Cool tim. Give me an example of a player who controls the ball as much as Rondo does, averages less than 14 points... and doesn't average over 9 assists.
Why don't you start me out with a list of players who control the ball as much as Rondo does,
... Nobody. The only player who dominates the ball as much as Rondo this season was John Wall and you'd have to take his 19 and 9 over Rondo's 12 and 9. Rondo dominates the ball... there is concrete statistical evidence that proves he exists in a Rondo-centric offense. You earlier claimed that Parker controls the ball as much. False. He doesn't. Statistical evidence points to the fact that Parker touches and possesses the ball significantly less than Rondo does. Rondo dominates the ball more than superstar offensive weapons like Kevin Durant and LeBron James. If stats point to one thing... it's that Rajon Rondo did not play in a ball-sharing offense this season. The ball was his.
Another possible comparison would be Sacramento's Isiah Thomas to who has the ball in his hands 7.6 minutes out of 19 (40%)... but he averages 9 less touches per game (84.1 out of 388 - 21.6%) ... the percentage of touches is about even though.
But again, Thomas averaged 21.1 points and 6.5 assists per 36 mins... his increased scoring makes up for his lack of assists.
Point is... you give a player the ball more than anyone on the court... if he's not scoring the ball he's going to be getting a ton of assists. But not everyone can flourish in a ball-sharing offense (the Spurs)... you need to be a viable offensive weapon to survive in that system. Rondo is not a scorer or a shooter... he would probably have trouble if they kept the system the same. Rondo is a great player... but for him to maximize his impact, he needs the ball in his hands. Without the ball, he's an offensive liability.