The Rest, Only Noise

Chapter 946: Trailblazer's Reverse Scale

As soon as the Blazers' Verdun defense came up, they gave the Knicks a punch.

Alvin Robertson's pressure on the ball made it difficult for Stockton to advance.

Jerome Curcy's double-team, in turn, made Stockton choose to pass the ball to Reggie Williams.

Xavier McDaniel's rough defense once again forced the Knicks to stop.

Fortunately, Williams has all-round skills, even if he encounters such a savage defense, he has no intention of retreating.

Called torture for 7 seconds, the Knicks let people see the tough side.

Sean Kemp mentioned a response from beyond the 3-point line, breaking the Blazers' Verdun defense.

This was just the first possession of the Knicks' second unit against the Verdun defense.

It's not a joy to break it, because what they need to think about is facing this line of defense for 4-6 minutes in a row.

How to break it safely and effectively for the next 4-6 minutes is the first thing to focus on.

Compared with last season, the Blazers have become stronger in hard power, but the Knicks are not unchanged.

It only took Kemp less than a year to go from the star sixth man to the starter and now as a superstar who can change the situation of the game.

Clifford Robinson was close to defending. Kemp leaned on the back and turned around suddenly. That speed was like a vortex in the water, throwing Clifford's center of gravity away, and went to the basket to meet Anthony Mason's help.

"Shh!"

Kemp used brute force to break the ball and successfully scored the ball by throwing.

"Is Danny Manning really better than him?" Tomjanovich asked inflated.

Louie is still sober: "Do you think Sean can bring Indiana to the Heat?"

Tomjanovich has confidence in Kemp: "How do you know if you haven't tried it?"

"Absolutely not!" Willis Reid, Kemp's supervising coach, poured a bowl of cold water. "That kid can't even make himself play more than 30 minutes of games stably."

What Reed was talking about was the problem of Kemp's inability to control the foul count.

This problem has existed since Kemp's rookie season.

But Louie never reminded Camp to change.

In this matter, Louis has a selfishness, and he still needs such a problem with Camp for the time being.

Because of the fouls, he can't play more than 40 minutes when he needs to like Wilson and Ewing.

A Kemp who spends about 30 minutes per game can barely coexist with Rodman, and a Kemp who plays more than 35 minutes per game and can play more than 40 minutes in key games will make Rodman not get enough playing time. .

However, Louis also knew that Camp would sooner or later correct this problem.

If he's going to be the perfect power forward for Louie, he'll have to correct his fouling.

This does not require the reminder and supervision of others, and he can do it by himself.

Half a minute later, the Blazers' Verdun defense caused the Knicks' first turnover.

Robertson disrupted Stockton's dribble, and the man's gangster-like defensive style presented a serious challenge to the Knicks' ball-handler.

Louie called Kemp, pointed to the backcourt, and asked him to go to the back more to respond.

After that, the Blazers' pressing defense prevented the Knicks from sending the ball to Stockton.

Reggie Williams dribbled the ball and made a great first step to get past Cauchy's defense.

I thought it could be transported to the front court cleanly, but McDaniel decisively attacked from behind him and knocked him out of the court.

"Beep!!"

The first time it happened, Kemp rushed in front of McDaniel and pushed him to the ground: "You **** like this?"

McDaniel did not feel any guilt for his violent foul. Instead, it was Kemp who stood up for his teammates and aroused his disgust.

The X-Men incarnated as the X-Thug, he stood up and reached out to grab Camp's neck.

As a result, Kemp was not polite to him, raising his hand and punching the opponent's cheek.

Things have changed since then.

When the referee reacted, the two sides were already in a ball.

Five people are expected to join the conflict, three on the Knicks side, two on the Blazers side, not counting McDaniel, who was punched out of combat by Kemp.

"Erwin, what do you think of the violence on the field?" Bob Costas asked his partner.

The tragic master smiled lightly: "I oppose all stadium violence, but those who actively use violence should be prepared to be countered by violence."

"Do you mean Xavier?" Costas asked.

"I mean all those who use violence." Tragedy teachers never die.

As a result of this conflict, Camp eats two T's and gets kicked out.

McDaniel took two T's but wasn't ejected because Camp's punch left him delirious and couldn't keep hitting.

Subsequent players who participated in the battle were not held accountable.

