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Ira
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Joined: 8/14/2001
Member: #91
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http://www.miamiherald.com/592/story/542123.html Michael Beasley wanted to know his options if he were to be picked by the Heat in next month's NBA Draft.
So this power forward from Kansas State asked his college coach, Miami native Frank Martin, for a few tips on one of their favorite topics: food.
''He can't control where he goes or what city he ends up in, but we joked about it a little bit -- what [Miami] is all about,'' Martin said. ``He knows my background, so he's asked me where all the good Cuban restaurants are, so he can get a good sandwich down there. We've talked about Spanish food and that kind of stuff.''
Beasley apparently is growing accustomed to the chance he might end up in Miami, which holds the second overall pick in the June 26 draft. But whether the Heat would pick -- and keep -- Beasley if the Chicago Bulls bypass him with the No. 1 pick looms as one of the biggest questions leading to the draft.
Heat president Pat Riley created a buzz after Tuesday night's draft lottery when he strongly suggested Miami would trade the pick if the right deal came along. At least five lottery teams picking behind the Heat -- including Seattle, Memphis, New York, New Jersey and Sacramento -- would have interest in acquiring Beasley if the Heat is serious about making a potential draft-day trade.
''I'm glad to hear that, because I'll be talking to him then,'' Knicks president Donnie Walsh said, when informed that Riley would explore trading the highest draft pick in Heat history. ``It's an asset, and a lot of people want that pick. There will be a lot of [trade] talk with this draft, but it'll get weeded out.''
TWO FOR THE SHOW
Beasley and University of Memphis point guard Derrick Rose are widely considered the two ''can't miss'' prospects atop the draft board.
The Bulls are believed to be leaning toward taking Rose, a Chicago native, with the first pick, but general manager John Paxson told reporters Tuesday he won't rush a decision. There is speculation in Chicago that the Bulls would look to trade point guard Kirk Hinrich or not to re-sign guard Ben Gordon to create room for Rose.
Riley said he had received at least three calls from teams interested in the Heat's pick. Because Miami owes its 2009 first-round pick to Minnesota, league rules prohibit the Heat from dealing this year's pick until after the draft.
During a TV interview with ESPN on Tuesday, Beasley said Miami and New York were the teams he believed were most interested in drafting him. He was the NCAA's third-leading scorer at 26.2 points a game and averaged an NCAA-best 12.4 rebounds in his lone college season.
The Knicks and Heat have a logjam at forward and likely would need to deal players to make room for Beasley. In the Heat's case, that likely would mean having to shop Udonis Haslem or Shawn Marion, who can opt out of the final season and $17.2 million of his contract to become a free agent July 1.
Memphis, Seattle and Sacramento have needs for a low-post scorer. New Jersey is expected to be one of the more active teams this offseason as new general manager Kiki Vandeweghe looks to retool the roster after Jason Kidd's departure.
''I like that pick,'' Vandeweghe said of the Heat's draft position. ``It's obviously looked at that this is a two-person draft, that the draft really starts after that second pick or whatever. At that point, you can sit back and look at options..''
Riley would not say what the Heat would expect in return should it part with the No. 2 pick. But it likely would require the combination of the Heat swapping selections with a team that chooses later in the lottery -- but likely within the top 10 -- and adding a proven veteran at point guard or center.
LOOKING FOR PARTNER?
It might also take a trading partner willing to take on the two seasons and $15.2 million remaining on center Mark Blount's contract or the three seasons and $13.2 million left on guard Marcus Banks' deal.
High lottery picks have been dealt frequently on draft day in recent years. A top-eight pick has been traded 10 times since 1999. And the No. 2 pick has been dealt three times in that span.
Riley is uncertain whether anyone of the Heat's potential options at No. 2 could have a more immediate impact than an established veteran as Miami looks to recover quickly from a 15-67 season.
''We need help. We need it now. We've paid the price for it,'' Riley said. ``Can [Rose and Beasley] help a team like ours -- and change it? Can they step in like LeBron [James], Kevin Garnett did at (age) 19 -- and turn a franchise around? That's how they're going to be measured.''
I would seriously consider offering Lee + our pick to Miami for Beasley.
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