Chapter 362: Collapsing at the First Touch (7003 words)
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***
On the evening of June 5, 2004, the game at Madison Square Garden allowed many commentators to re-evaluate the New York Knicks’ roster depth.
From the commentary booth, as the third quarter was about to end, Doug Rivers couldn’t help but exclaim again:
“The New York Knicks’ rotation is even better than we thought.”
“These players seem to be playing at 120% of their ability when they are around Clay Lee.”
“Raja Bell and Tayshaun Prince have both done a great job on the Defense, and even Amar’e Stoudemire, whose playing time was limited, scored consecutively in his limited minutes.”
“The locker room culture of a Champion team affects the players. Perhaps this is the key to their success!”
After saying this in a hoarse voice, Rivers felt he had learned something new.
He attributed the Orlando Magic’s failure to insufficient star power and lack of roster depth.
Watching Mike D’Antoni pacing with a smile on the sidelines, Rivers secretly envied him:
“What a lucky guy!”
Michaels felt his partner’s words made sense.
The New York Knicks’ rotation indeed performed excellently.
Dikembe Mutombo and the big man Wright, who came off the bench, both had specific tasks: if they couldn’t defend Shaquille O’Neal, they would foul him.
The New York Knicks could accept Shaquille O’Neal scoring easily in the low post, but in most possessions, they constantly fronted him and tried to double-team him in the low post.
Aside from Pau Gasol, who controlled his fouls, the few big men who came off the bench didn’t care about their foul count, sending Shaquille O’Neal to the free-throw line several times.
Unexpectedly for the New York Knicks’ coaching staff, perhaps due to the large deficit, Shaquille O’Neal was exceptionally focused, and the foul strategy failed.
Fortunately, Kobe continued to miss shots, occasionally making a field goal, while Gary Payton and Karl Malone were completely silent, completely ignored on the Defense.
With 46.2 seconds left in the third quarter, the referee was not stingy with his whistle, trying to compensate the Lakers a bit to prevent the score difference from becoming too large and affecting the game.
Ron Artest chuckled and high-fived Tayshaun Prince. As he returned to his seat, he noticed the Rookie, who had come on, was silently watching him again.
Kobe Bryant frowned.
The New York Knicks’ Defense was more troublesome than he had imagined.
Lee, standing beyond the three-point line, didn’t even look at Kobe, who was shooting free throws.
He had intended to check on Gary Payton nearby, but the veteran had already moved far away from him.
With reduced playing time, his expression was even uglier.
Although Derek Fisher, who came off the bench, also kept missing shots, Gary Payton couldn’t be happy.
He was completely dominated on both ends of the court.
Kobe’s two free throws brought the score to 61:89.
The New York fans on site were cheering and celebrating, anticipating a strong start to the Finals.
Lee didn’t rush.
Both teams still had one last possession.
In the commentary booth, Michaels summarized the game early:
“The New York Knicks’ strategy is clear. They have been constantly speeding up their offensive pace.”
“Although the Lakers performed well, they are still too slow. Losing by such a large margin, I believe Head Coach Phil Jackson will make adjustments in G2.”
By this point in the game, Kobe had only rested for 2 minutes.
The Lakers truly couldn’t do without him.
On offense, he had to handle a portion of the ball, and on Defense, Kobe also had to guard Lee to limit the New York Knicks’ scoring.
Although Kobe was struggling on both ends of the court, he was still one of only two players performing well for the Lakers.
“Let’s go Knicks!”
The cheers did not diminish as time passed.
A blowout game depended on the opponent, and seeing the Lakers struggle made New York fans particularly happy.
Due to foul trouble, the New York Knicks’ interior players at this time were Pau Gasol and Dikembe Mutombo.
In the third quarter, Karl Malone actively pushed, causing Kurt Thomas to pick up his fourth personal foul early.
However, this did not change the situation on the court, nor did it change the fact that Karl Malone’s offensive state was poor.
Watching Pau Gasol move early to the top of the arc for a screen, Karl Malone numbly shuffled his feet.
He had been so worn out that he had lost his temper.
Kobe, full of fighting spirit, stared intently.
Noticing Pau Gasol moving to his right, he immediately shuffled his feet and stepped up to tightly guard Lee, who was dribbling with his left hand.
The moment Karl Malone also slid over to help defend, Pau Gasol didn’t stand still but quickly rolled down, heading straight for the left baseline.
At the same time, Lee leaned against Kobe, feigning an acceleration to drive, and then, as Karl Malone’s help Defense was about to arrive, he smoothly delivered a bounce pass.
Just as he reached the left restricted area, Karl Malone saw Pau Gasol receive the ball in open space and quickened his steps, rapidly closing in to defend.
The moment he passed the ball, Lee first quickly shuffled sideways, feigning a cut, then suddenly stepped back.
Kobe, whose body center was deceived, was still sliding backward to the left.
He didn’t see Pau Gasol pass the ball again behind him.
By the time he reacted, Lee had already returned to the left wing to receive the ball.
Raising the ball for a pump fake from the three-point line, Lee’s realistic fake move immediately made Kobe rush to defend.
Protecting the ball on his left side, Lee quickly took a jab step forward to the left with his right foot, then suddenly lowered his center of gravity.
Kobe hurriedly shuffled back again.
Taking advantage of his opponent’s slide, Lee faked again, then dropped the ball with his left hand, feigning a drive.
Kobe, whose body’s center of gravity was continuously shifted, first rushed to defend and then quickly slid back to the right.
After body contact, seeing Lee quickly explode the ball and step back, Kobe couldn’t rush to defend in time and remained rooted to the spot, watching the shot.
Drifting slightly backward to the left, with no interference, Lee completed his jump shot and immediately raised his left arm, celebrating simply.
Swish! The three-pointer went in cleanly!
61:92. Kobe’s face was dark, but he had no solution.
If he got too close, he’d be driven past.
If he stayed too far, he’d watch a step-back jumper.
Since taking over the Defense in the second quarter, Kobe hadn’t found the right defensive distance and was constantly being toyed with by Lee.
The laughter of the fans in the front row made Kobe a bit hot-headed.
He no longer controlled the time.
After Gary Payton dribbled past half-court with 8 seconds left, Kobe immediately demanded the ball on the right wing.
Devin George, as always, stayed in the left corner, and Hill, beside him, didn’t look at him but constantly watched the interior movements, trying to anticipate the Lakers’ passing lanes.
When Lee arrived at the left wing, he didn’t look at Gary Payton beside him.
Below the left basket, Shaquille O’Neal was still battling Dikembe Mutombo.
Shaquille O’Neal, also looking upset, saw Lee and Hill begin to converge and knew the New York Knicks were preparing to double-team him.
He had intended to call Karl Malone for a baseline cross-screen, but before Shaquille O’Neal could speak, Kobe, who had received the ball away from the three-point line, swept the ball and then put it down with his right hand for a straight drive.
Constantly sliding backward to the left, Tayshaun Prince raised his left arm while constantly making small movements with his right hand, disrupting Kobe’s dribbling rhythm.
In daily training, the New York Knicks’ forwards would defend Lee this way.
It was considered the most effective defensive method.
Kobe’s dribbling center of gravity was higher than Lee’s, and coupled with some decline in stamina, he was forced to slow down while using his dribbling hand to swat away the arm, failing to squeeze past the Defense in time.
Shaquille O’Neal and Karl Malone saw Kobe stop short and immediately charged hard towards the basket.
They both knew they wouldn’t get a pass, so at this point, they could only desperately fight for offensive rebounds.
The anticipated rebound did not materialize.
Instead, the referee signaled a sideline inbound.
After Kobe made a fake move, Tayshaun Prince cleanly stole the ball, disrupting the offense.
Having completed an excellent Defense, Tayshaun Prince ignored Kobe’s glare and emotionlessly stuck close to him.
Even with the referee right there, Tayshaun Prince still subtly pulled and tugged, employing an “embracing” Defense that immediately infuriated Kobe, who started pushing back.
Fortunately, the referee gave a warning, and only then did Tayshaun Prince raise both arms, indicating he was fine.
Gary Payton inbounded the ball, and Kobe received it again on the left wing.
