Coaching was possibly a factor, but I think Enoch was a slow to develop player, even somewhat at Louisville, although he did develop. To me, he was a somewhat underachieving player at both UConn and at Louisville, as compared to what appeared to be his physical potential. Now that he is in the pros, he may develop further, as he had a long period of time to develop in college and did develop some.
A lot of times you see guys with great bodies and they just never become as good as you think they will be. Another UConn big guy who I thought would be better was Souleymane Wane. He was certainly a very good backup center on the 1999 national champion team, but he looked to me like he could have been a dominant player. At times he showed incredible moves, executed with a huge and agile body. Defenders bounced off him like ping pong balls. While a solid player, he was just never as good as I thought he would be. I am not sure if he was a guy who lived, ate and breathed hoops. My impression was he played basketball because he was good at it and it was a way to get educated. Not sure he even wanted to be a pro basketball player. And the reality is that not every guy has a Michael Jordan like drive to succeed in basketball.
UConn had some other players who looked lost on the Court from Day 1 under Calhoun. Covington Cormier, Monquencio Hardnett, Darius Smith. Hardnett couldn't handle the rock or else was too fast for his handling ability and always looked out of psynch with his dribble. There were so many other guys, and most of these guys left and never amounted to anything elsewhere.