XiaSports > Basketball > Curry scored 49 points to double kill the Spurs: Wen Ban tried his best, but

Curry scored 49 points to double kill the Spurs: Wen Ban tried his best, but

Basketball

Curry, after scoring a season-high 46 points, hit a new high of 49 points, double-killing the Spurs and making free throws to win.

Wenbanyama tried his best, but the two guards of Fox and Castle really lost to Curry. Coach Mitch was given a teaching lesson by Coach Cole: technology and wisdom, defeating Zenith Star Black Technology.

The opening was the same: Curry scored 10 of the Warriors' 18 points, bullying Champagne's pace, taking advantage of Castle's restlessness, and attacking Cornet's retreat: leading 18 to 12.

When he came off the court, the Spurs used Wenban's rim protection and Fox's ball-handling, as well as a 1-4 defense switch, to force the Warriors' second team to a duel. But this time the coaching level is revealed:

- The Warriors pass a lot of strong and weak side passes, catch the ball on the block and move, and have many points; the Spurs are over and over: Wenban or Fox or Castle start, either a personal attack or a strong shot from the corner.

When Curry returns and the Warriors set up space formations to score points, Richard will be able to vote for the literary class and stop the Spurs.

After that timeout, what strategy did Coach Mickey use?

Vinbanyama holds the ball and Konette picks and rolls with four or five. The Warriors were forced to switch defenses four or five times: Horford came to guard Bunyama.

I laughed at it.

On the other hand, Chasing Dream looked for Richard to take a long-range shot, Jimmy broke through the weak side and shot Cornette from a long distance, and Curry chased after the goalkeeper: 8 points in one breath - the Warriors have carefully thought about the Spurs system, but what about the Spurs?

For the Warriors' first goal in the second half, Moody chased Wenban; then Curry + Dream Chaser transferred Wenban out of the penalty area, and Moody picked up the offensive rebound. They are all just the right medicine - and they are all the same routines used in the previous game.

Did Coach Mickey review the game and do his homework after being knocked down by the Warriors in the last game?

Of course, the Spurs still found ways to get something back: Wenban fed Fox, Wenban hook shot, Wenban dunked, and Wenban made long shots. It’s not that Coach Mickey woke up again, it’s still Wenban’s personal ability.

The Warriors' response was very simple: Curry first shot a long shot from Kornet, and when the Spurs three-man team attacked, Curry asked Jimmy for a free throw.

After Wen's class was eliminated, the Spurs seemed to be able to play better: Vassell's weak-side ball rush and inside cutting also came out.

At the end of the third quarter, Fox seemed to have discovered a blind spot: In order to deal with Wenban, the Warriors would pile up people on the strong side, so Fox and Keldon even looked for Champagne, who was left open on the weak side. The result was Champagne + Fox vs. Curry: Curry scored 22 points in the third quarter of the last game and 17 points in the third quarter today, but the Spurs actually held on.

At the beginning of the fourth quarter, without Curry, the Warriors' offense was extinguished: Wenbanyama was on the court, and combined with the 1-4 defense change, the Warriors were completely unable to attack the basket, and even veteran Jimmy couldn't do anything about it. Wenban began to take over: Champagne took a long shot, looked for Sohan to cut inside, passed the ball less, and made a one-shot deal. A bit:

"Why don't you shout up?"

"I'm afraid of shouting!"

When the Spurs lead 87:80 , one of Bunban's consecutive shooting fakes was seen through by Dream Chaser, which instead put Bunban into a double-attack round; then Bunban Yamana's alley-oop dunk was not counted - I don't know why, those two rounds reminded me of Kawada Masashi defending Sakuragi Hanamichi, the old defensive legend versus the talented newcomer. After chasing 5 fouls, this was the Spurs' best opportunity.

But Curry is back.

The influence is fully activated.

What makes Curry terrible is not just the last 14 points in the fourth quarter, but the response to the details:

Wenban went to the three-point line to flank Curry and let Horford take a long shot, but Horford missed.

So Curry simply did not call the screen, scoring 10 points in a row, and was 5 points behind.

The Spurs used Wenbanyama to defend Payton Jr. and Vassell to defend Horford, so Podger took advantage of Library's gravity to find Payton for a long shot.

Curry was flanked by half-court and took the ball; Podger took a long shot himself and caught up to two points.

The Warriors resorted to the evil trick of attacking Wenban from one side with three people, and Payton used Kuyou's gravity to shoot from a long distance: the Warriors took the lead.

Then the technical and tactical level of both sides is truly reflected:

Chasing Dream feeds Curry to cut inside; Jimmy steals the ball from Fox; Chasing Dream cuts inside, Jimmy cuts inside and throws - the gravity around Curry, the Warriors pass and cut smoothly.

What about the Spurs? Fox made a strong shot, Castle added, and Wenban added: the tactics couldn't be run, it was forced.

Wenban magically blocked Jimmy and had a chance to seal the victory, but Fox missed two jumpers and Curry made a free throw to win.

Coach Mickey's final tactics were just "Fox went to the frontcourt and shot a 17-footer" and "Next time, change it and shoot an 18-footer?"

The Spurs had 28 assists in the game, but there were only a handful of them when the positional warfare tactics ran smoothly:

Castle was disrupted by Moody, and Wenban and Fox took turns holding the ball. Chasing Dreams still prevented Wenban from entering the penalty area, and the routine they used was that after Wenban attracted the Warriors to attack, the Champagnies shot from the corner, and Vassell's inward cut was a rare off-ball tactic for the Spurs.

On the other hand, Cornette and Wen Banshen were chased by Curry, and Kuang was cut to the basket. The 1-4 defense forced the Warriors to attack with the ball, but they still couldn't stop the Warriors' 15 offensive rebounds and the last-minute backdoor..

Coach Cole's responses around Curry include: when Curry is retreating, he rushes for shots, when he is flanked, he looks for Payton and the others to take long shots, and Moody shoots for the free class; Jimmy rushes to the front and applies pressure from the wing to force the Spurs to make mistakes - the Spurs made 20 turnovers - taking away the inside line of the free class. At the last moment, the Spurs were afraid of Curry, so they played multiple passes and cuts to the back door.

Curry's horror today was not just 49 points, but the combination of punches triggered by his response after his execution forced the Spurs to make changes:

Both he and the Warriors responded to the Spurs' arrangements for him - open three-pointers by Payton, Richard, and Podger, and inwards by Jimmy.

On the other hand, the Spurs came to the end with the help of Castle and Wenban, and with Fox advancing to the frontcourt for a one-on-one duel.

You can feel that Curry and Chai Meng have studied literature classes; has Coach Mickey studied Curry? have no idea.

The Spurs' final chance of victory came from Wenban's blocking and supplementation: it was not the success of offensive tactics, but the advent of Wenban's Zenith star technology.

And Curry finally sent away the Spurs - his 44th game with 40 points or more after turning 30, tying with Jordan - like he told Coach Mickey:

You need to follow the laws of basketball, and you can't just rely on Zenith Star's black technology to be your savior...

source:livescore truc tiep

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