Lee again followed Gary Payton to the left wing.
Noticing that Kobe was actually dribbling towards the baseline, he immediately loudly warned Tayshaun Prince.
Making a wrong offensive choice, under the interference of Tayshaun Prince’s long arms, Kobe, dribbling with his right hand, finally realized something was wrong and hurriedly dribbled behind his back to his left hand.
Karl Malone also moved from below the right basket to the left corner to set a screen for Kobe.
However, the space in this position was narrow.
Although Kobe, dribbling with his left hand, temporarily shook off Tayshaun Prince, he had to lead the ball forward to prevent the opponent from stealing it from behind.
But as Pau Gasol also came up to help defend, also extending his long arm to interfere, Kobe had intended to do an In and out, but he overestimated his ball-handling ability.
During the move, he collided into Pau Gasol’s arms, then lost control of the ball.
Kobe shouted, instinctively tipping the ball towards the three-point line, attempting to pass it to Gary Payton, who was coming up to receive.
However, the tip was too weak.
At the top of the arc, Lee exerted force with his feet and snatched the ball away.
Kobe, lying on the floor, was still complaining to the referee.
Gary Payton also couldn’t stop Clay Lee and could only chase him relentlessly from behind.
A 1-on-0 fast break, Lee ignored Gary Payton chasing him from behind, soared into the air inside the paint, grabbed the ball with his left hand, and glided for a powerful dunk.
“Wow!”
From the steal to the dunk, Lee only took less than 5 seconds.
The storm-like counterattack silenced the Lakers’ bench, with only New York fans still cheering loudly.
“This is Kobe’s third turnover. He shouldn’t dribble too much. Such an offensive choice is terrible.”
“Second-year Prince’s excellent Defense has put Kobe in trouble several times. The Lakers coaching staff probably didn’t anticipate this situation.”
Rivers immediately commented after looking at the technical statistics.
He had criticized Kobe’s offensive choices more than once tonight.
Phil Jackson sat expressionless in his seat.
The camera frequently focused on the Champion Coach, but he showed little reaction.
Michaels found it difficult to comment.
After all, everyone on the Lakers except Shaquille O’Neal was underperforming, which was fully proven by the Knicks’ increasingly compact Defense.
On the Lakers’ last possession, Shaquille O’Neal received the ball under the basket and was double-teamed.
When he turned from the left low post, Hill had already helped defend from the other baseline corner to the basket.
At the same time, Lee had also already helped defend beside Shaquille O’Neal, and Dikembe Mutombo’s arms were still above Shaquille O’Neal’s head, who was playing high-low.
With arms all around his waist, Shaquille O’Neal threw the ball to the right baseline corner from behind the rim.
Devin George caught the ball, and his open three-point jump shot ultimately clanked off the rim.
61:94. After three quarters, on the Lakers’ bench, Phil Jackson stood up and immediately called for the atmosphere group.
He had had enough of this game.
The Lakers failed to win a single quarter, scoring 22 points in the second quarter and 21 points in the third quarter.
The Kentucky Fried Chicken Old Man felt that tonight’s game was a humiliation to him, and he directly threw the tactical board to the assistant coach.
Kobe was glared at by Phil Jackson.
He had wanted to ask the coach to let him continue playing, but seeing the devouring gaze, he ultimately remained silent.
7 of 18 from the field, 0 of 4 from beyond the arc, 4 of 6 from the free-throw line, for 18 points, 3 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 steal, and 3 turnovers.
Kobe knew he hadn’t played well, but he felt he was just slow to start tonight.
Shaquille O’Neal had a long face, shooting 11 of 15 from the field, 7 of 10 from the free-throw line, for 29 points, 8 rebounds, 1 assist, and 3 turnovers.
The Shark couldn’t remember how many passes he had made, but what he knew was that the Lakers’ outside shots kept clanking off the rim.
Without blaming Gary Payton, nor communicating much with Karl Malone, Shaquille O’Neal just sat in his seat, silently drinking his “oral solution,” glaring angrily at those about to enter the game.
The two veterans were silent, and Devin George didn’t know what to say.
He shot 2 of 8 from the field, 1 of 4 from beyond the arc, and 4 of 4 from the free-throw line, scoring 9 points.
He was the only starter to make a three-pointer.
Payton played 28 minutes, shooting 1 of 5 from the field, 0 of 2 from beyond the arc, and 0 of 2 from the free-throw line, for 2 points, 2 rebounds, 3 assists, and 2 turnovers.
Malone shot 1 of 6 from the field, 1 of 2 from the free-throw line, for 3 points, 8 rebounds, 1 assist, and 1 turnover.
The starting five accounted for all of the Lakers’ points.
Phil Jackson’s brow remained furrowed after seeing the technical statistics.
The coaching staff naturally knew how to adjust, but unfortunately, even Kobe, with his excellent Defense, was useless against Lee.
The Lakers directly surrendered, and the Knicks naturally brought on the atmosphere group.
The New York fans present were very dissatisfied, and many began to boo and shout, and then the sound grew louder and louder:
“Where is shaq?”
The shouts in the Madison Square Garden caused Shaquille O’Neal, sitting on the bench, to crush the drink in his hand, cursing under his breath in anger, and then glaring at Kobe again.
At this point, both teams’ players no longer played intentional Defense.
Watching the back-and-forth on the court, Michaels began to discuss the next game:
“Doug, how do you think the Lakers should adjust? They had many opportunities for outside shots tonight.”
Rivers praised Raja Bell, who had just made a three-pointer.
Hearing this question, he couldn’t think of many solutions and could only say something diplomatic:
“Defense is the most important. They must effectively limit Clay Lee on the perimeter so that the second line of Defense can play its role.”
“If they double-team too early, the subsequent defensive rotation speed needs to be faster. This is also a test for the veterans, but I believe the Lakers’ Defense will change in Game 2.”
Playing 33 minutes, shooting 14 of 21 from the field, 7 of 11 from beyond the arc, and 10 of 10 from the free-throw line, for 45 points, 6 rebounds, 10 assists, 3 steals, and 1 turnover.
After looking at Lee’s statistics again, Rivers stopped talking.
He knew the Lakers were completely finished.
The game proceeded smoothly, with the final score settling at 85:118.
The Knicks overwhelmingly defeated the Lakers, easily protecting their home court.
Phil Jackson kept a straight face, not letting any emotion show, but when he came to the scorer’s table and saw Mike D’Antoni’s smiling face, his eye twitched involuntarily.
Compared to the Bald Young Coach from before, Jackson Man disliked the Mike D’Antoni in front of him even more.
His proud 72-win historical best record was gone.
Jeff Van Gundy led the Knicks to four consecutive championships, while Mike D’Antoni broke the historical best record and created the largest historical winning margin.
The two, one after the other, broke all of the Chicago Bulls’ records, leading most commentators to believe that Phil Jackson, the Champion Coach, was completely outdated.
“A wonderful game. I look forward to our matchup the day after tomorrow!”
Mike D’Antoni proactively stepped forward to shake hands, but saying these words made Phil Jackson’s expression change again.
He always felt his opponent was mocking him.
After shaking hands, he turned and left.
The Kentucky Fried Chicken Old Man and the Lakers quickly walked towards the player tunnel.
They only had a little over a day to rest.
After the game, the cheers in the Madison Square Garden were still incessant.
Michelle Tafoya, wearing a dark blue professional suit, came to Lee’s side and asked with a smile:
“Lee, congratulations on winning tonight’s game. Winning by such a large margin, does this mean the Knicks have an absolute advantage?”
After resting for a quarter, there was no sweat on Lee’s head.
Hearing the question, he answered without hesitation:
“Yes, we are stronger. The Knicks do have an absolute advantage!”
“I think the Detroit Pistons’ Defense is better than the Lakers’. The opponent’s help-Defense speed is too slow, and their defensive pressure is insufficient. This is why we won by such a large margin.”
“In a game, I usually don’t consider the first line of Defense, but when I encounter the Lakers, I don’t even consider subsequent Defense.”
“We just need to strictly execute the game plan set by the coaching staff to win step by step. I hope the opponent can last until the fourth quarter in the next game.”
