Author Topic: Strictly Hypothetical: Would You Deal Rondo for Rose?  (Read 23396 times)

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Re: Strictly Hypothetical: Would You Deal Rondo for Rose?
« Reply #15 on: November 26, 2013, 11:57:01 PM »

Offline playdream

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No way Rose can be himself anymore
i wouldn't want him next year, even Crawford is more useful

Re: Strictly Hypothetical: Would You Deal Rondo for Rose?
« Reply #16 on: November 27, 2013, 12:37:08 AM »

Offline connor

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Yup. I would pull the trigger on that deal real quick.

And no I'm not one of those guys who hates Rondo, nor did I ever think that the C's were better off last year when he was off the court. I love Rondo, but Rose is just too much of a beast.

The injuries are concerning, but the docs say they expect 100% recovery, and although there was a lot of rust on his game this season I don't think he lost the explosiveness his game is based on. And there is a similar element of risk with Rondo's knee.

I think it'd be easier to build a championship team around Rose, a more traditional point guard, than Rondo who is more of a facilitator. You'd be lucky to have either, but give me the guy who averaged over 20 points a game for the last 3 seasons. to build around, especially if he is locked up for 3 more seasons past this one.

The Celtics would be basically guaranteed a large number of ping pong balls in a loaded class, and hopefully can draft a guy to go along their other promising young talent and a healthy Rose. If they can find a way to clear some of the dead weight contracts and open up some cap space, I think they'd be a perennial contender barring injury (which is obviously a fairly big if at this point).

Re: Strictly Hypothetical: Would You Deal Rondo for Rose?
« Reply #17 on: November 27, 2013, 03:57:00 AM »

Offline guava_wrench

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The injuries are concerning, but the docs say they expect 100% recovery, and although there was a lot of rust on his game this season I don't think he lost the explosiveness his game is based on. And there is a similar element of risk with Rondo's knee.

I think it'd be easier to build a championship team around Rose, a more traditional point guard, than Rondo who is more of a facilitator. You'd be lucky to have either, but give me the guy who averaged over 20 points a game for the last 3 seasons. to build around, especially if he is locked up for 3 more seasons past this one.
Rose is a 'more traditional point guard'? He mostly just penetrates and is the scoring focus of his offense.

Rose has a unique game that puts a uniquely high level of stress on his legs. He changes direction like no one else. Without explosiveness, he is average since he is not a good shooter and is nothing special passing. He will always be injury prone unless he changes his game, which would make him far less valuable.

Re: Strictly Hypothetical: Would You Deal Rondo for Rose?
« Reply #18 on: November 27, 2013, 04:37:29 AM »

Offline Celtics4ever

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Rose is a SG trapped in a PG body.

Re: Strictly Hypothetical: Would You Deal Rondo for Rose?
« Reply #19 on: November 27, 2013, 06:43:35 AM »

Offline Moranis

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I would.  worth the risk.
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Re: Strictly Hypothetical: Would You Deal Rondo for Rose?
« Reply #20 on: November 27, 2013, 07:23:56 AM »

Offline crimson_stallion

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No, I absolutely would not.
 
When both guys are healthy and at their best, still think Rose is one of the most overhyped and overrated Point Guards in the NBA.
 
Don’t get me wrong he is a very good player and a legit All-Star candidate, but I don’t consider him to be an ELITE player when you consider how many talented shoot-first PG’s are in this league.
 
I think that highly skilled pass-first point guards are far harder to find in this league and overall I consider Rondo a far better PG, and quite possibly a better player. I’ll explain why below.

Note:
All statistics quoted below are taken from hoopdata.  Every stat is an average of the respective player's stat over their last four four (4) seasons in the NBA.  For example, the statistic quoted for Derek Rose' shooting percentage at the rim is actually the average of what he has shot at the rim over his past four seasons.  This presents a broader view of the players performance over the years as a whole, and helps to allow for players who have had inconsistent careers.


