I agree, but Jarvis never really developed his game beyond rebounding and layups, and that is on Stans and his coaches.
A little truth and a little dev advo here- Why isnt it on the player to develop his game over 4 years? Private shooting coaches etc?
I agree coaches exist in part to develop the players, but still...
There was this incredible(geek interest) report last year about how to maximize employee satisfaction. It contrasted the approach of improving weaknesses versus the approach of focusing on strengths. Ends up managers who found ways to highlight and maximize employee strengths had employees who were both more satisfied and more productive, compared to employees whose managers placed their employees in jobs and projects where weaknesses would have to be developed.
Anyways, something to always consider when it comes to athletics. We all want ourselves/kids/players we follow to develop skills they arent great at in the hope that more rounded players will make for more dynamic and productive players. Perhaps that is true when it comes to someone like Durant who has the skill set and gift to hone weaknesses into strengths, but years of research shows the opposite to be more likely.