马刺 vs 开拓者 112 - 101 技术统计 | 视频集锦
By Stephen Michael | Pounding The Rock (PtR), 2026-04-09 05:55:16

周三晚上,圣安东尼奥马刺 (San Antonio Spurs) 的局势本可能急转直下。没有维克托·文班亚马 (Victor Wembanyama),没有斯蒂芬·卡斯尔 (Stephon Castle),且这场常规赛末段的较量还暗含着季后赛排位的压力。从纸面实力看,这更像是一个陷阱。
然而,马刺队却将其变成了一场强有力的宣言。
凭借沉稳的进攻和在关键时刻提升的防守强度,圣安东尼奥以 112-101 击败了波特兰开拓者;这场胜利与其说是依靠球星光环,不如说是集体的坚韧。从开场跳球起,马刺就展现出了掌控节奏的决心。达龙·福克斯 (De’Aaron Fox) 率先奠定基调,他不断杀入禁区并掌控全局,砍下全队最高的 25 分。
但在缺少两名核心球星的情况下,这注定不能、也无法成为一场个人秀。
圣安东尼奥依靠其阵容深度赢下了比赛。德文·瓦塞尔 (Devin Vassell) 展现了其攻防一体的存在感,填补了空缺;而新秀后卫迪伦·哈珀 (Dylan Harper) 则从容地承担起更重要的角色,以超越其年龄的沉稳梳理着进攻。随后,另一位新秀带来了惊喜。卡特·布莱恩特 (Carter Bryant),这个名字并不总是出现在数据单的头条,但他此役在三分线外手感火热——三分球 6 投 5 中,用一场爆发式的投篮表现将波特兰的防守拉扯到了极限。
“我认为每个上场的球员都做出了非常棒的贡献,”马刺队主教练米奇·约翰逊 (Mitch Johnson) 说道,“面对一支极具竞争力的球队,我们在整场比赛中的应对都做得很好……我认为我们表现得非常出色。”
替补登场的凯尔登·约翰逊 (Keldon Johnson) 延续了其一贯的冲击力,不断冲击篮筐并提供身体对抗,在势头波动时帮助马刺稳住局面。
“我认为他 [卡特·布莱恩特] 做得非常出色,”约翰逊教练在谈到这位新秀时表示,“他在我们讨论和训练的框架内打球。他投篮很自信,打得也很有侵略性。”
尽管如此,波特兰并未束手就擒。德尼·阿夫迪亚 (Deni Avdija) 砍下 29 分撕碎了防守,而斯库特·亨德森 (Scoot Henderson) 贡献了 20 分,帮助开拓者在进入下半场时不断蚕食马刺的领先优势。第三节一度让人觉得比赛可能会失控。波特兰发起了猛攻,考验着这支缺少防守核心的马刺阵容。
就在那时,圣安东尼奥做出了回应,不是靠花哨的动作,而是靠纪律性。
马刺在防守端加强了封锁,切断了对手的突破路线并强迫对手艰难出手。在进攻端,福克斯重新接管比赛,将及时的得分与聪明的决策结合在一起。在角色球员的关键贡献和内线终结的带动下,马刺在比赛末段发力,彻底确立了胜势。
到了最后几分钟,结果已成定局。圣安东尼奥不仅在缺少球星的情况下生存了下来,而且表现得游刃有余。这场胜利让马刺本赛季的胜场数达到了 61 场,并锁定了西部前二的种子席位,这一里程碑凸显了这支球队在短时间内取得的巨大进步。
更重要的是,它揭示了更深层次的东西。这不仅仅是一支围绕旷世奇才构建的球队,更是一支能够适应环境、消化逆境并依然贯彻自身风格的队伍。
在聚光灯本可能变暗的夜晚,马刺证明了他们不需要聚光灯也能闪耀。
赛后笔记
- 米奇·约翰逊确认,在打出生涯之夜的表现后,布莱恩特将进入他的季后赛轮换阵容。
“他会在季后赛上场,”马刺主帅在赛后告诉记者。 - 凯尔登凭借周三晚的表现,可能已经锁定了他的年度最佳第六人奖项。
- 凯尔登和布莱恩特为圣安东尼奥替补席合力贡献了 37 分,如果这两名球员能保持这样的数据,对其他球队来说将是一个危险的信号。
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 down Blazers 112-101 behind balanced attack
Spurs down Blazers 112-101 behind balanced attack

The night could have easily tilted the other way for the San Antonio Spurs on Wednesday. No Victor Wembanyama, Stephon Castle, and a late-season game with playoff stakes quietly looming in the background. On paper, it felt like a trap.
Instead, the Spurs turned it into a statement.
Behind a composed offensive attack and a defense that tightened when it mattered most, San Antonio pulled away for a 112-101 win over the Portland Trail Blazers; a victory defined less by star power and more by collective resolve. From the opening tip, the Spurs looked like a team intent on controlling the tempo. De’Aaron Fox set the tone early, slicing into the lane and dictating pace on his way to a team-high 25 points.
But this wasn’t a one-man show and it couldn’t be with San Antonio missing two stars.
San Antonio leaned into its depth. Devin Vassell filled the gaps with his two-way presence, while rookie guard Dylan Harper stepped comfortably into a larger role, guiding the offense with poise beyond his experience. Then came the spark from their other rookie. Carter Bryant, a name that doesn’t always headline box scores, caught fire from beyond the arc—knocking down five of six three-point attempts in a breakout shooting performance that stretched Portland’s defense to its limit.
“I thought we had really good contributions from everybody that played,” Spurs Head Coach Mitch Johnson said. “I thought we did a really good job with responses throughout the game to a really competitive team… I thought we did really good job.”
Off the bench, Keldon Johnson brought his usual edge, attacking the rim and providing a physical jolt that helped the Spurs maintain control whenever momentum wavered.
“I thought he [Carter Bryant] did a great job,” Coach Johnson said of the rookie. “He played within himself in terms of things we’ve talked about and training on. He shot with confidence and played with physicality.”
Still, Portland didn’t go quietly. Deni Avdija carved up the defense with 29 points, while Scoot Henderson added 20, helping the Trail Blazers chip away at San Antonio’s lead heading into the second half. For a moment in the third quarter, it felt like the game might slip. Portland surged, testing a Spurs lineup missing its defensive anchor.
That’s when San Antonio responded, not with flash, but with discipline.
The Spurs locked in defensively, cutting off driving lanes and forcing tough looks. On the other end, Fox returned to orchestrate, mixing timely buckets with smart decision-making. A late push, highlighted by key contributions from role players and interior finishes, reestablished control for good.
By the final minutes, the outcome felt inevitable. San Antonio didn’t just survive without its stars, it looked comfortable doing so. The win pushed the Spurs to 61 victories on the season and secured a top-two seed in the Western Conference, a milestone that underscores how far the franchise has come in a short time.
More importantly, it revealed something deeper. This isn’t just a team built around a generational talent. It’s a roster that can adapt, absorb adversity, and still impose its identity.
On a night when the spotlight could have dimmed, the Spurs proved they don’t need it to shine.
Game Notes
- Mitch Johnson confirmed Carter Bryant will be part of his playoff rotation following his career night.
“He will play in the playoffs,” the Spurs’ head coach told reporters postgame. - Keldon Johnson may have secured his Sixth Man of the Year award with his performance on Wednesday night.
- Johnson and Bryant combined for 37 points off the bench for San Antonio, a dangerous sign for other teams if those guys can match those numbers.
By Stephen Michael, via Pounding The Rock