Part 1 – Pure Point Guard Skills
First of all let us look at Rose’s ability as a pure PG, starting with his assist rate.
 
NBA PlayerAssist RateRank
Rajon Rondo641
Steve Nash622
Chris Paul513
Deron Williams444
Tony Parker355
Andre Iguodala356
Derek Rose317
R Westbrook308
Dwyane Wade259
Tyreke Evans2410
Jordan Crawford1911

So Rose is clearly a skilled passer. I’d consider guys like Jordan Crawford, Tyreke Evans and Dwyane Wade to be above average combo guards in terms of passing ability. I’d consider guys like Tony Parker and Andre Iguodala to be excellent combo guards. Rose (like Westbrook) lies somewhere in the middle very good PG skills by combo guard standards, but not good enough to be considered a proper PG (such as Deron, CP3, Nash and Rondo).
 
The other factor for a PG aside from generate assists, is the ability to hold on to the ball. In terms of turnover rate, Rose is pretty much on comparable with other combo guards out there who handle the ball a lot:
 
NBA PlayerTurnover RateRank
Chris Paul11.71
Dwyane Wade11.82
Jordan Crawford12.53
Derek Rose13.04
Tony Parker13.05
Tyreke Evans13.46
Andre Iguodala13.57
R Westbrook14.28
Deron Williams15.49
Rajon Rondo20.110
Steve Nash21.211

So Rose does a pretty good job of not turning the ball over given how often he handles the ball, but his turnover rate is still pretty middle of the pack. Lets calculate the Assist Rate / Turover Rate to create a makeshift “Assist/Turnover Rate”:
 
NBA PlayerAst /TO RateRank
Chris Paul4.41
Rajon Rondo3.22
Steve Nash2.93
Deron Williams2.94
Tony Parker2.75
Andre Iguodala2.66
Derek Rose2.47
Dwyane Wade2.28
R Westbrook2.19
Tyreke Evans1.810
Jordan Crawford1.511

So now we can clearly see that Rose lies squarely in “Combo Guard” territory in terms of his pure point guard skills. He is really no more a pure PG than someone like Iggy or D-Wade…he mostly just plays the position because of his lack of height and the Bulls lack of a more suitable player at the position.
 
Part 2 – Scoring – Shooting From the field
Now we have established that Rose clearly doesn’t have the skills to be a pure PG. If he is as elite as people say, his main talent must be scoring. Is he really an elite scorer though? Let’s see.
 
Offensively Rose is most famous for his elite ability to finish at the basket off dribble penetration. Let’s see how he compares to the other guys on this list in his ability to finish at the rim:
 
NBA PlayerAt the BasketRank
Steve Nash72.4%1
Dwyane Wade68.5%2
Tony Parker65.6%3
Chris Paul64.6%4
Rajon Rondo62.1%5
Tyreke Evans61.6%6
Jordan Crawford61.5%7
Deron Williams60.3%8
R Westbrook59.8%9
Derek Rose57.8%10
Andre Iguodala55.6%11

Ok then…not so elite after all. Every single player on this list except Iggy scores more effectively around the basket than Rose does. In fact Rondo is far above him in this regard, and seems to be much underrated in his ability to finish around the basket.
 
NBA Player3-9 FeetRank
Steve Nash51.8%1
Chris Paul47.1%2
Derek Rose47.0%3
Jordan Crawford43.5%4
Tony Parker42.2%5
Deron Williams40.6%6
Dwyane Wade39.5%7
R Westbrook38.1%8
Rajon Rondo36.0%9
Andre Iguodala34.4%10
Tyreke Evans28.0%11

Ok, finally we have found an area in which Derek Rose really excels. He is an elite finisher from 3-9 feet, and his 47% from that area is very impressive.
 
