马刺 vs 森林狼 133 - 95 技术统计 | 视频集锦
By Jeff McDonald, Staff Writer | San Antonio Express-News (SAEN), 2026-05-07 01:03:21

2026年5月6日,星期三,在圣安东尼奥弗罗斯特银行中心举行的西部半决赛第二场对阵明尼苏达森林狼队的比赛中,圣安东尼奥马刺队前锋维克托·文班亚马 (Victor Wembanyama) (1) 做出手势。
在西部半决赛首战遭遇一场令人沮丧的失利后,马刺队主教练米奇·约翰逊 (Mitch Johnson) 毫不怀疑他的球队会在周三的关键次战中做出怎样的回应。
这正是马刺队整个赛季以来一贯的回应方式。
凭借强悍的防守表现和七人得分上双的进攻火力,马刺队在弗罗斯特银行中心以 133-95 痛击明尼苏达,将这轮分区半决赛的总比分扳成 1-1 平。
“我认为球员们在展现紧迫感方面做得很好,”约翰逊说道。
凭借这场胜利,马刺队延续了自一月份以来从未遭遇连败的纪录。
斯蒂芬·卡斯尔 (Stephon Castle) 砍下 21 分领跑全队,而文班亚马(19 分 15 篮板)和达龙·福克斯 (De’Aaron Fox)(16 分)也在进攻端找回状态,打出了反弹表现。
在首战以 102-104 惜败并丢掉主场优势的两天后,马刺队打出了队史季后赛几乎最悬殊的一场大胜。
1982-83 赛季的那支球队目前仍保持着该纪录,当时他们以 145-105 击败了丹佛。
周三的比赛中,马刺队在下半场一度领先多达 47 分。直到比赛还剩 44.2 秒时,森林狼替补球员琼·贝林格 (Joan Beringer) 的一次篮下得分才将最终分差缩小到 38 分。
在过去的 40 个赛季中,马刺队只有一场季后赛胜利比这更悬殊——那是 2017 年分区半决赛第六场以 114-75 淘汰休斯顿的比赛。
“我们的侵略性达到了预期的水平,”卡斯尔表示,“我们觉得在第一场比赛中,他们太容易打出战术配合了,进攻端打得很舒服。面对他们拥有的那些得分手,我们绝不能允许这种情况发生。”
在这个森林狼队遭遇队史季后赛最惨痛失利的夜晚,面对马刺队高强度的防守,他们几乎毫无还手之力。
森林狼队有四名球员得到全队最高的 12 分,分别是朱利叶斯·兰德尔 (Julius Randle)、贾登·麦克丹尼尔斯 (Jaden McDaniels)、小泰伦斯·香农 (Terrence Shannon Jr.) 和安东尼·爱德华兹 (Anthony Edwards)。
森林狼全场投篮命中率为 39.8%,三分命中率为 30%。
现在,马刺队将前往明尼苏达参加第三和第四场比赛。有趣的是,在目前 1-1 平的局势下,马刺队的总得分竟然比森林狼队多出 36 分。
第三场比赛将于周五在标靶中心球馆举行。
“唯一重要的是大比分变成了 1-1,”福克斯说道,“我们在主场丢了一场,所以现在必须去客场赢回来。”
以下是周三这场季后赛大捷的三大看点:
1. 文班本场无需干扰球
森林狼主教练克里斯·芬奇 (Chris Finch) 在第一场和第二场比赛之间一直在向裁判施压,声称文班亚马在第一场创纪录的 12 次盖帽中,至少有四五次应该被判干扰球。
但在这一场,文班完全不需要通过干扰球来防守,马刺队的整体防守已经足够出色。
尤其是上半场,简直是防守端的教科书。
森林狼在半场结束前 47 投仅 14 中,三分球更是惨不忍睹的 15 投 2 中。
马刺队凭借大范围跑动、夹击和包夹防守,在半场结束时确立了 59-35 的领先优势。森林狼从未获得过机会。
文班本场以 2 次盖帽收官,比第一场少了 10 次。
考虑到马刺队的防守方式,文班对此并不在意。
“我喜欢大家互相补防的感觉,”文班说道,“今晚的防守体系运转得非常出色。”
圣安东尼奥马刺队中锋文班亚马谈及第二场胜利中的防守表现:“我喜欢大家互相补防的感觉。今晚的防守体系运转得非常出色。” pic.twitter.com/5qpn6D50Po
— Spurs Nation (@ Spurs_Nation) 2026年5月7日
2. 三分雨终于倾盆而下
在第一场三分命中率仅为 28% 之后,马刺队在周三开局阶段的三分表现依然挣扎,首节 7 投 1 中。
但当闸门最终开启时,火力简直是爆发式的。
从第二节开始,马刺队接下来的 32 次三分尝试中命中了 15 球,全场三分球 39 投 16 中。41% 的命中率结合前述的凶悍防守,成就了这场大胜。
特别要赞扬朱利安·尚帕尼 (Julian Champagnie),他在第一场最后的压哨三分失手让森林狼保住了胜果。
而周三,他三分球 6 投 4 中,得到的 12 分全部来自第三节短短 3 分 20 秒内,帮助马刺队彻底拉开了分差。
在第一场三分球合计 12 投 0 中后,文班和福克斯在第二场也找回了远投准星,两人外线合计 9 投 4 中。
3. 爱德华兹状态仍未恢复
在第一场比赛中,森林狼得到了爱德华兹意外复出的巨大助力,他砍下 18 分并在第四节上演英雄表现,帮助球队偷走了一场胜利。
然而,这位全明星后卫在周三的表现回归了凡人。
虽然被允许带着受伤的双膝多打几分钟,但爱德华兹在第二场替补出战 24 分钟,仅得 12 分。
他的效率远不如两天前,全场 13 投 5 中,并伴有 4 次失误。随着比赛失去悬念,爱德华兹整个第四节都坐在替补席上,双膝都敷着冰袋。
如果森林狼无法从这位明显带伤作战的球员身上获得更多贡献,那么即便接下来的两场比赛是在主场进行,这轮系列赛对他们来说也将变得异常艰难。



















