words, decapitating this from that standpoint.
But there's some fun play there.
We had a lot of fun during that game.
and obviously got the win.
It's, you know, your on-field persona
and who you were known as in your career,
there was a brutality to the way that you played the game in a good way.
You know, and I think that some people,
because you were so much stronger and more powerful
than some of those guys,
especially in college and even early on in the league,
you know, I think that you had a certain play style
that people noticed.
And that on-field persona and the way that you played the game,
to me has always been removed in a way
from just how thoughtful and intellectual
and just so many other things that you seem to be off of the field.
And that part of just who you are and what your interests are
seem to be driving what no free lunch is supposed to be.
And so I just want to talk to you about how you're off the field
and kind of secondary interests away from football
have fueled your post-playing career
and have fueled kind of the sensibility
that you want to inject back into this show.
Yeah, for sure.
And I appreciate those comments.
And I've always wanted to pay homage to the people
that have come before me, the blue collar football guys,
the Russell Maryland's other world, the Reggie White,
all those amazing greats that I was fortunate enough to be able to watch their film.
And then in Russell, Maryland, he was a guy that trained me
and took a huge liking to me.
I actually just talked to him the other day.
And so being able to pay homage to them,
but also on the flip side,
just always having the goal and want to,
especially because both of my parents,
my mom being a teacher,
my dad being an engineer of being multi-dimensional and being off the football field and being
more successful also than I was on the field. And I think I've been super fortunate to have amazing
mentors, whether it's Joe Moglia, Warren Buffett, Jay Brown, all these different amazing
mentors, even Dan Gilbert won with my time in Detroit and even until this day still talking to him
about different opportunities and things of that nature. But I've gained so much knowledge. And so
no free lunch is all about being able to be curious, understand how these amazing people
from the lens of sports and even business, how they've found successes and how they're going
to continue to build and grow and being able to pass that knowledge along and be that curious
person as I've always been to go do internships at the time under Elliott Hill was just running
Nike, North America. Now he's running the entire company. So now I get the full breath of everything
that's going on and like being able to be in.
tuned with all these amazing people in companies like in Jerusalem Harowitz or General Atlantic
and these great opportunities to learn. I want to be able to pass that knowledge on and I think
that I have an amazing platform with no free lunch to continue to do that at a very high level.
And now I want to spend all my time doing that.
I'm curious, who do you see this show as being for? Do you see it being for people who are creatures
of the financial world? Do you see it being for people who need advice and kind of
setting up the way that they want to find their own successes?
When you think of the no free lunch listener, who do you have in mind?
Yeah, the no free lunch listener, I think it's going to be a gamut of different types of people.
I think primarily young personalities, people, entrepreneurs, athletes, whatever it may be,
that are looking for a way to start to mold their life and build not only success,
but also generational wealth in these different particular aspects.
One of the things that I've enjoyed the most since I've started No Free Lunch was friends, family, and old teammates.
I just had a conversation with my old teammate Dominic Riola about his son and being able to help tax strategy and different things around that because of the episode that he watched with me and Carlton Dennis the other day.
So those things to me are exciting to be able to, one, provide information to them for them to say, hey, let me think about things differently.
but then two, I'm an open book.
Let's follow up, us have deep conversations about this,
especially if there's connectivity and those relationships there.
So I think it's a gamut of young athletes,
professionals that are already in the business but still need guidance.
But then also I'm thinking that young person that just came out of college
or is in college and thinking about how they want to continue to grow
and build themselves as an individual for their own successes.
When you think about your interest in this, obviously, you know, creating generational wealth and building wealth and kind of the end game of it all clearly has, you know, some part in all of this.
But it seems to me like you appreciate the intricacies of this and you appreciate how it can be a puzzle to be figured out.
Like when you kind of take into account what's driven you to give deeper and deeper into this world, are the mechanics of it just as much of a part of it as the building wealth aspect of it is?
man you hit you hit you hit you hit a spot on and i love this question just because i think joll and
bibbs said it the best it's the process go through the process to reach that success and as you mentioned
the mechanics of being able to figure out hey let's stop what am i what does my ultimate vision of life
looks look like and then let's start to put the pieces of the puzzle together find out who we need
to have us uh who we need to support us for these everything's because nobody can ever do anything
by themselves to create success, especially if you want to go big and deep.
