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Life as NBA Rookie (SlamDunk System)

Chapter 122 / 195

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Chapter 122

Life as NBA Rookie (SlamDunk System)

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The opening possession saw

Davis

explode to the Jazz’s restricted area, using a screen from

Zack

to blow past

Paul

, and finishing with a one-handed power dunk over

Okur

.

Two months of rest certainly helped

Davis

get his body back into peak condition. But the main reason this "King of Bragging" went into beast mode was the adjustment to the Warriors’ starting lineup made by

Mike Malone

after the All-Star break, and

Davis

finally understanding Malone’s tactical philosophy.

Unlike last season, where the Warriors needed

Davis

to control his shot attempts and diligently support

Zack

, collaborating with him to launch attacks on the court, under Malone’s system, the Warriors actually needed

Davis

to increase his offensive aggressiveness. Especially after

Zack

officially ascended to the role of primary ball-handler, both

Artest

and

Davis

found themselves with plenty of "easy bucket" opportunities on the court.

Why did

Artest

, who initially thought Malone was going to strip him of his isolation privileges at the start of the regular season, stop complaining as the season progressed? Because reducing inefficient isolation plays never meant eliminating them entirely. On the court, once

Zack

switched to his "commander" mode, how could he not need teammates to charge into the fray for him?

Before his injury,

Davis

had boasted to his teammates and coaches that he’d grasp Malone’s tactical essence in just a week. It wasn’t until his recovery period that he truly understood

Mike Malone’s

tactical logic. Simply put, if

Davis

continued to play with last season’s mindset, with his inefficient isolation plays significantly cut down, he wouldn’t just be relegated to the perimeter, relying on his inconsistent career three-point shot to support his teammates. Moreover, since Malone’s tactics often originated from big men initiating from the high post or wing players initiating through screens on the sides, you could easily say that

Davis

, before his injury, had become a spectator in many of the Warriors’ offensive possessions.

Actually, as early as last December,

Davis

had already adjusted his game. Otherwise, even with

Zack

as his teammate, he would have struggled to compete so fiercely with

Nash

in the All-Star voting. However, it wasn’t until this injury that

Davis

truly grasped what role Malone wanted him to play.

And after the All-Star break,

Mike Malone

moved

Troy Murphy

into the starting lineup, decisively ending the debate about whether

Brown

or

Biedrins

should be the starting center. Malone’s bold move provided

Davis

with unprecedented space to operate.

In early February,

Murphy

, who had just returned from injury and was seamlessly coordinating with

Zack

on the court, immediately sparked a daring idea in Malone’s mind. This idea kept tempting Malone, leading him to put it into action after the All-Star break.

Murphy’s

defensive weaknesses were undeniable. But for the Warriors, who often used zone defenses and had

Zack

responsible for sweeping up, as long as

Murphy

could commit fouls in necessary possessions to disrupt the opponent’s offensive rhythm, why would the Warriors be so afraid of other teams attacking

Murphy’s

defensive soft spot?

On the court, during the Jazz’s offensive possession,

Murphy

perfectly played the role of a blue-collar role player, first hounding

Okur

in the high post, then retreating to the paint to box out for

Zack

and help him grab the defensive rebound. On the sidelines,

Brown

and

Biedrins’s

feelings could only be described as incredibly complex, watching

Murphy

benefit from their "dispute" like a fisherman.

Back on offense, it was the Warriors’ turn.

Murphy

, who could receive the ball in the high post and help the team transition, successfully freed up

Zack

. After moving up to the right 45-degree angle to receive the ball and passing it to

Davis

via a hand-off,

Zack

followed through the middle, received

Davis’s

drive-and-kick pass, and finished with a soaring layup.

The Warriors’ first two possessions tonight already made veteran coach

Sloan

frown. Compared to their matchup in early February,

Sloan

found that a fully healthy Warriors team had clearly elevated their offensive firepower to another level.

Davis’s

hot form.

Murphy’s

inclusion in the starting lineup freeing up

Zack

.

Zack’s

ability to create "easy bucket" opportunities for his teammates due to his own gravity.

Mike Malone

had, subtly, through a series of experiments and adjustments, molded this Warriors team into one of the most offensively potent teams in the current era.

