Bashir Ahmed has been terrible on offense.
Bashir Ahmed has not been terrible on offense. In fact he's been better than one of our best and most beloved players ever:
Bashir Ahmed - 39% from the field; 37% from 3
Marcus Hatten - 38% from the field; 28% from 3
Assuming you are using Hatten's first year here: Hatten shot 44% from 2 and 28% from 3. Ahmed is shooting 41% from 2 and 37% from 3. Hatten also took a larger % of 2 pointers than Ahmed. Hatten's assist rate was 29% (good for top 100 in the country) compared to Ahmed's 9.5% (black hole). While Hatten was not a very efficient player, he was still comfortably better than Ahmed.
That said, next year I expect Ahmed to improve his efficiency (just like Hatten did) and close the gap between the two players. If he can just learn to pass the ball..
Marcus Hatten was a top ten and probably top five player at Saint John's in my lifetime. If your statistics say anything about Hatten other than that your statistics are pointless and dumb. Similarly pointless and dumb is comparing Ahmed to Hatten, for reasons that should be obvious but maybe I'd better mention them anyway. In the first place, Hatten was a PG and Ahmed is not; and in the second the only players who will be flattered by a comparison to Hatten are players who were as great as Hatten was and Ahmed is no Hatten.
IN any event whatever metrics your pointless and dumb statistic measures - the square root of offensive possessions divided by field goal percentage times assists minus defensive rebounds squared plus turnovers to the eighth power, don't know don't care - your conclusion is false. Ahmed has not "been terrible on offense." The correct formulation would be "Bashir Ahmed has been terrible on offense according to this statistic that I think is important and other people think is pointless and dumb" Because Ahmed is averaging 13 points and 5 rebounds per game, which depending on the circumstances is somewhere between adequate and spectacular. For example that terrible output is similar to Jakarr Sampson's terrible numbers. Sampson was as I recall also terrible and a cancer, except he managed to metastasize himself into the NBA.
Those numbers are also similar to any number of well regarded SJU players: Shelton Jones averaged 14 and 8 as a junior; Lavar Postell averaged 13 and 6 as a junior; Artest averaged 14 and 6 as a soph; Willie Glass averaged 16 and 6 as a senior. Those guys were NBA draft picks. None of them were forced into a feature role because they played on one of the least experienced team in the country. Mo Harkless otoh played on a very inexperienced team that lost a shitton of games: he averaged 15 and 8 and was a lottery pick.
Ahmed is averaging ~ 16 and 6 over his past half dozen games, half a year into his college career, in what is allegedly the best basketball conference in the country - this while playing out of position. All last year I heard about how poor Federico Missini was playing out of position and what a brave wittle twooper he was. Well, Ahmed's a SF in a perfect world and playing out of position he's averaging about what this SF did in his first year
13 points / 6 rebounds / 2 assists / 48 fg / 20 3pt
versus
13 points / 5 rebounds / 1 assist / 39 fg / 37 3 pt
The numbers are eerily similar, the only significance between them being about a turnover per game, this guy being Malik Sealy. Pray tell what do Ken Pom's mystery statistics say about Malik Sealy? Oh that's right, IDGAF.
Ahmed is a bit out of control although less so now and isn't much of a passer. I don't need Ken Pom to tell me that because I have eyes. Also because I have eyes I know that if we had a couple three more players who were as "terrible on offense" as Ahmed is we might have won a couple more games.
PS Tariq Owens is not a "good" rebounder. In fact, Tariq Owens is a not very good rebounder, for a guy who's nearly seven feet tall. Shamorie Ponds and Marcus Lovett are good rebounders. Ask Ken Pom what he thinks about that.