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The Guys Who Are Sneaking Around (III)

The Guys Who Are Sneaking Around (III)

The "Stealth" series was the first to write "A Group of People".

The Miami Heat are undoubtedly a strong team, and the attention received is not low, but the limelight was overshadowed by several upstarts after a brief glow at the beginning of the game. Adebayor and Butler played 18 and 23 games respectively, and the Heat were short of manpower at one point, and Haslem had to wear it. Therefore, after the media's fresh energy for the heat has passed, more attention has been paid to the new forces in the east to the bulls and knights.

The Guys Who Are Sneaking Around (III)

It just so happens that the Heat has become an incubator again, secretly changing some tricks for you.

A lot of people aren't coming up for the first time, with Vincent and Stulus shooting unknown three-pointers in Miami last season. Judging from the determination of their shots, you understand that their positioning is of course a shooter, but the three-point shooting rate of 30.9% and 33.8% has little to do with the definition of shooter. The ability to turn stones into gold is indeed impressive, but if Dunroe-style Taobao becomes the norm, then the wizard who gave Bertans 80 million US dollars should not feel extremely frustrated, and even begin to doubt life?

The Heat is really dumbfounded. After Dunroe, the Heat have trained two lost draft picks into quality shooters, and Sturus has 9.7 shots per 36 minutes and a three-point performance of 41.8% shooting, which is already comparable to the league's top shooters. In the context of no shooter experiences eating, and the big contract smashing shooter may eat more, I am lucky to be able to find a shooter by myself.

And that's not all.

Firefighter Kyle Guy, who is frantically outputting in a very wild pose, is currently shooting 45 percent from three-point range. Of course, such a perverted value could not be maintained, but when he withered, the Heat personnel were mostly in order.

The Guys Who Are Sneaking Around (III)

Yurt Cevenn, the name of the twister, is another misstep. This dude did two shocking things today. First of all, so difficult to defend the sun blocking, he actually defended very well, and Paul gamed, stuck behind the center, basically in place. Then, he delivered 8 assists, the previous career high of only 4 assists, the Heat developed his strategic value, and even played the Suns defense.

Caleb Martin, on the same day as his brother, made a highlight. Although forced, he was also a man who played from the 2nd position to the 5th position, contributing to the vitality while shooting a qualified 37% three-point shooting rate. The game of hitting the Bucks is simply a god.

P.J. Tucker's quality offense turned out to be constant, not only exploding in the bottom corner, shooting 46.9% of the three-point shooting rate, but also a beautiful air cut, accurate close to the basket hook and throw, in his most famous Rockets period, and last season to win the championship, not so strong.

So, the people you think the Heat are sneaking up on are:

Facing the Suns, Tyro, who slashed 33 points and sent a diagonal pass?

In the face of the sun, 8 three-pointers in anger, Deng Luo who raised his hand will see blood?

Facing the Suns, miao took 13 assists, the strong side broke through the defense line, and accurately found lowry in the bottom corner of the opposite side.

In fact, their strength has long been there, and there is nothing new. In fact, Hiro has been wilting lately, and this one is the recent exception. Dunroe's three-point shooting percentage of 35.9% this season has only recently seen a pick-up trend. Lowry is no better than he has been in previous seasons.

But PJ Tucker ' levels overstimated over the past two years – get a full statistic of 13 points , seven boards , three assists + two steals — that doesn't even reflect his full contribution to the game. Jurt Cevennes faced the Suns with a full return from the inside line, and got 16 boards, 8 assists and 2 steals. Caleb Martin, who defended Paul, together with the team, let Paul lead the most pull-out battle of the season. Sturus also hit four three-pointers.

The Guys Who Are Sneaking Around (III)

The Heat, a bunch of sneaky guys, finally made the world aware of their existence in an upset win against the league's No. 1 game.

The Heat is in an X state.

When we talked about them during the offseason, we were worried that after forming the starting lineup of Lowry + Butler + Dunroe + Tucker + Reba at no low cost, their bench was too weak. Hiro was the first player to reassure, but his form was not stable.

The Heat's deep digging into the bench gave them more options, and their projection resources suddenly returned to the 19-20 season, which allowed the Heat to play "invincible" team basketball - why is the full Sun heat so difficult?

In addition to the feel of the critical hit, there is also the reason why the sun does not know where the focus is. The opposite shooter disrupted the Sun players in all directions in a surround sound manner, and they had no idea at what point they would eventually be caught in the neutral.

The Guys Who Are Sneaking Around (III)

One dealer, four shooters fly, let you guess which cloud has rain.

kindness.

If this content is maintained, it will be equivalent to completely liberating the core of the Heat — two melee heroes — which is one of the reasons for their success in the park in 2020.

Great places, more than that.

The Suns also shot 41.2 percent from three-point range, taking advantage of the sheer number of free throws, and in the end the offensive efficiency was limited to 100, and you can't say that the Heat defended them by luck, and that was done without the heat defending the strongest players. Coach Spoo's defensive command throughout the game is flexible and changeable, sometimes staring at people, sometimes joint defense, and there are several postures in joint defense. The Sun was completely out of rhythm and failed to play the inside advantage.

Winning the league No. 1, Miami's Musketeer Brigade reminded the league that discussing the topic of top competition must not forget them.

The Guys Who Are Sneaking Around (III)

A few months ago, when the Heat had just decided on a "featherweight stud," you wouldn't have thought that this team could put Dunro and Hiro on the bench when Butler and Adebayo were not there. Their rotation unexpectedly received expansion packs, and this is the first time that after the deep excavation of the 19-20 season, it is once again the responsibility of the little people. Should Miami be lucky, or are they unique?

All you can say is that sooner or later a well-trained team will have talent. Pulling back the clock back to last season, the Heat had nothing to do with luck, with their players suffering all sorts of inexplicable declines, while Strus and Vincent were already in the lineup at the time, delivering desperate shots, and they played anyway.

A good team can make players appear in the right lineup with the right positioning, stimulate their energy, and play the greatest role;

A good team can also use reasonable means to try its best to make up for the shortcomings of players, so that players with limitations can play to their strengths and avoid weaknesses.

Teams that can come up with a variety of styles on the defensive end and design a lot of running positions on the offensive end are not necessarily better than teams that can achieve their goals with simple means.

But such a team is usually not too bad.

From that point of view, the Heat are secretly powerful, and their coaches.

The Guys Who Are Sneaking Around (III)

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