Isnt it time for Rondo to take a game off or something. We will see if your theory is true. Bc we dont know if without Rondo this teams offense will suffer. Some actually have said the ball moves around better , which leads to easier baskets.
And likely our defense (ab, smart) will improve without Rondo.
Does it need to be a whole game? Can't you just watch for the team to play well in a couple of his 4-5 minute breaks during the game and extrapolate the entire season based on that?
Sure. Vs the mavs with 3 min left in the 2nd quarter, smart comes in for rondo. And then magically our defense is better (smart not letting his man get by, no domino effect). Our offense plays better. And we start cutting into the lead, build confidence and gaining momentum
Smart didn't come in for Rondo with 3 minutes left in the half, he came into the game with just over 8 minutes left in the half. At the time we were down 25, we ended the quarter down 26.
Rondo did come out of the game with 3 minutes left in the half. We were down 28, and in those 3 minutes the team built a ton of confidence and gained a boatload of momentum by shaving an entire *2* points off the lead.
Hilarious.
http://stats.washingtonpost.com/nba/pbp.asp?gamecode=2014110306&home=6&vis=2
Rondo leaves at 2:56 score celts 35, mavs 63. End of quarter score 41 mavs 67
It is only by 2 ppts bbtim but you obviously are ignoring the "momentum swing" effect. How were we doing before rondo left? How many pts and at waht rate were they acoring?? What happened when ab and smart came in and ro do leaving with less than 3 min?
Obvious things you overlook or dont want to acknowledge. You prob went for a break when rondo got substituted im guessing
According to that same box score, when Marcus Smart checked in for his first stint, the score was 13-21 in favor of the Mavericks. When Marcus got replaced again, the score was 17-36 for the Mavs. That means the Celtics got outscored by 4 to 15 over that stretch.
Obviously, I'm not going to look at the boxscore in that way and blame Marcus Smart for the loss. He was one of the key players (along with Rondo) in leading the comeback in the second half.
It's a silly exercise. You really ought to know better.
Edit:
Oops, I see that mmmm has just pointed out the exact same thing.
I guess it can't hurt for this to be repeated, though.