And so having that process and those mechanics to be able to build on, like, I have so much
fun and I have so much enjoyment of building those things, not only for myself, but also for
other people and helping them and reaching that success, because that's what I was afforded
for my mentors and what I want to be able to pass on to others.
You had, did a show that we're going to play here in a second, that with Vida,
about just the current environment around rookie contracts in the NFL.
Obviously, there's a huge gap between what the market should be paying players and what the
rookie salary scale is paying players.
And you come to it from a particularly interesting vantage point because you were drafted
in 2010 right before the rookie salary scale was put into place.
And if you look at your financial trajectory in the league, what you were paid as the number
two overall pick and then what you were able to do in subsequent contracts because of
that, it's from a previous version of the league that no longer exists.
And so that discussion with you and him was interesting because you come at it from two different vantage points.
Why did you want that to be one of the first episodes that you guys put out?
Why did you think that was an interesting topic to explore?
Well, for a multitude of reasons.
One, to your point, I was very strategic in coming out before the new CBA and pay scale all changed.
And so understanding that was something key for my own journey and whatnot.
But then also, I think a lot of people have the misconception of saying, because I made it to
professional sports, I am now rich and I am successful.
That is not the case.
You guys just see to the outside world and media is amazing at doing this, which is a good
and bad thing.
They're just showing the amazing highlights of this $100 million.
And wow, that guy is rich.
So they think everybody in the league is that way, not realizing saying they're CEOs that are making
50 times what the practice squad guy is making or a undrafted or a late round first or a late round pick
and all these different things. And then also you understand there's there's taxes that go into
his agent fees. There's so many different things that go into this where that hundred million
dollars is really only if you're lucky, 50 million dollars after after all the things that you have to
pay for, let alone training and all these different particular pieces that go into that. So it's
having people understand.
Yes, it's a great opportunity and a way to be able to play a sport,
but it's not always all that cracked up to be.
Before we get into the episode, I just want to hear it from you.
And if you want to tell our listeners, like, what should they be excited about?
What should they be looking forward to as you guys, you know, build the feed,
build the show into what you guys wanted to be and take it from here?
I mean, I think they should be excited for real conversations, real strategy and opportunities,
and real education at the end of the day
is what you're going to get from No Free Lunch.
And we're going to continue to find interesting people to talk to,
people you may know of, you may not know of,
and everything in between.
All right.
Well, please enjoy this episode of No Free Lunch from Indama Kinsu with Vidapeia.
Yes, thank you.
Each room had their own fines.
Like, if you leave and go to the bathroom, it's a $50 fine.
If you fart in the room, it's going to be expensive.
So it's like, if you want to go to the, that was the joke.
Like, you want to go take a, this is going to be expensive.
Yeah.
So it's like all of those stack up at the end of the year.
And then not, not included in.
Until you get a real vet in your room and you learn how to use a team company card.
Yeah.
No free lunch is presented by Tiro Price.
The information provided on this podcast is for informational purposes only
and should not be considered financial or legal advice.
Always consult with a qualified financial and or legal professionals before making any legal or financial decisions or investments.
Every year, almost 260 college athletes are drafted to the National Football League.
These players can receive signing bonuses ranging from millions to roughly $100,000.
Rookie contracts often appear straightforward, but they have hidden layers that can seriously impact a player's financial future.
So I thought it would be great to reflect on my early career in the league.
Joining me today is one of my favorite teammates.
He's a seven-year NFL vet.
In 2020, we won a Super Bowl together right here in Tampa.
He is a two-time pro bowler and a former first-round draft pick in the 2018 draft.
My guy, Vita Vaya.
Big girls in the building.
Welcome to the show, boss.
Appreciate you having me.
No problem.
Excited to have you.
So let's start with this, our relationship.
