By Michael C. Wright | ESPN, 2026-03-07 15:48:09

圣安东尼奥讯——周五,在马刺队以116-112击败快船队后,主教练米奇·约翰逊 (Mitch Johnson) 正在接受媒体采访,而就在他身后几英尺的更衣室内,欢庆的呐喊声此起彼伏。
在这场背靠背的第二场比赛中,圣安东尼奥马刺队克服了25分的落后分差完成大逆转。这是自1997-98赛季(文字直播时代)以来,球队队史第二大的逆转分差。自2月1日以来,马刺队的战绩达到了14胜1负,位居全联盟第一。据ESPN统计,这是球队自2015-16赛季以来在15场比赛区间内的最佳战绩,当时马刺队曾创下了67胜的队史纪录。
“我现在已经精疲力竭了,”维克托·文班亚马 (Victor Wembanyama) 说道。他在赛后接受ESPN现场采访时表示自己“快要昏倒了”。
“这是最伟大的胜利之一,”他补充道,“这是我职业生涯、我篮球生涯中表现最好的比赛之一,也是最精彩的时刻之一。”
文班亚马砍下全队最高的27分,其中包括那记反超比分的进球:他在转换进攻中接到达龙·福克斯 (De’Aaron Fox) 的长传并完成扣篮,此时距离比赛结束仅剩16秒,弗罗斯特银行中心球馆的球迷瞬间陷入疯狂。
“那可能是我身体里最后一次快攻的力气了,”文班亚马说道,他在22分钟的出场时间里还贡献了10个篮板和4次盖帽。
福克斯在第四节直接得分或通过助攻贡献了圣安东尼奥35分中的25分,全场砍下19分并送出9次助攻。
“这场胜利感觉很棒,”福克斯表示,“比昨天的感觉还要好。”
周四对阵东部领头羊底特律活塞队时,文班亚马和福克斯分别砍下38分和29分。据ESPN统计,他们成为自2018年以来,首对在比赛半场内均砍下20+得分的圣安东尼奥队友。两人的合力表现带领马刺队取得了一场决定性的胜利,使他们本赛季对阵东西部头名球队的战绩提升到了6胜1负。
周五获胜后,显而易见已筋疲力尽的文班亚马穿着灰色连帽衫,称球队最近这两场背靠背的完结是他生命中“篮球表现最精彩的30个小时”。
“我最喜欢的部分是,我们在最后两场比赛中面临了一些截然不同的考验,而我们每一次都能成功应对,”他说道。
快船队中锋布鲁克·洛佩斯 (Brook Lopez) 是约翰逊在斯坦福大学时的队友,他给圣安东尼奥制造了不小的麻烦。他在上半场11投7中,砍下全场最高的17分,导致马刺队落后20分进入中场休息,这也是他们本赛季最大的半场落后分差。
到第三节还剩9分23秒时,快船队已将领先优势扩大到75-50。
“昨晚(对阵底特律)是一场苦战,今天是背靠背的第二场,队员们都有些伤病,”约翰逊说道,“大家展现出的竞争响应和精神品质,以及他们努力团结在一起,克服心理、生理和情绪疲劳的斗志,非常值得赞扬。”
前马刺球员科怀·伦纳德 (Kawhi Leonard) 每次触球都会遭到嘘声,他全场砍下30分,另有9个篮板、3次助攻和3次抢断。
马刺新秀卡特·布莱恩特 (Carter Bryant) 赛后得到了伦纳德、约翰逊和文班亚马的赞扬。20岁的布莱恩特在关键时刻负责防守伦纳德。他的父亲德希恩 (D’Cean) 曾在加利福尼亚州里弗赛德的马丁·路德·金高中担任助理教练,执教过高中时期的伦纳德。
“以前我爸爸训练科怀时,我就在球场另一头,模仿他的动作,”布莱恩特回忆道,“当时我才8、9、10岁,看着科怀进入圣地亚哥州立大学。赛后他走过来对我说,‘伙计,你小时候总是在场边跑来跑去。我为你感到骄傲。继续加油,继续相信过程。’”
在下半场的最后21分20秒内,圣安东尼奥打出了66-37的比分。第四节双方经历了七次领先更迭。在距离比赛结束还剩52.3秒时,小德里克·琼斯 (Derrick Jones Jr.) 完成打三分,帮助快船以112-111领先,随后福克斯助攻文班亚马扣篮完成准绝杀。
根据ESPN的统计,这是文班亚马职业生涯第16次单场至少命中4个三分球并送出4次盖帽,为NBA历史最多。马刺计划在周六休息一天,然后在周日重回主场,对阵球风强硬的休斯顿火箭队。
在赛后采访结束之际,文班亚马询问了时间,开始计算在下一场比赛前他能睡多久。
“我能睡两个安稳觉了,”文班亚马说道,“好在我的身体没有什么特别酸痛的地方,不需要特殊处理。只是整个身体系统有些疲劳,这是最好的情况,说明我很健康。两个晚上的深度睡眠、恢复、按摩、冷热交替浴等等,我恢复得很快。所以我不担心两天后的比赛。”
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:Wemby emotional after Spurs' 25-point comeback over Clippers
Wemby emotional after Spurs’ 25-point comeback over Clippers

SAN ANTONIO – As Spurs coach Mitch Johnson addressed reporters after a 116-112 win Friday over the Clippers, jubilation rumbled inside the team’s locker room a few feet behind him.
