San Francisco (Bleacher Report/CNN)  It’s unlikely new Los Angeles Clippers forward Josh Smith perceives his nearly $7 million salary the same way you do.

The Clippers offered Smith, the ex-Piston and Rocket, a $1.5 million contract for the 2015-16 season, which he signed. The team introduced him to the Los Angeles media Tuesday. On top of that, he is going to make $5.4 million from a prior deal with the Detroit Pistons for a grand total of $6.9 million next year.

Smith let America know of his struggle, as reported by David Whitleyof the Orlando Sentinel (via the Detroit Free Press). “At the end of the day, you know, I do have a family,” he said. “So it is going to be a little harder on me this year. But I’m going to push through it, you know. … I made a decision for me and my family.”

While most of America might not know what to do with $6.9 million, Smith will attempt to rekindle his play from earlier in the decade that made him one of the most versatile forwards in the NBA while earning a lower sum than he’s used to. He’s been well-compensated for his performance, bringing in about $91 million so far in his career, according to Whitley.

But Smith is not the first to make such claims about a contract. Enter Latrell Sprewell.

The former shooting guard/small forward, who played in the league from 1992 to 2005, was once offered a three-year, $30 million contract from the Minnesota Timberwolves. It wasn’t to his liking, as he called it “insulting,” per Whitley.

Like Smith, Sprewell also referenced his family when insinuating the millions he was going to bring in annually would not be enough to supply a comfortable life for his loved ones.

Maybe average Americans like many of you and I don’t realize the pressures of playing professional basketball and maintaining a comfortable lifestyle for a group of people. Then again, that is a situation most of us would sign up for.

Whitley isn’t buying Smith’s struggle, and it’s likely that neither are the majority of basketball fans.

“I’m all for hardworking Americans like Smith chasing … as big of a pay day as possible,” Whitley wrote. “But for the millionth time, could we ban jocks from using the tired take-care-of-my-family shtick?”