I feel like we got a strong like brotherhood now.
I think I remember the first time you met.
I think you just signed with the bucks.
You flew in to do just babies and shake hands a deal.
And I think before or after you did that, you did a workout.
But I was coming into the locker room to grab something.
Obviously, I knew you were.
So then I introduced myself.
and then we started from there.
It was just funny.
We just started slowly cracking jokes.
I think that one day that's where Big Girl started.
It was during camp.
I was walking out in the locker and you were walking out in the wait room.
And I was like, I looked at you.
I was like, damn, why he looks so mad right now?
He always looked so mad.
And I was like, I'm going to just try to mess with him right now.
That's why I looked at him.
I said, Big Girl.
And then he couldn't, I could tell he wanted a laugh so bad.
He wanted to laugh so bad.
but he held it in.
And then that's why I knew I kind of cracked him a little bit.
I was like, hey, I'm going to give him to laugh.
Between you and my wife, and you guys loved cracking jokes on,
call me a teddy bear and whatnot.
So I'll give you that.
He's a big teddy bear.
How do you think me coming in as a vet, you as a young guy,
being, quote, unquote, the leaders as we're the starters from that standpoint.
How do you think that affected the rest of our group?
There was, I think it was good and bad.
I think more good than bad.
I think I felt like the only bad was at the beginning
because everybody, you know, like the typical, normal NFL roster
when he signed somebody else and I'm like, damn,
I thought I was going to start this year or that.
But then that wasn't the case as we started to roll and get rolling.
I think you felt it.
I think everybody else that was in that room that year
or the years you were there could attest to it too,
but saying that that was the closest R.D. line room was up until that point.
What was your biggest purchase you made as a rookie, especially with you being a 12 overall pick?
You signed a four-year contract on your rookie deal for $14 million, if I may share.
What was a big purchase that you wanted to make and one that you actually did make?
The biggest purchase I made that year was I bought my parents' house.
Okay, I think that was the biggest thing.
For me, it was funny, I think I went after I got drafted or after we had a break.
I flew out there to see it in person for the first time,
and it was just, it was dope.
It was just like, it was, because some of my, my brother,
me and my brother were sitting in there,
and we were just looking at each other.
And he was telling me, he was like,
he's like, yeah, sometimes I sit in the living room.
I just be, it was like, I think I'm at one of my friends' houses.
And it was just, it was just a wholesale moment to be able to do for my parents,
was about in my home.
and I think I had one more year
left in college. I played two years
in college and I was going to leave early
because a lot of the guys that I came in with were leaving
so I was following suit
and I was like, yeah, I'm going to leave too.
And the reason being was
when I went home after the season,
it was just...
And this was from college. You left college and went home.
I went home just to visit. It was like a short break.
Yeah. And just visiting my parents
and just seeing how they were like living.
Yeah. I was like, damn.
I got to leave.
I got to be able to support for them.
But then...
Did you have a conversation with them?
The reason why I'm asking is because I'm going to explain to why I'm asking,
but did you have a conversation with leaving school early to go to get into the draft?
I didn't.
Not really.
I think it was more so...
I think it was like, I think as men, you know, we...
It's like we have that natural instinct of...
Take care of you want to be, like, the poor for everybody.
And I think that's what kicked in for me was.
I think my hub bringing
It was always, like my dad always told me
It was like, yeah, you know
Look out how your mom's working
And this and that, you know, one day you'll be able to take care of her
You know what I'm saying?
Like football was that avenue for me
By the time, when I finally went back home
And seen them and I was like, damn
I had this opportunity to be able to, you know,
help them out and financially
I was going to leave, but
I ended up being talked into it
to stay in for one more year
head coach at Washington
will get you an insurance plan
do you think that was the right decision for you?
I think if I left that year I would have left
you never know what could have happened
I think I was still young at the time
and still it's still really really immature
I think when I first came into the league
I was immature but the year before
I think I was even worse
I was even worse so the reason why
I asked you that question and it's funny
because I went through a similar process
myself. You may not know this
but I think we might have shared a little bit
about this but mine was
in 2008 and
I was in Nebraska
I think you
probably were in elementary
year? 2008.
