马刺 vs 活塞 121 - 106 技术统计 | 视频集锦
By Stephen Michael | Pounding The Rock (PtR), 2026-03-06 05:52:46

圣安东尼奥马刺队回到主场后迅速奠定了比赛基调,并且从未让胜利溜走。从周四晚上的开场几分钟起,圣安东尼奥马刺就表现得像一支决心始终领先底特律活塞一步的球队,而事实也正是如此——马刺在整整 48 分钟内始终保持领先,最终以 121-106 的比分稳稳拿下胜利。
这场比赛完全没有戏剧性逆转或疯狂收尾的迹象。相反,马刺队展现出了稳扎稳打、井然有序的表现,他们从一开始就掌控了节奏,并在关键时刻依靠他们最闪耀的球星。而那位球星,毫无疑问,正是维克托·文班亚马 (Victor Wembanyama)。
这位身高 7 英尺 4 英寸的天才球员再次打出了统治级别的表现,砍下 38 分、16 个篮板和 5 次盖帽,在攻防两端都成为了圣安东尼奥的定海神针。无论是干扰禁区投篮、在多名防守球员头顶摘下篮板,还是在转换进攻中完成精彩终结,文班亚马再次看起来像是球场上最具影响力的球员。队内其他成员也纷纷跟进他的步伐。
“我对我们的对抗强度感到非常满意,”马刺队主教练米奇·约翰逊 (Mitch Johnson) 表示,“能够匹配底特律的身体对抗,同时努力贯彻自己的意志并打出属于我们风格的篮球,我认为我们做到了这一点。”
圣安东尼奥在第一节就火力全开,迅速确立了比赛节奏。流畅的球权移动和极具侵略性的防守帮助他们建立了早期的领先优势,迫使底特律在余下的时间里一直在苦苦追分。虽然文班亚马是核心,但马刺的辅助阵容确保了进攻端从未停滞。德阿隆·福克斯 (De’Aaron Fox) 反复撕裂活塞队的防线,砍下 29 分(其中上半场就得到 22 分),为后场注入了持续的爆发力。斯蒂芬·卡斯尔 (Stephon Castle) 表现沉稳,送出 11 分和 12 次助攻,不断为队友寻找得分机会。
“我们队里有很多能够自主创造投篮机会的球员,”福克斯说,“我会观察比赛的走向,今晚我打得很有侵略性。文班对我们来说非常棒。瓦塞尔投篮不多,卡斯尔投篮也不多。这是一场从头到尾都极具质量的团队胜利。”
底特律也曾有过表现亮眼的时刻,看起来准备让比赛重新产生悬念。
在凯德·坎宁安 (Cade Cunningham) 的组织下,活塞在第三节末段曾短暂缩小了一度超过 20 分的分差。趁文班亚马休息之际,底特律成功将分差缩小到个位数,这也是全场比赛唯一流露出悬念的时刻。但马刺队从未自乱阵脚。
“由于他们在第三节的表现,他们(活塞)值得称赞。我觉得我们投丢了一些球……NBA 的比赛是很漫长的。但我对今晚贡献力量的每个人都感到非常开心。我认为我们在保持专注和寻找投篮位置方面做得非常好。”
当文班亚马重新回到场上,圣安东尼奥马刺立即稳住了阵脚并全面掌控了局面。第四节的一个片段总结了整个夜晚:文班亚马在篮下封盖了活塞队的一次投篮,随即全速冲刺过全场,瞬间完成空中接力,点燃了观众的情绪,并将领先优势稳稳地拉回到两位数。
从那时起,马刺队彻底终结了悬念。
尽管底特律继续顽强抵抗,但圣安东尼奥均衡的得分火力以及禁区防守让活塞无法发起任何实质性的反扑。随着终场哨响,马刺队又锁定了一场令人信服的胜利。随着赛季的推进,这支球队正日益展现出作为竞争者的危险性。
对于圣安东尼奥马刺来说,赢球的公式看起来似曾相识:掌控节奏、分享球权、镇守禁区,并在需要时让文班亚马接管比赛。
“顶级种子球队之间的任何比赛都应该是令人印象深刻的,”文班亚马表示,“对我们来说,这超级有趣,如果我们没有为比赛奠定基调,那就不会这么有趣了。我想我们领先了 48 分钟。我不知道这是否令人印象深刻,但确实很有趣。”
周四晚上,这种组合被证明已绰绰有余。
赛后笔记
- 圣安东尼奥马刺替补席得到了 19 分,但在今晚,第二阵容并不需要承担主要的得分重担。拥有一支随时都能发力的深厚板凳深度确实是件好事。
- 如果马刺在季后赛中能拥有这个版本的德阿隆·福克斯,他们将成为进入西部决赛甚至 NBA 总决赛的热门球队。
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:Spurs stay in control as Wembanyama leads San Antonio past Pistons
Spurs stay in control as Wembanyama leads San Antonio past Pistons

The San Antonio Spurs returned home and set the tone early, never letting it slip away. From the opening minutes Thursday night, San Antonio played like a team determined to stay one step ahead of the Detroit Pistons and that’s exactly where the Spurs remained for all 48 minutes in a confident 121-106 victory.
