马刺 vs 灰熊 111 - 101 技术统计 | 视频集锦
By Mateo Mayorga | Pounding The Rock (PtR), 2025-11-19 11:36:11

圣安东尼奥马刺队艰难战胜了孟菲斯灰熊队,并再次将一支节奏更快的球队拖入了他们的节奏。尽管唱反调的人可以对这支正经历四连败的对手说三道四,但马刺队此役缺少了两名首发球员(维克托·文班亚马 (Victor Wembanyama) 和斯蒂芬·卡斯尔 (Stephon Castle)),而他们的访客则打得极为拼命。在执教有方的球队中,替补球员在获得额外机会时通常会大放异彩,而这一次挺身而出的是凯尔登·约翰逊 (Keldon Johnson)。
比赛开场,马刺队的防守慢了半拍,灰熊队在最初的89秒内便取得8-0的领先。这足以让教练米奇·约翰逊 (Mitch Johnson) 叫了暂停以加强防守布置,他的指示也得到了执行。但球队的下一个问题是进攻端陷入得分荒,投篮命中率仅有30%。马刺队通过如砖墙般向禁区收缩挺过了难关,让对手在该节的禁区内只多命中了一球。他们还从替补席上获得了15分的火力支援,其中包括凯利·奥利尼克 (Kelly Olynyk) 以两次抢断点燃了全队。首节战罢,他们以一分之差落后进入第二节。
马刺的进攻依旧在泥潭中挣扎,直到孟菲斯队身高7尺4的巨无霸中锋扎克·伊迪 (Zach Edey) 下场休息。随后,K·约翰逊 (K. Johnson) 和哈里森·巴恩斯 (Harrison Barnes) 开始在近距离和远距离开火。半场结束前,场上出现了四次交替领先,马刺最终以49-47领先进入中场休息,但孟菲斯凭借在进攻篮板上的强硬表现紧咬比分,他们借此得到了14分的二次进攻得分。
第三节比赛随之进入了油门踩到底、绝不刹车的对攻模式。塞德里克·考沃德 (Cedric Coward) 和小贾伦·杰克逊 (Jaren Jackson Jr.) 对圣安东尼奥造成了最大杀伤,但德阿隆·福克斯 (De’Aaron Fox) 从未让他们将分差拉开到危险的境地。
在经历了六次平分和十二次交替领先后,第四节开始时孟菲斯队领先一分。另一场得分荒来袭,这一次影响了双方。约翰逊 (Johnson) 教练大胆地让球队的主要进攻火力点福克斯 (Fox) 短暂休息,而这一决策收到了回报,马刺队在他不在场时夺回了领先。他在关键时刻回归,但哈里森·巴恩斯成为了他们的救世主,他通过近、中、远距离的投篮接管了比赛。
赛后观察
- 两队在第三节都手感火热,但防守端变得极具侵略性,包括马刺队有四人贡献多次抢断,这成为了比赛的胜负手。根据 Cleaning the Glass 的数据,他们将孟菲斯队的半场阵地进攻效率限制在每百回合74.7分,这一数据仅排在联盟第四百分位。
- 灰熊队不知道如何防守三分线,他们让对手在六英尺甚至更远的距离下获得了22.3次远投出手机会。你没看错,这不是印刷错误。马刺队直到第三节才利用了这一点,单节三分命中率高达58.3%。
- 失误一直是本赛季的一个问题,马刺队的失误率(16.5%)排在联盟第29位。但本场比赛,马刺队在上半场几乎没有犯错(4次),下半场也只有5次。失误对于任何球队来说都是自毁长城的行为,但面对像孟菲斯这样节奏飞快的球队,失误的代价可能是双倍的。
- 福克斯在上半场有一些精彩的时刻,他突入禁区后分球助攻,或是在重围中强行出手命中,但他直到第三节才开始打出顶薪球员的表现,增加了对篮筐的冲击力并命中多记三分球。过早的轮换模式可能是他开局较慢的一个因素。
- 朱利安·尚佩尼 (Julian Champagnie) 顶替斯蒂芬·卡斯尔(髋屈肌拉伤)进入首发阵容,但在上下半场的开局几分钟后,他在进攻端便毫无存在感。
- 杰里米·索汉 (Jeremy Sochan) 在单防或协防时总是拼劲十足、充满血性。他把所有小事都做得非常出色,以至于比赛最后时刻他仍在场上的五人之中。当晚他最精彩的时刻之一,是在一次防守失位后,从身后追身封盖了在篮下的小贾伦·杰克逊。
- 科内特 (Kornet) 的护筐很稳固,在近距离造成了多次投篮偏转和失手。然而,孟菲斯队也曾利用他防守沉退的特点,在禁区的中间地带尝试出手。
- 当那位7尺4的巨塔不在场时,篮板球吃亏是情理之中的事。球队真正想念他的时刻,是当扎克·伊迪在禁区内予取予求,以及当孟菲斯队拼抢进攻篮板之时。灰熊队全场共拿下21个进攻篮板,并转化为22分的二次进攻得分。
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。
点击查看原文:San Antonio vs. Memphis, Final Score: Harrison Barnes bails out the Spurs at home, 111-101
San Antonio vs. Memphis, Final Score: Harrison Barnes bails out the Spurs at home, 111-101

The San Antonio Spurs scraped by the Memphis Grizzlies and once again made a faster-paced team play at their level. Naysayers can say what they want about the opponent, which was on a four-game skid, but the Spurs were down two starters (Victor Wembanyama and Stephon Castle), and their visitors played desperately. Backups commonly shine when given the extra opportunity on well-coached teams, and this time it was Keldon Johnson.
