That's nonsense. The Jays thrived with Horford. They thrived with KP. Both can clearly play with an offensively talented center.
Al and KP fit with them. Vucevic does not. Fit matters whether you want to admit it or not.
Except, of course, that prime Al, KP, and Vuc all had similar offensive skill sets.
They don't have similar defensive skill sets.
Agreed on both counts. Vooch has a similar offensive skill set but not a similar defensive skill-set.
Given that Vooch has a similar offensive skill-set, he can clearly fit in alongside the Jays. There is no excuse in terms of offensive fit. There is no reason why Vooch should be sidelined / ignored to the degree he was. There is no reason why Vooch cannot be a productive offensive player while also allowing Tatum & Jaylen to continue being productive players themselves.
This was a failure of coaching. Not of offensive fit.
Al became a spot up shooter in Boston. His last 4 years here (when Tatum and Brown were in their prime) he took over 60% of his shots from 3 and they were almost all assisted. His last year in Atlanta he dunked the ball 84 times, in Al's last 4 years here he didn't dunk the ball i4 times total. Al was a different player in Boston than he was in Atlanta. He adapted his game to fit with Tatum and Brown. .Atlanta Horford was more similar to Vucevic, but Atlanta Horford is not the Horford we got in Boston.
KP has always been mostly the same player, but he also has always been much less interior driven. He gets dunks and inside scoring from rolls, cuts, etc. He doesnt camp out on the block like Vucevic. Not really the same style of play at all.
Vucevic doesn't camp out in the low post. He spends most of his time in the high post as a facilitator and PnP / PnR player.
He goes into the 20 foot area rather than the 23-25 feet area. There is no reason why he cannot work alongside the Jays.
and yet he didn't. He is too slow and gets in the way. Over 50% of his attempts for his career are inside 10 feet. Less than 19% of his career attempts were fron 3, he was just over 38% in Boston. Only 16.5% of his attempts in Boston were inside 3 feet, which is the 2nd lowest in his career and over 8% lower than his career average. Last year Horford was at 68.1% and 11.9% from this ranges. Even KP was 43.6% and 17.4%.
Vucevic couldn't adapt to the style of play required in Boston. His style simply doesnt fit offensively and he isnt good enough to change the offense for him. With both Tatum and Brown, the big man needs to be mostly a spot up floor spacing big man. An uber talent like KP can do a bit more pick and rolls, but even KP had to adjust a fair amount to really make it work.
There aren't a lot of offenses you can run with 2 wings with the skill sets of Tatum and Brown, especially when they are both on the floor. Neither one has the ball handling or playmaker abilities of the other great wing duos in history (Lebron/Wade and MJ/Pippen). JT and JB really only work well in an offensive system similar to the one Boston runs. Now if you swapped one out for a similarly talented player that wasn't a wing, a lot more options would open up.