Rondo's 4 attempts at the rim though are not the same as say...CP3 taking 4 attempts at the rim, because Rondo doesn't have range on his jumper. So, realistically speaking, his 4 attempts at the rim are the only attempts that really matter from Rondo, because he's a more effective passer the more he penetrates, and he's more likely to draw fouls and disrupt spacing.
I'm not quite sure what this means, but I'd say Rondo was a pretty effective passer whether he was penetrating or not this year.
Rondo is a good passer on the perimeter, but he's a far better player when he's using his speed, agility, smarts, and long arms to get inside and do damage. This is known. He is not actively seeking out situations which result in contact. This is also known. Look at the part of my quote you deleted for proof.
He generally avoids contact for various reasons. I don't disagree with this. I'll go back and read the older posts when I get a chance, but I'm still confused about what this part of the discussion is really about.
Its further alluding to the fact that Rondo does not go into the paint nearly enough to maximize his skillset.
Are you claiming that Deron has never passed the ball to someone else on a breakaway? Or, more likely, you know that he also does that every once in a while, the difference being you don't consider it to be stat padding.
I will claim that Deron Williams could count on his fingers the number of times during an NBA game he passed up an open lay-in or dunk to wait up for a trailing teammate to give them the bucket.
So Williams is a selfish player who pads his scoring stats. I can see why people are so enthralled with him.
Ha, no. And I dont think anyone who read that honestly would think that's what I'm saying.
What's fair for the goose is fair for the gander. Rondo's passing the ball on occasion isn't necessarily more selfish than Deron's rarely passing the ball.
Deron Williams' assist ration (% of time his poss results in an assist) is seventh highest among starting point guards. There are only six starting PG's in the NBA (and 10 other PG's total) who pass the ball more than WIlliams. This is off topic, but saying Deron WIliams rarely passes the ball is completely and irrefutably false.
Calm down. We're talking about breakaways, and you've claimed that he passes up open layups to let people running behind him score roughly once or twice a year. That seems fairly rare.
haha, so what you were doing was making a kind of claim about 'selfishness' alluding to Rondo's stat padding on breakaways as analogus to someone taking an open layin? That's kind of silly.
Again, though, what's the point of your "stat padding" argument? If he shot the ball instead of passing in in the situations you showed then he'd get two more points for every assist he lost and his fg% and PER and WS/48 and other stats would go up as well. His numbers would more closely match what you see from other point guards. That would cut into the arguments against him.
THat's kind of like saying 'If Rasheed Wallace would've just played in the paint more often, he would have scored more points, and his field goal % would have risen, and he would've closely mirrored Tim Duncan's production.'
If you don't see a difference between "If Rasheed Wallace would've just played in the paint more often, he would have scored more points" and "if Rondo had taken uncontested layups instead of letting other players take uncontested layups" then I don't know what to say.
My point was that what you're insinuating Rondo 'could' do more (ie be more aggressive on a nightly basis, and look for his own shot more) may not be something that is in his nature to do, much like it is not in Rasheed's nature to live on the block.
My point was that whether Rondo took those uncontested layups or let Ray and Paul take them makes no difference in the grand scheme of things. As to your point, I'd say that we've seen Rondo "do more" for somewhat extended periods of time and we won't know whether he'll do it on a regular basis unless he's on a team that calls for that to happen.
"Somewhat extended periods" is a suitably vague amount of time so that I can't really disagree. Let's make it more concrete; he's never done it for a full half of a season in his 4 years as a starter, or 5 years as a pro. DOesn't mean he never will (check out my various defenses of Kyle Lowry during the CB Draft for examples of how out on a limb I will go for someone), but it does mean we can't put him in the same conversation as people who have.
No, he's never done it as a starter, when he's on a team with Ray and Paul and KG and he's a pass first pg. I'd say that he's generally stepped into a bigger role on the offense when one or more of them were injured, but clearly that hasn't happened for a 40 game stretch.
Well, I'm glad that's settled.
First of all, Rondo isn't terribly inconsistent. If you disagree, go back to the first month or two of the season when he was healthy and show me all the games he took the night off. Secondly, I think that when Rondo tries to play through injuries, a lot of the posters here are quick to attribute the dropoff to his game to mental issues.
I actually looked at this pretty in-depth earlier in the year (comparing Rondo's play earlier in the season to his play later).
http://www.celticsblog.com/2011/3/10/2042655/by-the-numbers-is-rajon-rondo-off-lately
Rajon Rondo is a streaky, inconsistent player, and it lies almost entirely in his own aggressiveness. If he played an entire year at the level he played the first two months of the season, you'd have a leg to stand on, but he never has.
IMO you're comparing Rondo's play when he was healthy to later in the season when he was banged up (among other things, having hand issues) and somehow claiming that this proves he's an inconsistent player, or that his bad play was unrelated to health issues.
Well, look at the timestamp on the article. At the time, Doc, Rondo, Danny, and the Pope were all swearing up and down that Rondo was healthy, and not shaken up like a Bond martini from the Perkins trade. We learned later that he wasn't healthy, and was shaken up like a Bond martini.
So I say people blame Rondo's poor play when he's injured on mental things, you use that article to show that he's streaky and inconsistent, I point out that he was injured at the time and you agree with me. 
That was more to defend the article, than to agree with you. I still think Rondo is inconsistent, but that's based on more than just this season...which brings us to...
And of course he's never had an entire year when he played at the level he did the first two months of the season, his game improved significantly last year.
His game improved for what, less than a quarter of a season (19 total games played before his injury)? After which he played 48 pretty wildly inconsistent games over the course of 4 months?
While I won't dispute the near-MVP level of play Rondo showed for the first 20 games he played this season, I do think that the next 48 games he played showed that maybe that was a hot streak, rather than an indicator of a baseline that he's capable of right now.
...And one paragraph later, we're back to his being wildly inconsistent based on his play when he was injured.
If Rondo was out of his mind, hitting 80% of his layups or 50% of his threes (or even his jumpers) I could see calling it a hot streak. But his play was based on things like vision, court awareness, running the offense, defending and passing ability. Those things aren't generally known as streaky skills IMO.
Well, his shooting was down across the board, but to address your larger point, and the point I was trying to convey there, Rondo played 50 games after he returned from injury. That is not an isolated sample. And, while his hand was bothering him, everyone roundly said as the seaosn wore on that Rondo was playing below potential, including Rondo.
Then, after the season Rondo basically told everything that he was wicked bummed about Perkins, and he didn't really enjoy playing basketball as much.
He was brilliant in the beginning of the season, but he finished the season like an above average point guard. That's not really a big deal.
Because he's not a great shooter, he'll need to get to the cup a lot more frequently than your average starter to really make a difference on a large scale.
He's never shown he ability, or the desire, or whatever 'it' might be to really be aggressive enough to do that on a regular basis.
Until he does, he doesn't belong in conversations about who the best point guard in basketball is.