马刺 vs 猛龙 121 - 103 技术统计 | 视频集锦
By Mateo Mayorga | Pounding The Rock (PtR), 2025-10-28 10:50:22
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。

圣安东尼奥马刺队击败了多伦多猛龙队,他们在比赛中一度更好地打出了自己的风格,并顶住了对手的末节反扑,从而自 2017 年以来首次取得 4 胜 0 负的开局。这是维克托·文班亚马 (Victor Wembanyama) 在得分方面较为“沉寂”的一晚——他以 87.5% 的命中率得到 24 分——但他似乎想借此证明,他的队友们完全有能力掌控比赛。
马刺队开局便将猛龙队甩在身后,在开场七分钟内取得了 27-10 的领先。尽管猛龙队在进入第二节前缩小了一些分差,但他们始终被马刺队压制着,因为他们的外线进攻哑火,而马刺队则有五名球员命中不止一球。
马刺队很快便完全掌控了局面。维克托·文班亚马在第二节听到了一些 MVP 的呼声,只要他在场,球队就从未真正面临被翻盘的危险。在最后六分钟,他们甚至打到了犯规罚球状态(bonus),并在命中七记弧顶三分和十一次篮下得分后,带着 19 分的领先优势进入了半场休息。
但下半场的剧本却截然不同。马刺队下半场开局打得十分草率,出现了四次失误,迫使教练米奇·约翰逊 (Mitch Johnson) 提早叫了暂停。第三节过半,他们仅有两次运动战进球和零星的几次罚球得分,而猛龙队则抓住了马刺的困境,一步步将比分追近。这段得分荒源于多伦多队提升了防守强度,而圣安东尼奥队的进攻则陷入停滞,并错失了一些空位跳投。
第四节开始,马刺队让哈里森·巴恩斯 (Harrison Barnes) 出任五号位,迫使客队(猛龙)在防守端需要应对五个攻击点,而不是像俾斯麦·比永博 (Bismack Biyombo) 在场时那样只需应对四个。随后,猛龙队打出一波 9-0 的攻势,将马刺的领先优势缩小到八分,但文班亚马、斯蒂芬·卡斯尔 (Stephon Castle) 和哈里森·巴恩斯联手还以颜色,带领圣安东尼奥队冲过了终点线。
赛后观察
- 在此前的三连胜中,马刺队的场均回合数(pace)在 NBA 中排名倒数第三 (97.13),而猛龙队在他们过去三场比赛中则是节奏第二快的球队。多伦多队在那些比赛中遇到的问题是,在全场飞奔后,他们在防守端的腿脚就没那么有劲了,但在下半场对阵马刺时情况并非如此。猛龙队在末段的发力,就像一位经验丰富的老拳手,在被年轻对手摸清套路之前,总能在比赛后半段愈战愈勇。
- 由于卢克·科内特 (Luke Kornet)、凯利·奥利尼克 (Kelly Olynyk) 和杰里米·索汉 (Jeremy Sochan) 缺阵,球队的替补大个子轮换阵容捉襟见肘。比永博被替换上场后,很快就在防守端作为弱侧协防者(low man)被连续冲击了三次。在文班亚马下场后,猛龙队如入无人之境,肆意冲击内线,马刺队在此期间净负 7 分,而在文班下场后的第二段轮换时间里,他们又净负 5 分。
- 雅各布·珀尔特尔 (Jakob Poeltl) 的移动速度跟不上文班亚马升级后的脚步,他的臂展也无法对后者的出手点构成威胁。文班在开场五分钟内就在他身上造成了两次犯规,并且他本场比赛的罚球命中数比运动战进球数还多三个。他还展示了自己的控卫技巧,亲自持球推进到前场,并且在一次快攻中为德文·瓦塞尔 (Devin Vassell) 送出了一记精妙传球。除此之外,猛龙队不得不派上他们的侧翼球员来对位*“灵巧的维克”*以匹配其速度,但同样无济于事。
- 斯蒂芬·卡斯尔延续了他赛季初在近距离攻击方面的恐怖表现。要知道,上赛季他在 0-3 英尺(篮下)范围的命中率仅为联盟平均水平。他在半场阵地战中通过突破防守球员到达自己的攻击位置,并获得了 14 次罚球,命中了其中的 9 次。失误是他本赛季为数不多的弱点之一,本周一的比赛再次印证了这一点,他送出 4 次助攻的同时却有 5 次失误。在本场比赛前,他场均失误高达 6.7 次。
- 迪伦·哈珀 (Dylan Harper) 的表现完全不像一个新秀。他在第一节末尾为球队的进攻画上点睛之笔,在最后 28 秒内通过得分和助攻导演了球队的最后 5 分,帮助马刺队将领先优势扩大到 41-29。
- 多伦多队的三位核心球员——布兰登·英格拉姆 (Brandon Ingram)、RJ·巴雷特 (RJ Barrett) 和斯科蒂·巴恩斯 (Scottie Barnes)——都是一般或低于平均水准的三分射手。马刺队的防守将他们三人的总得分限制在 47 分,命中率为 47%。上半场,英格拉姆在应对圣安东尼奥队的防守策略(coverages)时最为成功,他能够突入中路和防守后线,但下半场构成威胁的则是巴雷特。
点击查看原文:San Antonio vs. Toronto, Final Score: Spurs handle the Raptors, 121-103
San Antonio vs. Toronto, Final Score: Spurs handle the Raptors, 121-103

The San Antonio Spurs defeated the Toronto Raptors, playing their style better than them at times and surviving a late comeback attempt to improve to 4-0 for the first time since 2017. It was a quieter night from Victor Wembanyama in the scoring department — 24 points on 87.5 percent shooting — but it seemed like he was trying to make the point that his teammates are good enough to take the reins.
