Sullinger will break all sorts of records for having his inside shots stuffed this season.
Is that the only thing you care about?? He was the best player of the game for the celts
He looked more mobile also which is a relief.
Sully has got to be dannys biggest steal of the draft yet

as much as i like rondo, Sullinger will prove to be the bigger steal.
Wowzers. Really? WHen Rondo was in his prime he was a 4 time all-star, 2 time assist leader and 1 time All-Defense 1st team.
I don't expect Sully to ever make an allstar team. He'll be a solid player though. Some day he could be a good player off the bench for a contender somewhere. He reminds me of Ryan Gomes.
For me , even though its not fair to say, Rondo has never been by himself (not surrounded by future HOF) yet to prove he is one of the best/franchise calibre player. Last year we saw a small glimpse of what "Rondos" team can do, and honestly it did avg to not so great (considering the horrible losing streak).
Sullinger imo can provide more impact on both ends of the court. He can do so many things, just think about it.
On the offensive end, he is passing, grabbing offensive rebounds, setting ridiculous picks, scoring, shooting. On the defensive end, it seems like its night and day difference when he is on and off the court. But its not even about stats, its about impact/influence.
Sullinger will likely never beat Rondo in terms of stats, triple doubles etc. Not many will. But i predict he will be more of a impact/influence for the team
... Are you serious?
You can't be serious.
Not to harp, but there's absolutely no way you can really believe this.
Take off your rondo goggles and you may understand my points.
How many years did doc cuddle rondo? How many years of in your ear instructions? Sullinger hasnt need any of that and forced his way into the starting lineup last year. Sullinger rate of progression is faster at this pt.
No but seriously we haven't seen squat from Sully to really suggest he'll be "better than Rondo".
He played 45 games last year and averaged 6 points and 6 rebounds in 20 minutes. He only started 5 games.
He was also playing a team completely depleted of bigs. Brandon Bass was brought in here to be our 5th big man off the bench... basically replacing Glen Davis. Thanks to injuries, retirements, dudes staying in Europe, etc... he somehow was our starting big by default. There were minutes to be had.
Rondo on the other hand, played 78 games as a rookie and started 25. This was despite the fact that we had made a rather controversial decision to trade our top lotto pick for Sebastian Telfair and there was pressure to pump minutes into Telfair... When Rondo showed up he was 3rd in the PG depth chart behind Telfair and Delonte West (who had played rather well). And yet... he started 25 of those games and did enough that Danny Ainge tried really hard not to trade him the following offseason.
That said, Sully's rookie stats were probably slightly more impressive than Rondo's rookie stats. But pulling down rebounds and scoring inside is easier than trying to run an offense. Additionally, Sully had a better College career than Rondo. I'm still not sold on Sully, but that's mainly because I haven't seen him play enough. I admittedly avoided most of the games during last year's sitting duck craptastic season. From what I've seen, I just see him as a smarter Glen Davis or a Ryan Gomes type. He doesn't seem to have the size or athleticism to be a star in this league. It's hard for me to get sold on him... it just seems like one of a long line of undersized big men that the fans here lose their minds over. All you have to do is pull down 10 rebounds in a game and suddenly you're the next Barkley. Whether it's Eric WIlliams, Brandon Hunter, Ryan Gomes, Leon Powe, Chris Mihm, Mark Blount, Glen Davis... I've seen Celtics fans overreact to "big performances" by big men over and over and over again. You need only to find the "Fab Melo" thread after his big Children's League game to see what I'm talking about. Dude blocks 80 shots while playing with 4 foot tall 12 year olds and suddenly he's the next Hakeem.
And I basically agree with triboy's point. Rondo always had potential, but I don't think Rondo would have peaked as a Top 10 PG if it hadn't been for a perfect storm of circumstances. I could be wrong, but I think this is a perfect example of Gladwell's "Outliers". ROndo came in as a 3rd string and had to work hard to earn his place. His GM was a former all-star PG. His coach was a former all-star PG. His second season he's thrusted into a winning culture with 3 jedi master hall-of-famers carrying the team to a title and imparting endless wisdom on the young padawan. The team signs a hall-of-fame backup (Sam Cassell) to impart more wisdom. Later the team brings in another former all-star for Rondo to spar with in practice (Marbury). He had multiple seasons to learn from Ray, KG and Pierce who were all vastly different in their approach to greatness. KG was pure intensity, heart, desire and determination... a born leader of men. Ray was clinically OCD and it impacted his routines, preparation, diet, etc... also barely ever showed emotion. Pierce was more loosey goosey, relaxed, party guy, but his talent spoke for itself. Rondo had all of these mentors to guide him into the player he was prior the injury. He also had players around him and a system that maximized his talents and hid his weaknesses. They surrounded him with shooters and gave him free reign to load up on boatloads of assists. It was a perfect storm of circumstances. I sincerely don't believe ROndo would have ended up the player he became if he had been stuck getting minutes by default on some bottomfeeder lotto squad. Unfortunately, that's what Sully is dealing with. He'll be force-fed minutes on a bottomfeeder lotto squad with no quality mentors to guide him to greatness. That's an Antoine Walker recipe... if Sully was anywhere near as naturally talented as Antoine Walker had been.