The Rest, Only Noise

Chapter 620: reach the limit

Update: Watching Jordan being tortured on the court was a joy.

Thanks to Rick Pitino, the ecstasy he poured into Jordan for the all-time-best kid in the game the wrong way.

Full defense, full attack.

After Louie put Ewing back on the court, Jordan was less aggressive in hitting the paint, but if he couldn't make a shot, he still had to come inside.

Ewing therefore gave him a big hat.

That cover took the noise in Memorial Coliseum down several levels.

Amazingly, Danny Ainge's counterattack was pushed too slowly, and Jordan was caught up later.

Dan Marley catches the ball and tries to dunk, but Jordan catches up with lightning and blocks it.

"!@¥#…"

The stadium was full of people, and fans raved about Jordan like he was one of a kind.

He was truly unique, in the 80s, like The Cosbys (-1992) ⑴. Before Jordan, the league had the great Skywalker, who was as dominant in comedy as the contemporaneous Army Field Hospital (M*A*S*H 1972-1983).

But in the 1980s, "Army Field Hospital" ended, Skywalker self-destructed, Bird and Tragic division were very good, but they could not meet the fans' imagination of the limit of the sport.

Pitino thought that Louie replaced Ewing early in the second quarter to use his inside advantage to knock Portland's penalty area.

They were dead wrong, and Ewing knew it was a shooter's game.

The Blazers' defense was too indulgent to the Knicks shooter, and Pitino, like all coaches who despise outside shots, put pressure from the high post and the paint at the top of the list.

As for the three-point line, they just want to hold the top of the arc and be successful.

Since the start of the game, Ewing has provided 5 assists. He is willing to make wedding dresses for his teammates, and he has found that as long as he has the ball in the low post, as Louis said, the Blazers will not treat the Knicks shooters as human beings and will attack decisively. Him, the shooter.

Ewing's assist came easily, just a flick of his hand, and Dan Marley easily got a shot.

Even if he doesn't have enough confidence in his shooting, he can hold the ball in that position to attract the Blazers' defense, and then do a pick-and-roll with McHale, and give the ball to McHale who cuts inside.

McHale went down to attract Drexler, who was chasing and defending Ainge. Ainge, who fell into the open position, easily caught the ball, leaving him with a large open position.

Angie did his part to make a three-pointer.

"Shh!"

42 to 30

In the frontcourt, Jordan assisted Drexler with a jumper in return.

32 to 42

The Blazers suddenly gave up double-teaming Ewing.

This brings a certain test to Ewing, he has to prove that he can eat Rick Schmitz.

In the four years he has entered the league, Louie has never tempered Ewing's offense. It can be said that his low-post singles are still at the college level.

Starting this season, Ewing's chances have increased.

Whenever the time is right, Louie will let him back.

Like this shot, his body completely pushed Schmitz away, turned around and rushed to the line, and after three big steps, he pulled up the back rabbit and made a jump shot.

Schmitz's hand twitched on his.

The referee blew the whistle and Ewing shot.

"AndOne!"

Louie said to Jordan, who was at a loss as to whether or not to flank Ewing: "You can't do it without help, don't you really think that the Dutchman can defend Patrick? Although Patrick is a bit strong from outside, but at the same time. A rookie is still fine."

Ewing looked at him unhappily: "Who do you think is strong outside and doing things in the middle?"

Louie didn't expect this guy to have such good ears.

Louis immediately defended: "Can't you see that I'm paralyzing them? That way they won't double-team you and let you continue one-on-one with him. You can't see my good intentions?"

Ewing somehow felt that Louie's so-called "good intentions" were not very intentional, because he said those words in front of Jordan.

Shouldn't this kind of thing be said in private?

If you say that you are showing weakness in person, will they still give you a chance to play singles?

Ewing was finally relieved, and he was also influenced by Louis' mentality. The more he thought about it, the more he felt that Louis was not a thing, and he was so angry that he made free throws crookedly.

"See? Fouling is also one of the ways to limit Patrick. Next time he takes the ball and fouls directly!"

Louie's kind reminder was exchanged for Jordan's silent response.

"Hey!"

When the Blazers' offense advanced to the frontcourt, Louis made a sound, prompting the subsequent defense.

The man who guarded Jordan was Ainge.

Regardless of height or weight, Jordan crushed Ainge, gave him the ball, and it was inevitable to blow Ainge.

What Drexler feared was Ewing behind Ainge, who was like a ghost, ready to approach Jordan at any time.

Jordan knew there was a problem behind him when he noticed that the glider wasn't passing the ball.

He couldn't get the ball, so he simply released his position. Ainge, Hornacek, and Marley, who were obviously present, were not the Knicks' best defensive perimeter and flank, but they brought huge trouble to the Blazers' tactical operation.

