nate33 wrote:stevemcqueen1 wrote:nate33 wrote:It's not knee jerk though. I've been critical of Beal at times, but I've never called for him to be traded. Now I am. 3.2 seasons is enough. There is still no improvement whatsoever. He's just not very good.
I'd happily keep him if he had the reputation of being "just a guy" like a Jodie Meeks or Jeremy Lamb. Then we could retain him at a modest salary. The problem is that has a rep of being some kind of budding star who deserves the max. But he's not even close. He's an average starter... if that.
He was playing like an All Star before he hurt his shoulder. Now he's struggling to find his range after coming back from that. This isn't unprecedented. I think it's a pretty good bet he's going to start hitting his threes again. And when that happens and he's back to playing like an AS, your hitting the panic button and wanting to trade Beal for a late lotto pick is going to look pretty bad.
He played a whopping 6 games before the shoulder injury. And he wasn't THAT good. His ORtg was 103 and his DRtg was 110. Basically, he had a hot streak from 3-point range, shooting an unsustainable 47%, which was offset by his horrific turnover rate. Overall, he was pretty much the same guy, but at a higher usage rate.
And let's not act like the injury was a fluke. He gets hurt a lot. It comes with the package. You don't want to get stuck paying that guy $20M.
Beal was definitely better this season before he got hurt, and it wasn't because of his three ball. He was and is still slashing and scoring on multiple defenders off the dribble. That is a big indication of growth. When he gets back to hitting the three at 40% instead of like 10%, he'll be scoring over 20 PPG again and leading the team as the first option.
You don't decide whether or not to keep a budding foundation player like Beal based upon whether or not you're afraid he'll get hurt in the future. It's unknowable. Steph Curry was injury prone throughout his first contract. On the flip side, Kevin Durant led the NBA in minutes played until the final two years of his second contract, when it seems like he's been constantly battling some kind of injury. You have to make a decision about whether or not to build with a guy as a core piece based on the things you can predict/assess--his skills, his personality, where he can grow as a player, his organizational fit, etc.