Getting past the hyperbole that has littered this thread regarding Rondo, I have to agree with the pragmatic opinions of Faf and Roy.
I'm one of the biggest Rondo supporters on this site but he does hold the ball a bit too much, but then again, in today's game, most PGs do. And it really doesn't matter the type of PG either. Whether you are a floor general type like Paul and Rondo or a shoot first guy like Rose or Westbrook, you tend to dominate the ball and the ball moves a whole lot less. It what the game has become with the advent of the three point line, stretch offenses, and smallish SGs with great handles that are too small to play the SG position in the much larger, current era of the NBA.
I think Stevens needs to change his offense. He's definitely at fault here. The system is awful.
The pace has to be improved when the efficiency isn't there, that's on Rondo.
The talent and general makeup of this team(loads of PFs and small guards, no centers, and a lack of ball handlers and shooters) is also to blame, that's on Danny.
The players in the system stink, that's on them.
Loads of blame to go around here. Singling out your one star and the team captain with 4 games to go in a season is ludicrous, Tommy. Respect for your knowledge and experience, but at this point, this is an off season matter to deal with between Stevens and Rondo. Sitting Rondo now for doing these things is just a ridiculous idea.
I think to a certain extent this is just a throw-away season. We don't have the talent to succeed in any offensive system or even implement one well. How much time and effort should Stevens put into coming up with a game plan (that he'll never use again) that will wring a tiny bit more productivity or efficiency out of them? And does such a scheme even exist? The only real plan I'm seeing in this thread that might help is "run more".
That works great if you have a transition opportunity but beyond that not so much. People believe that if the defense is set that rushing the ball up court and taking a quick shot will magically make us more efficient. It won't. Or we could have Rondo take off down the court whenever the other team shoots the ball, on the theory that the current bigs will hit him with a great outlet pass. That means we'll get fewer defensive rebounds and when the outlet's not there we'll be relying on players like Bradley and Bass to get the ball up court. What could go wrong there?
You are making a lot of generalities and oversimplifications just to make a point.
Pace isn't just running up the court. Its moving the ball quickly up the court before all five defenders have a chance to set and taking advantage of the quick openings available to get a shot off with more time left on the shot clock thereby creating more possessions per game.
I'm not about to go into the details of how to construct an offense around such a strategy, but its not that hard and has been done by tons of coaches and teams over the years.
Also, as a coach, you shouldn't be changing offensive systems year in and year out. Whether you have the players to run a system or not, you should be running your system from the get go so that players that do stay on the team learn and master the system and perform better in it. The last thing a coach wants is a player thinking through the system. It should come naturally and when a player knows it that well, they are more efficient in it.
So the idea that Stevens came in with a one year throw away system because he had bad players is a bit preposterous, if that is what you are alluding to. Coaches don't do that. His system sucks. He either needs to make major overhauls to it to adapt it to the pro game or scrap it entirely for a new one. Either way once he does he needs to stick to it for the rest of the time he is here.
If he keeps it, Stevens is gone in 1-2 years. Its that bad. It will cost him his job if he sticks to it, whether directly or indirectly.