tleikheen wrote: Why would Avdija flourish at the 4?
He  rebounds  the  ball better  than  probably  everyone  on  the  Wizards and  playing the 4  doesnt  necessarily  have  to  take  the  ball  out  of  his  hands to  bring  the  ball up. His  chance  of  sticking  with  the  Wizards  will be  better  playing  the 4  than SF  as  he  cant  shoot.
But  the  big  problem is  the  stand in  the  corners ,no player  movement  or  ball movement  in WUJs offense.Its  ISO  heavy  with  my turn ,your  turn . 
Seems  like  every year  the  last  teams  standing  are  teams  who  move  the  ball  and  have  player  movement. I  cant  remember  the  last good  team that  was  a  heavy  ISO  commited  team.
 I  think  the Washington  offense  will  be  better  with  KP at  Center ,Avidja  at  PF, Kispert at  SF, Beal  at SG, Anthony  Black ?????? PG.     Even  better  if  somehow  they  got  Amen  Thompson  for  PG ....... Lets  hope  the  PG  position  is  addressed  this  Draft.
 
I don't want to turn the draft thread into a Deni Avijda thread, but needless to say I think the team needs to make a choice between Kuzma and Avdija. The argument that you make is a fair one, but it also doesn't follow that Avdija should be the cog to make the ball movement offense flow. Look at the teams in the finals. Yes they have good ball movement, but they also made sure to sign good three-point shooters. Denver specifically traded for Kentavious Caldwell-Pope because he could shoot the 3 better. Ball movement + 3-point shooting. Avdija's lack of 3-point shooting renders your whole argument questionable. 
Defensively, Avdija is a good/great defender (would love to see him cut down his fouls) but the reality is that in 2023 teams seek out the weakest defenders on the floor. So the overall benefit of Avdjia's defense, though he is a good individual defender, is overstated. 
C - Porzingis
PF - Avdija
SF - Kispert
SG - Beal
PG - ????
If Avdija is making 37%+ from 3 and shooting 5+ 3's a game is a solid team. Especially if we have a PG who can shoot. But the time is far too late to start looking at Avdija like he's some kind of blank canvas. He's played 3 seasons and his 3-point shooting last season was the worst of his career. In your post you mentioned Anthony Black. Black is also not a good 3-point shooter (30% from the college line is concerning). So that lineup with Black at the 1 and Avdija at the 4, would lack floor spacing. The ball movement that you hope to create would be negated by the fact that the defense could easily help off of the 1 and 4 positions. Any good defensive team would just basically make Avdija and Black beat them from deep.
More so, Avdija's contract is coming up. There is no shortage of players in either the draft or free agency that can do what Avdija brings to the table. Bad 3-point shooting, secondary playmaker, good rebounding and solid defense is a dime a dozen. So where does that leave us with an Avdija contract extension?