NBA Player10-15 FeetRank
Steve Nash51.2%1
Chris Paul47.1%2
Jordan Crawford46.9%3
Tony Parker42.2%4
Derek Rose41.7%5
Deron Williams40.6%6
Dwyane Wade39.5%7
R Westbrook38.1%8
Rajon Rondo36.0%9
Andre Iguodala34.4%10
Tyreke Evans22.2%11

Ok, so yet another area where Rose is pretty much dead on average. The top shooters at the guard spot seem to be up around 47% from 10-15 feet, while the sub-par ones seem to be down around 36% (ignoring Tyreke – ugh). Rose’s 41% is more or less right in the middle, maybe slightly above average at best. The shock here is Jordan Crawford – he’s been ranking pretty well in every category so far…better player than I thought!!
 
NBA Player16-23 FeetRank
Steve Nash48.5%1
Chris Paul46.0%2
Derek Rose40.5%3
Rajon Rondo40.3%4
Tony Parker39.0%5
R Westbrook38.5%6
Deron Williams38.3%7
Dwyane Wade37.8%8
Jordan Crawford37.3%9
Andre Iguodala34.5%10
Tyreke Evans31.5%11

Another area where Rose is roughly average, maybe only just above average. Pretty much on par with Rondo, Parker, Westbrook, Deron here. Not on the elite level of Nash/Paul nor the horribly mediocre level of Iggy/Tyreke – right in between.
 
NBA PlayerThree PointRank
Steve Nash41.2%1
Chris Paul37.4%2
Andre Iguodala33.9%3
Deron Williams33.3%4
Tony Parker30.7%5
Jordan Crawford29.9%6
R Westbrook29.8%7
Derek Rose28.3%8
Dwyane Wade28.2%9
Tyreke Evans27.0%10
Rajon Rondo23.1%11

Rose is clearly average, maybe a tad below average from three.
 
We are starting to see a general trend here:
 
* Nash and Paul are deadly scorers from everywhere on the court
 
* Parker is pretty solid from anywhere on the court
 
* Crawford is pretty much elite within 15 feet, mediocre beyond that
 
* Tyreke is probably one of the worst scorers in the NBA and woeful from anywhere
 
Rose’s reputation as an elite scorer has me scratching my head. With the exception of that 3-9 foot range (where he is truly elite) Rose is otherwise a really average scorer from every other spot on the floor.
 
Part 3 – The free throw line
Part of Rose’s reputation as an elite scorer revolves around his ability to get to the line and finish with contact. Let’s see how he compared to the others in those two areas:
 
NBA PlayerFTRRank
Dwyane Wade0.421
R Westbrook0.382
Deron Williams0.363
Chris Paul0.364
Andre Iguodala0.355
Tyreke Evans0.336
Tony Parker0.327
Derek Rose0.298
Steve Nash0.269
Rajon Rondo0.2310
Jordan Crawford0.2211

Once again, Rose is pretty average in terms of his ability to get to the line. Guys like Deron, CP3 and Westbrook all get to the line far more often than Rose does.
 
NBA PlayerAnd1Rank
Dwyane Wade0.781
R Westbrook0.562
Derek Rose0.543
Deron Williams0.494
Tony Parker0.465
Tyreke Evans0.446
Chris Paul0.317
Andre Iguodala0.317
Jordan Crawford0.249
Rajon Rondo0.249
Steve Nash0.1411

Finally, the penny drops and things start to make sense. We can now see how guys like Wade, Westbrook Rose and Tyreke get all of their points – from And1’s. All of these guys rank somewhere between average and mediocre from the field overall, but they are clearly very skilled at finishing with contact. Rose in that regard is up there with the best – he doesn’t get to the line often, but when he does he usually makes the shot as well.
 
Rondo actually gets to the line almost as often as Rose does, and the ‘eye test’ tells me that he connects on those shots pretty often. I think Rondo’s poor free throw shooting really hurts him in this regard, and if he were even a 75% shooter I think he’d be ranked somewhere between Tyreke and CP3 on this list.
 