And compared to last season,

Zack

, who was always unsatisfied with just being a stat-padder, also used his obsession with defense to make

Sloan

keenly feel the progress he had made defensively. In the first quarter,

Zack

, guarding

Boozer

, didn’t apply intense pressure on every defensive possession. Retreating while fighting was

Boozer’s

trademark. But actually, using pick-and-rolls to get into the low post, and then relying on solid fundamental skills to put the ball in the basket, was

Boozer’s

main scoring method. Throughout his career,

Boozer’s

finishes at the rim accounted for about 40% of his shot attempts. This season, that percentage was close to 50%.

Therefore, when

Boozer

frequently moved up to the high post,

Zack

often focused on disruption. Even if

Boozer

could punish this defensive strategy with his signature shoulder-bump shot,

Zack

remained unfazed. Only when

Boozer

tried to get deep into the low post to initiate offense would

Zack

immediately apply full pressure, using his athleticism to suppress

Boozer’s

attack.

This was a defensive trick

Zack

learned from

Marion

. That is, the main goal isn’t to completely shut down the opponent, but to disrupt the opponent’s overall offensive rhythm by limiting their comfortable scoring opportunities on the court.

On the court,

Boozer

faced

Zack

in the low post four times, earning two free throws, getting two of his shots blocked by

Zack

, and missing one shot under strong interference from

Zack

. Under

Zack’s

defense,

Boozer

not only had a very uncomfortable first quarter, but after his most effective offensive methods were repeatedly thwarted by

Zack

,

Boozer’s

subsequent shoulder-bump shots from the high post were also inevitably affected.

In basketball, every player has their most effective scoring methods. Throughout his career,

Boozer’s

long two-point shooting percentage was around 41%. Given the volume of

Boozer’s

long two-pointers, if he couldn’t get consistent scoring from his more effective and primary scoring methods, he couldn’t beat these Warriors with just long two-pointers.

Of course,

Zack

could devote so much energy to defense tonight also because

Davis

had essentially battered

Paul

to death. In the game,

Paul’s

subtle movements, learned from

Stockton

, were not entirely ineffective against

Davis’s

powerful drives, but they were certainly overwhelmed.

Davis

, with his sheer force overcoming skill, would crush all of

Paul’s

tricks in an instant, as long as he found driving space using

Zack’s

screen. It’s like in a wuxia novel, no matter how many moves "Eastern Heretic"

Huang Yaoshi

has, he still needs to channel his internal energy to clash palms with "Northern Beggar"

Hong Qigong

and his Eighteen Dragon-Subduing Palms. As long as

Paul

didn’t have that "internal energy," he was bound to be crushed by

Davis

.

Furthermore, it must be stated for

Paul’s

sake that historically, even in that series where the Jazz eliminated the "Golden State Bandits" 4-1,

Deron Williams

was utterly pounded by

Davis

, that "violent motorcycle." Facing

Davis

, who was averaging 25 points for the Warriors with nearly 50% shooting,

Deron

, with an overall field goal percentage of only 38.7%, barely scraped by by "hugging his brothers’ thighs." If

Zack

remembered correctly, the reason the Warriors lost that run-and-gun battle to the Jazz was mainly due to

Stephen Jackson’s

overall field goal percentage being under 30%.

Due to the Jazz’s overly transparent presence and his own low-key nature,

Andrei Kirilenko

, who only made the All-Defensive Team three times in his entire career, was the true game-changer in that series for the Jazz. In that series,

Kirilenko

, who averaged 3.2 blocks per game, not only turned the famous "Martial Saint" into useless trash that anyone would want to kick, but he even had enough energy to help

Boozer

and

Okur

with their less-skilled sweeping duties.

However, compared to that "waste"

Stephen Jackson

,

Zack’s

presence meant

Kirilenko

couldn’t help his teammates with his usual help defense. Therefore,

Chris Paul

tonight... how can one describe his suffering?

At the end of the first quarter, the scoreboard read

24 to 32

.

Paul

had 2 points, 3 assists on 1-for-4 shooting. His counterpart,

Davis

, had 12 points, 3 rebounds, and 4 assists.

It’s well-known in the NBA that even if players share the same position on the court, they don’t necessarily guard each other throughout the game. Many teams will use switching to ensure their core players avoid the opponent’s offensive primary. But most of the time, some matchups are simply unavoidable through switching.

