As he scanned the box score, Detroit Pistons guard Malik Beasley smiled.
He focused on a number that played a major factor in the Pistonsā 117-114 win over the Los Angeles Lakers on Monday at Crypto.com Arena. Beasley looked satisfied over scoring 21 points off the bench while maintaining his efficiency from the field (8-for-15) and from 3-point range (5-for-10).
ā50!ā Beasley said with a grin. Yet, Beasley does not play just to produce numbers. He helped the Pistons (13-17) overcome a 10-point deficit against the Lakers (16-13) and prevail in crunch time in other ways, too. Beasley chastised Detroit guard Cade Cunningham for committing five turnovers. Beasley also encouraged his teammates to stay calm.

āHeās always bringing positive energy to the group,ā Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff said. Heās competitive. Heās fiery. Heās taken on many different defensive assignments and challenges and has lifted the spirit of the group. Obviously, the shot-making helps accentuate all of those things.ā
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It sure does.
After signing as a free agent with the Pistons last summer, Beasley ranks second in the NBA for most 3s made this season (119) and set a franchise record for most 3 made through 30 games. He also appears on pace to set a Pistons record for most 3s made in a single season (313). No wonder Beasley described himself to Sportskeeda as a āHall-of-Fame shooter.ā
āDefinitely putting in a lot of battles and a lot of missed shots and a lot of made shots,ā Beasley said. āIām putting in the work. But the most credit that I have to give to is my teammates.ā
Earlier, Beasley spoke to Sportskeeda about his shooting regimen, his interest in playing in the NBAās 3-point contest during All-Star weekend and his strong chemistry with Cunningham.
Editorās note: The following one-on-one interview has been edited and condensed.
How do you evaluate your season so far?
Beasley: āIāve put in the work. I have a great opportunity to be a leader and also do my role in general. Just to be on this team and change the culture and change the energy here has been huge for me. I feel like Iām doing my job. I just got to continue that and just keep hooping.
In what ways do you think youāve led and changed the culture?
Beasley: āWith my work ethic. I feel like my work ethic is unmatched. So now I have a āBreakfast Clubā that I have every year. There are a lot of guys that come to the āBreakfast Clubā now. Last game, I went before shootaround and put in extra work. Jaden Ivey came with me. He was like, āBeas, we got six guys coming in now.ā Before, it was just me and just two others. Then some left and then some came. Once you see the work continuously put in with the work that I put in, they see thatās consistent. Now guys are coming in more and more now. Iām just showing my work ethic, man. Iāve been in the league for nine years. I bring the energy that I can. I teach these guys the good, the bad and ugly and learn from it.ā
What have been the highlights with the āBreakfast Clubā so far?
Beasley: āThe highlights of āThe Breakfast Clubā has been having all of the guys come through. I donāt tell them to come. They see me working. When they come on the bus to shootaround, they already see me sweating. Theyāre like, āDamn, heās putting in the work.ā So itās also about having that mental edge with putting in that extra work. They see that. Cade came first. Then Jaden came. Then Tim [Hardaway Jr.] came. Then Tobias [Harris] came. It goes back and forth. Iām just happy to be a vet as best as I can.ā
Is āBreakfast Clubā essentially early-morning workouts, or you are all also grabbing an early meal?
Beasley: āNah, āBreakfast Clubā is essentially a workout before our practice. Most teams go to morning shootarounds. So I Uber 30 minutes before the bus. I get to the arena about 30 minutes before everybody to get in that extra work. But we called it the āBreakfast Clubā because āLittle Caesars Arenaā has the pizza. We say āwe eat pizza for breakfast.āā (laughs).
In what ways has that impacted everybody so far?
