It may have been Eddie Johnson... not completely sure... but he said something like Ayton should make himself visible when players drive to the basket so they can dish him the ball for easy opportunities.
A lot of times he is not in their line of sight.
I would think this would be easy to learn with time.
I watched Ayton, play after play on offense tonight, stationed 23 feet from the basket for most of the 24-second shot clock. Then as he headed toward the basket, a crowd of defenders would get in his way.
Ask yourselves. Is D'Andre Ayton stationed at the 3-point line to set picks for most of the shot clock by his design? Or is it the Coach's game plan?
I think the answer is obvious. #1 pick or not, he is a 20-year old rookie doing what he is instructed to do. He is the victim of a rookie NBA Head Coach trying to make his trademark Euro-ball. It is clearly not working.
Who is going to tell him? The meddling owner who has no technical basketball experience? The interim partial-General Manager who was elevated because he is Sarver's yes-man?
It is right there for the world to see. The next time you watch a game, watch Ayton as soon as the Suns bring up the ball. Stationed at the 3-point line to set picks. What a waste of the #1 pick.
You might ask why Holmes doesn't face the same predicament. I would think it is because he has four years of NBA experience. And Sarver can't steamroll him like he does his rookie GM and rookie Head Coach. Which rolls downhill to young players like Ayton.
These are points that have been mentioned in the past. Tonight I concentrated on it throughout the time Ayton was on the floor. Play after play. So predictable.