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Do people accept the "Coach told me to rebound the ball instead of blocking shots" explanation for the lack of rim protection?I remember that trying to block too many shots was a major problem for Sean Williams, in that the analytics showed that despite elite shot-blocking numbers he wasn't that defensively effective, leaving himself out of position for stops and rebounds. That said, for a bouncy kid with a 7'5" wingspan, I was surprised that he got so few swats.
Quote from: Roy H. on Today at 11:40:33 AMDo people accept the "Coach told me to rebound the ball instead of blocking shots" explanation for the lack of rim protection?I remember that trying to block too many shots was a major problem for Sean Williams, in that the analytics showed that despite elite shot-blocking numbers he wasn't that defensively effective, leaving himself out of position for stops and rebounds. That said, for a bouncy kid with a 7'5" wingspan, I was surprised that he got so few swats.I generally think that Kelvin Sampson is an excellent college basketball coach who puts his players in positions to succeed. So I suspect that the decision to prioritize rebounding over shot-blocking is a sign that Cenac is more helpful to a basketball team when he rebounds rather than trying to block shots. In other words... not really. Good coaches don't do things arbitrarily. It's pretty clearly a weakness for him, and I also agree with Who that a guy with his physical tools should average more than a half a block per game even if he's not actively hunting blocks. He's a project. But I'm a believer in our player development.