John Wall and the Washington Wizards re-committed to each other this summer, with the former Kentucky Wildcat agreeing to a new contract with the team that drafted him. 

Wall singed a four-year, $170 million contract extension with Washington that will come into effect in 2019 and last through 2023. There appeared to be little negotiation needed, with the explosive soon-to-be 27-year-old point guard locking in for his prime years. 

Since his days in Kentucky, Wall's been considered one of the most exciting guards in the league. The Wizards have been lucky enough to not have to deal with trade demands, while Wall similarly has never been at-risk to be dealt by Washington. 

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Still, committing the peak of his basketball career to a team that hasn't gotten out of the Eastern Conference Semifinals in the seven seasons he's spent there is a big decision from Wall. With that kind of guaranteed money on the table, and the Wizards set to be competitive as constructed, his decision was made. 

Wall sat down with Yahoo's The Vertical to discuss the extension and over-$200 million he's due from Washington over the next six seasons. Perhaps no quote was more perfect from Wall than how he described his financial future. 

“My kids’ kids’ kids should be fine,” Wall told The Vertical. 

Wall's made plenty of NBA money leading up to the $200 million he's raking in going forward, and that's not even considering endorsement deals he's signed off on as one of the NBA's most marketable guards since the moment he left Kentucky. 

The Wizards have fully invested in Wall, and the four-time NBA All-Star was happy to show the same level of loyalty to a franchise that's never strayed away from featuring him as the centerpiece of their world.

“I know where I want to be. I know who I’m committed to. I could see if they did something disloyal to me, where I could be, ‘I got something on them, I’m going to pay them back.’ They have done nothing to me but been loyal to me.

They stuck with me. They could’ve been, ‘Oh, he’s injury-prone, he’s not doing this, we’ve got to get rid of this guy.’ They’ve stuck with me through those tough times. And the player and the person that I’ve become now, is the same reason why I stuck with those guys," Wall said. 

It seems a little loyalty went a long way with Wall, and the Wizards are happily moving forward with their franchise player in lockstep.