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Quote from: LarBrd33 on March 18, 2013, 07:54:14 PMQuote from: jambr380 on March 18, 2013, 07:14:59 PMI don't know that Rondo developed slowly. He had a very solid rookie campaign where he was the starting point guard for a championship team. In the playoffs, in his second year, he exploded. The series against the Bulls was his coming out party and he showed his potential for becoming a future potential superstar.While I love what Bradley brings to this team, he is no alpha-dog like Rondo, and I don't see the superstar potential. I hope they are both with this team for years to come as there isn't a combo like those two anywhere else in the league.I hear what you're sayin... 2008 wasn't Rondo's rookie year, though. In 2006-07, Rondo played a total of 1830 minutes.Just for comparison's sake... Bradley has played a total of 1500 minutes in his first two seasons... so it's pretty much a fair comparison. Same age and have roughly the same amount of experience under their belt. And I really don't see Bradley as a SG. IF he's going to be successful in this league... it will be as a point guard. He's tiny. I also don't see him having enough offense to play SG. Best off as a role playing defensive PG. He's a SG on offense and a PG on defensive. It's unconventional, for sure, but we've seen it work with Rondo and Bradley in the backcourt together for a fairly decent stretch. It's hard to say that defensively a Rondo/Bradley backcourt is a liability. As far as offense goes, he'll get better, but he'll probably never be a big time scorer. I can live with that. Heck, we'll have Jeff Green to put some points on the board.
Quote from: jambr380 on March 18, 2013, 07:14:59 PMI don't know that Rondo developed slowly. He had a very solid rookie campaign where he was the starting point guard for a championship team. In the playoffs, in his second year, he exploded. The series against the Bulls was his coming out party and he showed his potential for becoming a future potential superstar.While I love what Bradley brings to this team, he is no alpha-dog like Rondo, and I don't see the superstar potential. I hope they are both with this team for years to come as there isn't a combo like those two anywhere else in the league.I hear what you're sayin... 2008 wasn't Rondo's rookie year, though. In 2006-07, Rondo played a total of 1830 minutes.Just for comparison's sake... Bradley has played a total of 1500 minutes in his first two seasons... so it's pretty much a fair comparison. Same age and have roughly the same amount of experience under their belt. And I really don't see Bradley as a SG. IF he's going to be successful in this league... it will be as a point guard. He's tiny. I also don't see him having enough offense to play SG. Best off as a role playing defensive PG.
I don't know that Rondo developed slowly. He had a very solid rookie campaign where he was the starting point guard for a championship team. In the playoffs, in his second year, he exploded. The series against the Bulls was his coming out party and he showed his potential for becoming a future potential superstar.While I love what Bradley brings to this team, he is no alpha-dog like Rondo, and I don't see the superstar potential. I hope they are both with this team for years to come as there isn't a combo like those two anywhere else in the league.