Take this game, for instance. Even without

Zack

, the Jazz would still have to use

Paul

to guard

Davis

. Because

Andrei Kirilenko

, the Jazz’s strongest defensive player, is 206 cm tall with shoes on. No matter how strong his one-on-one defense is, it’s only against wing players at his position, not point guards like

Davis

who just drive straight to the rim without much fuss. In the Jazz’s usual games, besides running into a few "demons,"

Paul

was already the Jazz’s most reliable perimeter defender. So

Paul

simply couldn’t escape this confrontation with

Davis

.

Originally,

Paul

, being single-handedly dominated by

Davis

, could have still found a way to get back into the game by orchestrating the offense, just like

Deron

, by "hugging his brothers’ thighs." But alas, with

Davis

capable of shouldering the Warriors’ offense,

Zack

had already tormented

Kirilenko

and

Boozer

to no end on both ends of the court tonight.

Historically, when

Deron

struggled, the Jazz surprisingly beat the Warriors 4-1, relying on

Kirilenko’s

limitation of

Jackson

and the excellent play of

Boozer

and

Okur

. However, in the later Western Conference Finals where they were miserably defeated 1-4 by the Spurs,

Deron

, who was averaging 25.8 points and 7.8 assists for the Jazz, could only accept the fate of defeat with his team. Why? Because the Spurs’ interior, led by

Duncan

, had already revealed the Jazz’s weakness through every offensive and defensive possession: they were a team lacking "hard solution" ability. In the game, as long as

Boozer

faced a power forward who could reduce his efficiency, the Jazz would expose their weakness of lacking "hard solution" ability in crucial possessions.

If it were a normal night,

Paul

could use his rhythm pull-ups to provide that "hard solution" ability for the Jazz in some possessions. But unfortunately, tonight both he and

Boozer

met their respective nemeses.

In the second quarter, the Warriors simultaneously put

Brown

and

Biedrins

on the court. These two interior players, who lacked self-creation ability, gave

Mike Dunleavy

a taste of

Stephen Curry’s

future treatment a decade and a half early. On the court, looking at the Jazz players who always abandoned guarding

Brown

and

Biedrins

to double-team him,

Dunleavy

wondered what sins he had committed to be on the court at the same time as these two "sleeping dragons and crouching phoenixes." And the most ridiculous thing was that after he hit a difficult catch-and-shoot jumper for the Warriors, these two brothers were busy taking credit. Didn’t they know that it was precisely because they always brought double-teams to him that he was forced to shoot over a defender?

In the first half of the second quarter, a physically and mentally exhausted

Dunleavy

had never longed for

Murphy

so much. And on the Warriors’ bench, Malone was already planning to retool the Warriors’ roster after this season. In Malone’s view, besides needing to add an interior player with playmaking ability to rotate with

Murphy

, the Warriors were definitely going to choose to keep only one between

Biedrins

and

Brown

. However, due to

Brown

and

Biedrins’s

personal friendship with

Zack

, Malone had never explicitly stated this. Malone knew very well that for a franchise player of

Zack’s

stature, no matter his reasons for wanting to adjust the roster, he had to communicate with him beforehand. Otherwise, there was a high probability he would find himself looking for a new job the next day.

In the latter half of the second quarter,

Zack

and

Davis

returned to the court. It’s worth noting that

Paul’s

individual collapse did not lead to a team-wide breakdown for the Jazz. The disciplined

Jerry Sloan

very rationally chose to avoid a head-on collision with the Warriors in the rest of the game. By actively slowing down the game, organizing offenses more patiently, and constantly increasing their defensive intensity, the Jazz still had a chance to win the game until the fourth quarter.

Having successfully won the championship last year, this Warriors team not only transformed in their demeanor but also developed some "bad habits" characteristic of strong teams in their playing style. The NBA has 82 regular-season games in a year; no team can treat every instruction and every game as seriously as a military unit. Therefore,

Mike Malone

could only tacitly allow the Warriors’ players to "not feel right unless they’re playing recklessly" on the court.

However, in the fourth quarter, the Warriors ultimately secured the victory at home, "slow-cooking" the game before "reducing the sauce" with the final 17 points scored by

Zack

and

Davis

combined. The final score was

101 to 114

.