Strong pocket formations, with Ewing struts, blooming in the center, exerting pressure on all sides.

Drexler's ball went to white guard Jerry SichtingPG.

Hitting was powerless to solve the dilemma facing the Blazers, and he had to wait until Jordan got out of the defense and passed the ball.

Jordan received the ball on the perimeter, and regardless of Ainge or anyone else, as long as he saw him getting the ball from the perimeter, he would step back a few meters and throw it to prevent a sudden attack.

When Jordan chose to dribble inward, Ainge on the opposite side, Marley on the weak side and Hornacek on the strong side instantly formed a three-man iron barrel formation.

They forced Jordan to pass the ball to the tallest player in the game, Schmitz.

Schmitz didn't have time to deal with the ball and had to get it right away.

Therefore, Ewing anticipated his attack and successfully blocked it.

beep!

The Blazers were blocked with a 24-second violation.

Rick Pitino was stunned, knowing that his success rate in pushing a full-court press in the NBA by relying on intensity alone is very low.

Therefore, he will design many defensive traps to assist players to complete the defense.

But he never imagined that his own defensive traps had no effect on the Knicks, and the Knicks' defensive traps had an effect on them.

This has to mention the strength of the special attributes of the role players, which determines the extent to which they will be ignored on the offensive end.

If the role players can guarantee the threat of open shots, opponents won't do much against your core player.

Man-to-man is the only proper defense.

If the shooting of the role players is unreliable, such as the Blazers, there are a group of players who are all right on the perimeter, plus Jordan himself is a three-pointer, how could Louie not design a lot of "two-pointers" around this. The tactic of disgusting people?

This is actually the spiritual core of the Jordan Law.

The smooth implementation of Jordan's Law depends on how much help Jordan's teammates can provide.

Only, after the Blazers hired Pitino as their head coach, Louie was pessimistic about the team's future.

Pitino's approach has overdrawn major players such as Jordan.

During the regular season, everyone will not use their full strength, because everyone knows that the playoffs are the real stage.

If you choose to play the regular season as the playoffs, you will naturally have an advantage. As long as you can improve to a greater intensity in the playoffs, you can play whatever you want.

But Pitino's approach is clearly overdone.

Even Jordan, Louie doesn't believe he can last a season.

Jordan, who was forced to stare, began to try to do something that seemed out of the ordinary.

He made a daring intrusion into the paint and got caught in the Knicks' pockets.

The New Yorker mercilessly knocked him to the ground.

That's what he learned in the Finals.

Sometimes referees give fouls, sometimes not.

He scored 11 points in six minutes this way, seven of which came from free throws.

Jordan was like a slaughtering killer, reaping the game frantically, chasing the difference to 4 points by himself.

Louie is sure that no one in the Knicks can compete with him at this intensity except Wilson.

Even Wilson is a notch off.

He's an executioner who has raised his butcher's knife, like Hannibal telling someone how he eats someone's body part.

This moment is bloody.

The soul trembled.

The **** of the best basketball player could last until the end of the first half, and fans at Memorial Coliseum are already cheering.

However, they never thought about why Jordan had to fight to such an extent for a regular season.

The last attack before the end of the first half.

Jordan held the ball from the outside, dragged the time, and came in in the last few seconds.

Louie had envisioned that Jordan might collapse in a few months, telling Pitino that he couldn't maintain that intensity any longer.

Or, he'll get hurt before crashing.

Either outcome is possible.

Louie only never thought that Jordan's body would exceed that limit in this game.

He rushed into the Knicks' pocket for the team and just wanted to score.

Jordan's lever action is as beautiful as Bob Dylan singing on stage, even Louie is drunk, and he warns Ewing in his heart: If he scores this goal, I will kill you!

Ewing's block didn't hit Jordan's ball ~www.readwn.com~ but he upset Jordan's balance.

Jordan's ball flew off his finger in a perfect parabola.

"Shh!"

The fans cheered for this, but their hero was unstoppable.

Louie scolded Ewing loudly, and for more than ten seconds, no one in the audience noticed that Jordan was injured.

Until Bill Shanely said, "Oh my God, Michael can't seem to get up!"

(1) If "Jumen" is Game of Thrones in the 1980s, "The Cosbys" is "Modern Family" in the 1980s. Unlike the latter, "The Cosbys" came out in the trough of the American sitcom, which redefined the genre and rescued NBC's precarious ratings, making them rich in 1989. Steal the NBA TV contract from CBS. One of the biggest differences between the NBA and CBS in the NBC era is their willingness to broadcast the games of the popular teams, which largely promotes the less popular teams.

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