One, I think we're really getting carried away here. Even if we were to lose Rondo next year, I don't think it's worth screwing up what we have now.
Two, I think we're getting carried away. There aren't a lot of teams with money and in these economic times I don't think there's a great chance some team offers him something ridiculous.
Three, I think from a value standpoint, if there's any position worth overpaying for, it's probably point guard (or it's a close second to center).
And honestly, how much are we going to be "overpaying" him by if we "overpay" him? A couple million? Who cares? We wouldn't blink an eye if the C's blew 2 million on a some free agent who didn't pan out.
Get him resigned. Elite point guards are hard to come by. Even if he plateaus now, he's sthttp://forums.celticsblog.com/index.php?action=post;quote=596839;topic=32416.75;num_replies=76;sesc=d2c325e9e07e9a40a03f05fc40e1985aill a top 5 or 6 point guard in the NBA.
Overpaying could be the difference between a 5-year/$78 million+ contract and a 4-year/$38 million contract. I don't know about you but $40 million is a lot of cash where I come from and could really handicap the C's in the future. That's a yearly difference of close to $6 million on average.
Also, PG is the last position I would overpay for because, as has been mentioned elsewhere, it is the rare championship team that wins it all with a superstar PG being one of the best players on the team. The only championship teams that have won a championship with a PG being one of their top 2 or 3 best players over the last 30 years were Magic's Lakers(5 titles), Isiah's Pistons(2 titles), Chauncey's Pistons(1 title), and Parker's Spurs(2 titles). Furthermore it can even be argued that Chauncey might have been the 4th best player on that Pistons team after Wallace, Rasheed, and Hamilton, even if he did win the Finals MVP award.
I'm quoting this message by nick, but I'll be addressing some aspects of later posts too.
First, I don't think history is necessarily a great baromter here. Yes, some teams won without great point guards, but a lot of teams also won with them. If you're looking for any trend in NBA championships, it's that the best players usually win the titles. Mikan, Russell, Chamberlain, Cowens, Bird, Johnson, Thomas, Jordan, Olajuwon, Duncan, and O'Neal account for 45 of the league's 62 NBA titles. You don't find that type of dominance of superstars in baseball or football.
But I think all this digresses from Rondo. My point simply is that there is a wealth of shooting guards and small forwards who are scorers. There aren't a wealth of great pass-first point guards out there. To me, that's worth overpaying a bit for.
Now I'm not referring to the difference between a max salary and 10 million dollars a year. I'm simply saying that if it comes down to Rondo wanting 12 or 13 million a year and the C's only wanting to give him 10, it's not worth giving up a unique talent like that for so little money.
Plus, in my vision of the future, the C’s will keep Ray and Paul around until KG’s contract expires in the summer of 2012. At that point, if they’re smart, the only players they’ll have under contract are Rondo and Perk. Even if Rondo’s making 15 million a year at that point and Perk’s making 10, they’ll still 30 million or so dollars to go out and spend on free agents.