And I still say you’re wrong. It’s establishing the wrong message with Ayton, to be passive or afraid defensively. And it’s establishing the wrong reputation with the refs, that he soft, a bad defender and not a rim protector. Unfortunately those things can stick.
I agree with you. That is the direction for Ayton to go in. But I do believe that it was better for him to start cautiously, not start out in the refs' headlights. Then take more chances as his stats became solid, which they have. I think it was the right move because this is his first experience playing Center in post-high school basketball. He did not come here with that inherent experience.
Lately, we can see Ayton being more assertive on defense and blocking as well as rebounds. I believe it was proper to have him start out more in control, just as we hope Jackson will be (although their traits and roles are certainly not comparable).
If we disagree on that, so be it. But I believe that Ayton has reached the second plateau of his development a quarter into the season. And that is helped by him having a more talented team around him at this time than from the start of the season. But a distributor who can feed him properly on offense would help.
In our eyes, Ayton is the second or third most talented player on the team and has been since the start of the season. In the eyes of the refs, he is just a rookie who has to pay his dues. And, as the #1 pick, probably more than most.