马刺 vs 公牛 129 - 114 技术统计 | 视频集锦
By Stephen Michael | Pounding The Rock (PtR), 2026-03-31 04:48:58

开场的前几分钟让人感到有些局促,仿佛一场风暴正在悄然酝酿。圣安东尼奥马刺队并未迅速进入状态,而芝加哥公牛队则打得气势汹汹,不断加快比赛节奏并先声夺人,让弗罗斯特银行中心球馆的观众们在座位上坐立难安。
但随后,正如他往常所做的那样,维克托·文班亚马 (Victor Wembanyama) 改变了一切。
这一切并非一蹴而就,从来都不是。先是一个篮板——在众人头顶高高摘下。接着是一次快速补篮,一记后撤步跳投,以及一次让球和观众都腾空而起的盖帽。几分钟内,不安感烟消云散,取而代之的是一种愈发清晰的预感:今晚将属于他。
首节结束时,场上的节奏已经发生了变化。到了第二节,比赛已完全进入了圣安东尼奥人的掌控。
“一种紧迫感和敏锐度,”马刺队主教练米奇·约翰逊 (Mitch Johnson) 在谈到他在开场仅一分钟就叫出的暂停时说道,“我觉得我们有时做到了,并在下半场给出了回应。但我们没有像我希望的那样,或者像我所知道的那样保持得那么久。”
“我们肯定还有需要改进和保持稳定性的地方,”约翰逊补充道,“我总是在寻找可以作为教材的时刻。虽然我们在赢球,但这种反馈可能会产生误导……我们必须正视自己有能力达到的标准和竞技水平。”
文班亚马无处不在:在防守球员中穿梭,拉开球场空间,掌控篮板球。公牛队无力招架,只能疲于应对,且每次反应都慢了一步。随着马刺队势头渐盛,比赛开始倾斜,最终彻底倒向了一边。
尽管如此,这并非一个人的独角戏,只是有时看起来确实如此。
斯蒂芬·卡斯尔 (Stephon Castle) 在混乱中保持着冷静与精准,穿针引线、冲击空隙,几乎无所不能。每一次助攻、每一个篮板、每一个进球,都为马刺队的进攻增添了一层火力,球队的进攻突然间恢复了往日的流畅运转。
半场结束时,紧张气氛已消失殆尽,取而代之的是掌控力。下半场的开局延续了上半场结束时的态势,文班亚马继续展现统治力。一波快速的攻势将领先优势扩大到20分以上,就这样,芝加哥人仅存的一丝希望开始破灭。他们也曾发起零星的反击——打出一波小高潮,或是投进几个高难度球——但每一次冲击都遭到了回击。
而大多数时候,给出回应的正是那位身披1号球衣的球员。到了第四节,比赛结果已毫无悬念。马刺队不仅是在赢球,他们还在主宰一切:节奏、空间,以及当下的每一刻。
“我们正在为一些只有少数人经历过的事情做准备,”马刺队前锋凯尔登·约翰逊 (Keldon Johnson) 说道,“我们今天的开局表现是不可接受的。我们需要继续将我们的意志强加给对手,并付出最大的努力。”
当全场比赛结束的哨声响起,比分定格在129-114,这感觉不像是比赛的终点,更像是某种正在酝酿的事物的延续,而那件事物将会非常危险。当马刺队找到节奏,且他们的年轻球星将统治力转化为常态时,人们很容易看到宏伟蓝图正在实时成型。
而更难想象的是,有人能阻止这一切。
赛后笔记
- 随着俄克拉荷马城雷霆队险胜阵容不整的底特律活塞队,西部联盟榜首之争可能会持续到常规赛的最后一周。马刺队目前落后雷霆2.5个胜场,且在常规赛收官阶段的赛程相对“轻松”。
- 约翰逊对球队开场对抗公牛的表现并不满意,因此可以预见,随着季后赛的临近,他将利用最后几周的时间来解决任何遗留问题。
- 文班亚马和卡斯尔在这次胜利中合力砍下了马刺队129分中的62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:Spurs overcome slow start to run past Bulls at home
Spurs overcome slow start to run past Bulls at home

The first few minutes felt uneasy, like a storm quietly building. The San Antonio Spurs weren’t sharp out of the gate. The Chicago Bulls came in swinging, pushing the tempo and landing early blows that made the Frost Bank Center crowd shift in their seats.
But then, as he so often does, Victor Wembanyama changed everything.
It didn’t happen all at once. It never really does. First came a rebound — high above everyone else. Then a quick putback. A step-back jumper. A block that sent the ball, and the crowd, into the air. Within minutes, the uneasiness was gone, replaced by a growing realization: This was about to be his night.
By the end of the first quarter, the rhythm had shifted. By the second, it belonged entirely to San Antonio.
“A sense of urgency and sharpness,” Spurs Head Coach Mitch Johnson said of what he was looking for in his early timeout a minute into the game. “I thought we got it at times and we responded out of halftime. We didn’t sustain it as long as I’d wish or that I know we’re capable of.”
“There’s definitely areas we need to shore up and get consistent in,” Johnson added. “I’m always looking for teaching moments. We’re winning games and that feedback can be misleading… the standard and level of play we know we’re capable of must be acknowledged.”
Wembanyama was everywhere: gliding through defenders, stretching the floor, controlling the glass. The Bulls had no answer, only reactions. And each reaction came a step too late. As the Spurs surged ahead, the game began to tilt, then lean, then finally tip all the way over.
Still, this wasn’t a one-man show, it just felt like one at times.
Stephon Castle moved through the chaos with calm precision, threading passes, attacking gaps, and doing a little bit of everything. Each assist, each rebound, each bucket added another layer to a Spurs offense that was suddenly humming with its usual routine.
By halftime, the tension was gone. In its place: control. The second half opened the way the first one ended, with Wembanyama asserting himself. A quick burst pushed the lead beyond 20, and just like that, any lingering hope from Chicago began to fade. They fought back in spurts — a run here, a couple of tough shots there — but every push was met with an answer.
And more often than not, that answer wore No. 1. By the fourth quarter, the outcome was no longer in doubt. The Spurs weren’t just winning, they were dictating. The pace, the space, the moment.
“We’re preparing for something that only a few of us have been a part of,” Spurs forward Keldon Johnson said. “How we started today is unacceptable. We need to continue to impose our will on teams and push our best effort forward.”
When the final buzzer sounded on a 129-114 victory, it felt less like the end of a game and more like the continuation of something building and that something is going to be very dangerous. When the Spurs find their rhythm and their young star turns dominance into routine, it’s easy to see the bigger picture forming in real time.
And it’s even harder to imagine anyone stopping it.
Game Notes
- With OKC’s narrow win against an undermanned Detroit Pistons team, the race for the No. 1 spot in the Western Conference might come down to the final week of the season. Spurs remain 2.5 games behind OKC and have the “lighter” schedule to close out the regular season.
- Mitch Johnson was not satisfied with his team’s effort against Chicago to start, so expect him to use these last few weeks to iron out any lingering issues with the playoffs around the corner.
- Wembanyama and Castle combined for 62 of the Spurs’ 129 points in the win.
By Stephen Michael, via Pounding The Rock