In the current NBA landscape, the concept of loyalty has come under fire in recent years.However, John Wall and the Washington Wizards are an example of a player and organization that seem to be on the same wavelength.First reported by David Aldridge of TNT, Wall agreed to a four-year, $170 million extension to remain with the Wizards. The extension begins after the two final years of his current deal conclude in 2019 and includes a fourth-year player option and trade kicker, as reported by Shams Charina of The VerticalShortly after the news broke, Wall announced on UNINTERRUPTED that he was staying put in Washington DC.Check out his joyous reaction to his lucrative deal in the video below:

"I just had to think it out with my family and friends and make a decision," Wall said in the video. "Y'all know where I wanted to be at. I'm happy I'm coming back another four years to be a Washington Wizard. Y'all know what I'm going for. Definitely gonna bring y'all the championship, that's my ultimate goal, and I won't stop till I get it.”

The 2016-2017 was, by all accounts, Wall’s best NBA season. Averaging a career-high 23.1 points, 4.2 rebounds and a career-high 10.7 assists, he earned All-NBA Third Team honors and led the Wizards to a 49-33 regular season mark and an opening-round playoff series victory before falling to the Boston Celtics in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

Wall’s stardom was on full display in the playoffs, when he became the second player in NBA history to average at least 25 points and 10 assists while playing at least 10 games in a single playoff season, joining Russell Westbrook. The former University of Kentucky star put up 27.2 points and 10.3 assists in 13 playoff contests.

He’s also the only NBA player to average at least 15 points and 10 assists in each of the last three regular seasons. Therefore, his incredible consistency is one of his best qualities.

Wall’s extension marks the second huge contract that the Wizards have handed out this summer. Washington previously matched Otto Porter Jr.’s four-year, $106 million offer from the Brooklyn Nets to retain their core heading into next season.

As a result, the franchise will incur luxury tax penalties, as their guaranteed salaries over the next two seasons are $126 million and then $108 million and $96 million in the two following years.

"I think we've proven that we have as much resources and as much tools as anybody in the league, and we're in the [luxury] tax," Wizards owner Ted Leonsis told The Washington Post. "We'll spend whatever we need to get better, but we're going to get better by keeping our core together and then adding to it.”

Heading into next season, the Wizards will look a lot like they did last year on paper, but given the changing landscape of the Eastern Conference, they should be considered contenders based on the development and cohesiveness that the team showed last year.