“…”
Michelle Tafoya could only smile politely. Lee spoke bluntly, but his words were also the truth.
Ron Artest behind him continuously punched the air towards the fans, then leaned into the camera and shouted loudly:
“They are too weak! We will win the championship!”
On sunday, June 6th, after Lee’s dominant performance against the “old man,” commentators overwhelmingly sang praises for the Knicks.
No one believed the Lakers could win the series.
The Knicks’ Defense restricted Payton and Kobe, and no matter how many points Shaquille O’Neal scored, it couldn’t change the game’s trajectory.
Pau Gasol, who had become a role player, shot 5 of 9 from the field for 14 points, 8 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 steal, and 1 block.
The Knicks’ “Four protect one” was very successful.
On the TNT program, Pau Gasol’s performance was analyzed, and Kobe’s offensive choices were criticized.
Finally, Charles Barkley no longer spoke up for the veterans and, for the first time, spoke bluntly:
“Gary Payton is no longer a qualified starting guard for a championship team.”
“After his physical abilities declined, he couldn’t support his rich defensive experience. Clay Lee is right, with a simple pick-and-roll, he can break through the Lakers’ Defense.”
He paused, seeing his two partners look at him.
In the studio, Charles Barkley sighed and continued:
“I understand Karl Malone. He’s a tough guy, but unfortunately, he can’t keep up with the pace of modern basketball.”
“This is a failed combination. The Lakers have no chance. Compared to the Knicks’ rotation, their roster depth also has a gap.”
“Shaquille O’Neal is not a qualified leader, and on such a stage, Kobe Bryant will even play emotionally.”
“If they maintain this game state, the Knicks will sweep the Lakers to win the championship.”
Seeing the veterans’ decline, Kenny Smith also lamented:
“I agree with Lee. In Eastern Conference Finals Game 3, the Detroit Pistons showed excellent Defense.”
“It should be said that in all four games of the series, the Detroit Pistons have done well defensively. They limited the performance of the Knicks’ role players.”
“In contrast, the Lakers let the opponent play too easily. I hope to see Karl Malone and Payton make those open shots.”
Ernie Johnson saw his two partners agree, then smiled and looked at them, finally asking:
“How do you think the Lakers will adjust in Game 2?”
Barkley remained silent. Kenny Smith said helplessly:
“Unless Kobe Bryant can break through the Knicks’ perimeter Defense to relieve pressure on Shaquille O’Neal, the Lakers will still lose by a large margin.”
“After all, they can’t expect the veterans to explode. Head Coach Phil Jackson has to prepare for the worst.”
“…”
On the morning of June 7th, several Philadelphia sports media reported Allen Iverson’s interview.
When asked about this year’s Finals, the short guard calmly stated:
“Teams in the Western Conference simply don’t know what we’ve been through all these years.”
“Times have never changed. Big men have never dominated the league.”
“I don’t like the New York Knicks, but the Lakers have no chance this year.”
Orlando’s local sports media also reported Tracy McGrady’s views on this year’s Finals:
“Kobe is my good brother, but I have to say, he’s very lucky. If I played for the Lakers, maybe I could also win a championship.”
“But in the Eastern Conference, I don’t have that opportunity. The New York Knicks have four All-Star players, which is proof of their strength.”
The Detroit media, who have always disliked the New York Knicks, also followed suit and mocked:
“Facing a Lakers team like this, as long as the Detroit Pistons can make it to the Finals, the championship is ours!”
Teams from the Eastern Conference complained one after another, and column articles all grumbled that the Lakers were too weak, allowing the New York Knicks to get a huge bargain.
The Lakers rested for a day, re-watched the G1 footage, and then everyone fell silent again.
The New York Times’ column articles no longer mocked the Lakers excessively.
Their opponent was too weak!
Yesterday morning’s article poked fun at Phil Jackson’s tactical arrangements, while some articles this morning ridiculed the arrogant Kobe:
“The league’s best shooting guard?”
Under the New York Knicks’ rotating perimeter Defense, Kobe’s shooting percentage was less than 40%, so his performance was naturally not living up to his reputation.
When he arrived at the Madison Square Garden for warm-ups in the afternoon, Kobe accepted an interview and confidently stated:
“I don’t care about external evaluations. I’ve said it before, I never play for stats.”
“I’m even less interested in looking at those boring box scores after the game.”
“Field goal percentage, that’s never been a concern of mine. I’m a scorer, and I’ll always believe in my shot because I know how much effort I’ve put into it!”
Saying this with a blank expression, Kobe noticed that even the Los Angeles Times reporter, who had always supported him, looked disappointed.
Sensing that everyone still wanted to ask questions, Kobe chose to turn and leave.
More words were useless; he would prove himself with action!
Phil Jackson didn’t allow Payton and Karl Malone to be interviewed.
The veterans needed to save face.
When asked how tonight’s game would be adjusted, the Kentucky Fried Chicken Old Man simply replied:
“Share the ball more, increase the pace of offense. The Lakers will expand their rotation, and players will step up to help Shaquille O’Neal share the offensive pressure!”
“…”
Game 2 was scheduled to officially begin at 8 PM.
Although it was a Monday, this would not affect the New York fans’ enthusiasm for watching the game in the slightest.
Each game was one less to see, and according to the current trend, the New York Knicks were very likely not to return to their home court.
Sweeping opponents in the playoffs for two consecutive years also frustrated some New York fans, as there were simply too few home games to watch!
Fortunately, Game 4 happened to fall on a weekend, and die-hard fans had already started booking flights to Los Angeles.
Everyone didn’t want to miss this year’s award ceremony.
Before the game started, at the ABC broadcast booth, Michaels noticed that neither team had changed their starting lineup and immediately asked his partner, Rivers:
“Will the Lakers execute a double-team Defense from the start?”
Rivers immediately shook his head and said with great certainty:
“No, the Detroit Pistons have tried such a defensive strategy. They tried to use a zone Defense to limit Lee.”
“The Detroit Pistons’ Defense is excellent, but Lee doesn’t need to have the ball in his hands. I believe the Lakers have already watched the Eastern Conference Finals footage.”
“Head Coach Phil Jackson should have Kobe guard Lee.”
Just as the tactical master Rivers predicted, the Lakers did change their matchups, and the New York Knicks also changed their defensive strategy.
After the game started, the Lakers first tried to control the pace, but after continuous missed shots, the New York Knicks took the lead, and Kobe couldn’t hold back, leading the charge.
His overly impatient offense fell right into the New York Knicks’ defensive trap, and Phil Jackson’s timeout couldn’t change Kobe’s offensive choices.
Late in the first quarter, the Lakers double-teamed Lee too early.
In the right block, Devin George hadn’t even had time to slide up when Lee, at the top of the arc, passed the ball to Hill on the right wing.
The latter received the ball, and Amar’e Stoudemire, who had just entered the game, immediately stepped up to set a screen.
Devin George, who slid over to help defend, had just reached the three-point line when Hill faked left and right, quickly swept the ball, and without using the screen, put the ball down with his right hand and drove forward.
Amar’e Stoudemire followed down, and Medvedenko, who came off the bench, hesitated slightly, but seeing Hill shake off his defender and drive straight to the basket, he could only quickly help defend.
Before reaching the paint, Hill, in motion, smoothly tossed the ball towards the front of the rim.
Medvedenko and Shaquille O’Neal, who had retreated to the basket, could only watch as Amar’e Stoudemire jumped up, caught the ball with both hands, and quickly slammed it into the basket!
A simple drive broke through the Lakers’ Defense.
The New York Knicks’ offensive pace showed no signs of slowing down.
Instead, it became faster and faster.
Derek Fisher received the ball on the baseline and was tangled by Lee.
He cautiously brought the ball over half-court, and at the Logo, immediately passed the ball to Kobe, who had popped out to the left wing.
Having just run past half-court, O’Neal, who had squeezed into the paint, raised his position to receive the ball.
After receiving the pass in the left block, Shaquille O’Neal hadn’t even put the ball down when Amar’e Stoudemire, cooperating with Pau Gasol, came to the paint to cut off the baseline.
