NBA players are no stranger to acts of charity or particularly making large sum donations. But they are normally expected from superstars with their deep pockets, not lower-tier roleplayers such as the Brooklyn Nets' Allen Crabbe.

Then again, Crabbe isn't an average roleplayer that typically command mid-level money. He was one of the beneficiaries of the lucrative 2016 NBA offseason in which teams garishly splurged on any and every free agent — with a combined total of $1.8 billion in just a single day committed to 29 players, and went upwards from there.

For his part, the spot-up shooter signed an offer sheet by the Nets worth $75-million for four-years which his team, the Portland Trailblazers, promptly matched, only to later send him back to the Big Apple a year later.

Not surprisingly, the headline for quite a bit has been Crabbe's gigantic contract. It did not help that he failed to at least contribute anything beyond outside shots, making his $18 million per year salary look worse than it already is… until recently, that is.

In an admirable act of paying it forward, the Los Angeles native donated to a local school in danger of being closed down after a local church stopped funding it. According to TMZ Sports who first broke the news, Crabbe attended the school in question, Frederick K.C. Price III Christian School, as a child. The 6-foot-6 guard later weighed in on his miraculous save:

“I was at that school practically my whole life. I’m just happy and feel blessed to be in a position now to do this.”