chakdaddy wrote:Except...a big part of the similarity is the high shooting percentages, which in Rondo's case is due to relying on drives and layups with occasional judicious use of an average-at-best jumper; in Stockton's case it is due to judicious use of an excellent jump shot.
Statistics fall apart when a similar number is arrived at by vastly different routes..."Mark West is the best shooter in NBA history!"
Well, at the end of the game it doesn't really matter how you scored your points assuming you scored them just as efficiently. If Rondo makes 5 layups on 7 shots and John Stockton hits 5 jumpers on 7 shots what is the difference? I guess it depends on what you hope to get from calling someone 'similar'. If all you care about are the aesthetic qualities of the players you're missing a lot I think.