I think we are seeing the effect of having no PG against a very good team playing second half playoff defense (AKA, locking it down).
You can get away with no PG in the regular season, by running, and taking advantage of defenses that aren't really locked in. But, in the playoffs, you need someone to break down defenses and create shots, and the C's just don't have that.
Unfortunately, the C's season ended when Rondo went down.
It's probably true that Boston had little to no chance without Rondo, but the plain truth is that the Celtic offense has been getting worse and worse the last few years. Even with Rondo, this team has been prone to truly awful offensive performances.
Doc's offense is too rigid, too predictable and too focused on running half-court plays for Pierce and Garnett. Iman Shumpert had as many shots last night in 18 minutes and Bass did in 34. That was ridiculous.
Mike
I don't disagree that the offense has been bad the last few years. Although I think there could be a strong argument that the problem with the offense before Rondo went down was not that they went to Pierce and Garnett too much, but it consisted too much of Rondo pounding the ball in the halfcourt waiting for something to happen.
We generally score efficiently with Rondo controlling the offense. We're a poor offensive rebounding team and a lack of inside scorers hurts our shot selection but those are separate issues. We do better with our scoring chances than most teams do with similar scoring chances.
Yes, this gets at the heart of it.
It's actually quite remarkable that the Celtics manage to have a functioning offense at all since their offensive game plan emphasizes, almost to the utter exclusion of everything else, mid-range jumpshots.
It's not the game plan so much as the roster. We went to the inside quite a bit when we had Shaq, we took more threes when Ray was playing big minutes.
That's definitely true.
But it's hard not to characterize it as a game plan when the team could have made roster moves to address it since the two players you mentioned left and yet it hasn't. It's not like capable 3 point shooters and rebounding specialists are so impossible to find out there.
I just think the team has prioritized defense and the ability to hit a mid-range jumper. Which is not necessarily a bad thing to do, but it does have consequences on the offensive side of the ball.
I know that part of the lack of outside shooting this year is just player's not performing up to expectations. Courtney Lee and Terry were expected to be reliable outside shooters, but they've been very streaky.
When I talk about adjusting the gameplan or system, though, I'm thinking of what San Antonio has done to transform themselves into a much more efficient offensive team. They've prioritized outside shooting and put less emphasis on post-ups, and made good moves to add personnel that fits with that plan.
I think Danny tried to transition the Celtics' gameplan and roster a bit in recent seasons by prioritizing youth, athleticism, and versatility, probably in the hopes that those players would fit well with Rondo. It didn't work out that way this season, though, for whatever reason.
My opinion is that Doc and the players still see it as Pierce and KG's team, so the team defers to them and plays their style. Which keeps us bogged down in the half-court, taking mid-range jumpers.