The Rest, Only Noise

Chapter 1033: Offensive and defensive change

Sabonis lost his mind for a while.

Its performance characteristics are that the passing lines are chaotic, the strategy is poor, the intention is unclear, and he wants to compete with Ewing, but the latter has rich experience in this regard.

The basis of competition on the court is strength.

If there is not enough strength to stand by, it is no different from some brainless ad flashing forward, just giving it away.

Watching Sabonis find Ewing's trouble as if his IQ was instantly reset, Louie felt a lot refreshed instantly.

At least, Pat Riley understands Louie about something.

For example, every time Ewing meets Sampson, he has to challenge several rounds without thinking. If Mr. One is not in a good state, and he is half-baked, then he is bound to get carried away. If on the other hand, Mr. One is in good shape, then Ewing will be hit with amnesia like the other centers.

Louie will often call a timeout and put a "sweet word" into the opponent's ear before Ewing is beaten to amnesia, but Sampson knows that the game is long and he can patiently launch a pleasurable ordeal.

"Big man, keep calm!"

Riley yelled.

Many immature players wouldn't be a problem for coaches if the rising emotions could be controlled with a few words.

Sabonis is a mature player in his own right, and once someone like that gets upset, it's hard to adjust.

Sabonis brought a chaotic rhythm to the Knicks to a 10-4 start.

Four and a half minutes into the game, he realized that Sabonis could not change Riley in his own state through self-regulation, and chose to call a timeout to make a substitution.

According to the Knicks' research with the Blazers, if Sabonis isn't doing well, they usually put Larry Nance at center to protect the rim in the paint.

With the Blazers' interior reserves, there is no better way to do this, unless Riley wants to play in a small lineup, but Louis expects the opponent will not do so.

Small **** are not something you can hit if you want. Contemporary coaches have the limitations of the times.

Therefore, Louis chose not to make substitutions, and it was not time for the rotation. No matter how the Blazers changed inside, Ewing and Rodman were absolute advantages.

Without Sabonis' high support, the Blazers' offense would be monotonous.

The easiest way to play on the basketball court: let the stars swing.

This style of play is looked down upon by many coaches, but when it comes to the Blazers, it has a very inconsistent sense of appropriateness.

The reason for the violation is that star singles are generally a game-breaking strategy for the team to fall into a stalemate, or a life-and-death decision at the last minute, but the Blazers can rely on the personal abilities of the three giants of Joe, Zha, and Tuo to turn it into a game. Regular play.

Thomas passed halftime and was not in a hurry to attack.

He passed the ball to Jordan on the left.

Jordan has the ball, and the defender in front of him is Wilson.

Jordan didn't call the pick-and-roll, dribbled the ball with his right hand, and took a step forward, which was faster than everyone on the court expected. When Wilson reacted, he was already one position behind.

The vigilant Stevens dropped Clifford Robinson in an instant to help defend, but Jordan made an emergency stop from the center of the free throw line, and falsified Stevens with the ball. Then another turn over and back, ignoring the Knicks' Longtan Tiger's den, scored 2 points.

6 to 10

"Some say mj and benj are upgraded versions of Larry and Erwin, do you agree?"

After watching this ball, Bob Costas asked with a smile.

Ranbir was about to blurt out the phrase "grass mud horse", but he held back after realizing that it was a national broadcast, and he said extremely unhappily: "Unless either of these two people win eight championships, they will not be recognized by me!"

The tragic master smiled and said, "You know my answer."

Louie whistled in the frontcourt.

Ewing glanced at him and saw that the other party was raising his eyebrows.

"Got it!" he said angrily.

Louis wondered: "What does he know?"

At this time, Ewing took the ball from a high position when he misunderstood Louis' instructions, and used his wide body to create a solid wall of meat for Wilson, isolating Jordan's defense from the free throw line.

Wilson penetrated the Blazers box, and Ewing threw the ball in the air.

Nance took off and intercepted, but the sky in 1993 no longer belonged to him.

The Conqueror jumped to the basket, waved his enviable long arms, and dunked Ewing's brilliant pass into the basket in the most domineering way.

This scene happened in front of Nance, but he couldn't stop it.

Ewing didn't even watch Wilson's attack, but shouted at Louie, "How's it going?"

Does he mean to ask how this pass compares to Sabonis?

Does Mr. Yu know that there is a classic line from Echizen Ryoma, a famous Japanese tennis genius?

You are still far away!

Louie didn't have time to trigger the "strike Ewing" passive, when he saw Wilson and Ewing, who were back on defense, give him a high five, and that scene made him silent.

It's been a year since the two of them gave each other a high-five, right?

12 to 6

Jordan's counterattack didn't keep Wilson waiting.

Thomas crossed halftime and glanced at Jordan on the left.

