Good call on that Hwangjini_1, I didn't mean to say Rondo was better than the guys you mentioned.
Nowhere in my comments did I place Rondo above Bird, Magic, Kobe, Moses et al...their names weren't even mentioned...
I first said I probably wouldn't even trade Rondo for what many think are the top three points in the game today in Rose, Paul and Williams. Which means I'm saying I therefore consider Rondo as possibly the best of all the points today.
Most of Rondo's greatness can't be measured on stats. People look at these other guys' scoring and assist numbers and say, "oh, they're better than Rondo". Rondo knows how to win games better than any of them, that's why he's so special, it's not just the numbers with him.
I was making an argument about how difficult it would be to even consider trading Rondo. Part of that, and one indicator of what makes the kid so unbelievably special, is that he accomplished in one playoff season what only Oscar Robertson, Wilt and Jordan had accomplished...in the history of the game, in the history of all the players who have ever played in the league.
That is an unbelievably monumental achievement for a 24 year old, pint sized point guard. Only Wilt, Jordan, Oscar and Rondo have accomplihsed it, ever.
That means it's an indication of his greatness as a player. But it has nothing to do with comparing him to Bird, Magic, Jordan, Moses, etc. They are completely different topics.
Rondo can't sniff those guys yet, he's no where near them. That is a completely different league. Rondo is like a freshman in college compared to those guys careers.
Rondo's ultimate place in the game will be decided when he retires and the full breadth of his cummulative accomplishments can be measured.
Until then, he's a sophomore compared to Bird, Magic and Jordan.
However, if Bradley is a guy who can lock it down on D, light you up for 20 and rack up 6-7 assists a night, IMHO, any GM would be a fool not to at least "consider" which guy to keep ( Rondo or Bradley).
The answer will be determined by who helps you win more games, not by the numbers they put up.
Karl malone put up great numbers, but he's no Tim Duncan. There is a huge difference of the impact that those two players have on any given game and on a team's ability to win titles.
But that's just the way I look at...