The Rest, Only Noise

Chapter 1071: Devil in the field

Rudy Tomjanovich implements the "you're sick or your life" guideline very well.

Since the Blazers are weak on the inside, they should give full play to their inside advantages and concentrate on beating the opponent's inside.

This put the Blazers at a loss from the start.

When the audience's attention was attracted by the police chase scene on the big screen, Ewing led the team to a 25-14 lead with 9 points and 11 rebounds in a single quarter like a Titan.

Bill Laimbeer said: "I can responsibly say that the window of Portland's victory over New York has been permanently closed with the Lithuanian acl, Michael Jordan would be the tragic man of the '90s, no he was better than Tragic was even more miserable. Because we all knew he was the best player, and Tragic wasn't the best player at the time, he was just one of the best."

"Besides Wilt Chamberlain, is there any recognized best player who can't win a title?"

Ranbir takes Chamberlain as an example, which is actually more disturbing.

Because even Chamberlain has two championship rings, and Jordan doesn't have any creditable team honors other than the ncaa national championship and the olympic championship.

It's not a sad thing to be looked down upon by Ranbir.

Maybe Blazers fans should be happy because Laimbeer is always the opposite of prophecy.

This is a strange phenomenon.

Laimbeer's favorite team always loses suddenly. He felt that there was no suspense in the game, and suspense always appeared suddenly, and then the lead was reversed.

Laimbeer's reverse prophecy battle of fame was last year's finals game 6 and game 7. He sentenced the Knicks to death twice in front of tens of millions of viewers during the national live broadcast. As a result, the Blazers lost in the end.

So starting from the second quarter, the "Lanbir's optimistic" buff came into play.

Trail Blazers veteran Larry Nance, the old man chatting about teenage madness, grabbed offensive rebounds from Ewing and Rodman's heads, and completed a shocking dunk that diverted the audience's attention for a second.

Nance's dunk woke Jordan up.

After that, Jordan opened the unparalleled, scoring 9 points in a row, helping the Blazers to recover the point difference back to single digits.

Tomjanovich called a timeout.

Returning from the timeout, Wilson responded with a three-pointer, pulling the difference to double digits again.

Barkley straightened his stance and received the ball more from a position he was familiar with.

Although Kemp has completed the evolution from an All-Star to a superstar, to compare with Barkley, it can only be said that the defense is stronger and the offense is still inferior.

And Barkley's offense can overwhelm Kemp's defense at will.

If Camp in his best form is the template for the perfect power forward, how should a superstar like Barkley be defined?

Watching Barkley play, Louie can clearly feel how much his strength has an advantage against players in his position.

He doesn't have many admirable skills, just an unstoppable body.

Each time, Barkley was able to get into the best position, borrowing power from his opponents, seemingly grudgingly but actually making it easy.

If not, his instant explosiveness can help him grab offensive rebounds.

After Barkley exerted his strength, the Blazers began to concentrate personnel in the restricted area.

Because the Knicks' biggest advantage is the restricted area.

In order to ensure that the rebounds are not destroyed by Ewing and the others, and in order not to let Ewing and Kemp dominate the basket, they would rather let the Knicks out of the perimeter.

The Knicks' perimeter is not allowed.

They were killed by the Knicks on the perimeter last year.

This is undoubtedly a big gamble, and it is also two bottles of poison born from the flaws of the lineup.

After Sabonis was out for the season, the Blazers had to face such a choice. If they wanted to take care of both ends as before, they would only be beaten by the Knicks.

Wilson scored a three-pointer, Miller also began to score a three-pointer, and after that, the Knicks' shooters all scored three-pointers.

At halftime, the Knicks had a 20-point lead.

Although the advantage is huge, Louis in front of the TV is not happy at all.

Because the Blazers weren't what a team down 20 points should be.

"Last year, New York came back from a 20-point halftime deficit," Jordan told reporters. "Why can't we do it? Why can't we?"

No one can tell him why the Knicks can reverse, and no one can say the Blazers must not reverse in the second half.

Nothing is impossible in competitive sports.

In the second half, the Blazers were familiar with the way the Knicks played.

It's the kind of brutality they once displayed at any cost.

In the second half of last year's tiebreaker, they relied on this style of play to make the unstoppable Blazers on the offensive end misfire.

