DD-Sport > Basketball > G3 in the finals said 7 points: MVP stealth in the last quarter, Harry scored 0 free throws in 3 games, and all players were huge in the last 5 minutes

G3 in the finals said 7 points: MVP stealth in the last quarter, Harry scored 0 free throws in 3 games, and all players were huge in the last 5 minutes

On June 12, in the third game of the finals held today, the Pacers reversed with a wave of flow in the fourth quarter, and finally defeated the Thunder 116-107, leading 2-1. Judging from the competition process and results, there are several points that must be mentioned in this game.

1.MVP invisible in the last quarter

I don't know if it was because the first two games were consumed too much, but today's MVP Alexander was invisible directly in the last quarter. In the fourth quarter, he played 1 of 3 and scored 1 of 2 free throws and scored 3 points and 1 rebound. Alexander only scored 24 points in the whole game, which was a significant decline compared with 38 points and 34 points in the first two games. Alexander's stealth in the last quarter was on the one hand, on the one hand, the Pacers' targeted defense; on the other hand, Alexander tried to commit fouls and did not whistle the referee even though he tried to make a foul, which affected his mentality.

2.Degnot's 7-player rotation

I wonder if anyone noticed a detail. In the first two games of the finals, Deegnot took a 10-player rotation; but in today's game, Deegnot changed his substitution strategy, basically taking a 7-player rotation (7 players played more than 10 minutes); while the Pacers still had a 9-player rotation. This led to a significant decline in the physical fitness of the Thunder in the fourth quarter and a significant decline in movement speed, giving the Pacers many opportunities to score second times and play fast breaks. At this moment, I have to sigh that Carlisle really dares to use people.

3. The finals were reversed to the third game, and the Pacers fully reflected their resilience. In both winning games, they reversed and won when they were behind after three quarters. This shows that in terms of overall strength, Pacers may not be as good as Thunder; but in terms of resilience and spiritual attributes, Pacers will definitely beat Thunder.

4. The referee made too many mistakes

To be honest, the referee's call today is somewhat controversial. For example, in the third quarter, McConnell had already stepped outside the bounds when saving the ball, and the ball was won to the Thunder; for example, in the last moment of the fourth quarter, when Halliburton broke through, Dort had a obvious foul foul and the referee did not sound the whistle. In addition, it is normal for Caruso to be fouled by Nesmith after stealing. Nesmith's move is a tough foul in the NBA, and it is not a move above the neck, so it is normal not to upgrade. However, if Nesmith's move was in the CBA or international arena, it would at least be a first-level malicious foul. If it is more severe, it may be expelled directly.

5. In the last 5 minutes of the Pacers, everyone was super giants. In today's game, especially in the fourth quarter, a magical phenomenon occurred again. In the last 5 minutes of the game, everyone on the Pacers' players seemed to be super giants. People who performed poorly before could stand up and contribute in the fourth quarter. For example, Turner, his performance was not good in the first three quarters or the first 43 minutes, but in the last 5 minutes of the fourth quarter, he contributed two key blocks. For example, Toping, there is no sense of existence in front of it, and in the fourth section, one cover and one supplementary button are priceless. Sometimes, it is really hard to understand why the walker is so strong at a critical moment, just like he was suddenly imparted with magic.

6. Stealing the opponent's baseline serve directly to score

The most impressive game should be McConnell, not only because he became the first substitute player in NBA Finals history to get 5 assists and 5 steals; but also because he had 3 steals, it was too exaggerated, he directly stole the Thunder's baseline serve and scored a layup. To be honest, this kind of steal is really rare in the NBA arena.

7. Halliburton scored 0 free throws in the first three games of the finals

In this game, Halliburton scored 22 points, 9 rebounds and 11 assists, without free throws. What's even more incredible is that Halliburton scored 0 free throws in the first three games of the finals. The boss Alexander, opposite, had a total of 26 free throws in the first three games of the finals.