Yeah, but that's so unrealistic. Ibaka's a double-double guy as a starter and lead the league in blocks in only 27 minutes per game. With Rondo and Westbrook roughly equivalent in trade value, you don't get someone of Ibaka's caliber as a throw-in.
Agreed. I think it was Roy who mentioned it before - a straight up trade would make both teams worse and there is no incentive for either team to throw in extra guys - and Ibaka is by no means a throw in.
TOV% is very misleading when comparing a shoot-first PG to a pass-first PG. Shooting a lot increases your usage without increasing your turnover risk (common sense: you are far less likely to turn the ball over on a shot attempt than a pass attempt, almost by definition), leading to volume shooting, turnover prone guys like Westbrook scoring lower TOV%s than much steadier guys like Rondo and Kidd whose TOV%s are higher because they shoot less frequently. Kidd's career is a good case in point. When he shot more (and the turned the ball over more) as the main guy in Jersey, he consistently posted lower TOV%s than he does now in Dallas, where he rarely shoots and turns it over less.
I must say - I don't quite buy this argument. It's not like as a shoot-first point guard, Westbrook is only taking jumpers rather than passing it to get extra scoring. Creating shots for yourself, whether passing or shooting, does make you susceptible to turnovers. He's attacking the rim a decent amount, which makes him more susceptible to turnovers. While he may not pass as much as Rajon, he's still only one or two assists off while scoring a whole lot more. I think turnover rate here is definitely applicable.
For Jason Kidd, I think the correlation is between usage rate and turnover percentage, rather than shooting vs. passing. If you have a higher usage rate, you will likely have a higher turnover percentage.
Westbrook's usage rate is far higher than Rondo's and yet he still turns the ball over less, which says something. Now, I get that TO% is based on a per 100 of the individual person's play, but I still think that if you are a larger focal point of an offense, whether as a passer or scorer, you will likely turn the ball over more.