马刺 vs 国王 113 - 140 技术统计 | 视频集锦
By MateoMayorga | Pounding The Rock (PtR), 2024-12-07 11:42:13
由生成式人工智能翻译,译文内容可能不准确或不完整,以原文为准。
连续第二个晚上,防守令人失望
缺少维克托·文班亚马(Victor Wembanyama)、德文·瓦塞尔(Devin Vassell)和特雷·琼斯(Tre Jones)的马刺队,未能弥补在输给国王队的比赛中对阵芝加哥公牛队时防守不力的错误。
在第一节,克里斯·保罗(Chris Paul)控制了比赛节奏,进攻端的额外努力显而易见。银黑军团抢下四个进攻篮板,朱利安·尚帕尼(Julian Champagnie)和凯尔登·约翰逊(Keldon Johnson)都将这些篮板转化为了得分。
但防守从一开始就存在问题,三分线外的保护薄弱,被对手八投四中。除此之外,德阿隆·福克斯(De’Aaron Fox)、德玛尔·德罗赞(DeMar DeRozan)和多曼塔斯·萨博尼斯(Domantas Sabonis)各自轻松命中三个投篮。
12分钟过后,比赛打成33平。
随后,马刺队的防守更加被动,由于无法阻止对手的运球或在不犯规的情况下进行防守,他们让对手以50%的命中率得到了36分。进攻端也几乎同样糟糕,命中率只有38%。
半场结束时,马刺队以59-69落后。球队在内线得到24分,快攻得到6分,二次进攻得到15分。
接下来,马刺队在下半场开始后对运球动作反应过度,让对手在内线轻松得分。萨博尼斯在禁区内得到四个篮筐,通过无球跑动获得了空位。萨克拉门托的马利克·蒙克(Malik Monk)和福克斯在中距离及以内也合力命中了14投6中。
在进攻端,斯蒂芬·卡斯尔(Stephon Castle)和哈里森·巴恩斯(Harrison Barnes)是马刺队中仅有的两位多次命中的球员。球队其他球员在这一节14投5中。
第四节开始时,马刺队落后14分。索汉(Jeremy Sochan)通过背身单打和空切上篮得到两次得分,但球队始终无法扭转局面,因为他们无法破坏萨克拉门托的进攻,在最后12分钟内让对手20投14中。
马刺队最终以113-140输掉了比赛。球队在内线得到48分,快攻得到15分,二次进攻得到19分。
观察
- 卡斯尔花了大量时间防守萨克拉门托的顶级球员福克斯。即使他处于正确的位置,他的对手也能在近距离和远距离得分。此外,福克斯多次利用掩护迫使卡斯尔换防。在一个回合中,卡斯尔完成了一次抢断,发动了一次马刺队的快攻,最终由尚帕尼得分。在保罗下场休息时,他获得了组织进攻的机会,并在运球突破对手后做出了正确的判断。但他终结能力不强,在内线错失了三次投篮。他当晚的两个最佳表现是抢下防守篮板后一条龙上篮,以及在第三节通过身体对抗将球传给索汉完成空接。
- 扎克·科林斯(Zach Collins)的傲慢让他被罚出场。首先,他抱怨自己对萨博尼斯在篮下的第三次犯规。然后,他在走向场边的路上对一名裁判爆粗口。他应该更明智一些。角色球员不能那样说话,而且在没有文班的情况下,他的球队需要他镇守内线。
- 查尔斯·巴塞(Charles Bassey)在内线发挥了自己的力量,多次送出盖帽,其中一次盖帽引发了约翰逊的快攻得分。由于科林斯的被罚出场,他和桑德罗·马穆克拉什维利(Sandro Mamukelashvili)的上场时间比预期的要长。尽管如此,他们仍然无法阻止萨博尼斯,后者看起来像是在对付轻量级选手。
- 第二节的防守非常糟糕,让国王队16投9中,并且犯规过多,让对手获得了14次罚球。国王队全场比赛24罚22中。
- 索汉没有延续他的两双纪录,本场比赛10投5中得到14分,还有5个篮板、2次助攻和2次失误。尽管如此,他的无球跑动做得很好,并且在换防后不得不防守福克斯。
- 圣安东尼奥的替补席在上半场表现更胜一筹,以29-16领先萨克拉门托。约翰逊是替补席上的得分王,在第一节就得分上双。他通过快攻和半场阵地战攻击篮筐得分。下半场,马刺队的替补席得分比对手少了8分。
- 国王队球员的运球速度是暴露马刺三分线防守的主要因素之一。马刺队必须在单防方面做得更好,并在对手传球后及时进行干扰。
点击查看原文:Sacramento at San Antonio, Final Score: Kings overpower Spurs, 140-113
Sacramento at San Antonio, Final Score: Kings overpower Spurs, 140-113
The defense was a letdown for the second night in a row
The Spurs, minus Victor Wembanyama, Devin Vassell, and Tre Jones, failed to make amends for refusing to defend against the Chicago Bulls in a losing effort against the Kings.