McDaniel replaced Kemp with himself, and it seemed that the Blazers profited, but the latter's counterattack boosted the morale of his teammates.

Louie gave Rodman a look and let him play.

Rodman swaggered onto the court with a contemptuous attitude towards the Blazers: "You can't beat us when you play; you can't beat us even more when you fight. I'll teach you how to be a man now, sir."

Louie really wishes he had Rodman's confidence, even half?

McDaniel's departure left the Blazers' Verdun defense with a vacancy.

Riley's choice was to increase the strength of this line of defense, so Jordan replaced it.

As the core player of the team, Jordan's addition is equal to the Blazers' showdown enlargement move.

Their heart to win has been shown.

The Verdun defensive line with Jordan is the most terrifying, and the intensity can be increased to the maximum on both ends of the offense and defense.

Although Rodman said ruthlessly on the court, his actual performance did not match the on-the-spot feedback.

On the contrary, it was the Verdun defense led by Jordan, who prevented the Knicks from reaching the half court twice in five rounds, and successfully passed the half court three times. .

The last few minutes of the first quarter, the Knicks only scored 1 point.

The Blazers scored 11 points under the leadership of Jordan.

With an 11-1 scoreline, the Blazers overtook the score.

The game was so long that one quarter felt like a year had passed.

But Louie confirmed a few things through the first quarter.

As long as the system works to the extreme, it can compete with the pioneers' quad-core starter.

Because Barkley, Sabonis, Thomas will be ordered on the defensive end.

The quad-centric offensive drive is terrifying, but the Knicks have plenty of defensive resources to counter it.

The defensive end only needs to play normally, the offensive end is aimed at the opponent's three dishes, and the four-core lineup as strong as the Trail Blazers cannot beat them with the so-called "unity" and "chemical reaction" alone.

Verdun has a strong defense, but without Jordan, it's the same as last year.

Once Jordan joins this lineup, the intensity will escalate and break the balance on the court.

In last year's finals, the Blazers took advantage of the Flying Man's offense and defense to the fullest to reach Game 7 with the Knicks.

Today, Riley let Jordan into the Verdun defense is the embodiment of "winner eagerness".

On the Knicks side, Ewing and Wilson both sat off the court to rest.

"I reckon they will keep the Verdun line for a few more minutes."

Louis first announced the lineup for the second quarter.

"MAR, Alex, Benj, Kevin, Patrick."

"First of all, the three outsiders." Louis arranged in detail, "What you have to face is the Blazers' craziest full-court pressing, you must pay attention to cooperation, you can't take chances, you must pass the ball when it is time to pass, Trust your teammates."

"As long as we can bring the ball to the frontcourt smoothly, the rhythm is in our hands. The Blazers like to switch defenses, then we let him switch defenses, but be smart, Kevin and Patrick..." Louie picked up The tactical board said quickly, "The tactics of all positional warfare are still the same, but you have to be flexible, like this..."

Doug Mo stayed with Louie the whole time.

Hearing Louie cracking the Blazers' pressing strategy~www.wuxiaspot.com~ couldn't help but praise: "Good idea, they never thought of this move."

As the active first coach, Louie has a lot of strengths that people are talking about.

For example, the behind-the-scenes operation, the adjustment of players' psychology, and the construction of the team system according to their aptitude... But in the eyes of his colleagues in the coaching staff, his most unique ability is his ability to adapt during the game. of determination.

There is no perfect match.

If it's an afterthought, every game can find tons of problems.

Some coaches need to learn lessons through replays, but they may still make mistakes next time. Good coaches avoid making the same mistakes, and bad coaches just allow problems to tear the team apart day in and day out.

It is here that Louis is most impressed by his colleagues.

He knows the team's problems like the back of his hand, and his opponent's problems even more so. For a team as invulnerable as the Blazers look, he still has plenty to target.

Now, he's going to touch the Blazers' backside -- their proud switching system.

This is the basis for the strength of the Blazers' defense. They believe in this philosophy. So far this season, they have played all over the league and have never met an opponent.

For Louie, the only way to make this system problematic is to change the pick-and-roll method in the inside?

(https://)

Set a small goal first, such as 1 second to remember: Shukeju mobile version reading website:

Tap the screen to use advanced tools Tip: You can use left and right keyboard keys to browse between chapters.

You'll Also Like