Alvin Kamara says he hasn’t spent a cent of his $75M-plus football earnings

New Orleans Saints RB Alvin Kamara is quite frugal, discussing his spending habits with Andrew Hawkins on Uninterrupted’s “Kneading Dough.”

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqbyahgz6p2j3xp7 player_id=none image=https://saintswire.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yK_daWGJtvA

Count Alvin Kamara among the NFL’s most frugal spenders. He’s worked hard to earn a $75 million contract extension with the Saints, and he plans on stretching it out for a long, long time; Kamara discussed his perspective during an interview with Uninterrupted’s “Kneading Dough” series, hosted by former pro wideout Andrew Hawkins. He says that growing up and seeing his family’s struggles with financial insecurity left a lasting impact on him.

“I’ve always known the value of a dollar,” Kamara recalled. “As a kid, I saw my mom work multiple jobs only to be able to afford the bare essentials.”

He drove back to one visceral image: a loaf of bread and a jar of peanut butter, two staples he continues to stock in his own kitchen. Aside from an early splurge on a box of wings after receiving his rookie signing bonus, Kamara has paid all his living expenses with money brought in from sponsorship deals, instead squirreling away his paychecks from the Saints into savings and investing accounts.

Kamara continued: “I’m like, ‘Okay, this is more than I’ve ever had. My mom ain’t never had this much. It would be a shame if I got this and lost it. I’m gonna keep doing the same thing I’ve been doing, [purchasing] what I need and that’s it. I’m not about to go over the top, I’m not gonna live beyond my means.”

And he’s notoriously picky with his endorsement partners, sticking to products he values personally; one of his first big deals came with Airheads, his favorite candy. One of his first real viral moments came after Kamara built a throne out of Airheads boxes in the Saints locker room and posed for photos. He later fulfilled a childhood dream and got his own flavor.

It’s become a popular approach for the NFL’s brightest stars. Longtime Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski did the same during his New England career, saving his football earnings and living off of sponsorship payouts. And it makes sense. This long-term financial security will outlive their playing days and could even set up generational wealth for their families. It just takes discipline.

Kamara’s been described as one of the smartest people in the Saints locker room since the team picked him in the 2017 draft. This is just more proof of it.

[vertical-gallery id=44359]

Chargers sign former Saints backup QB Chase Daniel

The Los Angeles Chargers signed ex-Detroit Lions quarterback Chase Daniel, a former New Orleans Saints backup to Drew Brees.

[mm-video type=video id=01f1qmwh5a6j2mfr27 playlist_id=01eqbyahgz6p2j3xp7 player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01f1qmwh5a6j2mfr27/01f1qmwh5a6j2mfr27-2a94cf8b45dfe4226c2096d8e87d742b.jpg]

There was some thought that the New Orleans Saints could bring in another of Drew Brees’ old understudies to round out the depth chart behind Jameis Winston and Taysom Hill, but it won’t be Chase Daniel. Daniel signed with the Los Angeles Chargers; ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports that the deal runs just one year but with $1.5 million in guarantees, which is good money for a team’s second or third quarterback. The Saints weren’t going to pay that with their complicated salary cap situation.

Daniel has made a nice career for himself in that capacity. He’s traveled around the NFL for a decade as a backup to younger quarterbacks with the Chiefs, Eagles, Bears, and Lions, racking up north of $37.8 million along the way. That’s impressive considering Daniel has attempted fewer than 300 dropbacks to pass in his career (287, to be exact, taking 26 sacks and completing 178 throws). For anyone curious, the math on that comes up to more than $131,000 per dropback, and a staggering $212,000 per pass completion. Daniel’s talents don’t come cheap.

Now he’s reunited with offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi, the Saints quarterbacks coach in both of his stints with New Orleans, from 2009 to 2012 and again in 2017. Expect Daniel to push Chargers backup Easton Stick for the right to chew sunflower seeds and buff out thumbprints on Justin Herbert’s tablet on the sidelines. And if Stick holds him off, well, Daniel will seek work while $1.5 million richer.

[listicle id=44021]