Yeah.
Middle school. He was in what?
You was in sixth grade?
In school my freshman year? No, I was
eighth grade. Yeah, okay. My first year
high school was 2010.
Okay, okay. I got you.
middle school, but 2008, there was the financial crisis that happened.
So obviously my mom being a teacher, my dad being self-employed, I looked at my parents as well,
like going back home, like, hey, I got a chance to go to the league where I could take care
of my family and I have to have as many worries.
My dad's business would obviously be down on the dumps, all these different particular things.
And I had that conversation with both of them.
And my mom's one thing is that you got to come back and finish school.
And I told her, it was like, if I leave, I'm done.
I'm not coming back.
So she was like, all right, well, you've made your answer then.
You're staying in school from that standpoint.
And I think it was the best decision because I was actually projected to be late first round
versus where I ended up being second overall or being having an opportunity to be in top three.
So it was one of the best decisions of my life that I made.
But it was at trials and tribulations where I had to figure out,
all right, do I put my family first or do I continue to finish school out and then go back and then go from there?
But I've always believed and I'm curious if you have that same,
ethos of everything happens for a reason of why you
something told you in your gut not to leave school stick for another year
and then you ended up being in a great situation in coming into a league and a
really and close to a lottery pick at the end of the day.
I do believe in that too. Everything does happen for a reason.
I think part of me didn't want to go.
I think truthfully I didn't think I was ready for it.
So I think knowing that helped me out going into my
because I still had, even when I left Washington,
I still had one more year of eligibility left.
I could have stayed, but I knew in my heart
I made that decision right then and there.
I was like, if I stayed, this is my last year.
And the coaches knew that.
Everybody knew going into it, even though I was a junior.
And then my family knew it.
I think that's what helped me too
because my sister told me she found out,
she pulled me to the side.
I was telling me, like,
we'll be able to manage for one more year.
Yeah. So then I think that's what helped me going in to be able to attack that last year.
So, Vita, let's get into the money side of this world of the NFL.
NFL salaries, especially rookie contracts.
I remember for me coming out, my rookie contract was enormous.
And I was super blessed to be able to be in that position.
And one of the reasons why I strategically, like I let this out earlier on, it's like,
but in 0809, I almost came out because there was going to bring the rookie cap.
So I wanted to come in in the uncapped years, which they ended up pushing it one more year,
which was my draft class was the last draft class to have an uncapped,
well, quote unquote rookie contract.
So lucky enough, I got 64 mil, and you came in in a capped year.
So yours was different.
You're in 2012.
So that was two years later.
What do you remember about your rookie contract?
And then what was the process of you learning about that?
I think it was like more so.
the expectation
versus reality
ideal for me
okay so I so break that down
because I'm I'm curious to what your expectation was
when you saw that number first at
oh I got four for 12
but what does that really mean
I just seen a meme on Instagram and said like
it was showing all these mansions
it was like and they labeled it
saying growing up
that's why I thought a million dollar house was
and they show you
they show you like these big old mansions
and then the next
clip that cuts over and shows you
what it actually bought, well, actually
a million dollar house buys you
in today's day and age, and I think that was
that hit home for me with
this rookie contract
type deal. And I think growing up
was just like, it's like, damn,
like, we were growing up,
you had $20, you had a lot of money.
So then it was just like, you couldn't
even fathom what
these NFL players thinking when you was in high
school, elementary middle school. So the whole
time it's built up in your head like,
they got so much money.
They could buy whatever they want.
But until you get into that
mode and
when you first get your
rookie contract for me was
the books paid you,
they gave you the signing bonus
in three different installments.
I remember the first big installment
I was looking at. I was like, damn, this is dope.
Yeah. But then half of that went to
buying my parents a house.
Okay. And now I think that's what slowed me down
because I was like,
I was like, damn.
I was like, have the money gone.
And I was just thinking about it and it was just...
What did that tax bill look like on that, on that W-2?
Do you remember that?
