I get it. It is hard to be real without seeming critical sometimes. Rondo had a big moment in game 7 and even beyond the last 4 minutes or so played a good overall game.
What I liked about the game was that the ball was moving on offense. No Rondo just standing there dribbling, waiting to make the perfect pass. He gave up the ball early, the ball moved, often coming back to him. And I liked his movement without the ball.
One thing I think he has figured out recently is that when his man is off double-teaming, he can be a weapon on the offensive boards. I really like that because that has the potential to force the defense to adjust which is the whole point in my opinion, make the other team adjust to you to open something up for someone else.
The way all teams play Rondo now, backing off, etc., Rondo can get to the basket and teams don't worry. Defenders are not sagging off Pierce or anyone else. Eventually Rondo gets to a big man and he has two choices, try to score over the big man or make a pass. Usually the pass option at that point is a very difficult high risk pass which Rondo is good enough to execute many times. Many other times, the high risk pass results in a turnover. Against Phili, they had enough interior defense that Rondo was not hurting them so much with penetration scoring.
There are few adjustments that Doc can try to have Rondo make to get the other team out of this defense. One of course would be for Rondo to continue hitting shots like he did in the 4th of game 7. This is what I like about Rondo giving up the ball and hitting the offensive boards. I think most teams would rather give up a few Rondo tip-ins over allowing Pierce to go 1 on 1 but this is a way to force the defense to at least think about an adjustment that will cover Rondo but open up something else.
This Miami series could be the movement for Rondo. They don't have a Brand or Hawes (or even a Lavoie Allen) for Rondo to shoot over on his layups. They also don't have great talent or offensive threats at PG. We are the underdog and Rondo just had a very big moment in game 7. He could do it all and be the difference; score on penetration, get the OReb tip-ins, make some timely outside shots, and get his assists on under control passes (ie low turnovers). I think we need all of the above from Rondo to beat the Heat and I think he has the ability to put it all together, so let's see.
Go Rondo, Go Celtics.