Seeing the opportunity, Shaquille O’Neal immediately passed the ball to the unguarded Medvedenko.
The latter came to the lower right of the rim, intending to simply dunk the ball, but Amar’e Stoudemire reacted even faster, getting there first, jumping early, and pressing the ball against the backboard in mid-air.
“Ah!”
Medvedenko couldn’t help but let out a cry, but Amar’e Stoudemire, who controlled the rebound, didn’t pause, immediately passing the ball to the waiting Clay Lee.
The New York Knicks players began to accelerate towards half-court, but the Lakers, who had only passed the ball twice, had no choice but to quickly retreat on Defense.
Arriving on the left wing, Lee, with the ball in his left hand, suddenly stopped short, quickly dribbled behind his back.
Derek Fisher hurriedly stopped his feet, waving his right arm, trying to interfere.
In transition offense, the Lakers hadn’t had time to help defend when Lee suddenly lowered his center of gravity, swayed his body to the right, and then quickly changed direction through his legs.
Scooping the ball with his left hand while dribbling forward, Lee lowered his shoulder and accelerated, driving straight to the basket from the left wing.
Derek Fisher made an excellent defensive read, but he had no way to stop Lee’s overpowering drive.
In the block, Lee took a step and gathered the ball, then directly bumped Derek Fisher away with his shoulder after lowering it.
The latter fell with a touch.
Amidst his opponent’s cry of pain, Lee was undisturbed, grabbing the ball with his left hand and extending his body for a scoop layup!
“Bang! Swish!”
Medvedenko, who had retreated to the basket, could only watch as the basketball hit high off the backboard and went in.
“Wow!”
Cheers once again echoed through the Madison Square Garden.
The New York Knicks had unleashed their signature counterattack, and the Lakers’ Defense was collapsing.
17:30, with 34.6 seconds left in the first quarter, the New York Knicks continued to extend their lead.
Phil Jackson did put in younger players, but they didn’t respond on offense and didn’t contribute much on Defense.
The baseline referee signaled Derek Fisher to stop complaining.
He saw clearly that Lee was just making a normal play.
Derek Fisher rubbed his chest, unable to express his pain.
He felt as if he had been hit by a car.
No wonder Payton’s offense was off.
He was expending too much energy on Defense.
On the Lakers’ last possession, Derek Fisher still passed the ball early.
Tayshaun Prince, who came off the bench, continued to chase Kobe, forcing him to receive the ball far from the three-point line on the right wing.
Putting the ball down with his right hand, Kobe also observed the Defense.
Noticing everyone had spread out, he faked a drive and immediately changed direction through his legs.
While Tayshaun Prince slid to the right, Kobe increased his dribbling speed and quickly changed direction in front of his body.
Readjusting his center of gravity, Tayshaun Prince accelerated and slid to the left-rear.
Kobe, unable to shake off the Defense, immediately stopped short after reaching the right block.
After a pound dribble, he switched to his left hand, protected the ball with his side, and Kobe continuously backed down forcefully, shaking his shoulder to try and confuse the Defense, then quickly turned and gathered the ball towards the baseline.
Watching Tayshaun Prince make the correct defensive read and jump high, attempting to block with his left arm, Kobe, in mid-air, leaned back and simultaneously adjusted the arc, shooting decisively!
“Bang!”
A rare one-on-one opportunity, but the basketball still rimmed out.
Although Shaquille O’Neal tipped the rebound, Amar’e Stoudemire ultimately controlled possession.
An annoyed Kobe bared his teeth and stepped forward to delay Lee, who was receiving the ball.
Dribbling unhurriedly past half-court, Lee, with the ball in his right hand, noticed there were still over 8 seconds on the shot clock.
Only then did he actively exert force, leaning forward to accelerate and bump Kobe away.
His opponent moved backward, and Lee took the opportunity to stop short, quickly pulling the ball back through his legs.
“Oh!!”
The New York fans, eager for excitement, began to stand up and cheer.
As the shot clock dwindled, the shouts grew louder.
Kobe stared intently at the ball, not going for a head-on, tough Defense, maintaining a defensive distance.
Lee straightened up, took a slight step to his front-left, then suddenly dribbled through his legs.
The moment he switched back to his right hand, without much swaying, Lee dribbled the ball forward and accelerated to drive.
Making the correct defensive read, Kobe continuously slid to his left-rear.
The contact at his side did not affect Lee.
Slowing down slightly, in the paint directly in front of the rim, Lee again took a step in motion, using his shoulder to bump Kobe away from his side.
Not giving O’Neal, who had returned to the basket, a chance to jump and block, Lee grabbed the ball with one hand and quickly tossed it towards the hoop!
“Swish!” The ball went in, the light came on, and the first quarter ended.
17:32, a double-digit lead, made Madison Square Garden erupt again.
Kobe, who was “eaten alive” in a one-on-one, could only rub his chest and sulk as he watched the back of Lee’s head.
O’Neal, already panting, was in no mood to glare at Kobe.
The repeated back-and-forth running had already disrupted his offensive rhythm.
In the noisy Madison Square Garden, New York fans were chatting and laughing, the game was even easier than they had imagined.
Playing the entire first quarter, 0-for-4 from the field, 1-for-2 from the free-throw line, Kobe Bryant, who diligently shared the ball, ultimately scored only 1 point.
Shaquille O’Neal was 4-for-6 from the field, 2-for-4 from the free-throw line, scoring 10 points.
The OK Combo combined to score half of the Lakers’ points.
As long as the ball could be passed inside, Shaquille O’Neal could score in the low post, but if O’Neal raised his receiving position, he would immediately be double-teamed by perimeter help Defense.
At the commentary table, Rivers carefully recalled the situation in the first quarter, and combining it with the previous game, suddenly said with emotion:
“The Knicks’ defensive strategy reminds me of that Utah Jazz team.”
“Shaquille O’Neal is difficult to limit, but the Utah Jazz used Stockton’s help Defense to control his receiving, and that tactic was very effective.”
“To close the gap, the Lakers must make those open shots. They need to give Shaquille O’Neal some support.”
Michaels also carefully looked at the statistics.
The anticipated defensive effect did not appear:
“Clay Lee’s scoring in the first quarter was almost all in the paint. He’s too well-rounded, and his running floater is almost impossible to defend.”
“God is not on the Lakers’ side. Clay Lee is still hot tonight!”
Playing the entire first quarter, Clay Lee was 6-for-8 from the field, 4-for-4 from the free-throw line, scoring 16 points.
He did not engage in too many half-court offenses.
A large portion of his scoring came from 1-on-1 breakthroughs in transition offense.
In the limited half-court offense, Lee only attracted Defense and patiently passed the ball, with Hill and Gasol becoming the primary scorers in half-court offense.
In the second quarter, Payton and Karl Malone were still on the bench, and the Lakers continued with the young lineup from the end of the first quarter.
On the Knicks’ side, Lee also didn’t rest, continuing to play with the bench lineup.
In the Lakers’ first offensive possession, as Derek Fisher had just dribbled past half-court, his side-body, right-handed cross-court pass was directly stolen by Lee.
The overly obvious passing intention allowed Lee’s steal to be clean and decisive.
While blocking the ball with his left hand, he smoothly poked the ball forward.
Bumping open a pulling Derek Fisher, Lee quickly controlled possession, 1-on-0 in the frontcourt, he rushed past the free-throw line and immediately leaped into the air, grabbing the ball with his right hand for a gliding dunk!
“Ah!”
After completing the steal and dunk, Lee stood under the basket, pounding his chest and roaring.
The fans in the front row cheered wildly, while Derek Fisher, who had returned to the baseline, was numb.
When the Lakers attacked again, to avoid turnovers, Kobe simply went to the left wing far from the three-point line to receive the ball.
Passing the ball before half-court, Derek Fisher led Lee to the right wing to create space.
Shaquille O’Neal actively stepped up to set a screen, but Raja Bell agilely squeezed through the screen, almost clinging to Kobe’s back.
With a thud, after tripping, both fell to the ground.
Kobe fell hard, but he didn’t look at Raja Bell’s provocative gaze.
Pulled up by his teammates, he came to the sideline to prepare to receive the ball again.
