I mean lamar is representing himself so its gonna take a lil bit due longer due to the fact that he got training and the team to worry about… while agents got more time to negotiate.. not to mention they are getting a cut so the faster the deal gets done, the faster they get paid.. idk the percentages, but in lamars case… an agent is possibly looking at a 7mil plus payday. No way im giving away 7mil for some shit i can do myself…
You'd think differently if you were negotiating that type of contract. Like nobody actually needs a real estate agent either, and people give away 6% or more to them, but most people still do it. Why is that? Time. Effort. Convenience.
The other things I'd point out is:
1. You talk about the agent getting paid quicker. So does the player. Lamar may get upwards of a $40-50M signing bonus. Maybe more. Who wouldn't want that now instead of 6 months, 12 months, etc. from now?
2. I haven't done a ton of diligence on player-negotiated contracts, but of the two recent one's that come to mind from non-rookies, Sherman and Wagner, those contracts were highly, highly, highly favorable to the team. I've not yet seen the player-negotiated deal where literally anybody thought the player got the good end of the negotiations.
Sherman's deal was heavily criticized by players and agents because he took a short-term, highly incentive-based deal for a player who was actually still considered a "in their prime" player, just coming off injury.
Wagner's deal, who's been a perennial All-Pro, is a one year $10M deal, with four years of total non-guaranteed fluff after that. I don't know that I've ever seen a player of his stature sign a five year deal with a very easy out for the franchise after one year.
And all of that could be totally irrelevant. What is relevant is the fact that an agent would have, at least, 4-5 months of additional negotiating time than Lamar. I'd argue 6 months. Because Lamar likely isn't and shouldn't negotiate from September-December (and hopefully into January) and once that period is over, he literally can't negotiate in February or March, because he's not under contract anymore. Then he gets tagged, which creates a slew of issues for the FO, and then he's capped at another period of limitations.
Like there's scenarios here where from September 2022 through December 2023, there's only about 4 months of actual negotiating periods. That number more than doubles if an agent is involved.