Sure. But despite that, he's had a very limited impact on Memphis' success since they drafted him. He's useful, certainly, but he's not the revolutionary 3 and D big he was hyped up to be. And those tools, while important, aren't the be-all/end-all, especially if you can't rebound. Like, at all. He's garbage on the boards in a way that's sort of astounding, given his athletic gifts. It's just not as large of a gap between the two players as you might imagine when we're evaluating their impact on winning. Neither is getting you to the Finals by themselves, but both have their strengths that could be valuable to the right teams.
In fact, I'd offer that Domas' skillset is looking more and more valuable in the modern NBA. Prior to this season, he was regularly in the top 5-10 in offensive rebounds every season. More and more NBA teams are looking to the possession game as a way to exploit inefficiencies. Houston's entire offense was basically built around Steven Adams' ability to generate more possessions for the Rockets, prior to his season-ending injury. JJJ likely isn't helping with the next big shift in analytics-driven NBA strategy.