Note30 wrote:winforlose wrote:Norseman79 wrote:
Honestly he's exactly who came to mind regarding a similar situation. Don't get me wrong, I think Edwards is a better player because of his defensive capabilities. But similar to Mitchell, Edwards is getting fingers pointed because people basically expect him to average triple doubles. It's not realistic for who he is as a player. It would be more likely for him to average 40 points a game.
Quite the contrary. Ant had a 1 shot attempt, 5 assist quarter and said that is not the kind of basketball he want to play. Ant said he is a scorer and followed that with 31 shots in the next game. Ant gave himself a narrative of numbers over everything.
LOL. He's a shooting guard wtf are you on about? He's averaging the same amount of assists a shooting guard should be.
It's not narrative over numbers it's him having to do everything on offense because our team is incapable of handling itself. Expecting him to try to craft a new style of play is going to be incredibly difficult.
Could he create more with his current skillset? Yes. Should he have to do so on a regular basis? No. That's not his job. Just because our GM wasted all of his picks and didn't get a long term solution at PG doesn't make it Ants fault.
This is pretty much where I was going. Obviously Edwards can pass the ball to people. But that's not his strength. We're trying to turn him into something different. Finch is trying to turn him into something different. Put him in the triangle offense, with a point guard who can get things set up and initiated, and his scoring takes off. I'm just using that as an example. The issue with playing positionless, 5 out, free wheeling offense, is you really want players that are jacks of all trades and Masters of none, or Masters of every trade which isn't realistic. Coaches like Funch love this style, it's beautiful, pure, difficult to stop when working, with the right players. because typically speaking, the game and players of that style are more geared towards that style basketball. Everyone can shoot a little, everyone can pass a little, everyone can dribble a little, but typically no one dominates.