Davis

had his best game of the season, scoring a total of

35 points, 8 rebounds, 8 assists, and 3 steals

for the Warriors.

Zack

easily notched a 30+ triple-double, finishing with

31 points, 14 rebounds, 11 assists, 3 blocks, and 1 steal

.

As for

Zack’s

good buddy,

Chris Paul

? After the game, as players from both teams shook hands and hugged,

Zack

went around asking everyone, "Have you seen my good buddy,

Chris Paul

?"

Paul

, who mysteriously disappeared during the game, finished with a total of

8 points, 5 rebounds, and 8 assists

. For

Zack’s

ugly post-game demeanor, exasperation was undoubtedly

Paul’s

most accurate post-game description that night.

But

Paul

doesn’t need to be too sad, because in the Warriors’ March journey,

Baron Davis

, who "sliced

Kidd

, slew

Nash

, punched

Deron

, and stomped

Parker

," pretty much trounced every notable point guard in the current era.

For this,

Anthony Lester

, a reporter for

The San Francisco Chronicle

, described

Davis’s

performance since his return: "

Baron

has shown the world just how furious he was about missing the All-Star break due to injury."

Throughout March,

Davis

averaged

27.4 points, 6.8 rebounds, and 5.4 assists

for the Warriors (these stats only include March). The excellent play of the original "Mr. Beard" allowed the Warriors to successfully overtake the Suns and claim the top spot in the Western Conference by the end of March. Moreover, this suddenly surging superstar guard threw a century-old problem at the Warriors’ upcoming opponents. If one

Zack

was already a massive headache, then adding a red-hot

Davis

... how could anyone beat them, facing the Warriors’ relentless, tsunami-like waves of offense?

In April, with the world’s questions in tow, the Cleveland Cavaliers, dominant in the East, arrived in Oakland led by

LeBron James

. As the top team in the East, they would face the newly crowned top team in the West, the Warriors, at Oracle Arena for their second, and final, regular-season matchup.

Although

James

and the Cavaliers suffered a complete defeat in their previous encounter last year, the resilient Clevelanders eventually recovered from that devastating matchup. Before the game,

The Cleveland Plain Dealer

hyped up this upcoming East-West showdown, stating: "Last year’s matchup holds no bearing. It proved that

LeBron

simply needed more time to gel with his new teammates."

Before this game, the Cavaliers had already secured 53 wins, just 4 less than the Western Conference-leading Warriors. Although the difficulty of the East and West schedules this season couldn’t be compared, as

James

led the Cavaliers to win streak after win streak in the East after the All-Star break, as another major contender for this year’s regular season MVP against

Zack

, people had every reason to believe that after several months of growth, "Young

LeBron

" and his increasingly harmonious "King’s Guard" were ready to defeat the defending champions.

This is precisely the most interesting aspect of competitive sports. Beautiful success always makes people forget painful pasts in an instant.

Moreover, as

James

led the Cavaliers to grow stronger and stronger in the regular season’s closing stretch, after the twists and turns, those influential figures who had previously intended to build the rivalry between

Zack

and

James

into the "Great Competition" of the 21st century realized that

James

, who always bounced back after every defeat, had objectively ignited the "Great Competition" they had been yearning for. After all, no matter the difference in schedule difficulty between the East and West, at least the Cavaliers were currently first in the East, and the Warriors they were about to challenge were first in the West. If a showdown between the first in the East and the first in the West couldn’t be called a "Great Competition," then what kind of matchup could?

The Cavaliers arrived in Oakland on April Fool’s Day to be in optimal condition for the East-West showdown on the evening of April 2nd. On the same day, Warriors head coach

Mike Malone

, after reviewing the Cavaliers’ recent games, changed the "go all out" tag he originally assigned to this game to "just have fun."

This was by no means an April Fool’s joke. In

Mike Malone’s

view, the upcoming Western Conference playoffs were the true "three rounds of Finals." As for after emerging from the West after three rounds of Finals?

"I don’t want to say that if we make it out of the West this year, it’s equivalent to defending our title... but I think it’s the truth," Malone stated during the Warriors’ final practice session before their game against the Cavaliers.

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