The game never had the feel of a dramatic comeback or a frantic finish. Instead, it was a steady, methodical performance from a Spurs team that controlled the rhythm from the start and leaned on its brightest star when it mattered most. That star, of course, was Victor Wembanyama.
The 7-foot-4 phenom turned in another dominant night, piling up 38 points, 16 rebounds, and five blocks while anchoring San Antonio on both ends of the floor. Whether it was altering shots in the paint, grabbing rebounds over multiple defenders, or finishing highlight plays in transition, Wembanyama once again looked like the most impactful player on the court. And the rest of the team followed his lead.
“Very pleased with the level of contact we played with,” Spurs Head Coach Mitch Johnson said. “To be able to match Detroit’s physically while trying to impose your will and playing your brand of basketball, I thought we did that.”
San Antonio came out firing in the first quarter, quickly establishing the pace of the game. Crisp ball movement and aggressive defense helped them build an early cushion, forcing Detroit to spend the rest of the night chasing the scoreboard. While Wembanyama was the centerpiece, the Spurs’ supporting cast ensured the offense never stalled. De’Aaron Fox sliced through the Pistons’ defense repeatedly, finishing with 29 points (scoring 22 in the first half) and bringing a constant burst of speed to the backcourt. Stephon Castle quietly orchestrated the offense with 11 points and 12 assists, consistently finding teammates in scoring positions.
“We have a team full of guys that create their own shot,” Fox said. “I just see how the game goes, and tonight I came out aggressive. Vic was great for us. Dev didn’t shoot the ball a lot, Steph didn’t shoot the ball a lot. That’s a quality team win for us from start to finish.”
Detroit had moments when it looked ready to make things interesting.
Behind the playmaking of Cade Cunningham, the Pistons briefly trimmed what had been a 20-plus point deficit late in the third quarter. With Wembanyama resting, Detroit managed to push the margin into single digits, giving the game its only hint of suspense. But the Spurs never lost their composure.
“They [Detroit] get a lot of credit for that [3rd quarter]. I thought we missed some shots… The NBA game is a long game. But I’m very happy with everyone who played a part tonight. I thought we did a really good job of staying with it and getting to our spots.”
When Wembanyama returned, San Antonio immediately regained their footing and took full control. One sequence in the fourth quarter summed up the night: Wembanyama rejected a Pistons shot at the rim, sprinted the floor, and finished an alley-oop moments later to ignite the crowd and push the lead comfortably back into double digits.
From there, the Spurs simply closed the door.
Detroit continued to fight, but San Antonio’s balanced scoring and interior defense kept the Pistons from mounting any real comeback. By the final buzzer, the Spurs had secured another convincing win, one that reflected a team growing more into a dangerous contender as the season moves forward.
For San Antonio, the formula looked familiar: control the pace, move the ball, defend the paint, and let Wembanyama take over when needed.
“Any game between top seeds should be impressive,” Wembanayama said. “For us it was super fun and it wouldn’t have been fun if we didn’t set the tone for the game. I think we led for 48 [minutes]. I don’t know if it was impressive, but it was fun.”
Thursday night, that combination proved more than enough.
Game Notes
- San Antonio scored 19 bench points but on this night, the second unit didn’t need to carry the scoring load. It is nice to have such a deep bench that can turn it on at any moment.
- If this is the version of De’Aaron Fox the Spurs will get in the playoffs, they will be the favorites to reach the Western Conference Finals or even the NBA Finals.
By Stephen Michael, via Pounding The Rock