Why NFL star Michael Bennett skips direct deposit and keeps his checks ‘until the end of the season’

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Why NFL star Michael Bennett skips direct deposit and keeps his checks ‘until the end of the season’
Published Sun, Sep 8 201910:30 AM EDTUpdated Mon, Sep 9 201911:04 AM EDT

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Courtney Connley@classicalycourt
NFL player Michael Bennett is a three-time Pro Bowler and star defensive end for the New England Patriots. In 2009, he signed with the Seattle Seahawks as an undrafted free agent and has since made millions in his career.

But despite his success in the league, Bennett says he still budgets and saves most of his NFL money.

On a recent episode of the “Kneading Dough” podcast, Bennett explains to entrepreneur Maverick Carter that instead of accepting direct deposit, he likes to receive his NFL checks by hand so that he can manage his money better.

“I keep my checks until the end of the season to make sure I don’t spend any money. And then at the end of the season, I deposit it,” he says.

To survive, the football veteran whose career earnings will total roughly $59 million at the end of this season, says he lives off the money he budgeted and saved from previous years.
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Bennett explains that he learned the value of budgeting at a young age when he was working odd jobs as a kid, growing up in Louisiana.

“I had different jobs, and I used to save my money to buy me and my brother’s school clothes,” he says. “I worked at a water park, a grocery store and most of the time I was a lifeguard. I was a lifeguard for four years.”

Bennett’s parents had five children by the time his mother, Caronda, was just 20 years old, according to a profile of the athlete in The New Yorker. His father was in the Navy. They divorced when Bennett was young.

On the podcast, Bennett continues by saying that as an undrafted free agent, those same budgeting practices stayed with him in the league so that he could remain financially secure. “I had to be tight with my money from the beginning,” he emphasizes.

In fact, for the first three years of his career, Bennett says he lived out of a hotel room in an effort to save money. One time, he says, he tried to settle down and rent a home in Seattle, but he instantly regretted that decision because he got cut from the Seahawks a few days later.

“I was losing rent, and I couldn’t get none of my money back,” he says. That moment, he explains, taught him to never tie himself to a city he doesn’t plan to live in permanently.

Similarly, Bennett’s younger brother Martellus, who won a Super Bowl with the New England Patriots and has since retired, says he also tightly budgeted his NFL money in order to “not go broke.”

“I don’t really buy anything,” says Martellus, who retired from the league in 2018 after making roughly $34 million in his career. “I’m not a car guy. I own my house. I own everything. So I haven’t really paid for anything in like the last four years. You get to a point in life where you don’t really need much.”

Martellus, who is now an entrepreneur and children’s book author, told CNBC Make It in 2018 that instead of luxury cars and homes, he likes to spend his money on books. “I have about 3,500 books, maybe more,” he says.

“I figured, if Mark Zuckerberg could read one book every two weeks, and he’s running [an] almost trillion-dollar empire, then one thing that little old me could do is read one book every two weeks,” he says.

 
In fact, for the first three years of his career, Bennett says he lived out of a hotel room in an effort to save money. One time, he says, he tried to settle down and rent a home in Seattle, but he instantly regretted that decision because he got cut from the Seahawks a few days later.

“I was losing rent, and I couldn’t get none of my money back,” he says. That moment, he explains, taught him to never tie himself to a city he doesn’t plan to live in permanently.

Similarly, Bennett’s younger brother Martellus, who won a Super Bowl with the New England Patriots and has since retired, says he also tightly budgeted his NFL money in order to “not go broke


They hate people like him!! Cause somebody taught him game and hes been doing the smart shit ever since!!
 
I remember when it first became mandatory that you use direct deposit all the older dudes were pissed and ALL OF THEM said soon as the money hit the bank they would go and take it out and put it in their pocket, my grandma used to do that with her social security check too
 
Good stuff.

He's cutting it close though. don't checks expire after 180 days.

its dumb nigga shit.

ive known a few dumb niggas that brag about holding onto checks like they never expire

damn our culture dumb as fuck

he could easily deposit that shit straight into an investment fund and earn interest while he’s ‘not touching it’
 
its dumb nigga shit.

ive known a few dumb niggas that brag about holding onto checks like they never expire

damn our culture dumb as fuck

he could easily deposit that shit straight into an investment fund and earn interest while he’s ‘not touching it’

He don't need to earn interest lol
WE NEED to earn interest.
 