In the first quarter, Chris Paul controlled the pace and the extra effort on offense was palpable. The Silver and Black recovered four offensive rebounds and Julian Champagnie plus Keldon Johnson scored on all of them.
But the defense was problematic early on and weak at protecting the arc, getting torched for four of eight 3-pointers. On top of that, De’Aaron Fox, DeMar DeRozan and Domantas Sabonis got loose for three field goals apiece.
Through 12 minutes, the match was tied at 33 points
Then the Spurs’ protections were put on its heels further, conceding 36 points on 50 percent shooting because of an inability to stop the dribble or defend without fouling. The offense was almost as suspect, only producing on 38 percent of attempts.
At halftime, the Spurs were behind 69-59 on the scoreboard. The team had 24 paint points, six on the break, and 15 via second chances.
Next, the Spurs came out of the break overreacting to dribble moves, giving up a surplus of shots in the paint. Sabonis scored four baskets in the restricted, getting free off the ball. Sacramento’s Malik Monk and Fox also combined for six of 14 baskets from mid-range and below.
On offense, Castle and Harrison Barnes were the only Spurs to make multiple field goals. The rest of the team made five of 14 shots in the period.
The fourth quarter started with the Spurs down 14 points. Sochan provided two shots on a post-up and rolled to the rim, but the group was never able to recover because it couldn’t blow up Sacramento’s actions, giving up 14 of 20 shots in the last 12 minutes.
The Spurs lost 140-113. The team had 48 paint points, 15 on the break and 19 via second chances.
Observations
- Castle got lots of time guarding Fox, Sacramento’s top player. Even when he was in the right position, his counterpart scored on him at close and long range. Additionally, Fox used many screens to get him switched off. On one play, Castle intercepted a pass, sparking a Spurs fast break on which Julian Champagnie scored. He got to run the offense when Paul sat, and did a nice job of making the right reads after beating his defender on the dribble. But he was not a strong finisher, missing three shots in the lane. His two best sequences of the night was ripping a defensive rebound and going coast to coast for a layup, and connecting with Sochan for a lob through contact in the third quarter.
- Zach Collins’ insolence got himself ejected. First, he complained about picking up his third foul against Sabonis at the rim. Then he barked the F word at one of the officials on his way to the sideline. He should know better. Role players can’t talk like that, and his team needed him on the frontline without Wemby.
- Charles Bassey threw his weight around, defending the paint, registering multiple blocks, including one that sparked a fastbreak score by Johnson. He and Sandro Mamukelashvili played longer than anyone expected because of Collins’ ejection. Still, they were not enough to stop Sabonis, who looked like he was dealing with lightweights.
- The defense in the second quarter was so poor, it allowed the Kings to convert nine of 16 baskets, and fouled so much, they were punished with 14 opponent free throws. The Kings only made 22 of 24 free throws for the game.
- Jeremy Sochan did not continue his double-double streak, finishing the game with 14 points on five of 10 shots, with five rebounds, two assists and two turnovers. Still, he did well moving off the ball and had to cover Fox after switches.
- San Antonio’s bench was superior in the first half, outscoring Sacramento’s 29-16. Johnson was the lead reserve, logging double figures in the first quarter. He scored by attacking the basket on the break and in the half-court. In the second half, the Spurs’ bench was outscored by eight points.
- The Kings’ speed on the dribble was one of the main ingredients that exposed the 3-point line. The Spurs have to do a better job of playing one-on-one defense and contest on time after the opponent’s pass.
By MateoMayorga, via Pounding The Rock