And Rondo wasn't disproportionately better than his minutes indicate at any point in his rookie year, another shocker. The guy shot below .400 from the field in 4 of his first 5 months in the league.
So, you're saying Delonte West and Sebastian Telfair were playing the point BETTER than Rondo was that year? 'Cause that was your argument, that Doc always focused on the rhythm of his "best" players.
For the most part of his rookies season, Rajon Rondo was not our best solution at PG.
You seem not to understand that a player's capability to contribute is not a constant over time.
The only two other options at the point were Delonte and Telfair, and Delonte played a lot at the 2.
DWest in 06-07 - 32.2 minutes, 12.2 pts, 42% shooting, 4.4 asts, PER of 14
Telfair in 06-07 - 20 minutes, 6.1 pts, 37% shooting, 2.8 asts, PER of 8.6
Rondo in 06-07 - 23.5 minutes, 6.4 pts, 41% shooting, 3.8 asts, PER of 13.1
Everyone with eyes could see that Rondo was, if not clearly the best PG on the roster already, had absolutely the most potential to develop into a great PG. Despite that and despite the team clearly being lottery-bound from early in the season, Doc wouldn't even play him for half the game. If Doc's main priority is the rhythm of his best players, he would have given Rondo more minutes. Doc had other priorities in that case and they may have been good ones. Perhaps he was worried about Rondo's bad habits and didn't want to let him think he had the PG spot locked up. That doesn't change the fact that your assertion that Doc's priority is the rhythm of his best players is provably false. The rhythem of his veteran players, perhaps, but not his best ones.
Mike