I don't remember.
I just, I could tell you it wasn't, it wasn't pleasant.
I do remember looking at it and it just...
You didn't really care because you saw what you actually got to keep
and then you saw the tax.
Yeah, that's why I didn't care because of what I had.
Yeah.
But then I think I did look at the W-2 and I was like,
but damn why I got to pay this much taxes?
It was just like having that young mindset
and not really being like smart with the money.
Yeah.
I think one of my boys asked me,
he was like,
we were kind of drunk at the time,
so he was just like,
asking me, because he couldn't,
it was everybody's dreams,
and you know, all your friends,
is your dream of NBA NFL.
And so he asked me and he was like,
it was like, how many mustangs you think you could buy?
And it was just funny with the answer I gave.
I was like, how much is one must thing?
He told me the price.
And I like, I did the math in my head.
Yeah.
And I was like, I can buy this.
And he was like, dad, that's crazy.
Yeah.
So I'm curious to understand in your opinion on this,
where do you think rookie contracts as a whole set up a rookie?
Do you think they're from a positive standpoint of they're educating you
and how to deal with the money
or do you think that
these contracts exploit you guys
and basically
the teams get the benefit of
getting you getting you in your youngest
form and your best
ability to play the sport
at a much cheaper cost at this day and age?
I think I understand it from both sides.
I think I understand it from me being
an older player now and being able
in on my second contract and seeing that
and what I made so far.
and how I came to where I'm at now
and then being able to see
a younger guy coming to the league
and seeing what they make, opposed to
what I'm making.
I think there's definitely a lot of more meat on the bone
for a lot of the rookies.
You can say after the fifth or whatever.
Yeah, I probably say after the third round.
After the third round.
It's pretty much...
Yeah, I was not saying you're playing for free
because, I mean, rookie contracts at the end of the day
are 750 plus from that standpoint.
but in the grand scheme of things
of what other guys are getting paid,
you're getting a lot less
of a percentage of the overall part.
Yeah, exactly.
You get in the crumb.
If you look at a practice squad player
and how he makes,
how much he makes,
and you break that down.
$90,000 to $110,000 depending on the practice.
Yeah, some people make that less than that in a year.
So you can obviously make that work,
but then I think what gets hard is
what you see other people doing.
I was like trying to live with the Jones
is you coming in with a hellcat.
Somebody else coming with a charger.
Yeah, you're coming in with a, yeah.
It's just like when you go to game day, you see,
you wear it.
Old Royce, chains, big girl chains.
Big girl chains.
That is just like you guess it's easy to get sucked in,
but it's not, it's easier for the first rounder to make that.
If they wear a Gucci outfit,
it's easy for them to purchase it.
opposed to a guy on practice squad
that's just making a little bit of money
or he's still making a good amount of money
but him purchasing that same outfit
that hurts him more than it hurts the first rounder
but I think that's like
when you talk about it, there's levels and lanes
and not being able to understand that
I can't do what.
Honestly, at the end of the day,
it's what it comes down to a financial education
and understanding what your budget is allowed.
Your budget is much bigger as a first rounder
and a guy that's established in the league
versus somebody who's young up and coming,
and even a journeyman, as we call usually a special team guy
that's been around the league for so many years,
but he's only been making league minimum at every step of the way.
So I'm curious to understand from your standpoint,
when did you start to really understand the hidden costs of the NFL,
your agent fees per game, participation clauses, and things of that nature?
And then, of course, you know, I was fine.
you've been fined your career
and then obviously we have expenses
like even in-house expenses
in the rooms that we got to pay. We got fines
in the rooms just because of how we
conduct our pots
from that standpoint. Taking care of your body.
All the time and energy and money that you
got to spend and I have an inside
looking to yours but like
explain to the people what that's all about.
There's a lot that goes into it. It's not just
showing up on Sunday and
making plays. I think
like how we were talking about
like how you said, a journeyman.
Let's use a practice squad player, for example.
A practice squad player has to do dirty work,
but then has to train at the same place.
I'm training that.
You pay the same rates I'm paying, but I can afford it.
