[PtR] 文班亚马绝杀太阳,率马刺挺进季后赛

马刺 vs 太阳 101 - 100 技术统计 | 视频集锦

By Stephen Michael | Pounding The Rock (PtR), 2026-03-20 04:39:59

大半个晚上,圣安东尼奥马刺队似乎都陷入了泥潭——空有拼劲却毫无进展。球磕在篮筐上的声音比空心入网的声音要频繁得多。进攻回合变得紧张而迟缓。球场另一端,菲尼克斯太阳队则表现得游刃有余,掌控着局面,他们建立起的领先优势不断波动、扩大,甚至一度威胁要彻底终结比赛悬念。

到了第四节中段,马刺队已经落后两位数。弗罗斯特银行中心 (Frost Bank Center) 内的观众开始变得躁动不安,先前的欢呼声被低沉的嗡嗡议论声所取代。这看起来就像是一个漫长夜晚即将迎来其不可避免的结局。

但篮球比赛,尤其是像这样一场充满变数且僵持不下的比赛,并不总是按剧本演出的。

逆转始于防守。一次成功的防守迫使太阳队在进攻时限即将耗尽时才仓促出手。接着又是下一次。突然间,太阳队整晚都非常稳健的节奏开始动摇。马刺队加快了节奏,并非盲目提速,而是带着紧迫感。达龙·福克斯 (De’Aaron Fox) 目标明确地切入禁区,顶着对抗完成终结。每一次突破都像是一点火星,点燃了这支一直在寻找生机的球队。此前,科林·吉莱斯皮 (Collin Gillespie) 曾一度压制着圣安东尼奥,连续命中三分球,每一次进球都是对马刺队反击势头的顽强阻击。

但随后,那些投篮开始在篮筐上转圈后滑出。圣安东尼奥继续完成防守并命中投篮。分差不断缩小。10分变成7分,7分变成4分。球馆内的声浪再次高涨——起初还带着些许谨慎,随后随着每一个进攻回合而愈发激昂。你可以感觉到信念正在一回合一回合地重新凝聚。

尽管如此,太阳队仍有机会。拉希尔·弗莱明 (Rasheer Fleming) 走上罚球线,这是每个新秀都渴望的时刻。但在这一晚,对于一个罚球命中率只有57%的人来说,任何事情都并非易事。他错失的罚球留下了悬念,给了圣安东尼奥可乘之机。

最后一个回合,最后一次机会。米奇·约翰逊 (Mitch Johnson) 叫了暂停将球推进到前场,毫无疑问,在比赛生死关头,球会交到谁的手中。球找到了维克托·文班亚马 (Victor Wembanyama)——仿佛从三年前他被选中那一刻起,这一切就已命中注定。由文班带领马刺重返季后赛的荣耀殿堂,再合适不过了。

“我为这座城市、这个社区和整个球队感到高兴,”马刺队主教练米奇·约翰逊在谈到锁定自2019年以来的首个季后赛席位时说道,“能成为这个过程的一部分是很有成就感的。”

那一刻时间仿佛静止了。没有仓促,没有恐慌。只有文班亚马,在防守球员上方高高跃起,他修长的身材在看似没有空间的地方创造出了出手空间。随着计时器接近归零,那记柔和且掌控力十足的急停跳投脱手而出。

在那一刹那,全场屏息凝神。随后,皮球穿网而过,篮网发出了清脆的响声。

“这非常有趣。我们已经很久没有遇到这种情况了。这是一次考验,而我们通过了,”文班亚马说道,“这是一场意义重大的比赛,而且临近季后赛,这是目前一次很好的磨炼。”

比赛仅剩一秒多,马刺队彻底扭转了局势,在看似败局已定的情况下以101-100惊险取胜。队友们簇拥着文班亚马。球馆沸腾了,先前的紧张感被足以震动建筑的欢呼声所取代。

他全场砍下34分和12个篮板,但数据似乎已是次要的。关键在于那种存在感,在于对时机的把握,以及一种日益增强的感觉:当比赛陷入胶着、聚光灯愈发耀眼时,马刺队拥有一个能够凭借意志扭转乾坤的人。

对于这支年轻的马刺队来说,这场胜利不仅仅是积分榜上的一个胜场。它更像是当下和未来的一个转折点,是那种你在日后会反复回想起的时刻——从那时起,势均力敌的比赛不再溜走,而是开始转化为完全不同的东西。

“感觉很好,感觉这一刻等了很久,”凯尔登·约翰逊 (Keldon Johnson) 在谈到锁定季后赛时表示,“我不想在其他任何地方,也不想在除了这里以外的任何地方完成这件事……我们拥有一个特别的团队。能成为其中的一员,我感到很荣幸。”

