马刺 vs 独行侠 139 - 120 技术统计 | 视频集锦
By Stephen Michael | Pounding The Rock (PtR), 2026-04-11 04:28:52

在前24分钟里,这看起来并不像一场大胜。在弗罗斯特银行中心球馆 (Frost Bank Center) 内,圣安东尼奥马刺队发现自己陷入了一场比预期更为胶着的战斗。达拉斯独行侠队并未退缩,他们与对手展开对攻,在能量感上不落下风,并凭借库珀·弗拉格 (Cooper Flagg) 在上半场火热的状态让主场观众感到不安。
圣安东尼奥马刺队此前并未拉开比分——至少当时还没有。但维克托·文班亚马 (Victor Wembanyama) 决心确保他的球队不会输球,尤其是在这个夜晚。文班亚马一如既往地展现着统治力,他在防守者中穿梭自如,得分信手拈来,影响力覆盖了球场的每一个角落。尽管如此,达拉斯人依然紧咬比分。马刺队的每一次发力都会换来独行侠队的回击,每一次起势的苗头都会消解在又一段拉锯战中。
半场休息时,球队传达的信息并非紧迫感,而是掌控力。当马刺队重新回到场上时,一切都变了。
第三节并非以一声怒吼开场,而是逐渐势如破竹。达龙·福克斯 (De’Aaron Fox) 首先掌控了局面,他适度放慢比赛节奏,以便在关键点精准提速。他一次又一次地拆解独行侠队的防守,送出穿针引线的传球,冲击禁区,并在每次进攻中都做出正确的判断。进攻端开始变得行云流水。
“他是我们队中目前最能理解比赛脉搏的人,”马刺队主教练米奇·约翰逊 (Mitch Johnson) 在谈到福克斯时说道,“我认为我们已经一次又一次地在他身上看到了这一点,而这正是我们在季后赛临近之际所需要的。”
随后,球队开始了冲刺。文班亚马紧随其后,将掌控力转化为对手的混乱——对达拉斯而言。他在内线取分,拉开空间,冲抢篮板,并抹杀了对手任何反抗的念头。原本焦灼的比赛瞬间变成了一场个人表演。
那么独行侠队呢?他们崩盘了。
投篮不再命中,进攻变得慌乱。一支在上半场弹无虚发的球队,突然间变得怎么投都没有。与此同时,马刺队的攻势接踵而至:一波又一波的冲击,一个接一个的进球。当第四节到来时,紧张感已荡然无存,质疑声也随之消失。圣安东尼奥不仅拉开了分差,更是彻底杀死了比赛。
139-120 的最终比分说明了部分情况,但它未能捕捉到那种转变——即竞争激烈的夜晚转变为彰显实力的时刻。文班亚马最终砍下 40 分、13 个篮板和 5 次助攻,这又是他在场上举重若轻的统治力展现,而这种表现似乎正逐渐成为常态。福克斯贡献了 18 分和 10 次助攻,静静地导演了彻底拉开比分的转折点。
“感觉很好,”文班亚马在谈到达到季后赛奖项评选的 65 场比赛要求时表示,“就像完成了一个待办事项。这是一个发生了很多事情的赛季,而这是一个很好的总结。”
在他们身边,马刺队打得像一支完全明确自身定位的球队。投篮命中,球权流转,节奏从未下降。上半场看似平淡的表现,在下半场变得势不可挡。
尽管输掉了比赛,达拉斯也有过高光时刻。弗拉格砍下的 33 分确保了这一点。但仅有高光时刻是不够的,尤其是面对这样一支可以随意切换挡位的球队。
因为这场比赛已经变成了一个提醒。
马刺队不需要用四节比赛来击败你。有时,只需一节就足够了。而当他们找到状态时,没有人能阻挡接踵而至的攻势。
赛后笔记
- 米奇·约翰逊表示,由于轮休原因,文班亚马可能会缺席周日对阵丹佛掘金队的比赛,但双方会在赛前进行沟通。与此同时,文班表示如果真是这样,他也不会感到意外。
- 随着常规赛收官和季后赛即将开启,卡特·布莱恩特 (Carter Bryant) 展现出了极强的自信。这使得马刺队在进入季后赛首轮时变得更加危险。这位新秀替补登场贡献 12 分,三分线外 3 投全中。
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:Strong second half sees Spurs rout Mavs in penultimate game of regular season
Strong second half sees Spurs rout Mavs in penultimate game of regular season

For 24 minutes, it didn’t look like a blowout. Inside the Frost Bank Center, the San Antonio Spurs found themselves in a game that felt tighter than expected. The Dallas Mavericks weren’t backing down, trading shots, matching energy, and riding a red-hot first half from Cooper Flagg that kept the crowd uneasy.
San Antonio hadn’t separated—not yet. But Victor Wembanyama was determined to make sure his team would not go down, not on this night. Wembanyama was doing what he always does, gliding through defenders, scoring with ease, impacting every inch of the floor. Still, Dallas lingered. Every Spurs push met with a Mavericks answer. Every hint of a run dissolved into another close stretch.
At halftime, the message wasn’t about urgency. It was about control. And when the Spurs came back out, everything changed.
The third quarter didn’t begin with a roar—it built into one. De’Aaron Fox took command first, slowing the game just enough to speed it up where it mattered. He dissected Dallas’ defense possession by possession, threading passes, collapsing the lane, and making the right read every time. The offense started to breathe.
“He’s by far the most capable on our team of understanding the pulse of the game,” Spurs Head Coach Mitch Johnson said of Fox. “I think we’ve seen that from him time and time again and that’s exactly what we need as the playoffs arrive.”
Then it started to sprint. Wembanyama followed, turning control into chaos—for Dallas. He scored inside, stretched the floor, cleaned the glass, and erased any thought of resistance. What had been a game suddenly felt like a showcase.
And the Mavericks? They cracked.
Shots stopped falling. Possessions grew frantic. A team that couldn’t miss in the first half suddenly couldn’t buy a basket. Meanwhile, the Spurs kept coming: wave after wave, bucket after bucket. By the time the fourth quarter arrived, the tension was gone. So was the doubt. San Antonio didn’t just pull away—they buried the game.
The final score, 139-120, told part of the story. But it didn’t capture the shift—the moment when a competitive night turned into a statement. Wembanyama finished with 40 points, 13 rebounds, and five assists, another effortless display of dominance that somehow continues to feel routine. Fox added 18 points and 10 assists, quietly orchestrating the turning point that broke the game open.
“It feels good,” Wembanyama said of meeting the 65-game requirements for post season awards. “It feels like a box that’s checked. It was a season where a lot of things happened and this is a good conclusion for it.”
Around them, the Spurs played like a team that knows exactly who it is. Shots fell. The ball moved. The pace never dipped. What looked ordinary in the first half became overwhelming in the second.
Dallas had its moments, despite the loss. Cooper Flagg’s 33 points made sure of that. But moments weren’t enough. Not against a team that can shift gears like this.
Because that’s what this game became. A reminder.
The Spurs don’t need four quarters to beat you. Sometimes, all it takes is one. And when they find it, there’s not much anyone can do to stop what comes next.
Game Notes
- Mitch Johnson said Wembanayama may miss Sunday’s game against Denver due to rest, but conversations will happen before. Meanwhile, Wemby says he would not be surprised if that’s the case.
- Carter Bryant is playing with such confidence as the regular season closes and the postseason set to begin. That makes a much more dangerous Spurs team going into the first round. The rookie finished with 12 points off the bench, connecting on all three of his attempts from beyond the arc.
By Stephen Michael, via Pounding The Rock