Freedom is all or nothing. If we have just the slightest bit of freedom, it would have to be free from the dictates of the endless cause and effect chains in a purely materialist world.
I'm not sure the freedom to have something I don't want is a freedom worth having. It's pointless.
Notions such as 'freedom', 'deliberate', 'control' are conceptualisations that have utility at certain levels of rationalisation. Imagine a physicist doing his shopping, gets into an argument with the market stallholder about whether the two apples he just bought can touch. To the stallholder, of course they can touch, it's bleedin' obvious. And this observation is valid not just for fruit and veg, it applies to all purveyors of domestic grocery produce. But the physicist's conceptualisation involving a deeper understanding of atomic particles is valid at the fundamental levels of matter and energy. The deeper understanding dissolves our everyday conceptualisations about touch and feel and weight, these concepts are useful to us, but they are born of the emergent phenomenology of minds and their associated expeditious abstractions rather than being fundamental truths. I think the debate about free will parallels the debate between the physicist and the stall holder, they are talking to different levels of conceptualisation, and to understand the deeper concepts of reality such as cause and effect, we have to allow the everyday concepts like 'freedom', 'deliberate', 'control' to dissolve. Of course we have control, of course we are free to make whatever choices we want, bleedin' obvious init ? Just like touching apples together, that's how it feels.