2. I don't know how to build a winner around Rondo and Smith- two excellent ball handlers, penetrators, and passers who can nonetheless be either dared to shoot or fouled mercilessly depending on their proximity to the basket. I do know that if you add even one more player to that starting five who can't hit an open shot, you're screwed (Rondo's promising re-invention as a midrange shooter notwithstanding).
If you could build an ideal team around the Rondo-Smith connection, it would have to include a center who can play decent interior defense, can shoot, and doesn't clog the paint (sorry, Al Jefferson. You'd need a Garnett-Bosh-Aldridge-Horford type). Then you'd need two wings with catch-and-shoot skills.
You don't have to look very hard for a winning duo that compares to Rondo/Smith. Look at the Kidd/Martin Nets that made back-to-back finals and then took the eventual champion Pistons to 7 games.
Obviously that team fell short of greatness, but not by all that much. And they didn't have anything close to the center you are talking about - they had freaking Jason Collins. Nor were their wings great catch and shoot players. Kittles and Jefferson were solid but unexceptional shooters, but good defenders. Not all that unlike Bradley and Green.
Rondo/Smith gives you the foundation of an excellent defensive team that can suction up defensive boards, turn teams over and field a dangerous transition attack. Sure, you'd need to do a lot better than Jason Collins at center and add the offensive 6th man that Nets were never able to land, but that isn't all that tall of a task.
That's a really good comparison, Snively. Tommy point.
It is close, but Kidd was a great foul shooter in those days and Martin was not an outside player at all. He hung out almost entirely in the post.
This is where the comparison falls flat on it's face.
Martin never thought he was Ray Allen.
He stayed within himself and played his game.
K-Mart wasn't quite as eager to chuck from deep as Smith, but he certainly wasn't bashful about shooting the ball, especially in New Jersey.
He shot 3s, he bricked Js, he regularly shot well under 50%.
Compare Smith and Martin in basketball-reference's play index - up to age 28 it's like you're looking at the same player.
Per 36, K-Mart actually shot a tiny bit more than Smith. They posted a virtually identical TS%. Smith is a smidgen better on the boards, better in assists, better blocking shots and a little worse turning the ball over.
Moving away from statistics I'd give K-Mart the edge as an overall defender (tougher, more committed), but Smith the edge as an offensive player (capable of creating for himself and teammates). In terms of overall impact, I'd rate them almost identical.