i honestly dont care how rondo plays in the regular season, he gives so much effort in the playoffs that he makes up for it. he obviously saves himself physically for the playoffs. if you want him to waste his 160 lb body in the regular season, well thats just not logical.
lol...
and if the team doesn't make the playoffs?
Btw, I don't buy the "playoff superstar" theory. He just gets more minutes.
He dominates playoff games and playoff series. And, fyi, it's not unusual for players to get more minutes in the playoffs than the regular season. Over the last 5 seasons combined, 5 players averaged 38+ mpg during the regular season, 27 have during the playoffs. 21 players averaged more mpg in those 5 combined playoffs than any player did during those combined regular seasons.
If your explanation of the "playoff superstar theory" was correct the theory wouldn't exist. Most (if not all) stars play more minutes during the playoffs, yet you don't hear that they're "playoff superstars". That's because they don't step up their games in the postseason like Rondo does.
He also has crappy games all the time in the playoffs. He also has dominate regular season games and stretches as well. Rondo is virtually the same player in the playoffs as he is in the regular season (look at his per 36 for both). He plays more minutes and takes 2 more shots per 36 and bumps his rebounding about 0.5 per 36, but is less efficient and decreases his assists per 36 by 0.5 per 36. In other words, for all practical purposes Rondo is the same player in the regular season as he is in the post season he is just slightly more inclined to shoot more and pass less in the post season. I would actually prefer that Rondo all the time as he does look to pass to much at times. He also has bad games all the time because he can't play at that top level consistently enough. His career, both post season and regular season equates almost evenly between great games, good games, and bad games. They are pretty much 1 in 3 across the board. He needs to up the great games and good games and decrease the bad games to really become the player he could become.
He doesn't have very many crappy games in the playoffs when he's healthy. He doesn't always have great scoring games but he doesn't have to score a ton to control a game. Also, as I've mentioned in the past, having a player's scoring go up even as much as Rondo's in the playoffs is unusual. The defenses are generally better as you see few if any of the bottom 10-12 defenses in the league in the postseason. The Celts play the majority of their playoff games against top 7 defenses, for example.
The last time this discussion came up I checked the top 25 or so active playoff scorers who had played a decent amount of playoff games. The only player who's per36 scoring average jumped as much as Rondo's was TMac, and that only happened because he had injury-plagued seasons where he didn't score much and missed the playoffs. The bulk of those players scored *less* per36 in the playoffs.
sure, but they also shoot less by and large, not increase their shot output by 2 a game. Rondo scores more in the playoffs because he shoots more, not because he increased his effectiveness. His shooting more means he gets less assists though and he basically contributes the same amount of points per game (assists and points) in both the playoffs and regular season on a per minute basis.
Again, I don't think you realize the difference between regular season and playoff basketball. First of all, there are less assists in general in the playoffs. In the 2013 playoffs the league average was about 18.6 assists/game. During the 2013 regular season every team in the league averaged more than 19 apg and the league average was over 22. Rondo's assists/36 drop by .5 between the regular season and the playoffs, if he held to league average his assists would drop by about 1.6. So, again, Rondo "steps up" compared to the rest of the league.
As for the number of shot attempts, notice that eFG% and TS% both drop during the playoffs (stronger defenses). I would be somewhat surprised if your claim (they take fewer shots) is really true. But if you're confident that it is, what does that mean? If they're maintaining their efficiency as you say, then their scoring efficiency compared to the league as a whole is improving. But the fewer shots means that their overall role in the offense (things like usage) is probably decreasing. Their team's overall decrease in efficiency means that their teammates are having to shoulder more of the load in the playoffs while those stars do less.
Yep. Basically, pace drops dramatically during the playoffs.
Defenses are better - especially at preventing easy transition D. The game slows down. Fewer total possessions == fewer shots, fewer assists, etc.
You have to be able to execute your offense from the half court in the playoffs. The years are littered with the wreckage of running teams that blazed through the regular season only to hit a brick wall in the playoffs.
So, to suggest that Rondo's simply shooting as a trade-off from passing is not quite correct.
Rondo's AST% (the percentage of team shots he assisted) pretty much stays up above 40% in both the regular season and the playoffs. It has dropped just slightly from his regular season number in his first 4 years in the playoffs and went up in his last playoffs. In that playoff run, it was way up over 54%. So not only did his own personally scoring go up, but his share of involvement in the rest of the team's scoring also went up.