The Rest, Only Noise

Chapter 201: Thank you, Karim

Chapter 201 Thank you, Karim

"Coach, hehe, how am I doing?"

Ranbir seemed to have no count in his heart, licking his face and waiting for Louis to praise him.

"It's so **** beautiful, if it weren't for the live broadcast now, I'd **** you with one **** punch!" It's not that Louie doesn't want to talk about his quality. He knows how to talk to people, talk to ghosts, right? Of course dogs speak dog words too.

Ranbir nodded wisely: "I understand, coach, you are always so rude, but you really appreciate me."

"Go away!" Louis laughed.

Laimbeer sat down and was replaced by Maxwell.

Louie blocked Maxwell's neck, pressed his center of gravity, and said in his ear, "Ralph fouls a bit too much. After you go up, help him share a little more pressure."

"Foul?" Maxwell asked.

"Are you really stupid, or do you think we have enough inside reserves to be able to foul casually?" Louis said with hatred, "Of course it's some little tricks that won't be seen by the referee!"

Maxwell nodded. "Understood...understood."

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was called for a technical foul. The referee knew who was provoking the trouble, but who made the old comrade punch?

So Louie replaced Ranbir to quell the anger.

On the Lakers side, replace Jamal Wilks with Wilkins, who is more temperamental, has worse defense, takes up more space, but has a more domineering style of play.

"That **** suddenly played this trick, it's really a dog can't change it!"

Pat Riley, like everyone else in the league, had a misunderstanding of Louie.

This kind of misunderstanding is the result of the old coach taking the rhythm and the media following the public opinion.

Since the Celtics often fight, and Louie himself has expressed his appreciation for this kind of move, consciously or unintentionally, some people will naturally suspect that he deliberately instigated the players to fight.

Louis is innocent. He can only say that he knows who will do things, but he will not stop them from doing things.

The only time he took the initiative to get a player into trouble was in Game 6 of the 1981 Eastern Conference Finals, asking Maxwell to make some noise to boost morale.

For the rest, he watched the players fight inexplicably, and then took the blame with a smile.

Over time, the **** Ranbir has almost become his incarnation on the court.

As long as he barks people on the field, come on, it must be ordered by that **** Louis!

The Celtics made two free throws.

Byrd made all the penalties.

64 to 54

In a flash, the difference has reached 10 points.

For the Lakers, a 10-point gap doesn't matter.

What troubled them was the atmosphere on the court. The Celtics first broke their targets and then let the players play at will, which they didn't expect.

Thomas took over in the second quarter, Sampson suddenly received the ball high and Bird played the pick-and-roll with the ball.

Plus what Ranbir did just now.

The atmosphere, the rhythm, the home-court advantage, the score, it's all on the Celtics' side.

Even if they hide and tuck on purpose, they don't want to be beaten so ugly.

Thomas looked at the changes on the field and seemed to be able to gradually understand why Louis didn't make any arrangements for him after the outbreak.

He gave the ball to Sampson again.

Today, he is also in great form.

Bird, the almighty pick-and-roll machine, stood beside him, then withdrew from the three-point line. Sampson took the ball to the basket again. Although his dribble was high, the distance from the free throw line to the basket was very important to him. , as long as one dribble can close the ball to threaten the basket.

His one step was farther than Thomas' two.

Fang was a thrower, this time he played a small lever with his right hand for his left to lick the basket.

66 to 54

Everyone was shocked except Louis.

"Ralph has been in Boston for four years, and this is the first time I've seen him play like this."

Tom Heinsohn represents the voice of Celtics fans.

"So he can play like this?" Heinsohn asked in surprise. "What the **** were we doing before? Why did Ralph play like this today?"

Sampson's free-throw line attack has this effect, and Louie is not surprised at all.

This is the ability he has at the University of Virginia.

Now he is a stable offensive and defensive monster averaging 22 + 11 + 3 assists + 3 blocks per game.

This is Louis's transformation of him.

He was originally just an epoch-making insider with an insider offensive mode that his predecessors did not have, but in four years, Louis made him grow from a 103kg skinny monkey to a 113kg muscle stick, and then let him learn the card position , screens, pick-and-rolls, sweeps the high post and the three-second zone like Garnett.

Most importantly, Louie taught Sampson to play without talent.

This greatly reduces his chance of injury.

Now, just to show everyone what the original Sampson looked like.

"Maybe we should give him higher tactical status," K.C. Jones said.

Louis smiled bitterly: "No."

"why?"

"Not enough ball possession, K.C." Louie has made countless efforts to find the current balance, and if Sampson is to get more ball possession, the existing balance has to be broken.