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:3 Takeaways as Wembanyama, Spurs punch back at Timberwolves in Game 2
3 Takeaways as Wembanyama, Spurs punch back at Timberwolves in Game 2

San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1) gestures during Game 2 of the Western Conference semifinals against the Minnesota Timberwolves at Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, on Wednesday, May 6, 2026.
Coming out of a disheartening loss in Game 1 of the Western Conference semifinals, Spurs coach Mitch Johnson had no question about how his team would respond in a crucial Game 2 on Wednesday.
It’s the same way the Spurs have responded all season.
Fueled by a monstrous defensive performance and a scoring effort that saw seven players land in double figures, the Spurs pummeled Minnesota 133-95 at the Frost Bank Center to even the second-round series at a game apiece.
“I thought the guys did a good job of playing with that appropriate urgency,” Johnson said.
With the victory, the Spurs still haven’t lost two games in a row since January.
Stephon Castle led the Spurs with 21 points, while Victor Wembanyama (19 points, 15 rebounds) and De’Aaron Fox (16 points) enjoyed bounce-back games on the offensive end.
Two nights after a 104-102 loss in Game 1 cost the Spurs control of home-court advantage, they bounced back with what nearly became the most lopsided postseason victory in franchise history.
The 1982-83 team still holds that record, having defeated Denver 145-105.
The Spurs led by as many as 47 points in the second half Wednesday. It required a paint basket by Minnesota reserve Joan Beringer with 44.2 seconds remaining to cut the Wolves’ final margin to 38.
In the past 40 seasons, the Spurs have only one playoff win that was more lopsided – a 114-75 triumph that closed out Houston in Game 6 of the 2017 conference semifinals.
“Our aggressiveness was right where we wanted it to be,” Castle said. “We felt like Game 1, they got to their actions a little too easy and they were very comfortable offensively. With the scorers that they have, we can’t allow that.”
On a night in which the Timberwolves suffered their biggest blowout loss in their club’s postseason history, they couldn’t get much going against the Spurs’ amped-up defense.
Four players led Minnesota with 12 points – Julius Randle, Jaden McDaniels, Terrence Shannon Jr. and Anthony Edwards.
The Wolves shot 39.8% from the field and 30% from 3-point range.
Now the Spurs head to Minnesota for Games 3 and 4 in the interesting position of having outscored the Timberwolves by 36 in a series that stands 1-1.
Game 3 is Friday at the Target Center.
“All that matters is that it’s 1-1,” Fox said. “We lost a game here, so now we have to go up there and win a game.”
Here are three takeaways from Wednesday’s playoff romp at the Frost Bank Center:
1. No need for Wemby to goaltend anything in this one
Minnesota coach Chris Finch spent the day between Games 1 and 2 working the officials, claiming at least four or five of Wembanyama’s NBA-record 12 blocked shots should have been whistled for goaltending.
Wembanyama had no reason to goaltend anything in this one. The Spurs’ defense was that good.
The first half, especially, was an absolute clinic on that end.
The Timberwolves made 14 of 47 shots before intermission, including a woeful 2-of-15 performance from 3-point range.
The Spurs’ flying-around, trapping, blitzing defense staked them to a 59-35 lead at halftime. The Wolves never had a chance.
Wembanyama finished with two blocks, 10 fewer than he recorded in Game 1.
Given the way the Spurs defended, Wembanyama couldn’t care less.
“I love how everyone had everybody’s back,” Wembanyama said. “Tonight looked like a system that worked.”
San Antonio Spurs center Victor Wembanyama on the defensive effort in a Game 2 win: “I love how everyone had everybody’s back. Tonight looked like a system that worked.” pic.twitter.com/5qpn6D50Po
— Spurs Nation (@ Spurs_Nation) May 7, 2026
2. The 3-point dam finally burst
After shooting 28% from 3-point range in Game 1, the Spurs opened Wednesday’s outing going 1 for 7 in the first quarter.
When the dam finally burst, it all but exploded.
From the start of the second quarter on, the Spurs made 15 of their next 32 attempts from distance, finishing 16 of 39. That 41% clip, combined with the aforementioned ferocious defensive effort, added up to a blowout.
Give extra credit to Julian Champagnie, whose 3-point miss at the buzzer in Game 1 preserved the series-opening victory for Minnesota.
He went 4 of 6 from the 3-point stripe Wednesday, with all 12 of his points coming in a span of 3:20 in the third quarter and the Spurs began to run away with the game.
After going 0-for-12 in Game 1, Wembanyama and Fox got into the long distance act in Game 2, combining to hit 4 of 9 from downtown.
3. Ant Edwards still isn’t right
In Game 1, the Timberwolves got a huge lift from the surprise return of Edwards, whose 18 points and fourth-quarter heroics helped Minnesota steal the game.
The All-Star guard was more mortal Wednesday.
Cleared to play a few more minutes on his hobbled pair of knees, Edwards came off the bench for 12 points in 24 minutes in Game 2.
He was not nearly as efficient as he was two nights earlier, going 5 of 13 with four turnovers. With the score out of hand, Edwards spent the fourth quarter on the bench with ice bags strapped to each knee.
If the Timberwolves can’t get more out of a clearly laboring Edwards, the series is going to be difficult for them, even with a pair of games looming at home.
By Jeff McDonald, Staff Writer, via San Antonio Express-News