Big J wrote:FrodoBaggins wrote:QingJames wrote:Gasol also anchored one of the best defensive teams to win a championship at age 34 - and all in the modern era.
He was also the starting center anchoring the #1 defense (-5.2 rDRtg) for the majority of the season at 36 in his last season with LA. Some one-number metrics like LEBRON had him as a top 6 defender on a per 100 possession basis.
 
Yes, and Rudy Gobert was the DPOY, and 10x more mobile than Edey, yet was continually hunted and cooked on the perimeter in the playoffs.
 
That’s a scheme issue though. Or are you one of those “Gobert is actually a bad defender” folks?
Edey’s weakest skillset is on the defensive end and I don’t think his footwork or awareness is good enough to actually become a positive defender, even under a drop scheme that keeps him close to the rim. That’s why I don’t think he should be drafted within the lottery. But if the argument is that you can’t draft a big who will get cooked if you continually make him guard on the perimeter, that’s a terrible argument. As with Gobert, the issue is usually scheme and surrounding, exploitable personnel rather than an innate failing on the part of the big man.
Put another way: you can count on one hand the bigs in the league who can competently defend on the perimeter. Bam, Mobley, Wemby (gets blown by all the time but obviously able to recover to a freakish degree). That’s pretty much it. Yet look at the teams in the finals - Al’s lack of mobility and Lively’s poor perimeter defense obviously didn’t sink those teams.
People REALLY overstate the “he’s big and can’t guard at the perimeter” for big man prospects. If you want to have a go at Edey’s defense you should be really targeting his bad footwork and seemingly slow awareness/recognition. That’s the stuff that would keep me from drafting him because I don’t think defensive awareness is something that most players have proven capable of improving once they hit an NBA level. You have it or you don’t.