110. Offensive and defensive ends

Wu Dawei held the ball, faced Wilson Chandler's defense, and boos all over the court. In the end, he didn't choose to attack hard, but passed the ball out. Because he saw Williams in a better position to attack than himself.

Wu Dawei passed it over, but it was a pity that Williams missed the shot. The rebound was not snatched by Wu Dawei, although he rushed to the basket the moment Williams made a shot, but unfortunately the ball did not bounce outside, but fell into the paint.

Amare Stoudemire has firmly held his position, and the difference in height is quite large, and Wu Dawei has the advantage of being a prophet, but he is helpless.

Stoudemire, who grabbed the rebound, was cheered on by New Yorkers. The Knicks switched offense to defense at a fast pace. This is the style of coach Mike D'Antoni, who started out with a fast break and is known for his fast attack. The Suns were the pinnacle of his fast-break playbook, and now, he's hoping to replicate that in New York and beyond.

While Raymond Felton isn't a better fast-break engine than Stephen Nash, the NC point guard is still an excellent No. 1 player. His past career under Larry Brown has given him a rigorous and meticulous style of play. When he realized that there was no very suitable opportunity after half-time, he immediately chose to stop and reorganize the attack.

Positional warfare isn't a New York Knicks' forte, but that doesn't mean they're going to be a mess in positional warfare. Amare Stoudemire, Daroni Gallinari and even Wilson Chandler are all very good singlesmen.

The basketball goes through a few rounds of passing and finally comes to the basket. Stoudemire received the basketball, stuck Antoine Jamison behind him, and arched in a few times, followed by a small throw that turned.

Basketball went to the net, and the New Yorkers got off to a flying start.

0:2。

The situation of leading the way made these New Yorkers, who had always been self-paying aristocrats, even more arrogant, as if the Cleveland players, especially Wu Dawei, were a bunch of lowly and inferior people in their eyes.

When Wu Dawei held the ball on the offensive end, the boos were still flying all over the sky. He kept his attention as focused on the court as he could, deaf to the shouting and yelling off the court, but now the situation on the court was that no one from the Cavaliers came up to answer him.

The loud noise made by the New Yorkers in the opening game made the Cavaliers players a little distracted for a while, which quickly caused Wu Dawei to be pinched on the line.

He's got the ball broken! It has always been Wu Dawei who broke other people's balls, and this time, he was snatched from the basketball by Raymond Felton who suddenly rushed up, and Maurice Williams was completely indifferent to this.

"Well done, Raymond!"

Spike Lee immediately howled like a madman, and when he saw David Wu deflated, especially in his own best field, Spike Lee was in a good mood! Aren't you very good at breaking the ball? Isn't it leading the steals charts? Why was it cut off?

"Hey, Chinese guy, you've got the ball broken!"

Wu Dawei did not have time to pay attention to Spike Lee's provocation on the sidelines, and the moment Raymond Felton cut off possession, he reflexively chased after the backcourt. Because Raymond Felton launched a fast break in the first place.

A 4-0 start is not unacceptable for any team, and it is not a football game. But in the face of such a bad atmosphere on the pitch, if you can't play in time, it will really hurt morale.

Although Felton is a defender, he has a huge advantage in positional battles, and he drags him down when he plays fast breaks.

As he rushed into the Cavaliers' half court and jumped up to finish the offense with a basket lick, Felton heard the wind whirring behind him, but he couldn't control that much at this time, and he had to send the arrow! …,