Tony Snell, the 27-year-old backup wing for the Milwaukee Bucks, was able to tack on some extra bucks via incentives thanks to the tremendous success that the Bucks have experienced so far in both the regular season and the playoffs.

Bobby Marks, the NBA salary cap aficionado of ESPN, reported Snell’s bonuses after the Bucks’ victory over the Celtics in Game 5 of the two teams’ Eastern Conference semifinal:

These might seem like sort of arbitrary delineations, but Snell did play 74 games for the Bucks in 2018-19 with 12 of those games coming as starts and he notched 6 points per game with typically solid (39.7 percent) three-point shooting numbers.

Though Snell played his lowest minutes load since his rookie year in terms of minutes per game (17.6) and total minutes (1304), he did manage to hit that magical threshold of playing in at least 75 percent of his team’s games before making it to the Eastern Conference Finals.

Beyond that, the Bucks winning 50 games is also representative of the coaching job that Mike Budenholzer has done in his first season with Milwaukee – especially seeing as that cruised past that total to win 60 games in the 2018-19 regular season thanks to the influx of talent via trade and free agency, the likely MVP season of Giannis Antetokounmpo and the excellent coaching of Bud.

While Snell’s input into the season might be minimal, he will still get some bonuses thanks to his efforts, and no one can take that away from him.