Re: 幾個看了只能苦笑的數字...
※ 引述《goopa (I still believe)》之銘言:
: 過去的三場比賽中,我們平均一場得不到73分。 (72.33)
: 過去的四連敗中,我們在16節中有10節得分連20都不到,只有2節得分超過22。
: 我們過去五場球得分最高的一場是85分....
: 過去十場呢? 我們的表現好一點。 (83.25)
: 讓我提醒大家一點,深知「防守是球隊更上一層樓的關鍵 :p 」的馬刺隊....
: 他們平均每場讓對手的得分是83.5....(聯盟第一)
: 這也就是說我們讓過去十場中的對手,防守看起來跟衛冕冠軍一樣好.....=.=///
: 上週日對馬刺的轉播中....有人提到說中文轉播人員怎麼都沒有稱讚馬刺防守好....
: 我是從頭到尾都聽英語的啦....其實英文主播也沒有怎麼提到.... :p
: 如果說我們在以防守至上的東區....
: 以這樣貧弱的得分能力或許還能打焦土戰殺出一條血路....
: 但我們是在西區....
: 所以....只能祈禱天上掉下來一個得分能手了....
: (板凳長出來我也不反對啦...:p )
現身說法?XD
http://www2.sltrib.com/jazz/main/index.asp
What offense?: Anemic Jazz suffer 4th consecutive loss
By Phil Miller
The Salt Lake Tribune
The Jazz have a serious case of the San Antonio Flu.
The Spurs won't be credited with their 17th and 18th straight victories
over Utah this week, but that's only a technicality. The world champs
infected the Jazz with a basketball virus last weekend, and there is no cure
in sight for Utah's sickly offense.
Friday's symptoms: Portland 87, Utah 73 -- the Jazz's fourth consecutive
loss.
"I said all along, wait until someone really comes after you defensively,
" Jazz coach Jerry Sloan said. The Spurs did Monday, and "we've struggled ever
since."
That's a polite term for what has happened. The Jazz went 0-3 on this week's
homestand, dropping to two games below .500 for the first time, and the fever
shows no sign of breaking. The Jazz scored 65, 79 and 73 points in the trio of
ugly games, and shot 36.2, 37.5 and 34.2 percent from the field.
Exactly one week ago, the Jazz were euphoric about their improved play and
their ability to create good shots, with Andrei Kirilenko reveling in how "we
are playing with freshness." Then they visited San Antonio, lost whatever
offensive momentum they had gathered. Four increasingly dreary losses later,
Kirilenko concedes, the Jazz have gone staler than week-old pizza. "Our spirit
is a little bit down," he said Friday.
The Blazers took advantage for their first win in the Delta Center since
March 2001, hanging around through the first half despite some iffy execution
of their own, then pulling away when the Jazz offense began running in circles.
Portland ran off 13 straight points (part of a 17-2 stretch) in the third
quarter, with three different players nailing three-pointers to inflict
additional harm. When Utah managed to right itself for a fourth-quarter rally
that closed the deficit to nine, the Blazers, who received double-figure
scoring from all five starters, responded with an 11-0 thumping that sent the
sellout crowd home early.
"Ten points turned into 15 and 20 before you knew it," said Raja Bell.
The culprit, as it has been all week, was layups.
The Jazz made 11 of them Friday, which is OK -- until you consider that they
tried 21. "I don't know what we can do to get better shots," Sloan said. "Guys
work on their 15-to-18-foot jumpers, and they forget that there are layups to
be had. But if you can't make them, what good does it do you? . . . If you
can't make layups, pass the ball to someone else."
Of course, even when the Jazz do that, it doesn't work out; by passing the
ball too much, Utah committed three shot-clock violations in the first 13
minutes of the second half, and rushed up bad shots at the buzzer a couple of
other times.
The Jazz's three point guards combined to shoot .286 (6-for-21), with
Raul Lopez suffering through a 2-for-8, four-turnover outing. And only one
Jazz player, center Greg Ostertag, managed to connect on half of his shot
attempts.
Sloan's prescription for the bed-ridden offense: play better defense.
"We are so concerned with what we are doing offensively, we forget to guard
people," he said. "If we play hard, we end up with easy baskets."
Not that they make them, of course.
The Jazz may be infected with another malady, too, Sloan said: too many
doctors. Everyone has a different opinion on the slump, he said, and all the
voices are causing locker-room problems that have grown into on-court problems.
"We need to take an ice pick and pick out all of those things," he said,
without elaborating.
Raja Bell, disgusted with the Jazz's effort in Wednesday's loss to Chicago,
agreed that consensus is necessary if the Jazz, who play eight of their next
10 on the road, are to stay afloat in the increasingly difficult playoff race.
"We probably need to sit and talk as a team," he said. "There is so much
being said from so many different places, we all need to get on the same page
. . . . I don't think anyone in this locker room isn't for winning. We all
want to win all our games. But we've all seen ourselves play harder, and we
need to figure out why we're not now."
That's a better solution than hoping it happens on its own, or, as Sloan
said, "waiting for something to come down out of the sky and give them a big
lift."
This sickness needs medicine.
pmiller@sltrib.com
--
再びジオンの理想を揭げるために !星の屑成就のために !ソロモンよ ! 私は歸ってき
た !!
--Anavel Gato
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