Draxler has no concrete identity.
Take a look at the 2012-13 season, and those statistics correlate with a No. 9 or a nine-and-a-half.
Still, the 2013-14 season shows he improved the main attribute required in a No. 10—being a creator.
Why?
He was frustrated with being pigeonholed as a No. 11 out wide and not being granted a free-roaming central role week in, week out.
You are inclined to think the one criticism which irked him was his inability to play in his team-mates, so Draxler proved his doubters wrong.
Yet at the same time, Draxler could not effectively multitask between scoring and creating.
His shooting-accuracy percentage drastically dropped by 26.25, and his goals-per-game output deteriorated by 0.25.
"No. 10 is my favourite position," Draxler said in 2013 when he extended his contract until 2018, per Kicker (h/t Stephan Uersfeld at ESPN FC). "But when Raffael played there last season, I wasn't disappointed."
The next year, same message, different team-mates.
"I want to play as [Schalke's] No. 10," Draxler said, after being a member of Germany's 2014 FIFA World Cup winning squad, per Bild (h/t Jonathan Walsh at Vavel). "But so do Max Meyer and Kevin-Prince Boateng."
Why does Draxler insist on being a No. 10 when he is not an orchestrator of play like Ivan Rakitic or Lincoln?
Is Draxler a pass-first footballer? No.
You surmise Draxler craves the creative freedom, the flexibility to disregard positional discipline and the liberating feeling of doing what he wants, a la Lionel Messi.
Draxler has yet to prove he deserves such an overarching attacking role, where he will monopolise the ball.
When you consider Draxler's two-footedness, his potent long-range shot and him thriving on taking the ball past opposing defenders, you can understand why he has been slotted on the left-flank.
The traits which elevated Draxler to fame and riches are also holding him back from fulfilment.
You cannot extract the best out of Draxler when he is yearning for a central role, which at times explains his inconsistent form.
Pre-hamstring injury, Draxler spoke about the fickle nature of football.
"It felt like I was the only one who was being blamed," Draxler said, per Bild (h/t Tom Sheen at The Independent). "I have to [perform if I want to] become attractive to big clubs again."