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Some of this stems from her high school days and AAU play because she changed programs going into her senior year. She should be a wing/forward, but somewhere she was told she should be a guard.She wants to be a 3, but doesn't have the shooting or ball handling to. Her 3PT shot has improved some, but she can't hit dribble pull ups or anything mid range. She also doesn't look that comfortable in the post. She has some success driving and cutting, but with Miles gone She may not get as many passes.
Her skills aren't really highlighted in the offense. The offense is a lot of ISO, and she doesn't have those skills yet.
She has a lot of potential though. I'm hoping this year she can put more pieces together. We'll need her to not foul as often.
I'm excited to see how Bransford has developed. She looked in shape last off season, and i was getting excited to see her mesh with the team. Her freshman season she showed flashes, sophomore year she was coming off a summer injury and regressed. Those two will need to be 10+ PPG scorers for ND.
When she was at Capital Courts, as the best overall athlete, she was allowed to be a primary ball handler. It was necessary based on the roster at the time. While with Kia Nurse, she was more of a wing as they would have Swords and Gibb be the primary ball handlers. However, when she switched to BecomeOne (now known as Become One Canada Elite), that coach had her as a primary ball handler along with Deniya Prawl.
Then add in Canada Basketball and the different ways she was utilized in U17, U19 and the Olympic squad. She's gotten a lot of mixed messages as to the type of player she should be. What I hope she does with her last two seasons is take a page out of Aaliyah Edwards' development at UConn which focused on improving range and ball handling to improve her draft prospects.
. However, that fashion statement, tough instruction and love and the modified Princton offense have moved on.