Amidst a chorus of boos, a synchronized chant soon erupted:
“Shaq wants to trade you!”
Kobe’s face was expressionless.
He bit his jersey, panting heavily, trying to calm the surging emotions in his heart.
The Knicks’ Defense was extremely aggressive.
This time, it was Lee who guarded Kobe.
After receiving the ball on the left wing, Kobe no longer called for a screen.
Biting his jersey, he dribbled with a hop step, then pulled back with a crossover.
Seeing Lee unmoved and continuing to stick to him, Kobe quickly dribbled between his legs.
Unable to shake off the Defense, he held the ball in his right hand, attempting to drive through.
Continuously sliding back to his left, Lee provided body contact, and his right hand subtly interfered.
Under the struggle, Kobe could only use his off-hand to swat away the arm, disrupting his dribbling rhythm.
Seeing Lee’s left hand attempt to steal, he quickly stopped and pulled the ball back.
Taking advantage of Lee again sticking close, Kobe also chose not to pass.
At this moment, his eyes were only on the basket.
Leaning into the Defense, he quickly turned, gathered the ball, and directly took a fading fadeaway jump shot!
“Bang!”
The posture was elegant, but the basketball hit the back of the rim and bounced directly into Amar’e Stoudemire’s hands.
Turning to receive the ball, Lee gave Kobe, who was still posing, no time to react.
He quickly pushed the ball to change direction, then accelerated with the ball in his left hand.
Kobe, who had spit out his jersey, was instantly two steps behind, chasing hard from behind, but could only watch Lee accelerate faster and faster.
Derek Fisher on the other side had retreated to half-court early, attempting to stick and interfere at the three-point line, but Lee, while moving, again pushed the ball to change direction.
After shaking off the Defense, Lee didn’t slow down, ignoring Derek Fisher’s pull from his side.
After three large strides, he grabbed the ball with his right hand and swung his arm for a powerful dunk!
“Boom!” A transition dunk!
“Oh!”
Watching Derek Fisher lose his balance and run out of bounds after pulling, the New York fans cheered happily.
Lee stretched his shoulder, looked at the retreating Kobe, and chuckled lightly:
“You can still get off work early tonight!”
“…”
Kobe, who was inbounding the ball, stared without speaking, while Head Coach Phil Jackson on the sideline loudly reminded them to pass the ball inside.
In the subsequent game, Kobe followed instructions and passed the ball to Shaquille O’Neal.
However, after several times being double-teamed and then passing out, the wide-open Derek Fisher failed to respond in time, and the Knicks again launched a transition offense.
Seeing Shaquille O’Neal’s menacing gaze, the Lakers called a timeout first.
The re-entered Gary Payton seemed to have completely lost confidence.
Several times he received the ball wide open beyond the three-point line but chose not to shoot, instead dribbling to drive.
Watching Payton get blocked by Lee and fall to the ground, Rivers on the commentary table said with some sympathy:
“The gap between the two sides is too great. The Knicks are destroying the Lakers with their strong bodies.”
“I think at this point, Head Coach Phil Jackson should call a timeout, not to talk about tactics, but to make the players play aggressively.”
The Knicks executed a three-line fast break. Lee, who attracted the Defense, assisted Pau Gasol, who trailed behind on the fast break, for a powerful dunk!
On the return possession, Kobe drove along the left wing.
Before he could exert force, he was squeezed to the baseline and directly crashed into a sideline camera by Ron Artest.
“Wow!”
The fans in the front row cheered continuously and egged them on.
Ron Artest, who received a foul, also showed a triumphant expression:
“Softie! Try me!”
Ron Artest, stretching his body, saw Kobe stand up and immediately yelled at him.
The latter completely lost his composure and rushed forward, ready to throw a punch.
Kobe’s actions made the New York fans even happier, and the roar in the Madison Square Garden grew louder.
Finally, the referee timely stopped Kobe.
Under emotional distress, Kobe again activated his scoring mode, helping the Knicks launch an 8-0 run.
Despite O’Neal’s continuous powerful dunks, the score difference grew larger and larger.
As the first half was about to end, a missed floater in the paint, Pau Gasol grabbed the rebound, and Shaquille O’Neal could only watch the long pass fly past half-court.
Controlling possession near the mid-court line, Lee smoothly flicked the ball with his left hand.
After bouncing off the floor, the basketball spun and flew into the hands of Hill, who was rushing down the left wing.
Undefended, Hill jumped with both feet in the paint, spun the ball once, and slammed it into the basket with his right hand!
“Boom!” A windmill dunk!
“Wow!”
The cheers in the Madison Square Garden made Shaquille O’Neal, who was stopped near the free-throw line, stare blankly.
He couldn’t run anymore, and he didn’t want to run.
On the final possession, Karl Malone’s jump shot from the right elbow clanked off the rim, and all the Lakers players walked with their heads down towards the player tunnel.
35:62, under the furious counterattack, the Lakers were again trailing by a large margin.
Clay Lee, walking towards the player tunnel, smiled and continuously waved his arms, with cheers in the Madison Square Garden coming in waves.
Kobe, trailing at the very back, looked numb, seemingly unable to accept such a result.
After entering the tunnel, he kicked over a railing:
“Shit! Why is this happening!”
…..
By the way, don’t forget to throw power stones and leave a review to motivate me 🙂
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 485 485: Jealousy Makes People Unrecognizable! (4762 words)
- Chapter 484 484: New Arena, New Achievements (4538 words)
- Chapter 483: If They Can Do It, Why Can’t We? (5465 words)
- Chapter 482 482: Durant can't accept the reality (4760 words)
- Chapter 481: Financial Reasons (4170 words)
- Chapter 480: From Bust to DPOY? (4995 words)
- Chapter 479: The Beginning of Brotherly Basketball (5034 words)
- Chapter 478: New York Has No Individual Players (5846 words)
- Chapter 477 477: Noble New York fans (5399 words)
- Chapter 476 476: The “God” of the Draft! (5414 words)
- Chapter 475: One Team, One City Cannot Win a Championship (5691 words)
- Chapter 474: An Embarrassing NBA Finals Record (5541 words)
- Chapter 473: Bearing the Name of “Softie (7451 words)
- Chapter 472: Early Award Ceremony? (4746 words)
- Chapter 471: How Did They Win the Division Title? (6807 words)
- Chapter 470
- Chapter 469
- Chapter 468 468: Collapsing Will (5102 words)
- Chapter 467 467: Please Me (5667 words)
- Chapter 466 466: Come Fight Me! (9349 words)
- Chapter 465 465: The Seed of the big three (7201 words)
- Chapter 464 464: Help me quickly! (7564 words)
- Chapter 463 463: It's All Lee's Doing? (5218 words)
- Chapter 462 462: Invincible Spiritual Victory Method! (6021 words)
- Chapter 461: Even a Champion Coach Has Problems? (7747 words)
- Chapter 460: The Temperament of an Old-School Player! (5584 words)
- Chapter 459: True Eastern Conference Dividend? (6676 words)
- Chapter 458: The Next “Victim” (7414 words)
- Chapter 457: Winners Need to “Control the Team” (5415 words)
- Chapter 456: The Ultimate Honor Stripped Away (5308 words)
- Chapter 455: The Collapsing "Arch-Rival (7862 words)
- Chapter 454: Who Am I? Where Am I? (8181 words)
- Chapter 453: Is My Physical Condition Declining? (7792 words)
- Chapter 452: Don't Let Loyalty Ruin You! (6360 words)
- Chapter 451: Who is He? (6670 words)
- Chapter 450: A Champion Coach's Prophecy (6542 words)
- Chapter 449: AMVP is also an important honor! (6088 words)
- Chapter 448: Nike's Third Son (4968 words)
- Chapter 447: Vengeful Lee (7597 words)
- Chapter 446: The Gap Between First Round and Championship (6156 words)
- Chapter 445: Overrated (5695 words)
- Chapter 444: We Need Help! (5787 words)
- Chapter 443: Winning Hearts by Losing (6063 words)
- Chapter 442: How many points does sympathy add? (6306 words)
- Chapter 441: What's Lost Cannot Be Recovered (7846 words)
- Chapter 440: It is also wrong to have too strongteammates (6285 words)
- Chapter 439: Decent Basketball?
