Beasley's Contract Becomes Guaranteed Tuesday

MIAMI (CBSMiami) – Miami Heat small forward Michael Beasley returned to the team that drafted him on an unguaranteed contract hoping to make enough of an impact to stick around for a full season.

By 5:01 p.m. Tuesday, Beasley will know whether or not he is staying with the Heat for the rest of the season. If Beasley is on the roster at 5 p.m. Tuesday, his contract will become fully guaranteed for the rest of the 2013-2014 season.

From the looks of it, the Heat has no plans to jettison Beasley which means the player no one wanted to take a chance on in the offseason due to maturity issues could come up big for the Heat.

"It's not easy being in his position," Heat star Chris Bosh said. "It's like having to learn how to play basketball all over again."

If that's the case, Beasley has been a quick understudy. After toiling in the NBA since the Heat traded him a few seasons ago, the former number two overall pick has been reborn in Miami with essentially a sixth-man role off the bench.

Beasley is averaging 11.1 points, the most of any player this season who logs less than 20 minutes per game. He's on pace to obliterate his previous career-bests in field-goal percentage (.531 so far this year) and 3-point percentage (.500). A bit volatile at times in his first five NBA seasons, he hasn't been hit with a single technical so far this season.

He's usually one of the first players to arrive at work, usually one of the last to leave. His locker is next to longtime mentor Udonis Haslem, which isn't accidental, since Haslem was the player most in his ear during Beasley's first stint in Miami after being taken with the No. 2 pick in the 2008 draft. Now it's like Haslem has to fight for time in that ear, since it's not uncommon to see Bosh, James, Wade, Mario Chalmers and others advising Beasley.

"As soon as he became available, we all wanted to bring him back," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. "Then it was about getting him to be consistent with the routine. We built up a very structured routine for him every single day of learning what we do and fasttracking what this group has been doing for the last three-plus years and he's embraced it wholeheartedly."

He scored 17 points in 20 minutes on Sunday, helping Miami top Toronto 102-97. Afterward, Beasley wanted to talk almost exclusively about his defense.

The scoring, that's probably what got him a second Miami chance.

His newfound commitment to being a complete player is probably what's keeping him around.

"It's refreshing, I guess," Beasley said. "Like I said before, I'm not really worried about the offensive side right now. But at the same time, I have to stay aggressive."

That's what James told him from the very beginning. For someone with Beasley's copious offensive gifts, coming to Miami was hardly a bad idea, not when he gets to share time on the court with James, Wade and Bosh — all of whom attract plenty of defensive attention.

And that tends to mean Beasley finds himself open, maybe more often than ever.

"Early on you could tell that he was very passive and we want to share the ball, but at the end of the day the ball's going to end up in his hands a lot ... and he's going to have the footspeed against a lot of 4's that are guarding him," James said. "He's one of the best offensive players that we have and he's taken full advantage of it."

As the season gets deeper and the stakes get higher, Bosh said he already knows Beasley will be playing a critical role for the Heat. Beasley hasn't appeared in the playoffs since 2010, the spring before Miami traded him to Minnesota. He's never even played in a second-round game, and now is expected to help a team try and win another title.

He's welcoming the chance.

"Still working hard," Beasley said. "I'm not going to work any less come Tuesday."

If Beasley continues at the pace he's on in the first half of the season, Miami will have another weapon to unleash on teams when the playoffs roll around at the end of April. If the Heat's Greg Oden can get on the court in the playoffs as well, the Heat may not be able to be stopped from a three-peat.

(TM and © Copyright 2014 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2014 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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