Cause playing accountant when you aren't account is when you go broke
so just save the money and keep the money
you don't need interest if you going to pocket $20m in a season
that $500k in interest don't mean shit.

Modest return the last few years was 7%
So of 20 mill
That’s approx 1.5 million

I don’t know anyone, whose name isn’t gates or bezos , who would say 1.5mill doesn’t mean shit
 
Lol dude did a joke I said I would have done living in a hotel... I said have 2 rooms on 2 diff floors... 1 the groupie fuck spot...the other where I rest my head... Even do a sponsorship/commercial with the hotel so I can live there for free get paid
 
Cause playing accountant when you aren't account is when you go broke
so just save the money and keep the money
you don't need interest if you going to pocket $20m in a season
that $500k in interest don't mean shit.
Say what? Your math is off. If you put 20 million away your interest is going to be over a million with current rates. That’s a lot of money for anybody . Even if you’re making 20 million.
 
Marshawn Lynch was notorious for this as well. Living tightly off his endorsement money (Skittles and EA) and pocketing his actual game salary.

Bennett is right, that at some point you should have all you need, and anything extra becomes doing it for the approval of others. To each their own and I don’t judge, but you really don’t need that much to be happy.

Smart man.
 
Say what? Your math is off. If you put 20 million away your interest is going to be over a million with current rates. That’s a lot of money for anybody . Even if you’re making 20 million.

I wasn't actually trying to do the math just saying it's way easier for people who have dedicated their lives to 1 thing to be cautious and just save money rather than chance it on anything.

I don't disagree with the ease but also me and you didn't have a singular focus from the time we could walk disregarding pretty much everything else.

Athletes always go broke trying to play away games. I respect his cautiousness.
 
You get to a point in life where you don’t really need much.”
He doesn't,I'm sure he has all of the things he enjoys when he has the time to do them,other than that he doesn't need a fancy sports car that's going to sit and collect dust,or a fancy watch that will tell him the same time his cellphone will or more new clothes when I'm sure Nike/addidas/whatever sends him more than enough shit every couple of months.

He's a football player not a movie star,I have two cousins that are ex NFLer's and both em are ok money wise but they admit that they made tons of mistakes and could of did better with their money.You live and you learn.
 
Modest return the last few years was 7%
So of 20 mill
That’s approx 1.5 million

I don’t know anyone, whose name isn’t gates or bezos , who would say 1.5mill doesn’t mean shit

There are a lot of people who don't respect 1.5m look at the prices of things that people buy lol

People donate that shit to campaigns.

It means everything to US but WE aren't them.


Again that's Your opinion on the money and again I wasn't being technical lol as much loose shit flies around here I say a random number and the calculators come out.

Also in the article, the brothers are literally quoted as saying "You get to a point in life where you don’t really need much. "

So while we're plotting on ways they should be trying to gain as much money as possible. I'm OK with them keeping the money they have and saving it.
 
I wasn't actually trying to do the math just saying it's way easier for people who have dedicated their lives to 1 thing to be cautious and just save money rather than chance it on anything.

I don't disagree with the ease but also me and you didn't have a singular focus from the time we could walk disregarding pretty much everything else.

Athletes always go broke trying to play away games. I respect his cautiousness.
But it is saving. If you’re concerned about the future why not just save and get free money too. What’s the issue? You’re doing the same thing except you’re not generating interest. If you’re holding money why not get another million for letting them borrow your money? Sheeeeeit
 
I wasn't actually trying to do the math just saying it's way easier for people who have dedicated their lives to 1 thing to be cautious and just save money rather than chance it on anything.

I don't disagree with the ease but also me and you didn't have a singular focus from the time we could walk disregarding pretty much everything else.

Athletes always go broke trying to play away games. I respect his cautiousness.
Exactly. Got generational wealth and trying to flip it. Just stay in your lane until you retire. Then use your free time to switch lanes.
 
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