Nah. Rondo's stats this season were the best of his entire career. How quickly we forget the assist streak.
Maybe had they played him 44 minutes a night in nationally televised games, only had him play against 2011 Philly, Horford-less Atlanta and Miami, he'd put up superstar numbers nightly.
I'm not a believer in this "playoff rondo = superstar" myth. He had a few good series, but his per-minute stats that year were about even with his regular season stats. He just was playing an obscene 44 minutes a night. All it takes is one whipping in the 1st round without KG and Pierce for the "playoff rondo = superstar" myth to die a gruesome death.
Running it back is silly. Acquiring assets isn't really that risky if you know what you are doing as a GM.
Bad GM - Kahn/Jordan
Good GM - Moray/Ainge
"Superstar Playoff Rondo" is not a myth. The fact that your argument relies on future hypothetical events as opposed to what has actually happened doesn't lend it much credibility.
Again, Rondo has been a superstar in the playoffs. That's undeniable.
You're waiting until he has a playoff series where he's not a superstar to prove your point. That's funny.
It's debatable. Even his crazy year last year... KG's per minute numbers were better. The year before that, there were 25 players in the playoffs who put up better per-minute numbers than him (that only includes players who averaged at least 30 minutes).
His stats in the playoffs last year were fantastic, though. Averaging 43 minutes a night helped inflate them, but the kid was a beast. He was a beast in 2009 too. You have to wonder how much of that is due to matchups, Boston's solid gameplan and a heightened sense of focus by the vets around Rondo during those series.
I guess some people assume Rondo is a "superstar" if he wants to. Like he just flips a switch and plays better. If that's your reasoning, you're essentially saying that Rondo is a player who dogs it 90% of the time and refuses to play to his potential unless he has to. That's a terrible person to build a team around. If that's your reasoning, then you can't blame Ainge for trying to trade Rondo every year.
That's not what I'm saying or assuming. I don't think it's a matter of "flipping a switch." I do think that a part of it is recognizing that at 6'1" 190, he'd break down if he went full speed for all the minutes he's required to play over the long haul of an NBA season. I don't think that's lazy. I think that's smart.
I also believe that his skill set is tailor made for a multiple game series against the same opponent. His craftiness and his BBIQ are what set him apart. He's really good at adjusting, and he's really hard to game plan against over the course of a series because he is so unpredictable. Rondo is a master at reading ahead to the next play or the next game. When the next game is against the same opponent, that's advantage Rondo.
I think that's why he's been so good in the playoffs.
I know you think he's going to suck once KG and Paul aren't there to "carry him" anymore. I don't think that's the case. Let's, at least, wait and see.
Also, let's address this idea that "he dogs it 90% of the time." It's certainly not like he's sucked during the regular season. For the 2012 regular season, he was an All Star, 3rd team all NBA, second team all defense, and top ten in MVP votes. That's hardly the resume of a scrub.
To start the 2013 season, he was playing some very good ball, as well, good enough to get him voted as a starter in the All Star game. At the time, I don't remember even his most ardent detractors having any disagreement with that selection. Unfortunately, he happened to be the best player on a team that was underperforming. He got much of the blame for that underperformance. Fair or unfair, that's the lot of a superstar. The anti-Rondo crowd jumped all over the team's record when he went down for the season and a good subsequent run without him as incontrovertible proof that the team was better off without him.
There were others of us who knew that the team would likely struggle without him when the playoffs rolled around. We did, putting up one of the worst offensive performances ever against the Knicks in the first round without our playoff star point guard.
I don't think he's such a "terrible person to build a team around."