This is because he can do things that no one in the game can do at center, other than Jokic. We just have to accept the bad with the good when it comes to Domas. There's no surprises with him. We knew he wouldn't be a defensive stalwart at the 5 and he's not quick enough to play the 4. McNair needs to build around him. I was as mad about Looney owning him in the paint as anyone else but it's difficult to gripe about the leading rebounder in the game not boxing out. He didn't lead the league in rebounds without knowing how to rebound.
Sabonis taking the ball up the court is by design. He doesn't lead fast breaks but he'll trail as the lead ball handler because he's the best passer on the team.
It sounds like you want him to play more like a traditional 5. If that's the case then we'd be better off with a Robert Williams type center but the offense would go from the best of all time to probably around mid pack if we didn't have Sabonis.
A right fitting 4 that can play some defense and spread the floor would be the perfect fit next to Domas. Those types are difficult to find but I'm sure McNair knows this as much as anyone and is on the look for one.
Honestly, Domas on defense wasn't even close to the problem. It was his offensive game. In fact, his work on the glass and defense in game 6 is a huge reason we won that game to even force a game 7. Like most of the team, our league best offense faltered probably in large part our conductor wasn't playing up to his usual self.
I'm just not going to stress about this playoff series for Domas as I just don't think there's any way he was at better than like 50-60% health wise. You don't just fall off from being an ALL-NBA player the entire season, be remarkably consistent all season (even with a broken thumb) to just falling off a cliff because Kevin Looney has a big wing span and the Warriors had a good defensive scheme for him. You're telling me NO one else in the NBA could figure out how to play Domas all season? The Warriors just magically did in game 83?
If he stumbles (assuming healthy) next year in the playoffs... then you start to worry. Another reason I'm hoping you go get a Naz Reid type this off-season is to hopefully limit his workload a bit during the regular season. Especially during the middle stretch of the season, we had to run him into the ground because no one was able to step up and claim that back-up C slot. From Dec 1 onward:
December: 36.4 MPG
Jan: 36.1 MPG
Feb: 34.5 MPG
March: 36 MPG
April: 31.2 MPG
And most of this stretch was with the broken thumb, which he took all of one game off for. In comparison to some of his other big man counterparts:
Jokic: 69 GP--2323 minutes
Embiid: 66 GP--2284 minutes
AD: 56 GP--1904 minutes
Bam: 75 GP--2598 minutes
Sabonis: 79 GP-- 2736 minutes
Figuring out a way to get Domas to the playoffs healthier and not as run-down needs to be a priority for the Kings this off-season. He had the 6th most minutes in the NBA last season.