Really Mosiah, does everything not come back to the most fundamental thing, motive, why do we do what we do.
I don't know if you see it but I would imagine in scouting people the most important thing to understand is why people do what they do, not what they really do, not what they shape and do in the open.
We all have eyes and ears and what I saw of gray was unusual, he had almost and equal amount of good superior plays to poor inferior plays, his inferior plays were mostly defensive and showed a tendency towards a lack of responsibility on the d side, two specific plays in just one game that seemed to suggest a lack of desire to protect, to defend which is job 1, it is perplexing as on the attacking side he assumed more responsibility and showed high desire to contribute and be involved. That is exactly what comes to my mind and that comes back to what is driving his brain. He seems to be an attacker adapted to defend than vice versa, maybe that is all it is.
I don't know if you see it but I would imagine in scouting people the most important thing to understand is why people do what they do, not what they really do, not what they shape and do in the open.
We all have eyes and ears and what I saw of gray was unusual, he had almost and equal amount of good superior plays to poor inferior plays, his inferior plays were mostly defensive and showed a tendency towards a lack of responsibility on the d side, two specific plays in just one game that seemed to suggest a lack of desire to protect, to defend which is job 1, it is perplexing as on the attacking side he assumed more responsibility and showed high desire to contribute and be involved. That is exactly what comes to my mind and that comes back to what is driving his brain. He seems to be an attacker adapted to defend than vice versa, maybe that is all it is.
Comment