Yeah.
And really even before that, like, y'all train at the same place,
and I'm not going to say any names,
but because you have a name, you may not get charged.
But because they don't have a name,
they're actually getting charged.
So those are some of the difference for you.
People don't even understand that.
Yeah.
There's a lot that goes into it.
So you think about a player that does not make too much
or the hidden cost of everything.
We started to be able to perform at a high level at the end of the day.
So for a lot of the guys of where they choose to train,
if it's in the city they play or in a separate city,
you got to account for food, obviously, your travel,
your room and board.
If you're renting a car,
if you're bringing a car,
all those add up
on top of the training.
Some guys have their own nutritionists
that they work with.
So that's a budget.
Some guys have their own trainers.
That is also a budget.
You get to talking about
your physical therapist,
chiropractor, massage.
All those seem so little
in the moment when you look at it
like, oh, how much this cost?
I was only 80 bucks, but then you stack it up once a week for a whole year,
and you look at the cost, and it's different.
You tie in a lot of guys want to go travel the world,
and they have the means to do it now,
and you can't look at them wrong because we're about to, you know,
you have time off, so go do as you please,
and as long as you're doing your work.
But all those, all those pieces, I think, add on,
Like I said, we still have to get, we still have to pay fines.
If a rookie's in the room, he has to get the food for the room on the plane, the snacks for the room.
There's like, we used to get fined.
Like, each room had their own fines.
Like, if you leave and go to the bathroom, it's a $50 fine.
If you fart in the room, it's going to be expensive.
So it's like, if you want to go to the, that was a joke.
Like, you want to go take a, it's going to be expensive.
Yeah.
So it's like, all of those stack up at the end of the year.
and then not including
until you get a real vet in your room
and you learn how to use a team company card
until you learn the way
but then that's not even a factor in the family part of it
I think you always, everybody always has the experience
of the uncle that they never knew
or they never seen in 10 years or whatever
and then your immediate family
that people you're close to that you always want to take care of
That's another expense as well.
And like there's always something that's going to happen.
There's always going to be, you know, a funeral or emergency
that you're going to come out of, have to come out of pocket for.
And that's like a lot of things that come into play that, you know,
a lot of people don't really understand.
So you add that all that together.
That's crazy.
Where you're at right now in your life, I know you're going into some special opportunities.
You've already gotten your second deal, maybe getting the third one.
And how are you building yourself to become not only just rich and successful at the standpoint from sports, but becoming wealthy?
And what are some of your practices of you doing that?
Who have you sent it, put yourself around?
What are some of the resources and things of that nature that have allowed you to say, hey, at the end of the day, when I'm done, I'll be perfectly fine.
And I can continue to help other people because I'm sad.
What really helped me was being around you.
I think seeing the way you live and how frugal you've been.
being who you are and just being like in the room and meeting people that you, you know, put me in touch with and the financial people you put me in touch with.
I think that was a big key for me, especially now.
I think you go back, take a step back to my rookie year.
To how I am now, I think I wasn't really honed in on, you know, looking at what my balance was.
It was always like it was the struggle of having a credit card.
just, I'm going to just swipe, I'm going to just swipe.
And then before you know it, I just have the budget meeting with our financial guy.
And I told him, it was just like just being able to stay under the budget.
And he was like talking to me to, you know, this is your budget, make sure you stay on it.
And we figured out a game plan.
And I told him it was more so like I knew I was spending too much.
But like another part of me was telling me not.
It's fine.
It's fine.
I got it here.
He was telling me,
it was true was it's hard to,
it's hard to budget,
especially when you're playing.
Because when you look at your bank account,
you're spending all this money,
but you still see the money going up.
Yeah.
But then when you break everything down
in the grand scheme of things
and you look down 10, 15 years from now,
how is that going to look when the money's not coming in?
Because you still want to spend that same amount
the money that you've been spending.
Yeah.
If not more when you retire, because you've got more time.
Yeah.
You got more energy to do different things.
You ain't got to worry about football.
You don't have to worry about those nuances.
