also downplayed the importance of the PG position and that you just need "good players" citing the success of this year's Lakers and Jordan's Bulls who didn't have any real PG.
so if you think they are entertaining dealing Rondo, this interview would certainly not dissuade you from that idea
Of course all of this is coming from a man who won both his championships in Boston playing next to the should-be-in-the-Hall-of-Fame-PG Dennis Johnson. He also conveniently overlooks the Spurs success with Tony Parker, the Piston's title with Chauncey Billups, and the Isaiah Thomas led Pistons. Also, that loser Cousy certainly didn't help the C's do anything.
While Ainge is right that a superstar PG may not be a prerequisite for a title, with the wide range of NBA champions we've seen over the years, you could say that about any position.
Hopefully he's not using this faulty logic to rationalize trading Rondo.