Jordan received the ball, and Wilson posted it and took the initiative to confront it.

In doing so, he did not want to give Jordan the opportunity to start at full speed.

Wilson legitimately gave Jordan interference with a hand-cheg defense that neither lost defensive position nor slowed the opponent's start.

This picture made Louis feel emotional.

Wilson is already one of the best defenders in the world, but even he has to rely on the convenience of the times to increase resistance to Jordan's breakthrough. What if Jordan played in an era where hand-cheg was not allowed?

Not to mention the unverifiable and seriously degrading remarks of 40-50 points per game, in terms of defense, Jordan in the illegal era of hand-cheg is an absolutely undefendable player.

Jordan dribbled the ball from left to right along the three-point line, stopped at a forty-five-degree angle on the right, and suddenly changed the direction of the crotch with a low center of gravity to adjust the rhythm.

Wilson had anticipated Jordan's offensive intentions and jumped forward.

But Jordan's speed was too fast, and the low center of gravity changed to the back of the ball in one go.

Not a chance chance, the same hit.

9 to 12

Stockton dribbled the ball from the backcourt to the frontcourt and still gave Ewing the ball high.

Ewing pretended to repeat the old trick this time, but he was actually pretending to pass the ball, and suddenly turned to face the basket and made a quick stop.

Clifford Robinson saw through his feint, approached from a corner that Ewing couldn't see, and gave a cap.

The ball fell in mid-air and was caught by Nance. The Blazers counterattacked like a rainbow.

Jordan sprinted down quickly, his teammates passed the ball in place, and scored dunks.

11 to 12

"In the last two minutes, mj has managed all of Portland's scoring!"

"I don't agree with some people that mj is an evolved version of Erwin, but I admit to being a more attractive player than both Erwin and Larry."

"Larry's 30's are often boring, and mj's 30's are always as dazzling as fireworks," Laimbeer said vividly.

At this point, the first quarter is over.

The Blazers continued to chase points with Jordan's performance, and Louis could only call a timeout to interrupt the opponent's momentum.

At the same time, he adjusted the lineup.

Mohamed Raouf replaces Stockton;

Miller replaces Rodman;

Kemp replaces Ewing;

Stevens plays the four.

Ewing, as the biggest advantage of the Knicks, was replaced after half a quarter.

Kostas' interpretation is this: "Coach Lu is a disciplined person, and Patrick's attack just now obviously ignored team discipline."

However, when Louis replaced Ewing, he specifically said to him: "You played well, but I need to adjust our tactics now."

Ewing said confidently, "You're always right, don't explain it to me."

Adjusting the lineup, Louie picked up the tactical board and said, "Let's hunt for Portland's defensive loopholes!"

When he said this, the players knew that the "roll-call" tactic was going to be played.

Ewing was replaced because of this.

He has a big advantage in the interior, but his offensive ability is slightly stiff. Although he can easily score 20 points with a shooting rate of more than 55% against the Blazers, he pays attention to indiscriminate damage.

This requires a large number of pick-and-roll cuts in the interior. Ewing’s pick-and-roll threat is the top in the league, but Kemp also has a top threat. At the same time, his offensive ability with the ball is not possessed by Ewing, and he can also bounce off. A three-pointer from the outside.

He's the perfect roll call tactical tool.

The suspension ended, and the Blazers made no changes to the lineup.

But after watching the evolution of the Knicks, based on the experience of the previous games, Riley also saw Louis's mind.

But Riley is not worried. In his eyes, the roll call is an alternative one-on-one challenge, and it is more than a one-on-one challenge. Who can compare to the Blazers, the Knicks are asking for a dead end.

Soon, Riley will change that view.

When Wilson dribbled the ball on the flanks, sharpened his knives at the Flying Pigs, and cocked his **** against the Assassins, he would find that their defense simply couldn't match the intensity of the Conquerors.

In the first round, Wilson hit Thomas in a dislocation, and a humiliating pull-up jumper ~www.wuxiaspot.com~ was shot on Thomas' head.

In the second round, Barkley, who directly broke through the defense with speed, scored with a dunk.

In the third round, Nance couldn't save, and Wilson fired from the outside.

If Jordan scored 7 points in a row because of his unparalleled personal ability, then Wilson's 7 points depended on interlocking teamwork.

Without Kemp's pick-and-roll threat, without Raouf's penetrating shooting threat, without Miller's space, without Stevens' monstrous 40 percent corner 3-pointer, Wilson wouldn't Getting such a good opportunity to play heads-up, because the offensive threat of these guys, stifles the possibility of the Portlanders double-teaming him.

So the Blazers players can only watch as Wilson slashes at them like a butcher.

In a blink of an eye, it was easy to attack and defend.

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