The Rest, Only Noise

Chapter 1036: The trouble should end it

Madison Square Garden's scoring record in a quarter belongs to Jordan, who set a record of 27 points in a quarter in the 1988 Finals.

At this moment, when Jordan asked this question, it was obvious that he wanted to break the record. Because Wilson scored 18 points in the first quarter, it seemed that he had the upper hand in the duel with him, so it was reasonable for him to fight back.

But that wasn't what Jordan wanted.

What he wants is to focus the opponent's anger on him, so that the offensive pressure of his teammates will be much less.

He was no longer the arrogant young man who was arrogant and arrogant.

The humiliating reality that he has not won a championship in the NBA so far in his career reminds him that a person's strength can only be won for a while.

A team like the Knicks cannot be beaten individually.

The Knicks' defensive intensity against Jordan has escalated in a straight line, but Jordan's roll call power has become more and more amazing.

There were two players on the Knicks court that he called the target.

One is Ewing and the other is Christie.

Although Ewing is the one with the best high-level defensive statistics among active players, no matter how good the defense is, he is a toy in front of a ball-handler with no shortcomings in his arsenal.

Jordan hit Ewing without much effort.

Just a little bit of rhythm change, quick stop and quick start, jump shot, and it's over.

In the four minutes after that, including the first 2+1, Jordan made six consecutive shots, all hits, and scored 13 points in a row, leading the Blazers to tie the game.

38 to 38

During this time, the Knicks responded by relying on the inside attack.

Reggie Williams on the periphery felt inaccurate, Christie was no longer empty, and Wilson, who performed well in the first quarter, reduced his shots in order to activate his teammates, and only scored 2 points in the second quarter.

Sometimes being selfless doesn't bring good results.

So Louie called a timeout and asked Wilson, "benj, you shot 11 times in the first quarter, and only once in the second quarter. Are you tired, or are you blocked?"

Wilson has not stopped for a second since the game. If he said he was tired, it would be excusable, and Louis could also go down the **** to replace him.

Wilson's response, however, was: "I don't want to do a one-man show anymore."

"That big-eared **** just sang a one-man show for four minutes in a row. What was the result? They tied the score! Now you immediately clear all those strange thoughts in your mind and come back on the court!"

Then Louie called Stevens again, replaced Reggie Williams, who was not feeling well, and let Mohamed Raouf replace Doug Christie, who had completed the mission.

The Blazers are already playing the roll call strategy.

Riley didn't mind being told that he succeeded by imitating Louie, and that if he could win, he could stand on the shoulders of giants.

A regional killer like Barkley with indiscriminate singles is not suitable for naming, because no matter who guards him, the effect is the same, so Riley did not replace him, but instead used Ze who was in charge of preventing runs in the previous few minutes. Will McDaniel be replaced by Clifford Robinson, with Cauchy and Mason, and Jordan, who has shown his fangs, the offensive and defensive pressure brought by the Blazers will be even higher.

Wilson listened to Louis.

After coming back from the timeout, he first broke the Blazers' full-court pressing forcefully, and faced Jordan in the front-end single defense, letting his teammates pull away, not a pick-and-roll.

That is to say, there was no roll call in this round, and Wilson had to rely on his personal ability to complete the offense.

It is a pleasure to watch Wilson's offense. He has the perfect height and wingspan in the same position, combined with excellent explosiveness, coordination and ball sense, when he makes a beautiful change of direction, it is like a dynamic picture. Peerless painting.

The crotch changed direction, the back changed direction, and the one-handed variation dribble tore apart Jordan's defense and made an emergency stop outside the paint area on the right.

Jordan showed extremely high defensive literacy, and Wilson couldn't get rid of him completely, but because he was behind most of his position, he couldn't affect Wilson's shot more besides interference.

"Shh!"

40 to 38

The Qiaowei battle is the biggest attraction in the biggest basketball game of our time.

Some people say that they are the upgraded version of the tragedian and the big bird, which is obviously false. Could it be that their downgraded version is Tragic and Big Bird? Their styles are fundamentally different.

Jordan didn't call Wilson back as expected.

