The No.1 Anti-Fans in Basketball-Chapter 435 - 223 Contemporary Jordan_3

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Chapter 435: Chapter 223 Contemporary Jordan_3

The Grizzlies’ performance tonight had truly made him feel as if he was in that era.

But it wasn’t his fault. After all, last year’s Heat Team had hardly put any pressure on the Grizzlies; you couldn’t see the Grizzlies’ real strength.

But this Heat Team did.

After the timeout, the Heat Team didn’t make any substitutions, but Wade started to handle the ball again.

He and Bosh began a pick-and-roll at the three-point line, and Wade drove into the crowd as soon as the pick-and-roll happened.

This made the Grizzlies’ defense instinctively tighten.

And at that moment, Wade passed the ball to Bosh.

Bosh was positioned quite far out, almost a step inside the three-point line.

The constricted Grizzlies’ defense was too late to rush out again.

Bosh’s adjusted mid-range jump shot was a stable hit.

Turning back, Hansen’s defender also changed back to Wade; it looked like Spoelstra’s timeout was mainly to adjust the defense.

The Grizzlies switched to high-low offense, with Randolph continuing to play in the low post against Bosh.

But this time Bosh stood firm, withstanding Randolph’s forceful low-post play and also protecting the defensive rebound.

Then, turning back, Bosh received the ball at the high post, feinted a jump shot to bait Randolph, then drove into the lane. A decoying fake again got past Little Gasol’s block attempt, followed by a two-handed dunk to score.

He had just toyed with the black and white bears by himself.

After the dunk, Bosh did his signature Dragon King’s roar to celebrate.

This season, Bosh, like Randolph, was also selected for both the All-Star game and the All-NBA Team.

to 12.

After Bosh’s two offensive and one defensive play, the Heat Team closed the gap once more.

Because James was traded, the peak grouping was no longer, and fans stopped referring to them as The Big Three.

But during this phase, everyone felt what The Big Three meant; really, any one of them could be the core player.

The Heat fans’ cheers rose again in the venue.

Tonight, the four- to five-point gap seemed like a hurdle the Heat Team could not overcome.

If they could just stop the Grizzlies on this offensive drive and narrow the gap to a single basket, the situation on the court would be completely different.

Hansen called for the ball in the frontcourt, backing down Wade.

He clearly understood this as well.

With the Grizzlies spread out, Hansen jumped to catch the ball and started to post up Wade.

Durant had only seen Hansen’s unique back-down technique at the All-Star game, but now Wade was genuinely experiencing it.

The pressure was even greater than with Kobe.

Just as he had to sink his weight, Hansen suddenly made a turn and hop step near the three-second area.

This move was very fast and he even bumped him during the turn. He had no chance to close the gap.

Before Perkins could lunge outward, Hansen made a floater that went right in.

The Grizzlies’ bench erupted with enthusiasm; this time it wasn’t just Sacre, Carter stood up excitedly too.

His killer move, Hansen executed it with equal adeptness.

The home crowd couldn’t help but grind their teeth watching Hansen.

Once again it was Hansen, always standing up to score whenever the Heat Team was about to turn the score around.

And the worst part was that Hansen, after scoring and retreating to half-court, clapped his hands and cheered his teammates on.

Bosh tried the same move, but this time Randolph blocked him outright.

Without the advantage in the clash, Bosh passed back to Wade.

Ray Allen ran a three-point strategy, but under the joint disruption of Little Gasol and Conley, the shot didn’t go in.

Hansen secured the long rebound.

Hansen carried the ball over the half-court line, then signaled to clear out, including Guy on the strong side, who was moved to the weak side by him.

The venue immediately buzzed with tension; Hansen was truly not holding back.

After creating space on offense, Hansen backed down Wade with the ball again.

This time he didn’t just bluntly chisel at Wade, but cleverly mixed feints with genuine moves.

Once he sensed Wade’s center of gravity shifting, he swiftly turned for a baseline jumper.

Wade immediately leapt up, only to be taken aback when Hansen faked the shot to draw a foul!

Unable to stop his momentum, their bodies collided, and the referee’s whistle followed instantly.

However, Hansen didn’t stop after the collision and followed through with the shot.

Wade turned around just in time to see the ball go through the hoop.

The crowd was stunned.

Hansen felt two points weren’t enough and also wanted an extra free throw?

At this point, even Wade had to laugh out of irritation.

When Hansen stepped up to the free-throw line, Wade couldn’t help but ask, "How did you manage to master post-ups and fadeaways in just one season?"

"It’s a secret,"

Hansen replied with a smile, then confidently made the additional free throw.

to 12.

For the first time, the Grizzlies extended their lead to double digits.