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531 - Eastern War

531-East War

Just as Ace purchased the riding equipment and started to ride in Los Angeles leisure plans, news about the situation in the Eastern Conference was also reported at noon.

"Little Emperor" LeBron James performed well, making 13 of 20 shots, scoring 38 points, 8 rebounds and 7 assists for the Cavaliers. Joe Smith scored 13 points, "Big Z" Zdrunas Ilgoskas had 12 points and 10 rebounds, Mo Williams and Deront West each scored 12 points.

Rodney Starkey's 20 points were the highest in the Pistons, Richard Hamilton's 15 points and Rashid Wallace's 13 points and 9 rebounds.

The Pistons have been suppressing the Cavaliers in the past few seasons, but the feng shui has changed. Now the league is the world of James. James scored 12 points in the first quarter, and made 6 shots. The Cavaliers showed the league's first momentum and were no longer afraid of the former strong rival Pistons, leading 30-25 in the first quarter.

After several rounds in the second quarter, James suddenly exerted force and made four consecutive free throws. The Cavaliers launched a 9-1 attack, and opened the gap with 2 minutes and 18 seconds left in the quarter. With 3 minutes and 40 seconds left, the Pistons scored only 1 point. The goddess of luck also favored the Cavaliers. They only had 2 seconds left for their last attack in the quarter. After James received the ball, he dribbled the ball and advanced quickly, took a step across the midfield, and immediately rode a horse and shot an arrow, and actually hit a long buzzer-beating three-pointer. The Cavaliers ended the first half with 57-45. James scored another 10 points in this quarter, and he scored 22 points in the first half.

In the whole first half, James missed one goal. In the third quarter, the Emperor's shooting rate decreased, but the Cavaliers still maintained their advantage. With 3 minutes and 48 seconds left in this quarter, James made one of two free throws, leading 15 points 74-59. After three quarters, the Pistons could only score the score to 65-78.

In the fourth quarter, the Pistons scored 74-83. James made another effort. He first caught the ball at the basket, shook the defender away, and then made a layup easily. Then, he shook Will Bynum in the three-point line, causing a foul and two free throws. After that, he made another shot, and one man scored 6 points. The Cavaliers made a 10-0 attack wave, and led 93-74 with 5 minutes and 12 seconds left in the game.

The victory and defeat were lost, and the Knights won the first battle without bloodshed.

Then the Cavaliers won easily in both games. They led the first three quarters today, but were threatened in the fourth quarter. Fortunately, they passed the game without any danger. LeBron James scored 29 points, 13 rebounds and 6 assists, Mo Williams scored 21 points and 7 assists, and Deront West scored 20 points.

The Pistons lost two consecutive games and could only hope to make a difference at home. Richard Hamilton scored 17 points, Rodney Starkey scored 14 points and 6 assists, Will Bynum scored 13 points, and Aaron Avraro scored 10 points.

James made 13 of 20 shots in the first game, scoring 38 points in 41 minutes, and also had 8 rebounds and 7 assists. What is even more surprising is that although the Pistons strictly guarded him, the "Emperor" did not make a mistake. After the game, the Pistons players could only sigh that James was unstoppable.

When they met again, James was still unstoppable. "Prince" Taychen Prince was helpless against the "Emperor". The Pistons fell behind in the first three quarters. James reduced some shots, but he still scored 8 points in the first quarter, which was quite efficient. The Cavaliers started with a 12-2 wave, and only allowed their opponents to shoot one goal in the first 5 minutes. The Pistons finally narrowed the gap to 2 points, but in the last 4 minutes and 18 seconds of the quarter, they only made one goal, and the Cavaliers scored 9-2, ending the quarter with 23-14.

In the second quarter, James only made a shot from the outside, but he made multiple fouls through continuous breakthroughs, scoring another 8 points in this quarter and scored 16 points in the first half. Shortly after the start of this quarter, the Cavaliers gained a double-digit advantage. With 4 minutes and 36 seconds left in the quarter, James made a three-pointer, and the Cavaliers led by 17 points 40-23. Since then, the Cavaliers have maintained a double-digit advantage and led 46-32 in the first half.

In the third quarter, the Pistons failed to narrow the gap to within 11 points. With 7 minutes and 58 seconds left in this quarter, Hamilton made a mid-range shot, and the Pistons still lagged behind 40-51, but this was the smallest gap between the two teams in this quarter. After that, Williams immediately broke through and made a layup, making a 8-2 wave, and the Cavaliers opened 59-42. The gap between the two sides quickly reached 20 points. With 3 minutes and 27 seconds left in this quarter, James broke through and dunked, and the Cavaliers led 68-46. West made a three-pointer at the end of this quarter, and the Cavaliers ended the first three quarters 77-50.

The Pistons started the fourth quarter with a 21-5 wave, chasing the score to 71-82 in one fell swoop. James was sitting on the sidelines, but when he saw this situation, he had to play again.

