Yes, but the second and third years don't have to be guaranteed, which they apparantly are in this case. Good for him, I'm just saying that if that's what he was looking for and able to get elsewhere, there's no way the Kings were going to match that.
Still, it's a bit weird. There wasn't actually any matching involved. He wasn't signed to an offer sheet by Milwaukee, because they couldn't - they don't have any capspace. I figure, the Bucks must have gone to Brockman's agent with the proposed trade in mind - use Jackson's unguaranteed contract as trade salary in a Brockman sign-and-trade. Now, they couldn't actually force the Kings' hand (since they couldn't sign him to an offer sheet) but the Kings, upon being informed of the proposal, must have felt they had to do what was best for Jon financially. Still, the Kings held all the cards here, and man, I would have liked to have squeezed Hobson out of it, even it it meant Hobson instead of the 2011 second-rounder. (A bird in the hand, you know...)
Anyhow, I kind of doubt that any other team had that sort of interest in Brockman, or they'd have signed him to an offer sheet. I also kind of doubt that Brockman's PT is going to be much better in Milwaukee than it would have been here. If it is, somebody among the Bogut/Gooden/Sanders/Ilyasova/Mbah a Moute group is going to get left out. Between Bogut, Ilyasova, and Mbah a Moute, there were 6000 of the Bucks' 8000 frontcourt minutes eaten up. Add Sanders and Gooden, and where's there time for Jon? Sure, you can slide Mbah a Moute over to the 3 a bit, but with Maggette, Salmons, and Delfino on the wing, it's a bit impacted as well. Don't get me wrong, every team has players that want more minutes, but it's not likely Milwaukee is a situation where Jon is going to be pulling down more minutes than he would have here. So it's got to be all about us giving him a chance to earn more $.