The defense started off a step behind as the Grizzlies took an 8-0 lead in the first 89 seconds. That was all it took for coach Mitch Johnson to call a stoppage so their coverages would tighten up, and his counsel was followed, but their next problem was an offensive drought, making 30 percent of attempts. The Spurs got by, collapsing onto the paint like a falling stack of bricks and allowing just one more shot in the lane in the quarter. They also got a 15-point boost off the bench, which included Kelly Olynyk igniting them with two steals, as they went into the second frame down a point.
The offense was still in the gutter until Zach Edey, Memphis’ massive 7’4 center, took his rest. Then K. Johnson and Harrison Barnes started cooking from short and long. Four lead changes followed until intermission, with the Spurs up 49-47, but Memphis was hanging on because of their strong work on the offensive glass, resulting in 14 second-chance points.
The third quarter was subsequently all gas and no brakes. Cedric Coward and Jaren Jackson Jr. did the most damage against San Antonio, yet De’Aaron Fox never let them get into dangerous territory.
The fourth quarter started with Memphis ahead by one following six ties and 12 lead changes. Another famine struck, this time affecting both sides. Johnson boldly gave Fox, the team’s main source of offense, a brief rest, and it paid off as they took the lead without him. He returned in crunch time, but Harrison Barnes was their savior, taking over with baskets at short, middle and long range.
Game Notes
- Both squads got hot in the third quarter, but the defense getting nasty, which included four Spurs were multiple steals, was the difference. They shut down Memphis’ half-court attack to 74.7 points per 100 plays, holding them to the fourth percentile, per Cleaning the Glass
- The Grizzlies don’t know how to guard the 3-point line and allow 22.3 long-range attempts with their opponent six feet away or farther. That was not a misprint. The Spurs failed to exploit that until the third quarter, shooting 58.3 percent.
- Giveaways have been a problem this season, as they are ranked 29th in turnover percentage (16.5), but the Spurs barely made any mistakes in the first half (4), and only five in the second. Turnovers are self-inflicted wounds against any squad, but they can hurt twice as much against a fast-paced team like Memphis.
- Fox had some nice moments in the first half when he broke to the lane for a kick-out and a shot through traffic, but he didn’t start performing like a max player until the third quarter, raising his rim pressure and downing multiple 3-pointers. Early substitution patterns could be a factor for his slower start.
- Julian Champagnie stepped into the starting role for Stephon Castle (hip flexor strain) and was invisible offensively after the first few minutes of each half.
- Jeremy Sochan is all hustle and guts when guarding the ball or being a helper. He did all the little things so well that he was one of the five on the floor at the end of the game. One of his best moments of the night was blocking Jaren Jackson Jr. from behind at the rim after falling out of the play.
- Kornet’s paint protection was solid, causing deflections and misses at close range. Yet there were moments that Memphis used him dropping back against him, attempting shots in the in-between area of the lane.
- It makes sense for rebounding to suffer when the 7’4 specimen isn’t around. The times he was really missed is when Zach Edey got loose in the lane and when Memphis snagged offensive rebounds, which totaled 21 for 22 second-chance points.
By Mateo Mayorga, via Pounding The Rock
