The Los Angeles Lakers and fourth-year forward Kyle Kuzma have reportedly agreed on a three-year, $40 million contract extension, per ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

According to Wojnarowski, Kuzma has an unprecedented player option in 2023-24, unheard of for an athlete not signing a max extension. This will allow Kuzma to potentially leave the Lakers via unrestricted free agency at the age of 28.

The Lakers and Kuzma “tabled” extension talks as recently as this past week until something changed in the negotiations leading to the agreemet.

Kuzma and the Lakers are coming off of the 2020 NBA Finals victory—the franchise’s 17th title in its history and their first playoff appearance since 2012-13. LeBron James delivered on his championship promise for another organization once again.

Kuzma’s role with the Lakers is still likely to come off the bench as a super sixth man for James, Anthony Davis, and head coach Frank Vogel as LA pursues a second consecutive championship in 2020-21.

After averaging 18.7 points in his sophomore campaign, last season in 2019-20 Kuzma primarily came off the bench for the Lakers and averaged 12.8 points and 4.5 rebounds in 25.0 minutes per game, shooting 43.6 percent from the field and 31.6 percent from 3-point range.

While Kuzma may be playing third fiddle to James and Davis, the Lakers certainly value the former first-round draft pick out of Utah, paying him $40 million over three years and giving him the ability to opt out in 2023 to enter free agency.