Part 4 – Rebounding
So Point Guards are generally depended on to run the offense, and we like them to be able to score a bit too. There are some other areas in which guards don’t get enough credit – rebounding. Let’s see how Rose rates here.
 
NBA PlayerOff-RRRank
R Westbrook5.31
Dwyane Wade5.12
Rajon Rondo4.13
Andre Iguodala3.04
Derek Rose2.95
Tyreke Evans2.96
Jordan Crawford2.87
Chris Paul2.08
Steve Nash1.79
Deron Williams1.610
Tony Parker1.111

I would say Rose is about an average offensive rebounder for a guard. While it’s impressive that he is up there with guys like Crawford, Iggy and Evans (who are all SGs and a good 2” taller) at the same time there is just as much gap between him and the top offensive rebounders (Rondo, Wade, etc) as there is between him and the less impressive offensive rebounders (Paul, Parker). By defininition that tells me he is middle of the pack.
 
NBA PlayerDef -RRRank
Andre Iguodala15.51
Tyreke Evans12.92
Dwyane Wade12.43
Rajon Rondo11.24
Chris Paul11.05
R Westbrook10.46
Deron Williams10.37
Jordan Crawford9.58
Steve Nash9.19
Tony Parker8.910
Derek Rose8.711

As a defensive rebounder Rose is terrible, and dead last in this group. That’s a worry considering the group consists of guys like Nash, Paul and Parker who are all shorter, less physically gifted and not really known as top rate rebounders.
 
NBA PlayerTot-RRRank
Andre Iguodala9.21
Dwyane Wade8.92
Rajon Rondo7.93
R Westbrook7.93
Tyreke Evans7.85
Chris Paul6.56
Jordan Crawford6.27
Derek Rose5.98
Deron Williams5.98
Steve Nash5.510
Tony Parker5.111

The total rebounding rate pretty much sums it up. People claim that Rose is an excellent rebounder for a PG, but reality is that he really isn’t. Only two players rank below him in total rebound rate on this list and that is Nash and Parker – both are considered below average rebounders. The big surprise is Deron, who I always thought was a better rebounder than this….but looks like he (like Rose) is pretty average by PG standards, and below average by overall guard standards. Unsurprisingly Rondo is right up there with Westbrook among the elite rebounding guards in the NBA – that is so relatively close to Wade and Iggy is extremely impressive give that they are among the best rebounders in the league at their relative position.
 
Part 5 – On/Off Stats
I know these stats are very controversial on this site because in theory they can be skewed by other factors (such as who else is on the court when the subject is on/off). Regardless, star players typically play between 30-38 minutes per game, so even if a player only plays 30 MPG and also misses half of the season due to injury, that’s still 1,230 minutes played. I believe that is a big enough sample size to cancel out MOST of the anomalies. I’m going to include these, and you can ignore them if you like.
 
NBA PlayerOffensive RtgRank
Chris Paul10.41
Dwyane Wade9.52
Deron Williams6.83
Steve Nash6.64
Derek Rose4.85
Rajon Rondo3.86
R Westbrook3.47
Jordan Crawford1.98
Andre Iguodala09
Tony Parker010
Tyreke Evans-1.811

According to these stats:
 
Chris Paul’s and Dwyane Wade’s teams over the past 4 seasons have scored an average of around 10 points per 100 possessions more when they are on the court compared to when they are on the bench. This indicates that both players have a dramatically positive impact on their teams’ offense when they are on the court. Everybody knows they are both elite offensive players, so I have no trouble believing this.
 
Deron and Nash are next, with their teams over the past 4 seasons being up being up around +6.5 offensively when they are on the court. Both of these guys are two directional players – both skilled scorers and excellent playmakers – so between their scoring and their ability to set up other players this is pretty easy to believe. Remember this is an average of the past four seasons, so it includes the Utah seasons in which Deron was up there with CP3 as one of the elite point guards in the league.
 
