Washington Wizards guard Bradley Beal (3) drives around New York Knicks forward RJ Barrett during the first half of a preseason NBA basketball game in New York, Friday, Oct. 11, 2019. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)
Washington Wizards guard Bradley Beal (3) drives around New York Knicks forward RJ Barrett during the first half of a preseason NBA basketball game in New York, Friday, Oct. 11, 2019. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens) Credit: Kathy Willens

Bradley Beal signed a two-year extension worth nearly $72 million with Washington on Thursday, a major victory for the Wizards and a move that will keep the All-Star guard out of free agency for at least the next three summers.

Beal still had two years left on his existing contract. The extension kicks in for the 2021-22 season, has a player option for the following year and means that Beal wonโ€™t be part of what has been shaping up to be an NBA free-agent extravaganza in the summer of 2021.

โ€œItโ€™s a blessing, man โ€“ for one, that they even consider me a franchise player, a piece of this organization in itself,โ€ Beal said at a news conference in Washington. โ€œAnd I was prideful of that. You donโ€™t get that type of love and respect and responsibility from anywhere.โ€

The Wizards were willing to give Beal a three-year extension that would have been worth about $111 million. Beal went the two-year route and that protects his future options โ€“ he could opt out of the deal in the summer of 2022, coinciding with his 10th year in the league.

The 10-year milestone is significant: By having that many years of service, Beal would be eligible to sign a new deal worth in excess of $250 million over the next five seasons.

โ€œYou ask yourself a lot of questions during free agency: Why do people leave? Why do they go other places?โ€ general manager Tommy Sheppard said. โ€œWeโ€™ve always retained our free agents. The ones we wanted to keep, we did. And this is a humongous opportunity right here with Bradley Beal. It speaks to the rest of the league that he believes in this place, and thatโ€™s huge.โ€

Sheppard told a story as the team was getting ready to begin training camp about what he says to young players he meets for the first time: Work as hard as Beal.

โ€œIt sounds easy,โ€ Sheppard said. โ€œThen you come in and you see all the work that Bradley puts in every day, all the leadership he exudes every day. Heโ€™s shown time and time again how committed he is to D.C.โ€

Beal has played more minutes than any other NBA player in the last two regular seasons, is one of only five players to not miss a game in that span โ€“ and is the lone player to have started all 82 games in both of those seasons.

Heโ€™s an elite scorer, 12th in the league last season at a career-best 25.6 points per game. And he will be the centerpiece again for a Wizards team thatโ€™s without point guard John Wall for the entire season as he recovers from an Achilles injury.

โ€œThis is where Iโ€™ve been for the last seven years, going on eight,โ€ Beal said. โ€œI have an opportunity to be able to turn this thing around. A lot of people doubt that. I view it as a challenge.โ€

Sheppard said Beal is poised for yet another big year, and that the way he was interacting with teammates in recent weeks didnโ€™t give him any reason to believe he wasnโ€™t committed to the team.

โ€œThe fact that he showed up in summer league and worked with our young players and watched what we were doing โ€“ he was so committed throughout the summer,โ€ Sheppard said. โ€œHe came in, in September, had everybody out here working out. All those actions showed somebody that really wanted to be here.โ€