I had real reservations about trading Rondo for Chris Paul. Paul puts up a lot of numbers and I would give him a nod as the better of the two - only because he can shoot - but I like Rondo.
To me, Paul puts up great numbers but Rondo is the type of player I would always feel very uncomfortable betting against in big games and big moments. He gets the right steal at the right time, or clears the boards out of nowhere, or throws up 15 assists in the 1st 2.5 quarters to dominate a game....
* He generally rises to the occasion
* See Rondo vs Rose, vs. Paul, etc., especially when it matters and when he's healthy.
Sometimes, the same couple of mental traits that make a player great are also the things that make them the weakest.
His incredibly stubborn mental toughness is what drives him at a competitive level. Unfortunately, that same trait can also be a thorn in everyone else's side.
I wouldn't give up on him.
I think he's uniquely talented. If Ainge can manage to put a high octane team with 1-2 of the right young, max players around Rondo and the right complimentary pieces in between - I think this Kidd will dissect the league every night.
Kind of like the damage Magic used to do, it would just be Rondo's own version of that. I think the game becomes a playground to him in the right situation and with the right weapons around him.
I hope he's a lifer - just get him great, young shooter who can run with him.
He will continue to mature and his shot while it will most likely never be great, will most likely continue to incrementally improve over his career.
Remember, a guy as sensitive as Rondo appears regarding comments about his weaknesses and mistakes, will probably work relentlessly to erase the embarrassment he feels because of it.
Rondo has a lot of pride - The embarrassment is probably what hurled the water bottle...
He just needs to bottle things better. And I think he's probably way too intelligent not to be able to figure it out in time.