So let's talk a little bit more about this budget.
I'm curious.
How do you feel is the best way for a young rookie or a young Vita Vaya,
Dom Kinsu, whoever may be to hone into that budget and keeping accountability?
Because that's really what it comes down to.
And like, what are some of the practice?
that they should be doing as a rookie?
First, as a rookie, just being able to understand just like financial life,
she as a whole, I think there's a lot that goes into it.
You know, you could just be, have a budget and say, you know, I'm not going to invest.
I'm just going to be my budget for the rest of my life.
You know, I'm a cheap person.
You know, I don't need much.
Or you could be a person where you could try to be really savvy with it.
And, you know, how I look at you as, like, I'm going to pursue these different endeavors that, you know, could be beneficial for myself.
And, you know, there's different ways to look at it.
So I think figuring out as a rookie, for me, just figuring out what I wanted to do.
I think there's always been guys that told me, I think I remember, it was Mitch Unride.
I don't know if you remember him.
It was a detack of my rookie year.
Okay.
Yeah.
I came in.
I bought a rangeover.
I was like my dream car and I was like yeah I'm about to buy it right for the season started I was always driving this uh this run a car from enterprise
I was like you know one day it was just like random I was driving down the street
seen the range over dealership yeah pulled in walking around I didn't talk to anybody nobody it was just
a spontaneous thing that I did for myself I think I was just wearing a t-shirt I had some jordan slides on some shorts
I didn't look like I could afford a range over at the time.
So it was funny, but what help was, somebody knew who I was.
So when I walked in, it was like, oh, yeah, that's so-and-so.
So one of the sales guys.
And then that's when he started helping me.
I think if it wasn't for that, I wouldn't about it because nobody would have helped me.
So then he was showing me around.
He was like, you want a test driver car?
And I said, let's do it.
Yeah.
I just drove the car.
And that you know, he told me the price.
and it was wild to me because I was like,
this is too expensive,
but I really liked this car.
And like, he swindled on me.
He didn't swim in it, but he was a good salesman.
Yeah.
So then next year you know,
I'm at the Chase bank
getting a cashier's check for the car.
And I do that.
And it's just,
I think what Mitch Unryan was telling me
was when he seen me with the rangeover,
he's like, you bought that or at least.
I said, I bought it.
He, like, pulled me to the side.
He was like,
he said you should start investing now
and then five years from now
whatever you profit you could have bought that
I didn't really understand that
at the moment and I think
I stole that from him and that's what I told
rookies now or young guys now
I try to talk to them as we're talking about these
financial decisions that rookies got to make
where do you sit
when it comes for a rookie that's
brand new into a team
let's just say their first
round second round pick should they buy a house
or should they rent a house? Or should they rent a
house in your opinion and then also following up from that perspective as they start to build
out a team quote unquote from essential staff whether that's financial advisors financial institution
that they're working with accountants executive assistants when do you think is the right time
to be able to do that stuff as well on buying the house i think it depends on really if they want to
live there or if they want to live somewhere else i think it would be my opinion i would say it's smart
because you could always sell the house
and get your money back
opposed to when you're renting,
you're not going to see that money again.
So that's my viewpoint on it.
I think that's what pushed me to buy a house
after my rookie year
because I think I rented a big apartment
because I knew a lot of families
are going to be visiting.
So I try to get an apartment
with multiple rooms that could be able to house.
So you felt like you threw away that rent money
versus being able to build equity in a house.
house. And really, I'm not opposed to that, especially for somebody in your position, that
signs a four or five-year deal and you've got seven, eight figures of a contract.
And you guys are lucky enough, that's a fully guaranteed contract. So you shouldn't particularly
hurt yourself. But I think a key point within that of what you said is, do you anticipate
to live in that city or are you trying to go live back home or something in that nature? And
you made Tampa home. So it worked out. And that was marvelous from your perspective.
of making that decision.
So wrapping that one up,
where do you see guys or gals
being professional athletes
needing to have accountants
and financial institution advisors
and lawyers being brought on to their
on a staffing perspective
of being people that are essential
for them to have success?