Next come Rose, Rondo and Westbrook who’s teams are all about +3.5 to +4.5 when they are on the court. Rose has the biggest positive impact of those three, with Rondo and Westbrook being about on par.
 
The rest of the guys have little or no positive impact (Except Tyreke – who is a negative).
 
I would say based on this that Rose clearly improves his teams’ offense when he is on the court, however doesn’t have the same elite “MVP” type impact that guys like Chris Paul and Dwyane Wade have on their teams offense. Still an All-Star worthy offensive impact though.
 
NBA PlayerDefensive RtgRank
Tony Parker-3.91
Andre Iguodala-3.52
Dwyane Wade-0.53
Steve Nash-0.54
Tyreke Evans0.25
Chris Paul0.46
Rajon Rondo0.77
R Westbrook2.98
Deron Williams3.09
Derek Rose4.510
Jordan Crawford5.111

There has been a general reputation around the league that Derek Rose is a poor defensive player. Chicago supporters would love to jump up and say this is not true, and that he is actually a pretty good defender.
 
The data above says otherwise. Derek Rose’s defensive rating ranks second worst on this list, with his teams over the past 4 seasons allowing 4.5 more points per 100 possessions when he is on the court. The only guy on this list that is below him is Jordan Crawford, a guy famous for being a poor defender. The worst thing to me is that Rose has actually played on elite defensive teams for almost his entire career, so if anything his numbers should be skewed in a positive way…the fact that they go the other direction doesn’t speak too highly of his defensive skills.
 
The positions from 4 through to 7 are all pretty much even – all guys who have very little impact on their teams defense whether they are on the court or not. Rondo falls in this category probably because he gambles a lot on D (which hurts the team), but this is more or less cancelled out by the fact that he is actually has elite defensive skills.
 
The Tony Parker ranking is a surprise. This might be related to the fact that the Spurs teams he plays on are generally very good defensively (he’s usually on the court with Duncan), or he may just be a much better defensive player than he is given credit for.
 
Iggy’s ranking is no surprise – he is (and always has been) one of the best defensive players in the NBA.
 
NBA PlayerNet RtgRank
Chris Paul10.01
Dwyane Wade10.01
Steve Nash7.13
Tony Parker3.94
Deron Williams3.85
Andre Iguodala3.56
Rajon Rondo3.07
R Westbrook0.57
Derek Rose0.39
Tyreke Evans-2.09
Jordan Crawford-3.211

He is where Rose’s poor defense hurts him. His team scores about 4.5 more points per 100 possessions when he is on the court, but they also allow about 4.5 more points per 100 possessions when he’s out here. That means all the extra points the teams scores are effectively being neutralised by all the extra points they allow when he’s on the court. His net Off/Def rating is only +0.3 as a result.
 
If these numbers are anything to go off, Boston actually misses Rondo a lot more than Chicago misses Rose
 
Part 6 – Conclusion
So now we have a little bit more information to support this Rondo vs Rose debate.
 
Scoring
Rose is unquestionably the better scorer. He’s a more efficient scorer from 3-9 feet, from 10-15 feet and from three. He gets to the line more often, converts And1’s at double the rate, and shoots a better percentage from the line.
 
Rondo does hold his own as a scorer in two areas though. He scores more effectively at the basket, and at 16-23 feet they are dead even.
-Winner: Rose
 
Point Guard Skills
Rondo wins this category just as clearly as Rose wins the scoring. His assist rate is more than 100% higher than Rose, yet he only averages 50% more turnovers. Rondo’s overall Ass/To rate is 33% better which is pretty significant.
-Winner: Rondo
 
Rebounding
Rondo again is the clear winner here. His Offensive Rebound Rate is 40% better, his Defensive Rebound rate is 30% better, and his Total Rebound Rate is (naturally) 35% better.
–Winner: Rondo
 
Defense
Rondo wins again. If you look at it subjectively, Rondo has made an All-Defensive team four consecutive seasons (11-12, 10-11, 09-10 and 08-09) and also led the league in steals once (2009-2010). Rose has never led the league in steals or made a single All-Defensive team. Objectively Rondo’s defensive rating is a full 4 points better than Rose, which is a massive difference.
-Winner: Rondo
 
Overall Winner: Rondo (3-1)
 
The problem I see with Rose is that his greatest talent is scoring, and yet he still is not an elite scorer at the NBA level. He excels offensively in two area – his ability to finish with contact, and his efficiency scoring from 3-9 feet. Everywhere else on the court he is merely average, and both of these skills rely entirely on his athleticism.
 