Beasley: āI see it tremendously. Jaden has asked me why I can make my open 3s on catch-and-shoot and how I can make my pull-up 3s. You shoot it differently. Iām going to show you how to make sure that shot is the same as the other side. Jaden Ivey has, I call it āthe pretty shot.ā He shoots it and then he lets it go like Stephen Curry. I tell him that whenever he makes it that he needs to stand in the same spot and hold his follow through. Everything is the same. So then the other night, he made two or three like that. But then he had one āpretty one; where he didnāt. But he made it. I was like, āYou better stick with your f---- follow through.ā (laughs). So itās just about teaching him the game. Iāve done this. Iāve done this a long time.ā
Besides your work, what else do you think explains your prolific 3-point shooting specifically with this team? (16.4 points on 42.9% shooting overall, 41.9% from 3)
Beasley: āIāve been on a good number of teams, and I donāt know many that can do what I do. If you add the numbers, every game Iām getting up 400 made 3s more than anybody on my team before we even do shootaround and before we even do practice. So 400 times 82 is more than anybody else. You do the math (32,800 practice makes a season). The work pays itself out. When Iām shooting in the game and making 3s, I already shot more than 100 threes. So Iām in rhythm. People may think itās hard when Iām hitting three 3s in a row. Thatās hard to do. But Iām making it look easy. So honestly, Iām just sticking to the hard work. Iām staying humble. Iām staying blessed. Iām not getting bored with the success. I just have to keep grinding, man.ā
With your 3-point shooting and spacing, in what ways has that made things easier for Cade?
Beasley: āWeāve grown tremendously. After the first 30 games, heās starting to realize that he has the nail help. For example, if Iām on the side and heās driving at the nail to the free-throw line to get a pull-up, last year there would be a defender there helping him. This year, the defender has to stay close to me. So he has about four extra feet to work with, and heās starting to realize that. At one practice, I said, āYou probably donāt realize how open youāve been, huh?ā And he said, āNah, I havenāt!ā I said, āListen bro, we got you.ā So weāre all using each other. The best thing about our team is our chemistry.ā
And with that, I saw youāve been quoted about how Cadeās leadership has taken a step. What have you seen with that?
Beasley: āHeās just talking to us on the floor. Heās a nice guy in a sense. He doesnāt want us to take it the wrong way. But heās our leader. So he has to learn how to talk to different players in different ways. One guy, you might have to be like, āHey, we need you to do better.ā To me, he can come up to me and said, āWhat the f--- are you doing? Letās go!ā And Iāll be good. He knows who he can talk to. Heās starting to learn. He's starting to grow. Thatās what it takes as a point guard.ā
How do you determine which approach to take?
Beasley: āYou got to hang out with your teammates. A lot of guys donāt do that. With certain guys, I know I can cuss them out and they can cuss me out and weāll be good. But then thereās other guys where I have to say, āHey, letās just figure this out.ā Thereās nothing wrong with that. Itās just thatās how you make a team better by being able to hold each other accountable and also take accountability.ā
This might be too early, but I want to make sure. Have you heard anything about your chances to be in the All-Star 3-point contest?
Beasley: āYeah, they asked if I would be willing to do it. I told them yes.ā
So youāre in?
Beasley: āWe donāt know if Iām in. Obviously all the All-Stars got the first pick. Then if they need another shooter, Iām in.ā
So they just asked if youāre interested and you said yes.
Beasley: āYep. They asked me if I was interested and I told them yes.ā
Do you have any sense of when youāll know for sure?
Beasley: āI donāt know when anything will be official. But the main goal is to win. If we donāt win, it sounds clichĆ©, but itās the truth. If we donāt win or at least have a Play-In record, then it doesnāt matter. Theyāre not going to have those guys in. So my main focus is obviously to win. If all of that happens, then everything else comes with it.ā
What do you draw from your journey with playing for different teams and playing with different guys with LeBron [James], Giannis [Antetokounmpo]and [Nikola] JokiÄ?