And this has to affect the ball power of many people, and he has to do ideological work one by one. In the end, the effect may not be as good as it is.

And more than half of the season has passed, and they can't hurt themselves.

"Because there's only one ball, Isiah wants it, Larry wants it, everybody wants it, and all we're going to do is put the best person in charge of it."

"It's not that Ralph isn't the right fit, it just happens that we have someone on the team who is more suitable than him."

K.C understood the meaning of Louis's words on the spot, and he was also used to marginalizing the inside line.

Because during his playing days, the team's leader, Bill Russell, was a marginalized core player on the offensive end.

Tomjanovich was sour that he didn't know what to say.

"Many talents are also a problem."

"That's right, Rudy, it's not difficult to lead this team to success, but it's hard to stabilize the floating hearts." As Louis talked to them, the magician juggled the bar in the penalty area with the ball and hit the board with his left hand.

56 to 66

Sampson made a mistake with Bird, his dribble was blocked, and the return pass to Bird was blocked.

Wilkins played the most beautiful counterattack in the game, and his dunk height was seen on the spot, so Louis couldn't help giving him a nickname: Weizhi basket.

Every shot Curry made in 2016 looked like he was going to die, and every dunk this guy made was like a train-bouche-style draw with the basket on his hands like Wego's Alexandre Dumas.

58 to 66

Attacking with Sampson as the core has obvious limitations.

In his offensive awareness, there is no tendency for pull-up jumpers. Either catch the ball and shoot, or hold the ball to the basket and use a variety of methods to finish, so although it is not easy to defend against his offense, it is easy to guess.

As long as you can guess, you can give certain restrictions.

So Louie asked him to give the ball to Bird when he attacked and killed him. The steal last round cast a certain shadow on him. This time he didn't even attack. When he saw no chance, he returned the ball to Bird. .

Bird feinted a shot, knocked off the defender, and suddenly gave Sampson a lob.

Sampson ran to catch the ball, started, and made a layup. Kareem had nothing to do.

68 to 58

The smell of gunpowder from Ranbir still reverberated on the field.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was fiercely resisted by Sampson, and he felt wrong, so he returned the ball to Rambis.

Louie asked Maxwell to do some little things on the whole. Although he understood it, he didn't know how to organize his life. He thought about using Rambis as an experiment.

As a result, Rambis took a jump shot, and he actually put his foot on it in front of everyone. What's even more outrageous is that halfway through what he did, he found that it was too blatant, and it was not good, so he pulled his foot back.

Rambis had already seen what he had done, and after landing, he was furious and came up to do something.

Louie looked at the trigeminal neuralgia, either so dirty that he wanted to chase after him, or so stupid that he wanted to go up and knock people out.

Ask him to do something small, and he actually steps on his feet in front of the camera?

Shame ancestors!

There are so many connoisseurs of small moves in the history of the Celtics, how did the tradition break up in Maxwell's generation?

Pat Riley angrily ran over and shouted: "LittleLu, you better control your players!"

The most exciting drama has appeared!

Since Rambis "just" pushed Maxwell without hitting, and Maxwell obviously failed to step, the referee blew Maxwell's unsportsmanlike foul, which is T.

Louie has no objection. He completely supports the referee's decision. Maxwell is not only unsportsmanlike, but his brain is like a pig.

I originally thought that things would come to an end here, but I didn't expect the first monster of the alliance to jump out.

"Why did Bill Laimbeer also unsportsmanlike just now and didn't call his technical foul?"?

"Why did I just wave my fist and didn't hit the client, but it violated sportsmanship and was called a T, while my teammate pushed someone but nothing happened?"? ?

"Why is it unsportsmanlike to try Maxwell's footsteps?"? ? ?

The last sentence is the lore "Why are all unsportsmanlike blacks ~www.novelmt.com~ and whites always get away with it?"

Louie / Referee: ? ? ? ?

Don't say that the referee was confused, the players on the court, whether the Celtics players or Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's teammates, or Rambis, or the coaching staff off the court.

Louie's mouth opened wider than Wang Dalu, and he and Tomjanovich looked at each other.

They saw a look of horror on each other's faces, and a sentence that couldn't be uttered: How could there be such a fool in the world?

You know, it was the black referee Dan Crawford who blew these technical fouls.

So Kareem's allegations...

Crawford had no choice but to blow a second technical foul to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who was drooling at him, so that the sick Abdul-Jabbar could leave the field.

Before Kareem left the court, Maxwell rushed to him and held his hand affectionately: "Thank you, Kareem."

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