- Chapter 438: Attribute Cap (6085 words)
- Chapter 437: The Person Who Desires Victory the Most (6353 words)
- Chapter 436: Los Angeles Mamba (5965 words)
- Chapter 435: Record God (5631 words)
- Chapter 434: Those Who Imitate Me Shall Perish (6356 words)
- Chapter 433: Are These Stats Real? (5655 words)
- Chapter 432: Exorbitant Luxury Tax (4483 words)
- Chapter 431: Who is the Ideal Idol? (II)
- Chapter 430: Who is the Ideal Idol? (I) (4055 words)
- Chapter 429: Shortcut
- Chapter 428: Conveying Championship Experience
- Chapter 427: Poaching and Respect
- Chapter 426: A True Superstar Doesn't Take a Pay Cut (4399 words)
- Chapter 425: The Power of a Role Model (Part 2)
- Chapter 424: The Power of a Role Model (Part 1)
- Chapter 423: GOAT Needs No Customization
- Chapter 422: Meritorious Basketball
- Chapter 421: True Dynasty
- Chapter 420: The New Spokesperson
- Chapter 419: Award for a Promising Future
- Chapter 418: Outdated Chinese fans (6132 words)
- Chapter 417: The Victory of the Tactical Master (4575 words)
- Chapter 416: Extravagant Hopes and Experiments (4788 words)
- Chapter 415: Duel (5953 words)
- Chapter 414: Changing Tracks (5002 words)
- Chapter 413: Duncan's Nemesis?
- Chapter 412: Adversity? (5836 words)
- Chapter 411: Future Opponent
- Chapter 410: Different Contract Years (6454 words)
- Chapter 409: They’re Not That Tough (5228 words)
- Chapter 408: The Injured Rookie
- Chapter 407: The Rise of the New Generation (5181 words)
- Chapter 406: The era of advanced data (4420 words)
- Chapter 405: Akron Mamba (7599 words)
- Chapter 404: The Copycat (4460 words)
- Chapter 403: Rookie's Strength (5992 words)
- Chapter 402: Wrong Script (4703 words)
- Chapter 401: The Coach Who Knows Lee Best (5578 words)
- Chapter 400: I Won't Vote for Him (4786 words)
- Chapter 399: Clay Lee's Praise (5573 words)
- Chapter 398: Mamba Mentality (4816 words)
- Chapter 397: A False Home Game
- Chapter 396: Outdated Traditional Guard (5932 words)
- Chapter 395: All Talk and No Walk (7781 words)
- Chapter 394: The Fastest Player
- Chapter 393: The Selfless Leader (4442 words)
- Chapter 392: Respect Comes from Strength (5667 words)
- Chapter 391: Star Among Stars (5294 words)
- Chapter 390: The Air of a Superstar (5467 words)
- Chapter 389: Season Sweep (5885 words)
- Chapter 388: One MVP Is Enough (5492 words)
- Chapter 387: Selfish Basketball (5706 words)
- Chapter 386: Breaking a Record is More Uncomfortable (5685 words)
- Chapter 385: The Pitfalls of Happy Basketball (5685 words)
- Chapter 384: Showing Off is Also a Skill (5811 words)
- Chapter 383: A Terrible Penalty
- Chapter 382: One-Punch Man (5956 words)
- Chapter 381: The Confidence of a Top Scorer (5881 words)
- Chapter 380: Winning Cures All Problems (6193 words)
- Chapter 379: Mental Health Issues (8009 words)
- Chapter 378: The Role of Data (6727 words)
- Chapter 377: They Are Just Not Strong Enough (5564 words)
- Chapter 376: Rules Make Me Stronger! (5545 words)
- Chapter 375: A Chaotic New Season (5374 words)
- Chapter 374: Grand Preseason (5635 words)
- Chapter 373: The Simple World of Basketball (5293 words)
- Chapter 372: Injuries and Self-Discipline (5313 words)
- Chapter 371: Making Money is For (4233 words)
- Chapter 370: Spending Little Money to Do Little Things (5294 words)
- Chapter 369: The Lakers Disband (5761 words)
- Chapter 368: Clay Lee Clause (4513 words)
- Chapter 367: Present and Future (4344 words)
- Chapter 366: How long does the peak period last? (4650 words)
- Chapter 365: True G.O.A.T. (5238 words)
- Chapter 364: Commendable Spirit (6598 words)
- Chapter 363: Good Job! (6537 words)
- Chapter 362: Collapsing at the First Touch (7003 words)
- Chapter 361: The Fourth Battle (6210) New Year Bonus chapter
- Chapter 360: Rising Attributes (5306 words)
- Chapter 359: Scoring Twice (6234 words)
- Chapter 358: Angry Detroit (7631 words)
- Chapter 357: Times Have Changed (6249 words)
- Chapter 356: Outdated Basketball Philosophy (4609 words) Bonus chapter
- Chapter 355: Angry Detroit (7631 words)
- Chapter 354: Useless Defense (5922 words)
- Chapter 353: The True Era of Excel (6180 words)
- Chapter 352: Super Team (5676 words)
- Chapter 351: Anti-Lee Alliance (6528 words)
- Chapter 350: Core Gap (6409 words)
- Chapter 349: "Life" and "Career" (5440 words)
- Chapter 348: Old Friends" Gathering (7648 words)
- Chapter 347: The Lost Trophy (5485 words)
- Chapter 346: The Opponent Resists (8915 words)
- Chapter 345: The Troubles of a Deep Roster (5638 words)
- Chapter 344: Even if I give you a chance, it’s useless (6429 words)
- Chapter 343: Strength Doesn't Allow It (6339 words)
- Chapter 342: Competing for Second Place (6378 words)
- Chapter 341: Reverse Contract Year (6658 words)
- Chapter 340: There's a Gap Even Among All-Stars (5505 words)
- Chapter 339: Passive Improvement (5362 words)
- Chapter 338: Open Card: Give the Ball to Lee (7318 words)
- Chapter 337: The Birth of a Bandwagon Fan (5242 words)
- Chapter 336: Playing Like Clay Lee (6551 words)
- Chapter 335: A Hot Potato of Honor (6139 words)
- Chapter 334: Limited Data (8065 words)
- Chapter 333: An Era of Declining Star Quality (6121 words)
- Chapter 332: When you meet a star player, you must strike (6819 words)
- Chapter 331: More Fun (6483 words)
- Chapter 330: Old Man Basketball (6480 words)
- Chapter 329: Small Ball and One Star, Four Shooters (6367 words)
- Chapter 328: Rising New Stars (5485 words)
- Chapter 327: Perfect Debut (8638 words)
- Chapter 326: You Are All Here to Assist Me (6438 words)
- Chapter 325: Earning too little is not good (7089 words)
- Chapter 324: Passionate Tanking? (7098 words)
- Chapter 323: The Taste of Power
- Chapter 322: The Losers' Alliance
- Chapter 321: Only Basketball Accompanies Me (4691 words)
- Chapter 320: Shaq Too.