With 3 minutes and 51 seconds left in the game, Antonio McDyce made a shot, and the Pistons fell behind only 77-84. James had to play hard, and after causing a foul, he made two free throws. After that, West also made two free throws, and the Cavaliers regained a double-digit advantage.

At the critical moment, Bynum, who performed well in this quarter, missed two shots, and the Cavaliers continued to use free throws to open the score. With 2 minutes and 19 seconds left in the quarter, Williams made a layup. This was the Cavaliers' second shot in this quarter, but this was enough for them to open the gap again 92-77.

The Pistons' shocking reversal failed and returned to the home court with a 0-2 back. The situation was not good. The Cavaliers won both games easily and led the first three quarters today, but were threatened in the fourth quarter. Fortunately, they passed the game without any danger. LeBron James scored 29 points, 13 rebounds and 6 assists, Mo Williams scored 21 points and 7 assists, and Deront West scored 20 points.

The Pistons lost two consecutive games and could only hope to make a difference at home. Richard Hamilton scored 17 points, Rodney Starkey scored 14 points and 6 assists, Will Bynum scored 13 points, and Aaron Avraro scored 10 points.

James made 13 of 20 shots in the first game, scoring 38 points in 41 minutes, and also had 8 rebounds and 7 assists. What is even more surprising is that although the Pistons strictly guarded him, the "Emperor" did not make a mistake. After the game, the Pistons players could only sigh that James was unstoppable.

When they met again, James was still unstoppable. "Prince" Taychen Prince was helpless against the "Emperor". The Pistons fell behind in the first three quarters. James reduced some shots, but he still scored 8 points in the first quarter, which was quite efficient. The Cavaliers started with a 12-2 wave, and only allowed their opponents to shoot one goal in the first 5 minutes. The Pistons finally narrowed the gap to 2 points, but in the last 4 minutes and 18 seconds of the quarter, they only made one goal, and the Cavaliers scored 9-2, ending the quarter with 23-14.

In the second quarter, James only made a shot from the outside, but he made multiple fouls through continuous breakthroughs, scoring another 8 points in this quarter and scored 16 points in the first half. Shortly after the start of this quarter, the Cavaliers gained a double-digit advantage. With 4 minutes and 36 seconds left in the quarter, James made a three-pointer, and the Cavaliers led by 17 points 40-23. Since then, the Cavaliers have maintained a double-digit advantage and led 46-32 in the first half.

In the third quarter, the Pistons failed to narrow the gap to within 11 points. With 7 minutes and 58 seconds left in this quarter, Hamilton made a mid-range shot, and the Pistons still lagged behind 40-51, but this was the smallest gap between the two teams in this quarter. After that, Williams immediately broke through and made a layup, making a 8-2 wave, and the Cavaliers opened 59-42. The gap between the two sides quickly reached 20 points. With 3 minutes and 27 seconds left in this quarter, James broke through and dunked, and the Cavaliers led 68-46. West made a three-pointer at the end of this quarter, and the Cavaliers ended the first three quarters 77-50.

The Pistons started the fourth quarter with a 21-5 wave, chasing the score to 71-82 in one fell swoop. James was sitting on the sidelines, but when he saw this situation, he had to play again.

With 3 minutes and 51 seconds left in the game, Antonio McDyce made a shot, and the Pistons fell behind only 77-84. James had to play hard, and after causing a foul, he made two free throws. After that, West also made two free throws, and the Cavaliers regained a double-digit advantage.

At the critical moment, Bynum, who performed well in this quarter, missed two shots, and the Cavaliers continued to use free throws to open the score. With 2 minutes and 19 seconds left in the quarter, Williams made a layup. This was the Cavaliers' second shot in this quarter, but this was enough for them to open the gap again 92-77.

The Pistons' shocking reversal failed and returned to the home court with a 0-2 loss. The situation was not good.

Next is the Heat and the Hawks' match.

Josh Smith scored 23 points and 10 rebounds for the Hawks, Joe Johnson scored 15 points, Al Horford scored 14 points and 9 rebounds, Mike Bibby scored 10 points and 9 assists, and Marvin Williams scored 10 points.

Dwyne Wade did not get the support of his teammates and was unable to compete with his opponent with just one effort. He made 8 of 21 shots in the game, scoring 19 points, 5 rebounds and 5 assists, and his turnovers were as high as 8. Michael Beasley scored 10 points and 10 rebounds, and the others failed to score in doubles. The Heat only scored 7 points in the last quarter.

Last year, the Hawks caused great trouble to the later champion Celtics in the first round of the playoffs, which also caused headaches for Ace and his new Big Three. This season they have a home advantage and hope to cause greater waves.

After the opening, the Hawks blossomed at multiple points and quickly took the lead, with a slight advantage of 16-12 halfway through the first quarter. Only Wade, the Heat, supported it hard, and scored 11 points in the first quarter, but the Heat still lag behind 21-24.

