Tony played dumb (especially on offense so many turnovers),
Avery Bradley is turning it over at pretty much the same rate.
I find it funny people say Bradley know how to play within himself better, given the galore of ill-advised layups in traffic and threes from the top that we've seen recently.
This year yes, Tony when he was young and with the C's turned it over at a much higher rate one that cemented his reputation. Thats why I was using the past tense instead of the present.
His last year with the C's he finally turned that around and has continued his improved decisions with Memphis. He still has the spectacularly bad TOs but not nearly as often.
A lot of it has been role change. He was previously used a lot as a PG, handling the ball a lot, and asked to be a playmaker a lot which led to his turnovers. You take him outside of that role, and his turnovers are going to go down certainly.
So considering that Bradley has become our defacto PG (not a back-up, but our main PG) is not realistic to compare it to how TA has been turning the ballover. That said, Bradley is not turning the ball over at all. In this month, he's averaging 1.5 turnover in 32 minutes of play being pretty much exclusively our PG.
His decision making is a bit suspect, and it's really peeved me some of his trigger happy moments that make zero sense to me, but otherwise he's been pretty good protecting the ball. Even a year ago, given this role, he would've been terrible, but I think he's holding his own at the moment.
TA during the playoffs, didn't play any PG role as far as I can recall. Plus, he shared the floor more with Rondo and Pierce than during the regular season, so that meant less time for him handling the ball. As I've mentioned through the years, worrying about TA turning the ball over during the playoffs is based completely on myth and extrapolating on the few instances he did turn the ball over, which were very few.
Conclusion: TA as a PG will turn the ball over at a high rate no doubt.