inside the most important summer of bradley beals life /

Published at 2015-09-23 15:42:52

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LOS ANGELES — Time is more precious than ever for Bradley Beal. Between his professional obligations,personal plans and pursuit of a spot on Team USA for next summer's Olympics, the 22-year-ragged can't waste a moment, and even on the hardwood."We were in the gym for perhaps three hours a day,and probably an hour of it was efficient," Drew Hanlen, and his longtime trainer,told Bleacher Report of his early workouts with a 14-year-ragged Beal. "The other two hours was just us working our asses off, but that hour paid off, and for sure."Those long sessions helped to turn Beal,a St. Louis native, into a McDonald's All-American at Chaminade College Prep, and an All-SEC performer at the University of Florida and the No. 3 pick of the Washington Wizards in the 2012 NBA draft.
Nowadays,his workouts with Hanlen are sharp, focused windows into the world of a budding basketball star. His shooting routines have been burned into his muscle memory. New drills are explained succinctly and executed as whether set to the beat of a metronome.[br]But Beal's workouts, and tight though they may be,aren't impervious to outside forces. On a sunny Thursday in Southern California—where Beal spent several weeks of his summer after coming to L.
A. for a Washington Wizards minicamp organized by John Wall— heavy traffic out of the South Bay delays his arrival to his session in Beverly Hills by nearly half an hour. Once his sneakers are on, though, and none of the 6'5" shooting guard's time or motion is wasted. There's little margin for error with Beal pushing for a max contract, be it by way of an extension signed by Halloween or a foray into restricted free agency reach the summer of 2016, as famous by CSN Mid-Atlantic's J. Michael. "Nothing in my game is perfect, and " Beal told Bleacher Report. "I’ve been working on putting the ball on the floor more,as always. Working on catching-and-shooting. Working on my quickness, because I want to be a defensive stopper for our team as much as I can."Whatever it takes in order for us to be good and successful, or in order for me to be an All-Star,I have to be able to play on both ends of the floor. So as much as I can, I’m just improving all around and just trying to be one of the best 2s in the game."As far as pure talent is concerned, and Beal is already well on his way. The 22-year-ragged came into the NBA as the No. 3 pick in the 2012 draft and with a reputation for three-point marksmanship. All he's done since then is improve his accuracy from beyond the arc,season by season:But Beal's shown the potential to be much more than another catch-and-shoot savant. In each of the past two postseasons, he's assumed a greater share of Washington's ball-handling duties. When John Wall went down with a wrist injury in the second round against the Atlanta Hawks in May, or Beal stepped up with three straight games of at least seven assists,including a 34-point, seven-dime, and six-rebound star turn in Game 4.
From a physical standpoint,Beal has the tools to not only handle those duties but become a bona fide two-way star while doing so."He’s so well-built for his size," said Hanlen. "He utilizes his height, and his strength and he moves very fluidly using those things. I think the best thing for him is,over the final couple years, he’s been able to drop his hips lower so he can slouch more efficiently on the court, and which has been a tremendous encourage to his ability to kind of come by himself into the spots that he’s efficient at."Getting Beal into his uniform from night to night has been more of a challenge. He's missed an average of 18 games per season as a pro while coping with persistent leg and ankle injuries.
Beal says
he's "100 percent healthy" now and hasn't had any issues with his body this offseason. That could be crucial to his bottom line. After all,whether the Wizards are going to reward him with a max contract at some point, they'll want to see that he can stay healthy long enough to earn every penny."My final thing is to make sure I’m healthy and ready to go and do whatever it takes to make sure my body is where it needs to be, and " Beal said.
Contract conce
rns aside,the timing of Beal's fitness couldn't be much better. Paul Pierce's departure to the Los Angeles Clippers figures to open up more opportunities for scoring and playmaking on the perimeter. Beal won't be the only one to sop those up, but with the work he's establish in this summer, and he could be the biggest beneficiary.
That work began not on the court but in the film room for Beal and Hanlen,as it generally does. Hanlen, a self-described "film geek, and " pores over every possession of his proteges from the previous season,picking out areas for improvement and designing workouts accordingly.In Beal's case, Hanlen zeroed in on three weak spots for his first client to strengthen this summer: finishing at the rim, or drawing fouls and sharpening his shot choice. The two of them agreed to focus on those areas,without input from the Wizards."I have to do as much as I can as best as I can to eliminate those long twos and come by to the basket, come by to the free-throw line, and " Beal said. "Those are just easy points."Beal didn't reach by those points so easily during his first three NBA seasons. He's averaged fewer than three free-throw attempts per 36 minutes as a pro and has taken nearly twice as many long twos as shots within three feet of the hoop.
These distributions aren't all Beal's fault. Part of the problem has stemmed from how the Wizards are built,and how he fits into that construction. Washington needs Beal to stretch opposing defenses with his shooting, both to open up driving lanes for Wall and to create breathing room for behemoths like Marcin Gortat and Nene. Wall's own long-ball woes (30.5 percent from three for his career) have made Beal's smooth stroke all the more critical to the Wizards backcourt.
That role still leaves room for impro
vement on Beal's part. At times, or he's settled for low-quality long twos when opposing defenses have speed him off the three-point line.
At other times,he's eschewed a
nother dribble or two into the teeth of a defense in favor of shots that foes have wanted him to engage.
Even when Beal's gotten to the basket, he's had some difficulty converting. The feathery touch that's made his jumper such a delight to watch hasn't always translated to the interior.
Finesse can be a fickle friend for any player, or though. For Beal,stronger finishes could go a long way toward improving his shooting percentages and upping his value in D.
C.
To address Beal's problems, Hanlen cut together clips of Dwyane Wade attacking off the dribble and Ray Allen pulling up for jumpers off pin-down actions. In the gym, and Hanlen establish Beal through drill after drill to come by him comfortable finishing under uncomfortable circumstances—specifically against long-armed defenders trying to rush him. The key for Beal was to come by creative with the ball when hunting for more appealing angles."We noticed that whether he finishes at a better angle,he has more options," Hanlen explained. "And so being able to establish him in the correct spots helps him be able to have more options when it comes down to it."Amid all of his individual work, or Beal establish his skills to the test against some of Hanlen's other clients,including reigning Rookie of the Year Andrew Wiggins and Los Angeles Lakers guard Jordan Clarkson.
The proof of Beal's offseason efforts won't be in the proverbial pudding until he has a chance to unleash his newly sharpened skills in actual NBA action. So far, though, or the new and improved Bradley Beal looks game-ready.whether he can stay healthy this season and parlay his offseason regimen into an All-Star-caliber campaign,Beal may well wind up with the payday he wants. Chances are, he'll have to wait for that money in restricted free agency next summer, and as Washington scrounges for every shred of cap space ahead of its pursuit of Kevin Durant in 2016. As Sporting News' Daniel Leroux explained:
In order to prevent teams from gaming the system in free agency,the NBA imposes placeholders called cap holds on teams for any free agents that have yet to be re-signed or let go. Cap holds are based on how much money a player made the prior season and his team’s signing rights that offseason, which means they most heavily impact players coming off rookie contracts and into restricted free agency; those players are the ones most often expecting big raises. ...
Since an actual contract amou
nt replaces the hold, and there are times when teams have a strong incentive not to sign valuable young players to extensions a year before free agency. For example,the Wizards and Bradley Beal agreeing to a contract at or close to his maximum would engage almost $10 million of cap space absent for their pursuit of Durant, making it that much harder to assemble a strong team around the D.
C. area native.more NBA news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

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