Riley was forced to change lineups, then lost to the Knicks in a defensive battle, switched back to the offensive lineup again, and was reversed.

Riley, who once fantasized about using the offense to set the trend of the times, no longer has similar ideas after that game.

The Knicks proved that, as long as the referees loosened their grips, they could limit any offensive team with brutality.

Whether it's the showtime Lakers or the 93 Trail Blazers who claim to have the strongest offensive ability in history.

The Knicks even suffocated the Celtics dynasty at the end of its peak with defense in 1988, when it was a little green.

There is nothing they can't do.

Any attempt to beat them with an attack will prove to be a self-inflicted joke.

So Riley gave a inflammatory speech in the locker room.

He asked his players to think about how the Knicks had beaten them over the past few years.

He even cites Kevin McHale's famous clothesline foul on Bird as an example.

This undoubtedly touched the heart of Isiah Thomas.

Game 7 of the 1988 Eastern Conference Finals remains the game he least wants to recall.

The unwillingness to lose, the anger at the Knicks, eventually turned into pure hatred at Riley's instigation.

That hatred made the Blazers the most feared team.

Stockton called the pick-and-roll and was caught violently.

Within seconds, Stockton dropped the ball and was knocked to the ground by Clifford Robinson, who came to double-team.

The Knicks are trying to match that intensity, but the Blazers' range of motion is well beyond basketball.

Camp and Barclay were already in the dominant position, but their teeth were knocked out by Fliggy's elbow.

He had to come off.

After Rodman came up, the Knicks finally had someone to match the strength of the Blazers.

The game became increasingly difficult to end.

But Louis's brows were getting tighter and tighter.

What Curry taught us about Tyronn Lue's brainless double-team tactics is that even the best shooter in history will fail under such a defense.

What the Blazers have done is no longer within the scope of basketball.

It's like another game, it still operates according to most of the rules of basketball, but there is an unspoken rule of "you can do anything to the opponent as long as you don't kill them".

Dick Bavita, Hugh Hollins and Earl Strom, the scum of the three referees, completely acquiesced to the Blazers' brutality.

Louie's blood pressure was high, because Rudy didn't know how to control the field at this scale. He didn't put pressure on the referee, but just adjusted in a panic.

Can you blame him?

After all, this is his first year coaching, and he doesn't have enough experience to deal with the unexpected situation tonight.

Although he did a lot of wrong things, he was right about one thing, that is, he gave the players enough trust.

He kept emphasizing solidarity, helping each other, and then demanding tit-for-tat from his teammates, as Louie did.

But Riley still achieved his purpose.

The Knicks' perimeter shooting has plummeted, and only Miller can consistently score.

So Miller became the focus of the Blazers defensive object.

The confrontational intensity of the competition has broken through the sky, and body supremacy has begun to be implemented. Only those with the strongest physical talent can gain a foothold in the competition.

Ewing is still the king of the paint.

Wilson gave up outside shots and repeatedly dribbled to the basket for dunks.

Jordan staged the most iconic scene of the game in the middle of the third quarter. He came in with the ball from the left wing, took off from the paint area, and pulled the bar with both hands twice in the air. Covering the ball and changing the ball back to his right hand when his body fell, he pulled the stick four times in the whole process, and finally threw the ball into the air with a magical touch, hitting the board~www.readwn.com~ Most of the audience were caught in the chase scene between Simpson and the police Attracted, they didn't know that they missed the opportunity to witness the first drawbar in history.

This ball is very demoralizing.

But Miller clapped his hands and shouted, "Give me that **** ball!"

When Miller got the ball, all of the Blazers' players felt like they were standing on end.

It was a deep-rooted fear.

Four men ran towards him, and Miller threw the ball in what Spike Lee called a "shit move."

"Shh!"

The first drawbar in history that shocked the audience is only 2 points.

And this unremarkable hollow goal counts as 3 points.

Miller frantically said to the four Blazers who were defending him: "I'm going to send you to God with a **** 3-pointer!"

Miller didn't know what he was doing, he challenged a group of mad dogs who had lost their minds.

More than ten seconds later, Isaiah Thomas deliberately pushed Miller from behind, hitting his waist and knocking him into the billboard with the ball.

Right in front of David Stern, a gang fight broke out on the court between two of the best basketball teams on the planet.

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