0032 It's not that I don't believe you
On the field, Jack dribbled the ball and advanced.
McMillan also realized that something was wrong and hurriedly raised her hand and gestured, demanding a new tactic.
Jack nodded, waved to the four teammates, then accelerated to the right wing position of the frontcourt, stopped and waited. At the same time, Ad was standing in the elbow area on the right, and Pursbila stood on the outside of the free throw circle, forming a double cover.
Seeing the cover formed, Jack kicked the ground again and drove the ball straight to the top of the arc.
Parker chased after him and bypassed two walls in a row, without any worries about Jack taking the opportunity to take the three-pointer.
Jack really didn't shoot, but stopped at the top of the arc, arching his body to pass the ball to Ade who was walking down to his waist.
Generally speaking, in this case, waist players have the opportunity to catch the ball.
But the person who defended Ade was Duncan. The moment Jack stopped, he walked around to block the receiving route.
Ade did not turn to cut the basket empty, and I wonder if he was worried that Jack did not have such good passing skills. Seeing that Jack could not pass the ball for the time being, he quickly threw the ball towards the 45-degree three-point line on the left, where was Roy in the open position.
Finley had previously found the free throw line and was about to intercept Jack's breakthrough. Seeing Roy hold the ball high, he hurried back to defend.
Roy immediately stopped the shooting, crossed and stepped violently, and rushed to the edge of the paint area in a blink of an eye.
Finley was unable to catch up, so he completely lost his rhythm. He subconsciously jumped up with Roy and instinctively raised his hand to block the block.
"Oh..." Roy roared, the basketball flew out, and the referee's whistle rang.
Finley was fouled for a shooting, Roy got two free throws, and the Trail Blazers applauded on the bench.
Su Yang applauded and felt a little regretful. The tactics that the Trail Blazers just implemented were one of the high-position double-screen series he designed, with the purpose of helping Ade easily catch the ball, but Duncan's defense was too perverted and could almost always take into account both man and ball.
Before the game, he told Ade to take the initiative to try to fight back and attack the basket, but Ade didn't try, so the habit was difficult to change.
What's even more regrettable is that Jack didn't make three-pointers even after getting a large open position, and was still restricted by the original tactical system "Don't make three-pointers easily". Roy could also make three-pointers as soon as possible after getting a large open position, but he insisted on pursuing stability.
This is the concept of the times. It’s like who had just hated Jay Chou’s music style before the 1980s, which was difficult to deal with!
While thinking, Roy made a free throw and hit the iron for the first time, and the Spurs fans cheered and shouted.
Roy shook his head slightly, interacted with his teammates with his high fives, and then stood on the free throw line again.
When! The second free throw also hit the basket and hit the iron.
Cheers in the AT&T center instantly exploded, and the players of the two teams scrambled continuously, and the basketball fell into Finley's hands.
"Go back to defend, back to defend..." Monty shouted.
Before he finished speaking, Finley raised his hand and made a long pass. The basketball flew across the center line and landed on the right side of the frontcourt.
Parker reached out to receive the ball, rushed to the three-point line for a few steps, faced Webster's defense, slowed down sideways and waited.
Duncan followed closely and directly set up a wall in the right elbow area to provide side cover, but Webster took the lead.
Parker immediately pulled the ball in the opposite direction, gave up going online, and instead went down to break through, but Webster quickly slid and blocked it.
Even so, Parker stopped, pulled the ball back to the three-point line, and ran back to the right elbow area to look for cover.
This time, Webster never had time to grab a position and intercept in advance, and Ade was forced to misplace the defense of Parker.
With Adina's speed, the online area of Parker is basically free, so Webster rushed up quickly.
Seeing that the double-team was about to form, Parker stopped urgently and bent over, raising his hand to pass the ball with a hit.
The basketball rebounded and flew to the right waist position very close to the basket, while Duncan took it in his hand, turned around and passed Jack who tried to make up for defense, stepped into the basket, jumped up and dropped the basket, and scored two points in a very simple way, as if there was no confrontation training.
The Spurs did not have any complicated running positions this time, and they all depended on Parker's patience to play pick-and-roll with Duncan.
Compared with the previous three zipper tactics, it can be both showy and return to nature.
McMillan saw it with envy and a little question, why can't his team members play patiently?
Amid cheers, the two teams changed their offense and defense.
It may be because he was behind 0-8, or because he lost two consecutive free throws, Roy couldn't bear it anymore.
He got stuck in the elbow area in advance. When he saw Jack dribbling the ball across the center line, he immediately mentioned 45 degrees to beg for the ball.
The others of the Trail Blazers scattered and left room for space. Roy turned around and changed hands and shook his hands, and Tiexin wanted to fight alone.
Unexpectedly, Finley directly blocked the upper line space, actively left room for the bottom line, and allowed to make breakthroughs.
But if Roy rushes in, he will have to face Duncan and Oberto, and the scoring pressure is quite high.
Roy weighed for a moment, pulled the ball back, rushed to the line in a blink of an eye, rushed to the left side of the free throw line, and stopped and pulled out quickly.
When! The basketball hits the front basket and rebounds and falls.
Duncan grabbed the basketball casually, moved forward two steps, raised his hand and passed the right sideline, and Parker caught the ball and rushed.
"Return to defense, return to defense..." Monty shouted when he saw the Spurs attack as if he had a program trigger command.
Cheers broke out in the stadium, Parker dribbled the ball to the elbow area on the right side of the frontcourt in three seconds, and a landmark emergency stop turned around, instantly passing Jack who was trying to intercept Jack, and rushed into the paint area like a small gyro. Facing the double-team, he rushed to the ball and jumped.
The basketball flew straight to the bottom corner on the left, Bowen received the ball in a large open space, ignored Webster's return to defense, and raised his hand and made a three-pointer.
Swish! Hollow into the net, 11 to 0.
Cheers burst into tears in the arena, and Su Yang turned his head to look at McMillan, thinking that he should ask for a pause.
Jack, who was pushing the ball, also looked at the bench, but McMillan did not take action and didn't know what he was thinking.
Jack gritted the bullet and took the ball across the center line, handed it to Roy, who was on the 45-degree three-point line on the left, and headed straight to the bottom corner.
Webster lifted the wall from the elbow area to cover it, and Roy took the opportunity to rush to the free throw line, facing Bowen in dislocation.
But Bowen's defense is better than Finley. Roy hesitated a little, and Finley chased him again, and double teaming was formed.
Roy hurriedly passed the ball, while Webster received the ball and lowered the center of gravity, rushed to the basket without caring about anything, and forced a jump.
Beep! The referee blew a whistle and blew Duncan to defend the thug, giving Webster two free throws.
Duncan spread his hands to show his silence, while the Spurs requested a substitution, and Ginobili trotted into the court to replace Finley.
With boos all over the field, Webster stood on the free throw line and bounced back into the net for the first time.
The Trail Blazers broke the scoring drought, and the entire bench breathed a sigh of relief, and Su Yang said in his heart that it was not easy.
Webster smiled and interacted with his teammates at high high, and then stood on the free throw line again.
The booed the whole field followed closely, and Duncan jumped to catch the rebound for the second time.
The Spurs launched a counterattack, and Parker slowly dribbled the ball across the center line, standing at the top of the arc with confidence on his face.
Chapter completed!