When should they start keying in on those different people?
Accounting's financial advisors
and stuff of that nature,
I think should be
should be
setting stone right away.
I think in my experience,
I think me personally,
I know what it brought for me
and I knew it was going to bring a budget
my younger days.
And I knew that's not what I wanted.
So I think I wanted to have that freedom
of being able to do
as I please without anybody telling me
like, hey, you're spending a little bit too much.
I look at you, for example,
and like how organized your life is
and just seeing how everything is like set up the way it is.
I think you just, it's like, it's like you're able to, you can be comfortable.
Like you can go to sleep good at night.
I think how I am is not, I think not healthy because I think I'm more so nonchalant.
And like I was just, shoot first, ask questions later.
You need a little extra time to build into it.
And obviously, yes, I'm a little wired of being anal
for lack of better words.
But it was still a learning process for me.
And I went through, let's say, two or three different financial advisors
and got to my final institution where I sit now where I'm comfortable.
And I know.
And it also took me time to even before I started investing,
I wanted to understand what I was getting into.
So there's nothing wrong with that.
But let's dibble and dabble early on so we can find,
That's what I was going to say.
How long to take you?
To get where I'm at right now and find the team that I'm with,
I mean, it took me a solid, I'd say four years.
And I was with some really, like, top groups.
Like, one of my first financial advisors was the same financial advisor
that did fill nights money back home in Portland.
I had another guy in Florida.
I had money with, but I was just learning from.
And it came from a friend of mine,
or a mentor of mine, but they weren't kind of the right fit,
at least that group.
And it wasn't until about my third, fourth year.
And then I switched everything when I signed my $100 million.
I sat in a ton of cash.
So I missed out on that huge rally from 2010 to 2012,
like how the market went up crazy.
And I missed all that because I sat in cash.
But I didn't want to dive into something until I got comfortable to say,
this is what I'm getting into.
And I understand it enough to where I'm,
Okay, you can, I can dibble dabble.
Now I'm, hey man, this is the plan for over here,
and then this is my private equity, my VC, other stuff,
and then I've got my blow money in the middle,
and then my wife's purse money that she always has on me about.
That's why I was saying that it would be best for them to start.
Start as early as early as they can.
I think I'm fortunate to have someone like you or a relationship that we have,
and I'm able to, you know, run stuff by you.
and like figure things out or ask questions
or get help from you.
I think not a lot of guys are that fortunate
to have relationships like that, I think.
But I think that's something that we as young guys need to
in older guys, vets or whatever,
is to be more open.
It took you a while to ask me that.
It took almost five, six years.
We've known each other longer than that.
So it's a matter of like, I also got to be more open too.
No, but that's the thing, though.
I use myself, for example, like, I say they should be able to figure that out
or not figure out, but learn about it as early as they can.
I've appreciated the conversation to say the least in you coming on no free lunch.
If you were to leave the viewers in a young Vita Vaya rookie coming in the league
with any piece of advice, what would that piece of advice be?
One thing I always say is just have fun, enjoy the process.
I think you look at life, life is too short, you know, especially with this football thing.
I would say I would say the younger guys and rookies to have fun because there's only, you only get this football life for so long.
And you look about the rest of your life compared to your football life or your life in the NFL or college, whatever you are.
it's so short to compare
what the rest of your life looks like
having a marriage
or having kids look like
you have so much more to look forward to
but then I think being present
in the moment and just
having fun with you know whatever you're doing
and just enjoying it
because one day you look back and say it's like
they say it's like you never know
you're in the good old days until
you know, you look back into it.
Like, those are some good times.
Well, that's awesome, man.
I appreciate that.
And thank you again for coming on the show.
Thank you for having me.
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What an amazing conversation with my guy Vee.
I think the biggest takeaway I want you guys to take from this is whether you're a first round draft pick or a free agent or somebody just transitioning from college to the professional world, it's important to have mentorship and people surrounded to support you in your new and next endeavors.
I would love to hear your feedback and share what topics you want to hear us talk about next.
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