“Kevin Durant and Michael Beasley are the two best players that ever came from NCAA” – Darnell Jackson says Beasley had the potential to be a Hall of Famer originally appeared on Basketball Network.

When Kevin Durant stepped onto the NCAA hardwood back in 2006, few could’ve predicted that he would deliver one of the most dominant individual seasons in college basketball history. He averaged 25.8 points and 11.1 rebounds while shooting 47.3 percent from the field and 40.4 percent from three, adding 1.9 blocks and 1.9 steals per game. At 6’11”, he left fans and NBA analysts in awe. No one had ever seen a player of that size move and shoot like a guard with such efficiency.

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Just one season later, Michael Beasley arrived, Durant’s good friend and arguably put together an even more brutal season at Kansas State. He averaged 26.2 points and 12.3 rebounds on 53.2 percent shooting from the field. His physical build and stat line echoed Durant’s dominance as both were unguardable, relentless scorers.

Jackson saw both players up close

Darnell Jackson, Beasley’s former teammate at the Miami Heat and a four-year NBA veteran, saw both players up close — playing alongside Beasley and facing Durant. In an interview with Basketball Network, he made a bold statement.

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“But just watching the career that he (Michael Beasley) had in college, and watching what he did in the NBA, I truly believe if he was in the right opportunity, the right situation and had the chance to really showcase what he can do — and people weren’t messing with him — no doubt in my mind Beasley would be a Hall of Famer,” Jackson proclaimmed.

“He’s still in the conversation as one of the best scorers in the game and he was. And you can throw him in that category with Kevin Durant. I say it all the time: Kevin Durant and Michael Beasley are the two best college players that ever came out of the NCAA. That’s just my opinion. What those two guys did, I don’t think we’ll see anything like that ever again. We might, but it might take years,” Jackson concluded.

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Few have dominated the NCAA like Durant and Beasley

From someone who shared the locker room with Beasley and competed against KD, such a statement carries weight, though not without controversy. It’s easy to understand why Jackson would make such a bold claim. But considering that neither Durant nor Beasley won a college title and that others have both the accolades and stats to back their case, it’s hard to fully agree.

Take Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, then Lew Alcindor, who won three NCAA championships with career averages of 26.4 points and 15.5 rebounds per game. Or Pete Maravich, who still holds the all-time NCAA scoring average with 44.2 points per game. Even Bill Russell, with two NCAA titles and averages of 20.7 points and 20.3 rebounds, belongs in that conversation.

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Still, few have dominated the NCAA like Durant and Beasley, at least offensively.

However, only Durant fully lived up to the NBA expectations. Why he didn’t make it is hard to pinpoint, but former teammate Goran Dragic once opened up about how talented and wildly inconsistent Beasley was.

“Michael Beasley is really a good guy; he has his own basketball philosophy, but honestly, he’s one of the most talented players I’ve ever seen,” Dragic said. “He can play the one, two, three, and four positions. Long, left-handed, he can shoot, go right, go left — whatever you need, he can do it. The only thing was, when you put him on the court, sometimes he wanted to play, sometimes he didn’t… so it was all in his head.”

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Related: “With LeBron, it was more like the little homie” – Kevin Garnett on why many players don’t view LeBron James the same as Michael Jordan

Beasley often seemed stuck in the mindset that he was owed more

And that’s the bottom line — the mindset. In the NBA, talent alone isn’t enough. You need focus, discipline and mental toughness. Many players with far less talent than Beasley went on to have long, productive careers because they were committed and consistent.

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Beasley, by contrast, often seemed stuck in the mindset that he was owed more, which, as Jackson suggested, was a big reason for the stall in his career. When you combine frustration over opportunities with inconsistent effort and focus, the results are rarely positive.

Beasley will for sure go down as one of the league’s biggest “what if” stories.

Related: “There’s no reason in hell I should not be playing basketball” – Michael Beasley airs out frustration over being blackballed by the NBA

This story was originally reported by Basketball Network on Jul 29, 2025, where it first appeared.