I don’t see it at all. At 22-23 Holiday was already an All-Star in his 4th season. He’s superior in almost every facet of the game.
Terry is nearly 25 years old and isn’t even that close to 22 year old Holiday, let alone the beast Holiday is now
I see the age difference, but as I said on the first page, Jrue's all-star selection in his fourth season was not that impressive. He averaged 17 and 7 with 4 turnovers in 38 minutes a game on a team that won 34 games.
His year four numbers skyrocketed because he was playing 38 minutes a game and his usage rate went from 22 to 27%. Although his shooting numbers stayed relatively the same, as he became more responsible to distribute the ball, his turnovers almost doubled, from 2.1 in year 3 to 3.7 in year 4. He only made the all-star game in a very down year for the Eastern Conference, when Tyson Chandler and Luol Deng also made it. For comparison, his production was roughly the same per36 as Dinwiddie or Reggie Jackson this year, who clearly are not all-stars. The Sixers went 34-48 that year.
Rozier had roughly the same production as Holliday in year 3 of their career. If Rozier was a starter and had the same usage as Holiday in year 4, there's good evidence he would be producing at the same level as Jrue that season.
His 7 games as a starter this year is a small sample size, but when you combine that with the 16 games last year at about the same level of productivty (16-5-5 on 38/39/75 shooting splits) and his 19 games as a starter in the playoffs (17-6-5 on 41/35/82 shooting splits), you start to see a pattern.
That's 42 games as a starter at the same level of production as Holliday in his all-star season. Also, he isn't close to Holiday's usage (because the Sixers were force-feeding Holiday that year), and that doesn't account for the fact that the Sixers played Holiday 38 minutes a game, but Rozier gets less, even as a starter.