On the second night of a back-to-back set, San Antonio overcame a 25-point deficit, the club’s second-largest comeback in the play-by-play era (since 1997-98), to run its record since Feb. 1 to an NBA-best 14-1. That’s the team’s best mark in a 15-game span since the 2015-16 season, when the Spurs won a franchise-record 67 games, according to ESPN research.
“I’ve got zero left right now,” said Victor Wembanyama, who told ESPN during his postgame on-court interview that he was “about to pass out.”
“That was one of the best wins,” he added. “That was one of the best games, best parts of my career, my basketball life.”
Wembanyama scored a team-high 27 points, including the go-ahead bucket in which he hauled in a long pass in transition from De’Aaron Fox and dunked it in with 16 seconds remaining, sending the fans at Frost Bank Center into a frenzy.
“That was probably the last [fast break] I had in my body,” said Wembanyama, who also had 10 rebounds and four blocks in 22 minutes.
Fox scored or assisted on 25 of San Antonio’s 35 fourth-quarter points and finished with 19 points and nine assists.
“This one felt good,” Fox said. “This one felt better than yesterday.”
Against the East-leading Detroit Pistons on Thursday, Wembanyama and Fox scored 38 and 29 points, respectively, and became the first San Antonio teammates since 2018 to each score 20-plus points in the same half of a game, according to ESPN Research. The combined effort lifted the Spurs to a decisive victory that moved them to 6-1 against the No. 1 seeds in each conference.
After Friday’s victory, a visibly exhausted Wembanyama, wearing a hooded gray sweatshirt, called the conclusion of the team’s latest back-to-back “the best 30 hours of basketball” of his life.
“[My] favorite part is we faced some very different trials over these last two games and we’ve been able to answer the call in every single one of them,” he said.
Clippers center Brook Lopez, Johnson’s former college teammate at Stanford, made that more difficult for San Antonio. He scored a game-high 17 points on 7-of-11 shooting in the first half, leaving the Spurs with their largest halftime deficit of the season at 20 points.
By the 9:23 mark of the third quarter, the Clippers had extended their lead to 75-50.
“Hard-fought game last night [against Detroit], second night of a back-to-back, guys are banged up,” Johnson said. “The competitive response and the character the guys showed to really try to band together and fight through the mental, physical and emotional fatigue was commendable.”
Former Spur Kawhi Leonard, who was booed every time he touched the ball, scored a game-high 30 points with nine rebounds, three assists and three steals.
Spurs rookie Carter Bryant drew praise after the game from Leonard, Johnson and Wembanyama. Bryant, 20, guarded Leonard down the stretch. His father, D’Cean, coached Leonard in high school as an assistant at Martin Luther King High School in Riverside, California.
“I used to be on the other end of the court when my dad was working Kawhi out, just mirroring what he was doing,” Bryant said. “I was 8, 9, 10 years old watching Kawhi go to San Diego State. He came up to me after the game. He was like, ‘Man, your little ass used to be running around on the court. I’m proud of you. Just keep going. Keep trusting the process.’”
San Antonio outscored the Clippers 66-37 over the final 21:20 of the second half. The fourth quarter featured seven lead changes. With 52.3 seconds left, Derrick Jones Jr. converted a three-point play to put the Clippers ahead 112-111 before Fox and Wembanyama connected for the go-ahead dunk.
Wembanyama produced his 16th game with four 3-point field goals and four blocks, the most in NBA history, according to ESPN Research. The Spurs plan to take Saturday off before resuming their homestand Sunday with a matchup against the physical Houston Rockets.
In the middle of finishing his postgame media availability, Wembanyama asked what time it was as he started calculating how much sleep he could get before the next outing.
“I’ll get two good nights of sleep,” Wembanyama said. “The good thing is I didn’t get any super sore points in my body. So I don’t have anything specific that needs to be covered. It’s just the whole system, which is the best. It means I’m healthy. Two good nights’ sleep, recovery, massage, whatever, cold contrast, hot and cold, all these things. I recover really quickly. So I’m not worried about two days from now.”
By Michael C. Wright | ESPN, via ESPN