Beasley: āThat Iām a professional. Everything in between, I got to get better at. I wouldnāt still be in this league if I wasnāt doing something right. So itās learning from that. Iāve learned from the best players and Iāve learned from guys that donāt play much. Everybody in this league got into the league a certain way. So you can learn from everybody. But what I learned the most is that you have to continue to put in the work and you can never get too high and you can never get too low. I might have 30 one night. But it doesnāt matter because weāre playing a back-to-back. Itās about never getting complacent or getting too high or low. I just continue to put in the work.ā
Even with your great shooting numbers, youāve had stretches where shots donāt fall. I know itās a make-or-miss league, but what else do you think explains that?
Beasley: āIāve had three games this year where Iām 2-for-10 from 3. Then the next game I was 4-for-5, 6-for-11, 7-for-8. You just got to keep shooting. Thereās nothing you can do. Shooters shoot. You canāt get discouraged by the fans. A few games ago, I took the most 3s I ever shot in my career in a game (7-for-19 from 3 vs Utah on Dec. 19). The āold meā wouldāve been scared to shoot some more because I was missing. But it brought us back in the game by making a couple of shots.ā
So basically itās A make-or-miss league and you just have to stick with your work and stay confident in your shot?
Beasley: āThis league is all about process. If you can continue your process, the results will show. Itās just one plus one equals two in this league. But a lot of people get complacent. A lot of people donāt work. A lot of people donāt come in and do extra work. As much as I do it, youād be surprised on how many guys donāt do it. How many guys donāt come in to work before shootaround? Itās not mandatory. But thatās what separates those guys. What separates me as an elite shooter? Iām not a Hall-of-Fame player. But Iām a Hall-of-Fame shooter. So you just keep pushing.ā
You mentioned the number of shots you take before a practice or a shootaround. But what does one of your workouts look like with drills and anything else youād care to share?
Beasley: āA lot of it is reps. I make 20 threes in each spot. Thatās 100 threes made. Then Iām doing all of my movements. Thatās eight 3s in the five spots (left corner, left-wing, top, right-wing, right corner). Thatās 40 shots total. So right there, Iāve already made 140 [threes]. When coaches and players are coming in before shootaround, I have to stop. But then Iāll shoot more afterward. After shootaround, I have a shooting group that Iāve taken upon. We work on the first to make 35 threes. So thatās a lot of reps. Iām not just bullsh--- you. When you put the time in over and over again, at some point, itās going to become muscle memory. If I go 0-for-3 to start the game, my next thought now is, āI put in the work. Youāre going to make your next shot.ā If I donāt, then Iām about to make four in a row to get to 50%.āā
Beyond the teamās strong chemistry and talent, what else will determine if you can make the Play-in or the playoffs?
Beasley: āJust making sure we hold each other accountable as a young team. There have been times during games where a team goes on a run and weāre still winning, so we donāt have the best energy. So itās about learning. For me personally, Iāve told Coach this multiple times. I came from winning programs. To build this process is new to me. Iāve done this on other teams, but itās been a while. Just learning not to get bored with the process is the toughest thing for me with, āThese young guys might make a mistake. They never won a playoff game in the last 10-20 years.ā So I just got to understand that and learn from that to be a good veteran.ā
With the way youāre explaining this, it sounds like you think this team has the right ingredientsā¦
Beasley: [interrupts]. āWe have the right ingredients. If you looked at all the games last year, even when I was with Milwaukee and we played them, they only lost games by 10 or less. They just couldnāt finish. So now we have guys that can help finish. We have guys that can get us in the right direction.ā
What does it mean to play in Detroit considering your mom has roots here?
Beasley: āIt means a lot to be able to represent my hometown. Basically, I thought I would be with the Atlanta Hawks. I would be repping them a lot. But it ended up being Detroit, my second home. It worked out. God always has a plan. I love it here. My mom has been able to go to games. Sheās enjoying it. My family will be coming out.ā
Mark Medina is an NBA insider for Sportskeeda. Follow him on X, Blue Sky, Instagram, Facebook and Threads.
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