Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Cole Beasley, slated to be an unrestricted free agent after this season, said Tuesday on Twitter that the team's front office "pushes" who gets the ball on offense.

"Honestly, the front office pushes who they want to get the ball to," Beasley said while responding to a comment about the Cowboys' decision to fire offensive coordinator Scott Linehan. "I haven't been a huge priority in that regard. Maybe that will change but I'm not sure. More balls come my way in 2 minute drill where nothing is planned."

He tried to clarify his comments Wednesday afternoon, saying all teams' gameplans are "dictated by the front office."

Some are misunderstanding my point. EVERY team's gameplan in pro sports is dictated by the front office. Big free agent additions, high draft picks, etc are going to get the most opps. And I'm not mad at that! Lol I just want to help my team win. All good players want the rock. — Cole Beasley (@Bease11) January 23, 2019

Beasley, 29, caught 65 passes -- his second-highest total in his seven seasons with the Cowboys -- for 672 yards and three touchdowns in 2018. He averaged 10.3 yards per catch.

Beasley, who made $3.25 million in 2018, said he'd like to re-sign with the Cowboys but is ready to move on to any team where he can "make more of an impact" because "utilization is more important than money."

Doesn't mean I'm gone. I'll play anywhere where I can make more of an impact. I would love for that to be Dallas or anywhere else that will give me more pops to make an impact. I just wanna ball. It's hard with 3 to 4 opps a game. https://t.co/zImZKxkAvD — Cole Beasley (@Bease11) January 22, 2019

The Cowboys fired Linehan on Friday, saying, "It would be in the best interest of all of the parties involved if we were to make a change." The Cowboys finished the season ranked 22nd in yards (343.8) and points (21.2) per game, even though they had the NFL's leading rusher, Ezekiel Elliott, who gained 1,434 yards.

ESPN's Todd Archer contributed to this report.