Rondo is what he is (cliché alert). The blueprint is to sag off Rondo, let him do his thing, and stay home on everyone else.
This seems like a contradiction. Rondo's "thing" is to pass the ball, get assists, and get points for everybody else. If it were so easy to sag off him and "stay home on everyone else," you would think that Rondo's assist numbers wouldn't be what they are.
While teams frequently do sag off Rondo and go under picks against him, it doesn't mean they are sticking like glue to everyone else. As a matter of fact, you often see guys guarding off the ball on the perimeter cheating in towards the lane to defend against Rondo getting in the paint. When he does get in the paint, defenses scramble to figure out what he's doing due to his vision and deceptiveness. Guys are constantly left open for easy buckets, and, of course, Rondo finds them.
In short, Rondo's abilities create more open looks for his teammates, not less.
So these are fair questions but I think that the "blueprint" is more effective at the ends of games where things tighten up. The blueprint is at its peak when it is a last shot situation, usually after a time out, where there is no transition to take advantage of. The blueprint is at it worst (Celtics/Rondo at their best) when the team is running and pushing the ball in transition as Rondo has the chance to pick apart the not yet set defense.
What you're witnessing at those times isn't a Rondo thing, it's an nba thing. Go to 82games and check out some team eFG% for different parts of the shot clock. All (or at least almost all) of them will be significantly higher in transition than late in the shot clock. Also, they did a few studies a few years ago:
http://82games.com/gamewinningshots.htm
http://82games.com/random12.htm
That track those last shot situation you're talking about. The tables have league average numbers at the top, and the average fg% are all under 30%. So defenses are better against every team in the league during the times you're talking about, and you're trying to claim it's something specific to defenses against Rondo. It's not.
You only quoted part of my post, leaving out the part where I said the tendency for the game to slow down in the 4th is not a Celtics thing or a Rondo thing, it is a league thing.
So I left out the part where you undercut your own theory. You claim that there's a blueprint for taking Rondo out of the game. I point out that it must not be much of a blueprint, given his success over a number of years. You then say it's effective, but only at times when all defenses are more effective. The difference between having a blueprint and not having a blueprint is, for all intents and purposes, non-existent.
My point is that Rondo can best utilize his unique skill set during times when the game is more open. If he gets the ball up the court before the defense is set, he can use his unique passing skills more readily. His skill set is more conducive to that pace of play. When the pace is slowed in the 4th quarter, Rondo's flaws are more easily exploited.
There's not much truth to this. Some, because Rondo does excel in transition, but Rondo's one of the better PGs in the league at running a half court offense. His teams have had plenty of success at it. Also, when you're talking about times when the pace slows and defenses dig in, start with the playoffs, where Rondo shines on a regular basis.
Every player has strength and flaws that are more or less conducive to certain pace or style of play but the effect of this is amplified with Rondo more than any player that I can think of. This is because his strengths are so strong and his flaws are so flawed. So when the game is slowed and his strength is largely negated, his flaws can be exploited and the result is a dramatic reduction in his on court impact.
Again, this isn't the case, as his play in the playoffs (against mainly top defenses) has amply shown over a number of years. You frequently talk about how teams sag off of Rondo and talk about how effective that it is, yet it's pointed out time and again that defending him like that doesn't prevent him from getting assists or getting into the lane. To me, that sounds like a fairly ineffective blueprint.
In any case, I compared Rondo's 4th quarter assists to other point guards that pass a lot but are better scorers. I went back to 2011, back to 2010 for Nash. Rondo gets 18.3% of his assists in the 4th quarter, slightly better than Deron Williams at 17.8% but well ahead of CP (14%) and Nash (13%). Again, there's no evidence to back up your claims, and there's plenty of evidence to contradict it.