If that athleticism he relies so much on doesn’t fade with all the injuries, it certainly will fade with age. Unless he changes his game as he gets in to his 30’s (the way guys like Jordan and Karl Malone did late in their careers) to counter for that, his average skill set is going to be exposed very quickly.
 
He also has average pure PG skills (by proper PG standards) and is really more of a shooting guard who has some PG skills (much like D Wade). Unlike Wade though, he lacks the size and strength to defend bigger shooting guards. He’s also a very average rebounder for a guard, and his defense is well below average (almost 37 year old Ray Allen bad).
 
He’s the stereotypical guard who is massively overhyped because he’s been the “star player on a good team” and because his flashy style of play pleases the cameras and brings fans in to the arenas. In reality though he’s traditionally struggled to carry the load in the playoffs, and despite being the best player on some elite teams he has never led those teams to any significant playoff success.
 
Finally there is his attitude. Yes Rondo has an “arrogant dude” reputation around the league, but he is a grade A warrior. He plays through some truly horrific injuries, and I have no doubt that if it was playoff time right now (and Boston was in the playoffs) Rondo would be out there on the court. Rose on the other hand sat and watched his Bulls team get eliminated from the playoffs, even after his doctors cleared him to play, while he sat carefree on the bench. The guy has zero drive, zero attitude, zero desire to win. He just wants to go out, chuck up a million shots, and then go home a hero. He’s like the Carmello of Point Guards, only he isn’t because I couldn’t imagine Carmello sitting on the bench while his team is down in the Playoffs.

« Last Edit: November 27, 2013, 08:13:41 AM by crimson_stallion »

Re: Strictly Hypothetical: Would You Deal Rondo for Rose?
« Reply #21 on: November 27, 2013, 07:50:31 AM »

Offline pokeKingCurtis

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You're forgetting the fact that teams don't defend Rondo.

Figure 1. Westbrook taking a 24 second breather while Rondo pounds the ball, refusing to take a jump shot.


Figure 2. Kobe playing defense on Rondo in the 2010 finals.

Re: Strictly Hypothetical: Would You Deal Rondo for Rose?
« Reply #22 on: November 27, 2013, 08:12:26 AM »

Offline crimson_stallion

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Tell that to the Heat, who tried just about everybody (including Lebron) on Rondo and were still getting burnt by him.

I seem to recall a comment by some high profile Heat person (either Lebron or Spolestra) saying something like "We tried everybody today, but I just don't know how to defend him". 

Re: Strictly Hypothetical: Would You Deal Rondo for Rose?
« Reply #23 on: November 27, 2013, 09:35:17 AM »

Offline dreamgreen

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No. Like many have already said, to much risk.

Re: Strictly Hypothetical: Would You Deal Rondo for Rose?
« Reply #24 on: November 27, 2013, 09:38:54 AM »

Online Roy H.

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I think that this is a really interesting question.  I think that if both were healthy, Rose is the better building block.  He's a true "superstar", whereas I think Rondo is a phenomenal player, but not a #1 option for a title team.

With the health concerns, Rose may never be the same.  At the same time, Rondo is coming off a major injury of his own, and is at high risk of reinjuring his knee (or injuring the other one), as well.  (I just watched an interview that said that once an ACL goes, the chances of injuring the ACL again -- either in that knee or the other knee -- goes up to about 1/30).  So, the injury risk is very high with both of them.

