Rondo is Rondo, there has never been a player who can do as many things as well as Rondo while being as bad a shooter as Rondo. Hard to find a comparable. But if Rondo could ever learn to shoot as well as Stockton could shoot, look out. You could assume though that Rondo could provide an equivelant contribution as Stockton but he would do it differently.
As for Green, I think the Worthy comparison is realistic. He has played for stretches as well as Worthy but so far in his career has not been able to sustain it.
Worthy and Stockton are not going to win any titles with the current Celtics supporting cast and neither are Rondo and Green, in my opinion.
You really think Worthy is a "realistic" comparison for Green? Dang, that's not too kind for Worthy? When has Green ever had stretches as good as Worthy had for his career?
It's a fantasy thread about 'ceiling'. What HoF 'prototype' do you think a player could be if they reached their ceiling. No one here is saying our guys ARE equivalent to these HoF players. It's just for fun.
FWIW - to answer your question - Green's stretch from around mid February last year all the way through the playoffs in June was pretty much just a hair under Worthy's numbers during his peak years (pts, rebounds, assists) .
The only real difference being that Green got some of his points from outside with 3PT shooting that was not really part of Worthy's game. And of course, Worthy maintained those numbers for a long time, across multiple years.
It's telling that last year was the first time Green came close to getting the same kind of utilization that Worthy got. Worthy was consistently above 22% USG% through most of his career. Last year was just the second time Green was ever above 20% and the first time he was above 22%.
Physically, Green looks and _moves_ a lot like Worthy on the court. The similarity is obvious to many of us who watched back then and now.
Whether Green is able to consistently maintain that 'Worthy-like' production of course, is a completely open question and it is fair to doubt it. But that doesn't mean it isn't the 'upside' that we would hope to see realized.