The Spurs put the Raptors in the rearview, taking a 27-10 lead in the first seven minutes. The Raptors closed some of the distance heading into the second quarter, but they were kept at arm’s length because their perimeter attack faltered, and the Spurs had five players log multiple baskets.
The Spurs soon took over. Victor Wembanyama heard some MVP chants in the second quarter, and the crew was never in danger of giving up a comeback while he was present. They even got into the bonus for the last six minutes and went to halftime ahead by 19 after making seven triples at the top of the key and 11 baskets in the lane.
But the second half followed a different script. The Spurs started the second half sloppily with four turnovers, causing coach Mitch Johnson to call an early timeout. They only had two baskets halfway through the third quarter with a handful of free throws, and the Raptors banked on those struggles, slowly creeping back into the game. The drought came from Toronto raising their pressure, and San Antonio’s offense going stagnant with some missed open jumpers.
The Spurs used Harrison Barnes at the five to start the fourth quarter, making the visitors defend five instead of four when Bismack Biyombo is on the floor. The Raptors subsequently cut the Spurs’ lead to eight on a 9-0 run, but Wembanayma, Stephon Castle and Harrison Barnes countered and powered San Antonio past the finish line.
Observations
- In the previous three wins, the Spurs averaged the third-slowest pace in the NBA (97.13), and the Raptors were the second-fastest team over their last three. The problem Toronto had over those games was that they didn’t have the same juice in their legs for defense after racing up the court, but that wasn’t the case against the Spurs in the second half. The Raptors late run was reminiscent of a veteran boxer getting stronger in the later rounds against a young opponent before their code is cracked.
- With Luke Kornet, Kelly Olynyk and Jeremy Sochan out, the backup big man rotation was desperately thin. Biyombo was summoned off the bench and attacked as the low man thrice quickly in his first minutes. The Raptors became looters in a riot without Wembanyama there to stop them as the Spurs were minus seven points in that span, then negative five in second non-Wemby minutes.
- Jakob Poeltl’s foot speed couldn’t keep up with Wembanyama’s upgraded footwork, nor could his reach challenge the release point. Wemby drew two fouls on him in the first five minutes and went on to make three more freebies than field goals. He also showed his point guard skills, taking the ball up court, plus had a marvelous feed to Devin Vassell on the break. On top of that, the Raptors had to deploy their wing players on Slick Vic to match speed, but they couldn’t do anything either.
- Stephon Castle continued his early-season streak of being a terror at close range. Keep in mind that he shot at just about league average last season at 0-3 feet. He got to his spots beating defenders in the half-court, and took 14 free throws, making nine. Turnovers have been one of his few weaknesses this year, and they were again on Monday with five against his four assists. He was averaging 6.7 turnovers before the game.
- Dylan Harper doesn’t play like a rookie. He added the finishing touches of the first quarter, assisting and scoring on five points in the last 28 seconds to push the Spurs’ lead to 41-29.
- Toronto’s top three players- Brandon Ingram, RJ Barrett and Scottie Barnes- are decent to below average at 3-point shooters. The Spurs’ defense held them to 47 points on 47 percent shooting. Ingram had the most success against San Antonio’s coverages in the first half, getting to the middle and backline, but Barrett was the threat after halftime.
By Mateo Mayorga, via Pounding The Rock