In the end, it comes down to contract.  Rose is owed around $20 million per year for three more seasons after this one.  That's too much for a guy who is going to be a big gamble on the court.


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Re: Strictly Hypothetical: Would You Deal Rondo for Rose?
« Reply #25 on: November 27, 2013, 09:43:50 AM »

Offline ssspence

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I was about to say Rose is too fragile... and then i remembered Rondo is coming back from a knee injury.

My answer is no. Both totally healthy? Of course. But under the circumstances, I fear for Rose's longevity, and generally if we're going to deal Rondo I'd prefer not to trade him for a PG anyway. 
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Re: Strictly Hypothetical: Would You Deal Rondo for Rose?
« Reply #26 on: November 27, 2013, 11:06:39 AM »

Offline GreenWarrior

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Ok I've heard enough. I've been a lurker too long.

I can't believe what I'm hearing. Rondo is the better player here. Rondo has been severely underrated(much like Pierce) by the NBA and particularly New Englanders his entire career.

Just because ESPN doesn't think so doesn't make it true. Just because Rose sells more sneakers doesn't make him better than Rondo...it doesn't even make him a great player.

Rondo is special. he has the intangibles.   

Re: Strictly Hypothetical: Would You Deal Rondo for Rose?
« Reply #27 on: November 27, 2013, 11:15:33 AM »

Offline GreenWarrior

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I appreciate the stats. I personally don't need 'em though. Rondo passed the eye test a long time ago.

For a player that is really inconsistent from outside he sure can dominate a game.

I absolutely believe Rondo needs to improve his FT shooting though.

Re: Strictly Hypothetical: Would You Deal Rondo for Rose?
« Reply #28 on: November 27, 2013, 11:29:29 AM »

Offline connor

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The injuries are concerning, but the docs say they expect 100% recovery, and although there was a lot of rust on his game this season I don't think he lost the explosiveness his game is based on. And there is a similar element of risk with Rondo's knee.

I think it'd be easier to build a championship team around Rose, a more traditional point guard, than Rondo who is more of a facilitator. You'd be lucky to have either, but give me the guy who averaged over 20 points a game for the last 3 seasons. to build around, especially if he is locked up for 3 more seasons past this one.
Rose is a 'more traditional point guard'? He mostly just penetrates and is the scoring focus of his offense.

Rose has a unique game that puts a uniquely high level of stress on his legs. He changes direction like no one else. Without explosiveness, he is average since he is not a good shooter and is nothing special passing. He will always be injury prone unless he changes his game, which would make him far less valuable.

More traditional is a poor description, what I'm trying to say is he would be easier to build around. He is the scoring focal point and also hands out 7 assists a game. With Rondo you're getting a superstar, but you still have to find your scorer.

I think Rose is going to bounce back just fine from this and still have that same explosiveness. Now whether or not he is going to continually have injury problems is another matter I'm not so confident in, but I'd still take the risk.

In a vacuum choosing between the two of them I'd say it'd be like flipping a coin. I'd be equally happy with either. But under the current circumstances if the C's could trade Rondo for Rose (possibly some salary relief and/or a pick too, given the injury) I'd definitely do it. It would solidify Boston getting a high draft pick and you'd have D-Rose under contract for 3 more years. If that lottery pick works out and we clear some cap space to go along with our young core, you're looking at a serious contender.

Re: Strictly Hypothetical: Would You Deal Rondo for Rose?
« Reply #29 on: November 27, 2013, 11:41:07 AM »

Offline Jailan34

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I would nowt with his second season ending knee injury. I'm getting a Brandon Roy vibe from this whole situation, young player on the rise suffering major career ending injuries. Rose May come back, but he wasn't the same this season, and it could be even worse next season. A real interesting question to ask is if Chicago finds out rose will never be the same would they consider using the amnesty clause on him and his huge contract?
You can't reason someone out of a position they didn't reason themselves into.