field coach

Chapter 386 DeWeese in Position 4

Chapter 386 DeWeese in Position 4
Now the Magic have three point guards on the court, and they are all top five point guards in the league. Although Johnson and Thomas have retired or are on the verge of retirement, the saying that the older you get, the more demonic it is not a joke.

Moreover, both Bird and Thomas have participated in the formulation and training of the Magic's Terminator tactics.

To put it bluntly, the terminator tactic is to create open opportunities in an absolute sense with almost unreasonable running and passing. What this tactic needs most is the player's ability to read and pass the ball on the court.

Coincidentally, with these two things, four of the five starters of the Magic are now at the top level.

McHale averaged only 1.7 assists per game in his career, which is naturally not a part, but the other four tacitly played the terminator tactics with Davis as the end point.

Carter’s parallel time and space is somewhat different from the original time and space. He didn’t go to North Carolina, where he had mixed reputations, but went to his hometown, Buddha University, and formed the strongest trio in NCAA history with Nash and Iverson.

During his two years in college, he learned a lot from his two teammates.

Iverson's breakthrough skills and Nash's passing skills have benefited Carter a lot.

Although Carter's dunk is still everyone's favorite because of his superb physical fitness, his other qualities are much stronger than in his previous life.

And in this situation where the Magic's defense is about zero, Carter began to show his more comprehensive scoring methods than in his previous life.

Facing Bird's defense, Carter opened up the space through rhythm changes and physical advantages. Instead of breaking through, Carter ended the attack with the most effortless mid-range shot.

Bird didn't care at all, he was no longer the high-spirited bird that year, and Bird, who returned to the court by accident, just wanted to enjoy every second of his time on the court.

When it came to the Magic's offensive round, Bird received a hand-off pass from Thomas at the top of the arc, and he handed the ball back to Thomas who entered the three-point line. Thomas made a breakthrough fake and caught Stoudemire's attention.

But Thomas didn't stick to the ball too much, and he passed the ball to DeWeese.

Davis didn't take the ball either, but lobbed it directly to Johnson in the low post.

Johnson is now the most effective point on the field except Davis. He no longer distributes the ball to other teammates as the Raptors thought, but directly relies on the defensive player Xiaotian to hook.

After Kareem Abdul-Jabbar retired, the sky hook was no longer seen in the league. Even Johnson, who had received Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's true biography, could only use a small sky hook.

With a hook hit, the Magic continued to maintain a balance with the Raptors.

Carter missed a three-pointer around the screen, but the Raptors took the offensive rebound and made a second offense.

The Magic finally relied on Davis' personal ability to play once. After he got the ball, he directly signaled his teammates to pull away.

DeWeese is more and more fond of dunking. Maybe Jordan also felt this way back then. He was taller and faster than others. He rushed in and dunked on top of others. . . . .

Of course, his other skills have not been put down, but his offensive selection is more inclined to use dunks to finish.

Seeing such a wonderful dunk from DeWeese, Carter's hands also itch.

He immediately returned a dunk, which excited the audience on the sidelines.

I saw that Carter still avoided Davis' defense through the pick-and-roll. First, he leaned his back against Thomas who was defending him, then turned around, squeezed the thin Thomas away with his strength and rushed in. As soon as he entered the free throw line, Carter flew up.

Yes, he seemed to be flying in the air.

There was a camera on the sidelines where Carter was just able to take pictures of the air. His eyes were almost level with the basket, staring at the basket. Carter held the ball high and glided in the air for a long distance.

UFO, well-deserved reputation!

After Carter landed, he looked up to the sky and screamed, and he was greeted by wild cheers from the Raptors fans on the sidelines.

The two teams played a fast-paced and efficient offense because neither of them could prevent the other's offense.

In just half a quarter of the game, the score came to 23-24, with the Magic trailing by one point.

Davis scored 23 of 15 points and Carter scored 24 of 12 points. Both of them played at a very high level.

However, the performance of the veterans is coming to an end for the time being, and D'Antoni has replaced the real main player.

Duncan, Clay, Cole, and Nasr went into battle.

Davis remained on the field.

Although the replacement of four veterans caused dissatisfied boos from the fans on the sidelines, the game still has to pursue victory, and no matter how beautiful the performance is, there will be an end.

After replacing the main force, the Magic's defense became tougher at once.

Davis unexpectedly appeared at the power forward position, exactly the same as the transformed Johnson.

But DeWeese's height of nearly two meters, coupled with his excellent physical talent, makes him a remarkable player at the 4th position. More importantly, the Magic's inside line has an extra organizational point that is stronger than Garnett.

The Magic's inside line has always been organized. Except for O'Neil and Rodman's inside combination that had no organizational ability at all, the organization ability of Mason, Garnett, and Duncan is almost at the top level among inside players.

But now, Davis simply hit the 4th position.

On the first attack after changing positions, DeWeese completed a standard inside attack.

He singled Walter Williams with his back. Williams shook his shoulders a few times and couldn't move. Then Davis turned halfway, leaned on the opponent with his shoulder, separated the opponent with one hand, and hooked the ball with the other hand.

The ball fell steadily into the basket, and Walter couldn't make an effective defense at all.

Walter had no choice but to discuss it with his teammates, and Davis helped defend him when he hit him again.

Carter still wants to break into the inside and dunk, but the inside of the Magic where Duncan is present is no longer a place where Carter can come and go whenever he wants.

Although Duncan's interference did not block Carter, it forced Carter to change the dunk into a layup. Carter's pull-up layup missed the basket, and Davis stuck Walter to get a defensive rebound.

After getting the rebound, DeWeese didn't have to pass the ball at all. . . .He picked up the ball and rushed to the frontcourt.

Nasr followed closely beside DeWeese, and now he is the only one who can keep up with DeWeese on the current Magic team.

DeWeese sprinted inside to Eurostep past the Raptors, then tossed the ball high into the air.

Nasr jumped high from behind, received a pass from Davis in the air, and scored with a one-handed dunk.

(End of this chapter)

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