Difference between Rondo and CP3:
PORTLAND, Ore. -- "All I care about is that fourth quarter," said Chris Paul, and in Thursday's 74-71 win over the Portland Trail Blazers it appeared he meant it literally. Through three quarters, he was virtually nonexistent -- no points, one assist -- and his Los Angeles Clippers were down by eight after trailing by as much as 18.
"I couldn't get it going," he said.
And then in the fourth, he blew up. Seeing his teammates' heads dragging, he brought the team together for a little pep talk to remind them it was still a winnable game, and then he backed it up by taking over the game. First he got off the schneid with a 10-foot fadeaway jumper in the corner over Wes Matthews, a shot that he said got him going.
Something similar between Rondo and CP3 in there as well. CP3 virtually disappearing for long stretches in the game, something you've repeatedly assured me Rondo does but other top players don't. Also, I watched a lot of the first half in that game. If Rondo played like CP3 did in that game, the Celts would go into the fourth quarter down by 25 or so, which would have made those heroics meaningless.
when was the last time rondo came alive in the fourth and willed the c's to victory?
usually he plays really well for 3 quarters and then disappears.
i'll agree with you, though, that chris paul is not a model of consistency, either -- otherwise his overall numbers would be better.
but he consistently shows up and takes over when his team really needs him to. he is that go-to guy in crunch time of a close game, even if he doesn't carry the offensive load throughout the entire game.