Duke13 wrote:I think the narrative with the passion for the game with Edwards has been blown out of proportion. I get the scare amongst wolves fans with our history of Wig, Edwards personality on the court in terms of just showing emotion and his physicality isn't even in the same ball park as Wig. His skill level, advanced footwork, ability to dribble and jump shot are so far ahead of Wig in my mind also.
The stance that Wiseman was the for sure slam dunk pick by some of the more knowledgeable posters on here has me a little dumbfounded, we'll see. I'd take wing over a big all things equal every time.
I agree with you on the differences between Edwards and Wiggins. Edwards shows more emotion on the court in his demeanor, and much stronger than Wiggins physically. I'll add that Edwards is also a significantly better ball-handler than Wiggins. So I totally get why Edwards is a highly attractive prospect and there are meaningful differences between him and Wiggins.
My concern with Edwards is that, while outwardly more animated on the court than Wiggins, he's no more motivated that Wiggins to be great and is equally lacking the inner competitive fire. Draft reviews of Edwards and Wiggins were identical in noting their tendency to disappear from games and general disinterest in defense. Watching Edwards in Georgia's Maui Classic game against Michigan State was telling. It was probably his best game of the season. Yes, it scored 37 points, but he was completely absent from the game, even though he was on the court, until 6 minutes into the second half when his team was down 26 points. That's mind-boggling for someone with his physical gifts. The fact that he then scored 37 points the rest of the game shows you what he can do. But the fact that he didn't do ANYTHING for 26 minutes before that is a huge red flag. And remember, this was his best game of the season. In the prior Maui Classic game, Edwards was absent the entire time, ending up with 6 points.
So while Edwards' outward appearance is different from Wiggins and although he has a better skill set than Wiggins, he has the same core deficiencies that almost always foretell a prospect's failure to reach his potential and often result in profound disappointment. I think Edwards resembles JR Rider more than Wiggins. Like Edwards, JR was a very charismatic, personable guy who was physically gifted and often showed exuberant emotion on the court. But like Edwards, JR was known for disappearing from games in college and had multiple analysis and GMs questioning whether he had the competitive drive and will to become great. The rest is history.
I certainly hope I"m wrong about Edwards and I remain in awe of his physical gifts. But gambling on prospects with the red flags associated with Edwards, no matter how talented, almost always turns out to be a bad bet.