Arguing that Williams has been a better passer over his career and is a better passer now are two different things. Deron developed faster than Rondo (unsurprising considering their draft positions) and Rondo was playing with players that control the ball more than anyone on Utah ever did.
Okay, well, I suppose it's easy to cherry pick one year out of the last five to say that Rondo is a better passer. Although, even in this year, Deron averaged nearly 13 assists a game with a GARBAGE Nets team. And even this year, his assists percentage was higher than Rondo's. And even this year, Utah's offense, which Deron ran for the vast majority of the season, was better than the C's offense.
Haha. Am I looking at 2008 or something? "Cherry picking" the latest season when we're discussing which player is *currently* better than the other. Hilarious.
Oh, and the reason Utah's offense was better than the C's offense was the Jazz getting more offensive rebounds. The Celts scored more efficiently than the Jazz, so advantage Rondo.
What part of my post had anything to do with 2008? Did Deron not have a better PER, Win Shares/48, TS%, TOV%, etc. in the most recent season?
Utah also had a much a better offense because its point guard had a 20.6 PER, compared to Rondo having a 17.1 PER. It also had something to do with Rondo having a 24.3 turnover percentage compared to Deron's 18.1. Turnovers actually do play a part in the running of an offense. So does your point guard's ability to score.
Also, Utah had a better offense with a starting line up around its point guard that was
quite obviously worse offensively than the Celtics.
But yeah, I guess we can harp on the offensive rebounding.
The Celtics had a 56.1 TS% and Utah's was 54.4 TS%. That's a less than 2% difference in TS%. That extra 1.7%, with four All-Stars playing in the lineup, is because Rondo can run an offense so well, or something.