Why? It's a big galaxy, and they're both living as hermit-nomads. Seems like it would be very easy for them to have never met until then, especially if one of them was actively avoiding it and the other doesn't know Ahsoka even exists.Even if this show takes place before the other shows, it's still years after the events of ROTJ. It would be weird for them to have not met yet.
Looking for a short cut, as the villains usually are.
More to the point; he fundamentally misunderstood the force. He just saw it as a source of power you can unlock, or a resource to exploit. He thought he was being smart by bypassing the mysticism and attacking it with just science, except the force is both of those things.Yep. He wanted access to Force powers then and there and as soon as possible and beyond what it could have done for him I doubt he put too much thought into it.
With that kind of mindset, no amount of meditation or training would have gotten him anywhere because it starts with the mind, and his was closed shut.
As far as Sabine goes; let's remember that she's comparing herself to Ezra, who was a prodigy. IIRC FPJ described his take of Kanan's mindset at the start of the show being akin to that of an older mid-skilled musician that was good in his day but only because he worked his arse off, but has lost his passion for it and hasn't touched in instrument in years . . . and then he runs into this kid who's basically Mozart, and he's looking to him for mentorship. It's a nice allegory that explains a lot of Kanan's early reservations and struggles with self-confidence, but also give you a clear idea that Ezra was always operating on a different level than anyone else. Not unlike Anakin, Luke to a lesser extent, and perhaps Rey too.
But who is it we generally think of as the quintessential Jedi? It's Kenobi, who like Kanan was by no means a prodigy, who got as good as he got due to struggle and perseverance. The greatest teacher failure is after all, and like Kenobi, Sabine has failed a lot. She'll do fine. Indeed the stubbornness will probably help just a soon as Ahsoka figures out have to help her channel it better.
I'd say that a bit of a false equivalence. First off: Those scenes weren't about Luke at all, they were about Grogu. BoBF is an entirely different animal than this show. It was clearly Mando Season 2.5; part of an ongoing story, and those two episodes were explicitly the "let's catch up with Din & Grogu before the finale" part of the story. Luke being there made sense and was important to the plot because this was Grogu's story.Ah, but was Luke's story central to that of Boba Fett's?
Almost anyone can push a piano key and sound a note, but very few have the talent/capability to be a concert pianist.
Plus I think we all know which Skywalker is the more likely to show up; the one that we know for a fact it vitally relevant to Ahsoka's story and has already been name dropped just so the newbies are on board.