It’s Time to Take the Training Wheels off Mike Beasley
I have been highly critical of how Michael Beasley has progressed over his first two seasons in the League. He’s been great with Dwyane Wade out recently, but that brings to mind the "Why can’t he play like that all the time?" question. Looking at this thing objectively, I don’t think Beasley’s lack of consistency is his own doing. As a coach myself, I admired the way Coach Spo dealt with Beasley at first: Bring him along slowly; D-Wade can keep us competitive and anything we get from Beasley would be icing on the cake. Then he sat Beasley late in games in favor of Haslem because Mike allegedly was missing defensive assignments. I thought, "Good for you. Stick to your guns. Make the kid earn it"—at first.
Here’s the thing though. Beasley is mega-talented. He provides a service the Heat need. He’s someone who can create his own shot! So even if he is a little lacking on the defensive end (which most NBA players are), we are a much better team with him on the floor than when he’s not. The problem is that even when he is in the game, Beasley doesn’t look like the second option. He often looks like a third or a fourth option. Are you kidding me?!? Get that kid the ball in space and I believe he’ll make the Heat an even better team by taking the "heat" off Wade. There’s no excuse for him not to average right at 20 points a game. Well actually there is—it’s the stagnant Charles Barkley-style-give-Wade-the-ball-and-watch-him-play-one-against-five offense the Heat run. I don’t get to see a lot of Heat games because I live in Chicago, and I don’t have LeaguePass. But what I have seen of the offense seems to have no goal other than forcing Wade to take tough shots. We need movement!
Believe it or not, Wade and Beasley have complimentary skills. They should be able to play off each other. Zo has taken Beasley under his wing, but is there a relationship (on the court or off it) between Wade and Beasley? Do they have personal chemistry issues? If so, these issues need to be addressed. Coach Spo, "Let Beasley Play!"
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Comments
Ummm...
I just want to comment about the “why doesn’t he do it every game”. And not watching him often.
1. No player in the NBA produces to the max of their abilities EVERY GAME. Not Wade, Kobe, James, Paul and etc. So why would you even ask yourself such a foolish question.
2. If you don’t watch guys for at least 75% of a season, coach or not, you shouldn’t be lending opinions on a player. Basketball is a emotional game, especially for young guys with high expectation. They’re always changing, and so much goes into what these players have to deal with. At the end of the day, they are human. We sometimes forget that.
Born and raised in the county of DADE!!!
Check the post again
It was not a knock on Beasley. I mentioned some of the criticisms against him only to say that I think he has shown enough for those who thought he might be expendable (including myself) at the right price should lay off and look at how his coach is handling him. Michael Beasley can be a beast, and he needs a coach and a system that allows him to shine in his own way.
Playing, coaching, and watching basketball.
I agree…while he can’t be expected to score 20+ points every night, I’d still like to see him play the same kind of inside-out game more consistently. His rebounding has been great almost every game, which is definitely a step in the right direction. He has also been improving on the defensive end, it’s just going to take time before he can bring it all together.
Wade didn’t reach ‘superstar’ status until his 3rd year, and I imagine that with Beasley it will be a similar time table…maybe longer because he is a forward.
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Beasley needs more minutes at crunch time
Wade did take time to mature, but it was clear he was the team’s best option at his position, and Riley and Van Gundy let him play. Beasley is our best option at either forward position, and he should be getting the chance to help down the stretches of games. I just think his coach is not putting him in the best position to help them win games or to develop him properly for the immediate and/or long-term future.
Playing, coaching, and watching basketball.
At Dolphan
Ummm… Wade reached superstar status in his second season whenm he made the jump from 16 points a game to 24+ per game.
That’s probably the biggest shadow over Beasley and what’s keeping many fron seeing the improvement.
What isn’t being said is that a guard has more control over how a game is played. Especially when a 4-man doesn’t have a coach demanding that his set-up men get him the ball when he is in a threat position.
I’m not saying he’s ready to be among the elite… he’s to young mentally. But his skill set is easily ready to produce 20+ points and 9+ rebounds in 36+ minutes of play… EASILY!!!
Born and raised in the county of DADE!!!
???
Other than the fact that you used fewer words than me, how different is what you just said than my original post?
Playing, coaching, and watching basketball.

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