You say that you understand this, and I'm sure you do, but based on your posts in this thread, it's also very clear to me that you severely undervalue these aspects of playing winning basketball.
Well, however valuable they may be, Rondo's contributions in those areas haven't made the Celtics a good fourth quarter team for the past couple of years.
As the posts that follow this one indicate, it's difficult to concretely illustrate how good we have or have not been in previous years relative to other top teams in the league in fourth quarters.
If you have some definitive numbers on fourth quarter efficiencies over the last couple of seasons, please share.
All I can is this -- have you watch this team play at all in the 4th quarter in the last 3 seasons? If yes, have you forgotten all of the double digit leads given up, all of the offensive dry-spells, etc. Remember Game 7 in the Finals? I'm sure that you do.
I don't have statistics for you. However, here's what Danny Ainge had to say on it:
"I think there's two things that sort of stand out. I'm not taking a nine-game sample. I'm looking at what has been our pattern, and what has been our weakness, over the last three years with this group of guys," said Ainge. "For three years now, we have been the worst offensive rebounding team in basketball. The second thing is, the execution of our offense, our offensive efficiency in the last five minutes of the game, I think those two things have got to be improved. I don't necessarily know why that hasn't happened. It's not just personnel, because we've had a lot of good offensive rebounders on this team."
I would love to see this team consistently score at will down the stretch in big games. As with anything, though, you have to put these things into context.
I look around the league and see what's happened to the Chicago Bulls, the Miami Heat, and the OKC Thunder, among others, in some big gams, and I see teams that have struggled to score or look efficient on the offensive end when big games get tight.
That's how this league is; Defenses toughen up, games slow down, and shots become harder to make. It's not just true for the Celtics. It's true for most teams, even other top ones. Also, of course, most games are not won or lost in the last five minutes, but over a 48 minute span.