
Good morning, everybody. Here's a piece about Tristan Vukčević that I think you all will enjoy, and I'm sharing a gift link, so it's free from The Athletic's paywall. -Josh Robbins
Wizards players call teammate Tristan Vukčević by his nickname, "Tricky." And now, with a brand-new contract, for his next trick, the 7-foot center plans to prove that he belongs in the team's long-term future.
9 comments
Thank you Josh! I really do believe Tristan controls his own destiny. Most players need to improve their skill set in order to earn a spot in the league, but TV has skills for days.
He really just needs to become a dawg. If he can decide to crank up the effort defensively to 11 on every possession, treat every play like it’s do or die, dive for loose balls, fight for rebounds, etc… I think he can make a great backup center.
Right now, he just kinda seems ambivalent a lot of the time. Maybe it’s because we’re tanking, maybe that’s just who he is. But he can’t continue to avoid contact in the paint or miss his help defense assignments if he wants to be an NBA player.
I’m rooting for Tricky, but I’m not holding my breath.
I watched him against GS recently and he was not good
Too soft, bad defensively, not athletic enough. Only thing he has is a nice jumper, and some vision. Replaceable.
I’m officially team “I’m not sure this rebuild is working out”
there’s nothing stopping Vuk from being a Nemanja Bjelica type and sticking around in the league for a long time. Think he’s probably gotta be a power forward long-term unless you can pair him with a roaming weakside rim-protecting 4 like Giannis (or AD, perhaps)
Appreciate you providing this article for us. My main question is: is this supposed to be reporting on the team’s statements on Vukcevic, or independent analysis?
I ask bc, I get that the team will speak highly of their prospects, but it’s hard to imagine an independent observer getting this from Vuk’s last year:
“He has, however, added that intangible that the Wizards wanted to see from him at the start of the 2024-25 season: grit.”
Respectfully, the guy still has not shown much grit, and that’s exactly why his defense and rebounding lag way behind what they should for a seven footer.
Tristan will be a fun player to have around but I just don’t see how he fits in long term. Eventually we will have more talent than we can fit on the roster (fast approaching) and I just don’t see him sticking around due to his defensive liability.
I think offensively he’s the most talented young guy on this roster except possibly Riley. Unfortunately he’s also an incredibly bad defender with no physical talent combined with a terrible mentality on that side of the ball
If he bumps it up a level, fantastic.
If he doesn’t, so what?
They’re paying him next to nothing.