- Chapter 319: Not five! (7393 words)
- Chapter 318: Future Champion Award (5572 words)
- Chapter 317: The Consequences of Being “Clumsy” (5461 words)
- Chapter 316: Infamous Dirty Foot (8238 words)
- Chapter 315: The Same Choice: Give the Ball to... (7142 words)
- Chapter 314: An Overnight Sensation (6311 words)
- Chapter 313: Only Speed is Unbreakable (9256 words)
- Chapter 312: Overthinking is Scary! (6019 words)
- Chapter 311: Onto the Finals
- Chapter 310: Dream Smasher (8165 words)
- Chapter 309: Why Was Duncan Born When There Is Lee? (7432 words)
- Chapter 308: The Best Point Guard? (8331 words)
- Chapter 307: Missing Persons (6660 words)
- Chapter 306: Reasonable Basketball (5825 words)
- Chapter 305: We strike hard against the veteran (7513 words)
- Chapter 304: The blessing of the sheep? (5939 words)
- Chapter 303: Crushing Hopes (7645 words)
- Chapter 302: A Real Man Should Go One-on-One? (7510 words)
- Chapter 301: A Pretty Posture Is Useless (6056 words)
- Chapter 300: A new record (7267 words)
- Chapter 299: Lee vs Jordan, the end of an era! (7861 words)
- Chapter 298: Thirst for Honor (7723 words)
- Chapter 297: The False "white-hot space (7821 words)
- Chapter 296: Perfect Curtain Call (7464 words)
- Chapter 295: A Custom-Made All-Star Game (7538 words)
- Chapter 294: Outrageous Excel is equal to MVP (7129 words)
- Chapter 293: Can basketball still be played like this? (7024 words)
- Chapter 292: True Star (7639 words)
- Chapter 291: The Birth of a Champion Coach (8789 words)
- Chapter 290: Clay Lee Recognition Award! (8134 words)
- Chapter 289: The Difficulty of Easy Gains (5342 words)
- Chapter 288: Mismatch Equals “Softie”? (6124 words)
- Chapter 287: Revenge Season? (5873 words)
- Chapter 286: You're Going to Teach Me How to Win a Championship (5234 words)
- Chapter 285: The Secret to Winning: Superstars (5937 words)
- Chapter 284: Money and Wealth (5829 words)
- Chapter 283: Knicks Only Need Young Talents (6663 words?)
- Chapter 282: If I Say You Can, You Can! (7534 words)
- Chapter 281: A Polarized Market (5672 words)
- Chapter 280: Redemption (7982 words)
- Chapter 279: Problems That Fighting Spirit Can’t Solve (8342 words)
- Chapter 278: Basketball IQ? (8344 words)
- Chapter 277: So We're That Weak? (7924 words)
- Chapter 276: My Strength Doesn’t Allow It (8104 words)
- Chapter 275: You Know, Lee is Mine. (Part 3)
- Chapter 274: You Know, Lee is Mine (Part 2)
- Chapter 273: You Know, Lee is Mine (Part 1)
- Chapter 272: Star Collection (8120 words)
- Chapter 271: Praising and Belittling (7324 words)
- Chapter 270: Data and Spirit (4929 words)
- Chapter 269: The Lower and Upper Limits
- Chapter 268: Clay Lee's Team (3289 words)
- Chapter 267: The Van Gundy Era is Over
- Chapter 266: I am the AMVP! (5462 words)
- Chapter 265: A Failed All-Out Effort
- Chapter 264: It's All Lee's Fault!
- Chapter 263: Different Boss
- Chapter 262: The Era of Van Gundy (7763 words)
- Chapter 261: Returning to the Essence of Basketball
- Chapter 260: A New "Arch-Rival" (3928 words)
- Chapter 259: Difficulty Level B (4021 words)
- Chapter 258: Tom, I need you!
- Chapter 257: Enjoy the Dividends (5567 words)
- Chapter 256: NBA Games Aren't That Hard (5328 words)
- Chapter 255: Collapsing Skyscrapers (4126 words)
- Chapter 254: A promising future? (5532 words)
- Chapter 253: The Disintegration of a Dynasty
- Chapter 252: Deputy GOAT? (4873 words)
- Chapter 251: All for Profit (5219 words)
- Chapter 250: Farewell to the Ewing Era
- Chapter 249: Establishing New Standards
- Chapter 248: Stubborn Defeat (6643 words)
- Chapter 247: Let's Go Together! (8321 words)
- Chapter 246: Unfriendly Away Game (5534 words)
- Chapter 245: It’s Hard to Be a Leader (16, 392 words)
- Chapter 244: Fast Break as Fierce as a Tiger (6128 words)
- Chapter 243: Different Thoughts (6773 words)
- Chapter 242: Higher Pursuits
- Chapter 241: Rebuild?? (7210 words)
- Chapter 240: The So-Called "Arch-Rival" (7432 words)
- Chapter 239: More Desire
- Chapter 238: Data and Victory, I Want It All! (8956 words)
- Chapter 237: Ko-ho-lapse (Collapse)
- Chapter 236: Nemesis of Famous Coaches (5128 words)
- Chapter 235: The Influence of MVP
- Chapter 234: Upcoming Draft (5867 words)
- Chapter 233: Desparate Eastern Conference (5165 words)
- Chapter 232: Easy Win (5346 words)
- Chapter 231: Crushing Advanced Stats
- Chapter 230: Heavy Fines
- Chapter 229: MVP Needs to Brag (5430 words)
- Chapter 228: “I Should Be There!” (5298 words)
- Chapter 227: Brotherly Basketball Must Be Stopped
- Chapter 226: Being Born in the Same Era as Clay Lee is a Sin
- Chapter 225: Do Nothing and Become an All-Star!
- Chapter 224: Explosive Power! (8013 words)
- Chapter 223: The core player with the ball can only bully weak players? (7548 words)
- Chapter 222: Let Him "Suck" (7256 words)
- Chapter 221: The Magician Lee
- Chapter 220: Unlimited Attributes
- Chapter 219: Starting the Tour from the Preseason
- Chapter 218: Eastern Conference Bonus
- Chapter 217: The “Lonely” Superstar
- Chapter 216: Dominate for 10 Years?
- Chapter 215: Enough Talents?
- Chapter 214: True Superstars Are Like Non-stick Pans
- Chapter 213: The Knicks Only Want Superstars
- Chapter 212: 'Billions' Bobby Axelrod
- Chapter 211: Off-the-Charts Stats
- Chapter 210: Dynasty Team
- Chapter 209: The Future is Mine(4548 words)
- Chapter 208: Historical Superstar
- Chapter 207: Sleepless Night (8878 words)
- Chapter 206: Different Dominance
- Chapter 205: Becoming Mortal Enemies (10,239 words)
- Chapter 204: Monster-level physical fitness
- Chapter 203: Shaq's Shooting (10,960 words)
- Chapter 202: The Greatest Point Guard in History?
- Chapter 201: Veteran is Tired
- Chapter 200: The Pick-and-Roll Man
- Chapter 199: MVP Takes Turns (5657 words)
- Chapter 198: Fans Love to Watch Offense!
- Chapter 197: Contradictory Team Building Philosophy
- Chapter 196: Far Ahead
- Chapter 195: Shit! It's Like This Again! (6986 words)
- Chapter 194: A Negative 27 Performance
- Chapter 193: Old Rival and Tour (5640 words)
- Chapter 192: A Soft Style of Play
- Chapter 191: Data and Victory!(7757 words)
- Chapter 190: Strong West and Weak East?
- Chapter 189: O'Neal's Era? (6489 words)
- Chapter 188: The Impact of Trade Rumors (4377 words)
- Chapter 187: Champions Don't Show Sentiment
- Chapter 186: They are all here to compete for the second place
- Chapter 185: The New Generation of Stars Officially Debut (4590 words)
- Chapter 184: New York's "Inheritance" (II) (5429 words)
- Chapter 183: New York's "Inheritance" (I)
- Chapter 182: The League's First Meat Shield (4308 words)
- Chapter 181: Developing Offensive Ability (II)
- Chapter 180: Developing Offensive Ability (I)
- Chapter 179: Champion Dilemma (4678 words)
- Chapter 178: Pick-and-Roll and Jump Shots (5679 words)
- Chapter 177: The West is strong and the East is weak? (II)
- Chapter 176: The West is strong and the East is weak? (I)
- Chapter 175: Interesting Position Sense (II)
- Chapter 174: Interesting Position Sense (I)
- Chapter 173: Ewing's Advertising Effect
- Chapter 172: Champions are all about the US dollar
- Chapter 171: Top-tier Gathering
- Chapter 170: Knicks Boxer
- Chapter 169: Basketball is also about human relationships
- Chapter 168: Departure, Albuquerque
- Chapter 167: All In Just For A Better Life
- Chapter 166: Nike and the Draft Pick
- Chapter 165: Hometown Team is Great
- Chapter 164: A champion is a champion
- Chapter 163: The Beginning of Hell (II)
- Chapter 162: The Beginning Of Hell (I)
- Chapter 161: The Fatal "Blow" (II)
- Chapter 160: The Fatal "Blow" (I)
- Chapter 159: Free Throws and Missed Shots (II)
- Chapter 158: Free Throws and Missed Shots (I)
- Chapter 157: You'll be numb even if you defend (II)
- Chapter 156: You'll be numb even if you defend (I)
- Chapter 155: You Play Your Game, I Play Mine
- Chapter 154: He is just a rookie
- Chapter 153: Rookie Showdown
- Chapter 152: There is Only One Boss (II)
- Chapter 151: There is Only One Boss (I)
- Chapter 150: Upper and Lower Limits
- Chapter 149: Reluctant Exit
- Chapter 148: New York's Old Enemy
- Chapter 147: Dawn of New Era
- Chapter 146: The Champion Coach's Secret to Winning
- Chapter 145: Young MVP
- Chapter 144: Ended just as It Began (6676 words)
- Chapter 143: The Gap between “Four Protecting One”
- Chapter 142: Historical Point Guard
- Chapter 141: NOTICE!!
