Is This the End of Bradley Beal?

About an hour ago it was announced that Bradley Beal is out for the season due to hip stuff. I don't know if it's a fracture or a break or surgery. All I know is that his hip is giving him enough pain that he is done. And that brings me to what I want to touch on today, is Bradley Beal done as a pro basketball player?

I have always liked Beal from the first moment I knew he was a Saint Louis kid. I'm always going to root for a kid from here, as long as they don't do anything foul in their personal lives. For all intents and purposes, Beal seems to be a solid dude. I followed him his one season at Florida and saw the lottery pick potential. It was no surprise that he was going to go top ten, and the Wizards did just that when they drafted him. I liked the pairing with John Wall there. I felt their respective games complimented each other very nicely. And they found a little success with those two as their guys. The Wizards were a perennial playoff team, Wall and Beal were both constantly in all star talks and they were fun to watch. I know that when this whole website started, during one of my earliest NBA preseason preview and prediction blogs, I had the Wizards, with Wall and Beal, making it to the Finals. That obviously never happened, but the Wizards still made a push and won a playoff series here and there. Then John Wall got hurt and was kind of the forgotten guy in Washington. The team decided to let Beal be the star. And they found minimal success. They were still a playoff threat. When they got a still solid Russell Westbrook to team up with Beal, it was a little reminiscent of Wall playing with him. Bradley Beal was still putting up a ton of points and running the offense. He got a massive deal with Washington, one in which he got a no trade clause, and then it started to tumble off a bit. The Wizards were bad. Beal would miss big chunks of the season. He didn't have the juice that many had come to expect from him. He started to have his name pop up in all kinds of trade talks. A lot of people deemed his contract one of the worst in professional sports history. He handcuffed the Wizards. It seemed like he was content to stay there, cash in his checks and not win too many games. But I have to imagine at some point the lack of winning games had to wear on him. He was on teams that were mostly competitive.  And I have to think that the front office went to him and said they were going to rebuild during this time. When he finally relented, he accepted a trade to Phoenix to pair him up with KD. It didn't hurt that he was going to get to play with Devin Booker as well. The three of those guys teaming up had me thinking that the Suns were going to be one of the most lethal offenses in the NBA. That never happened. Devin Booker is not a point guard. Bradley Beal is not a point guard. KD is not a point guard. They had no player that could truly run the offense. Beal insisted on starting, and with three too many guys that needed the ball, he felt like the odd man out there. Then the injuries started to pile up. KD got hurt warming up for a game. Then Beal would miss massive amounts of time during the year. The only one who stayed on the court was Booker, but man that had to be frustrating for him after being in the Finals a few years before all this went down. The Suns were so bad last season that it seemed inevitable that this group was going to fracture, and that Beal was the main reason why. KD went over to the Rockets in a big time trade and Beal was cut and able to roam free agency as he wanted to. He only ever wanted to go to the Clippers, so when he finally signed there it was not a surprise to anyone. I liked the fit under one condition, Beal needed to come off the bench. He is so bad defensively now that I would rather have Kris Dunn start, a non shooter, because he is wonderful on the defensive side of the ball. But Beal had to be a starter, and the Clippers relented and let him start. The Clippers are 3-8 at this point in the year, the defense is horrendous, which should be their calling card, and the offense isn't much better. James Harden is still productive, but Kawhi Leonard is hurt, Ivica Zubac has underwhelmed and Bradley Beal wasn't doing much when on the floor and he is now done for the year. In the long run this may benefit the Clippers because now Ty Lue can play rotations and starters that he trusts.

Bradley Beal has taken such a deep dive since signing his humongous deal with the Wizards. He never got back that oomph that made him so much fun to watch when he played with John Wall. He seemed okay to clock in and out and cash his paycheck. It didn't feel like he was legitimately trying to improve his game in any way. He just kind of fading into the back and now I am left wondering if he will be an afterthought when he finally decides to retire. And that bums me out being a fan of his previous work. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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