The fact is exactly the opposite of what people expect. Jordan seemed to be "afraid" of Wilson, and took the initiative to lean on people and help Thomas create opportunities.

Thomas cut in from the middle, caught the ball, jumped up, and Ewing flew to defend, but was hit by him with a limit layup to avoid hitting the plate.

"Look at mj, this is the most correct way to play." The tragic master was full of praise for Jordan, "At this stage of his career, he has integrated individualism and teamwork!"

Jordan's approach upset Louie.

This unease comes from the possible consequences of his actions, such as will Wilson stop shooting again? Will he think again of his previous selfishness that nearly crashed the team?

The answer is yes.

Wilson really did not continue to attack, Ewing ran to the high position to do a pick-and-roll for him, but he directed Ewing to go down. Although his offense with the ball forced the Blazers to switch defenses, allowing Ewing to dislocate against the Blazers' small man, and to use his body to ravage the opponent at will after receiving the ball, this was the right choice, but Louie wanted to see Wilson more. Continuing the offensive momentum that made opponents terrified before.

"You said I'll call a timeout to keep him on the offensive, will he be obedient?" Louis asked left and right.

Tomjanovich thinks Wilson will still be obedient, but within a few rounds, he will be back.

"He still seems to have a knot in his heart," Tomjanovich said.

Zhao Yuanzheng said: "Old way, you have to tie the bell to untie the bell."

The trouble should end it? Who is this guy? Ewing?

Obviously not Ewing. After all, this guy "can't wait" after being beaten in the locker room expressed that he wanted to be punched again. His sleazy face made him feel physically uncomfortable. How could it be Ewing?

Louis quickly thought that this person was not a specific name, but a group of people.

The group was teammates including Ewing.

Whenever Wilson wants to take over, he thinks about how passive the team has been, and he hesitates.

This is an inner demon, a bigger problem than James' overthinking or looking too far.

To make matters more difficult, the problem is beyond Louis's reach.

Wilson can't get rid of his inner demon himself, only his teammates can help him get rid of his inner demon.

This made Louis feel extremely passive.

If Wilson can't get all of his teammates, including Ewing, to think, "Benj, let's win this game" and act at the same time, he can't be on fire.

Louis hates this passive feeling, but he has no right to complain, because this hidden danger was buried by himself.

From the moment he didn't discourage Wilson's selfish behavior, from the moment he expected Ewing to be the perfect leader, it was doomed.

It can even be said that the test of Ewing is not over yet.

When the team needs it, can he give up his leader's ego and pride and become Wilson's sheepdog?

It's harder than getting punched in the locker room to pay off debt, and it's telling the world that Wilson is more reliable than him when it comes to crunch time.

Just when Louie's mind wandered, Isaiah Thomas, with Jordan's help, turned into a deadly assassin.

The roll call was like it was tailor-made for him.

He has absolute speed, and can punch any player from the Knicks head-on. At the same time, he also has a sharp pull-up jumper. As long as he has a touch, God will not try to stop him.

When Jordan chose to attack Thomas and Wilson decided to put aside his selfish side and drive his teammates as much as possible, Thomas showed fans all the energy a superstar should show at this time.

Raouf couldn't stop him at all.

Ewing's defense was ignored by him.

Even Kemp was played with applause by his changing rhythm.

From then on, by the end of the first half, Thomas dominated the rhythm of the game~www.novelmt.com~ Like a **** of war, he scored 13 points and 3 assists in the half.

In this half of the game, all of the Blazers' scores were related to Thomas.

Thomas' celestial performance reminded MSG viewers of how Thomas, who was one of the Celtics' Big Three at that time, produced tons of output with a broken leg and almost killed the game six years ago.

"Isiah tonight is like Game 7 of the 1988 Eastern Conference Finals," said Bob Costas. "It's still the greatest game I've ever watched in my life."

Laimbeer said with a displeased face: "I don't want to mention that game."

"I was there at the time." The tragic teacher was very willing to mention Lvkai's sad past.

At this time, at the end of the half, 60 to 52, Thomas' brave performance gave the Trail Blazers an 8-point lead over the Knicks at halftime.

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