- Chapter 140: Notice!!
- Chapter 139: Let him brush! Let him brush!
- Chapter 138: The Tail of the Peak
- Chapter 137: New Star-Making Movement (II)
- Chapter 136: New Star-Making Movement (I)
- Chapter 135: Aim for MVP?
- Chapter 134: Coach, I Want to Play Basketball
- Chapter 133: Disharmonious Team Atmosphere
- Chapter 132: Locker Room Bomb
- Chapter 131: Lonely Exit
- Chapter 130: Strong as an Ox and Fat as a Ball
- Chapter 129: Hometown Basketball
- Chapter 128: The Dollars Brought by Influence
- Chapter 127: Big Scorer?
- Chapter 126: The Joy of Harvest
- Chapter 125: Not One, Two, Three...
- Chapter 124: The Beginning of a New Era
- Chapter 123: I gave you a chance, but you are useless (II)
- Chapter 122: I gave you a chance, but you are useless (I)
- Chapter 121: Stronger Pick and Roll (II)
- Chapter 120: Stronger Pick and Roll (I)
- Chapter 119: Everyone Fights Bravely and Strike Back
- Chapter 118: Rewards for Defeating the BOSS
- Chapter 117: It's My Time (II) (8389 words)
- Chapter 116: It's My Time (I) (5389 words)
- Chapter 115: Is Your Desire Above Mine?
- Chapter 114: My physical strength is superior to yours (II)
- Chapter 113: My physical strength is superior to yours (I)
- Chapter 112: Four Protecting One (II)
- Chapter 111: Four Protecting One (I)
- Chapter 110: The Unforgettable Decline
- Chapter 109: Passively Becoming a Tool
- Chapter 108: God is helping
- Chapter 107: Talent Digestion
- Chapter 106: Pursuing Another MVP (II)
- Chapter 105: Pursuing Another MVP (I)
- Chapter 104: Interesting Rankings
- Chapter 103: Can MVP also be compensated?
- Chapter 102: Basketball without Brothers
- Chapter 101: Pretending to Lose the Trophy
- Chapter 100: You are all here to serve as sparring partners
- Chapter 99: True All-Star
- Chapter 98: New York's long-awaited Christmas battle
- Chapter 97: Jump Shot Team
- Chapter 96: Whose Team is This?
- Chapter 95: The Unlucky Gorilla
- Chapter 94: The Soft and Hard Core
- Chapter 93: Admiral Robinson is roughly equivalent to Ewing
- Chapter 92: New Equipment and New Records
- Chapter 91: Big Contract and Championship
- Chapter 90: Physical Strength
- Chapter 89: Just call be Little Ben
- Chapter 88: Hardwork
- Chapter 87: Nike
- Chapter 86: US dollars brought by data
- Chapter 85: Black Jesus (7735 words)
- Chapter 84: The core issue?
- Chapter 83: The Price of Arrogance(8370 words)
- Chapter 82: Anti-Jordan Pioneer
- Chapter 81: I'm in Every Record
- Chapter 80: The Price of Victory
- Chapter 79: Walking "Record" (7438 words)
- Chapter 78: The rules that are fully "understood" (Bonus Chapter)
- Chapter 77: The Core of Inefficiency
- Chapter 76: Teacher and Student Battle
- Chapter 75: Setting a New Record
- Chapter 74: The No. 1 Point Guard? 8093 words
- Chapter 73: The Importance of Excel
- Chapter 72: MVP’s Trouble (7749 words)
- Chapter 71: Basketball Conflict (7278 words)
- Chapter 70: Tested Out? (6762 words)
- Chapter 69: The Knicks have two coaches? (6687 words)
- Chapter 68: Show off during the All-Star Weekend (II)
- Chapter 67: Show off during the All-Star Weekend (I)
- Chapter 66: Accompanying the Records (Part 2)
- Chapter 65: Accompanying the Records (Part 1)
- Chapter 64: The Inevitable World of Vanity and Fair (Part 2)
- Chapter 63: The Inevitable World of Vanity and Fair (Part 1)
- Chapter 62: The Unstoppable Record (Part 2)
- Chapter 61: The Unstoppable Record (Part 1)
- Chapter 60: Core Benefits (Part 2)
- Chapter 59: Core Benefits (Part 1)
- Chapter 58: Rookie Wall? (Part 2)
- Chapter 57: Rookie Wall? (Part 1)
- Chapter 56: Farewell to 1996 (Part 2)
- Chapter 55: Farewell to 1996 (Part 1)
- Chapter 54: Small Trophy
- Chapter 53: Setting a New Record
- Chapter 52: Beautiful Muscles (Part 2)
- Chapter 51: Beautiful Muscles (Part 1)
- Chapter 50: Basketball is all about knowledge!
- Chapter 49: Mass-produced Jordan
- Chapter 48: “Iron-Blooded” Basketball (IV)
- Chapter 47: “Iron-Blooded” Basketball (III)
- Chapter 46: “Iron-Blooded” Basketball (II)
- Chapter 45: “Iron-Blooded” Basketball (I)
- Chapter 44: Pressure from the Media
- Chapter 43: The Influence of Records
- Chapter 42: Interesting Live Coverage Across America (Part 3)
- Chapter 41: Interesting Live Coverage Across America (Part 2)
- Chapter 40: Interesting Live Coverage Across America (I)
- Chapter 39: You'd better come to assist me?
- Chapter 38: Rookies’ Debut (End)
- Chapter 37: Rookies' Debut (V)
- Chapter 36: Rookies’ Debut (Part 4)
- Chapter 35: Rookies' Debut (Part 3)
- Chapter 34: Rookies' Debut (Part 2)
- Chapter 33: Rookies’ Debut (I)
- Chapter 32: The Age of Butt Sticking Out (Part 2)
- Chapter 31: The Age of Butt Sticking Out (Part 1)
- Chapter 30: I can’t control who the audience likes to watch
- Chapter 29: Goal: Send away the "good brothers"
- Chapter 28: Welcome Ceremony (Part 2)
- Chapter 27: Welcome Ceremony (Part 1)
- Chapter 26: The Knicks, a team full of big brothers
- Chapter 25: The Friendly New York Media
- Chapter 24: New York
- Chapter 23: The Golden Generation
- Chapter 22: 1996 Draft
- Chapter 21: Lakers
- Chapter 20: Different Choices (Part 2)
- Chapter 19: Different Choices (Part 1)
- Chapter 18: The Messy Joint Tryout
- Chapter 17: Attribute Radar Chart
- Chapter 16: Excel Gap Lead
- Chapter 15: Hard work pays off
- Chapter 14: Hesitation leads to defeat
- Chapter 13: Kentucky's Dominance
- Chapter 12: Crushing Semifinals
- Chapter 11: The Standard Childhood of a Superstar
- Chapter 10: Make money while standing
- Chapter 9: Easy Regional Finals
- Chapter 8: Regional Semifinals 2
- Chapter 7: Regional Semifinals 1
- Chapter 6: Is young age also a problem?
- Chapter 5: Invisible Talent
- Chapter 4: A unique style of play
- Chapter 3: College Basketball
- Chapter 2: Simple Talent System
- Chapter 1: Connecticut Huskies