赛后笔记

  • 太阳队本赛季一直是马刺队的眼中钉,双方常规赛系列赛战成2-2平。但在所有四场比赛中,太阳队在对阵圣安东尼奥时都表现得非常稳健。如果这是季后赛首轮的对决,那将会非常有看点。
  • 斯蒂芬·卡斯尔 (Stephon Castle) 的外线防守在对阵德文·布克 (Devin Booker) 时显得尤为关键,后者当晚砍下了22分。然而,即便没有卡斯尔的防守,布克全场也仅有21投8中。
  • 如果这是我们在季后赛中能看到的维克托·文班亚马和达龙·福克斯,马刺队将继续让人们大吃一惊。他们会比许多人预期的走得更远。

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:Wembanyama’s game winner downs Suns and sends Spurs to playoffs

Wembanyama’s game winner downs Suns and sends Spurs to playoffs

For most of the night, it felt like the San Antonio Spurs were stuck in place — running hard, but going nowhere. The ball clanged off the rim more often than it swished through. Possessions grew tense, deliberate. Across the floor, the Phoenix Suns moved with the confidence of a team in control, building a lead that hovered, then stretched, then threatened to break the game open entirely.

By the middle of the fourth quarter, the Spurs were down double digits. The crowd inside the Frost Bank Center grew restless, a low murmur replacing the earlier buzz. It had the feel of a long night nearing its inevitable end.

But basketball games, especially strange, stubborn ones like this, don’t always follow the script.

It started with defense. A stop that forced Phoenix deeper into the shot clock. Then another. Suddenly, the Suns’ rhythm, which was so steady all night, began to wobble. The Spurs pushed the tempo, not recklessly, but urgently. De’Aaron Fox sliced into the lane with purpose, absorbing contact and finishing through it. Each drive felt like a spark, something to ignite a team that had been searching for life. Earlier, Collin Gillespie had kept San Antonio at bay, knocking down three after three, each one a small act of resistance to the Spurs’ attempt at getting back into the game.

But then, those efforts began to go around the rim and out. San Antonio continued to get stops and make shots. The deficit shrank. Ten became seven. Seven became four. The noise inside the arena swelled again — cautious at first, then rising with each possession. You could feel belief creeping back in, possession by possession.

Still, the Suns had their chances. Rasheer Fleming stepped to the line, the kind of moment a rookie lives for. But on this night, nothing came easy when the man at the line shoots 57 percent. He missed free throws left the door open, just enough for San Antonio to slip through.

One final possession. One final chance. Mitch Johnson called timeout to advance the ball and there was little doubt who would have the ball in his hands with the game on the line. The ball found Victor Wembanyama — as if it had been destined to all along when he was drafted just three years ago. It was only fitting that Wemby had the chance to return the Spurs to playoff glory.

“I’m happy for the city, the community, and organization,” Spurs Head Coach Mitch Johnson said of clinching the team’s first playoff berth since 2019. “To be a part of that process is rewarding.”

There was a stillness in the moment. No rush, no panic. Just Wembanyama, rising above the defense, his long frame creating space where there seemed to be none. The shot — a soft, controlled pull-up — left his hands as the clock neared zero.

For a split second, everything held its breath. Then the net snapped as the ball went through.

“It’s very fun. We hadn’t had this type of situation in awhile. It was a test and we passed it,” Wembanyama said. “It was a meaningful game and close to the playoffs, this was a good test right now.”

With just over a second remaining, the Spurs had flipped the entire night on its head, stealing a 101-100 victory from a game that had seemed lost. Teammates swarmed Wembanyama. The arena erupted, the earlier tension replaced by a roar that shook the building.

He finished with 34 points and 12 rebounds, but numbers felt almost secondary. This was about presence. About timing. About the growing sense that when the game tightens and the lights get brighter, the Spurs have someone who can bend the moment to his will.

For this young Spurs team, this win felt like more than just another mark in the standings. It felt like a turning point for the present and their future, the kind you remember later, when close games stop slipping away and start becoming something else entirely.

“It feels good, it feels like a long time coming,” Keldon Johnson said of clinching the playoffs. “I wouldn’t want to be anywhere else or do it anywhere else but here…this is a special group that we have. And I am blessed to be a part of it.”

Game Notes

  • Phoenix is one team that’s been a thorn in the Spurs’ side all season, officially splitting the season series 2-2. But in all four games, the Suns have been a solid team against San Antonio. If this is the first round matchup, it’ll be juicy.
  • Stephon Castle’s perimeter defense was missed against Devin Booker, who scored 22 points on the night. However, even without Castle defending him, he only shot 8-for-21 for the game.
  • If this is the Victor Wembanyama and De’Aaron Fox we’re getting in the postseason, the Spurs will continue to surprise people. And they will go further than many are expecting.

By Stephen Michael, via Pounding The Rock