Wade's shooting percentage was not high, and he failed to perform well in the second quarter. The Hawks gradually widened the score. With 8 minutes and 39 seconds left in this quarter, the Heat only trailed 27-30, but they failed to score in the next two minutes. After 7 points in a row, the Hawks still failed to find the feeling. After another 12-3 wave, the Hawks led by 19 points 55-36 with 1 minute and 26 seconds left in this quarter. At the end of the half, the Hawks led by 59-39.

Bibi made three-pointers at the beginning of the third quarter, expanding his advantage to 23 points. With 3 minutes and 49 seconds left in the quarter, Smith grabbed the offensive rebound and dunked, and the Hawks led 74-49. Wade had given up resistance and only made one goal in this quarter to score 2 points. The Hawks led 76-57 after the third quarter.

Wade missed four consecutive shots after the start of the fourth quarter, completely desperate, and then got off the court. With 9 minutes and 18 seconds left in the game, Smith and Bibby scored an alley dunk, and the Hawks led 82-59. After that, both teams failed to score within 6 minutes and 42 seconds. It was not until 2 minutes and 36 seconds left in the game that Moon scored a goal for the Heat.

The victory or defeat of the game has long lost its suspense, and the Hawks passed easily at home. In the last quarter, the Hawks scored 12 points, while the Heat only scored 7 points.

The Heat, who fought the next day, defeated the Hawks 108-93 away, won a game and scored 1-1.

The Heat have gained a home advantage. "Flash" Dwyne Wade has made his first game low, shooting 6 three-pointers, scoring 33 points, 7 rebounds and 5 assists, and "three-point king" Daquian Cook also shot 6 three-pointers and scored 20 points. The Heat team made 15 of 26 three-pointers. Jermaine O'Neal scored 19 points, and Michael Beasley scored 12 points and 7 rebounds.

The Hawks lost their home advantage. Mike Bibby scored 18 points, Josh Smith scored 17 points and 10 plows, Joe Johnson scored 16 points, and Al Horford scored 11 points and 11 rebounds.

Wade's performance in the first game surprised his teammates. He kept missing shots and made mistakes. He even had the idea of ​​giving up when the Heat was behind in a big score, and did not shoot in the first 10 minutes of the third quarter. In the end, his poor performance made the Heat lose 64-90.

Wade will not be depressed forever. Today he let the Hawks see the style of "The Flash". Wade scored 8 points in the first quarter, and the Heat led 22-18.

This is just the beginning. In the second quarter, Wade attacked wildly, constantly shooting from the outside, hitting three three-pointers three times, scoring another 13 points in a single quarter, and scoring 21 points in the first half. Wade's three three-pointers were all shot in the last 2 minutes and 24 seconds of the quarter. With 56.8 seconds left in the quarter, the Heat led 54-41 after his third three-pointer. Both teams failed to score since then.

In the second half, Wade continued to blossom inside and outside, and the Heat maintained the lead. With 9 minutes and 51 seconds left in the quarter, O'Neal made two free throws, and the Heat led by 17 points 60-43. The Heat have since maintained a double-digit advantage in this quarter. Murray made a buzzer-beating three-pointer for the Hawks, but they still lag behind 72-83 in the first three quarters.

With 8 minutes and 25 seconds left in the fourth quarter, the Heat led 93-80. In the following 3 minutes, the Heat did not score a single point, Bibby and Johnson each made a three-pointer, and the Hawks tied the score to 86-93. In the past 4 minutes, the Heat failed to make a goal. It was not until 4 minutes and 36 seconds left in the quarter that Haslem made a jump shot and the Heat led 96-89.

Wade made a three-pointer with 2 minutes and 38 seconds left in the game, and the Heat scored a 10-point advantage with 101-91. Cook also scored a three-pointer thereafter. The Heat led by 13 points with 1 minute and 19 seconds left in the game, and finally defeated the Hawks' fighting spirit.

The work area also turned into the Cavaliers 2:0 Pistons, and the Hawks shook hands with the Heat 1:1, which was exactly the same as the work area in the West.

The 76ers completed a big reversal. Andre Iguodala made a shot and won the win, scoring 20 points, 8 rebounds and 8 assists, Louis Williams contributed 18 points, Andre Miller scored 15 points, and Sedis Young scored 14 points. Veteran Donyere Marshall scored 11 points, and all came from the fourth quarter, which was a hero of the reversal.

"Big Ben" Ben Wallace scored 31 points and 16 rebounds. This transfer before the playoffs this season was finally brought over by the Magic who was desperate to lack the inside. Cootney Lee scored 18 points, Rashad Lewis scored 15 points, Raf Alstom scored 15 points and 5 assists, Rashad Lewis scored 15 points. Heaton Tekglu returned from injury, but made 2 of 8 shots, only 6 points.

In the past 13 years, the Magic have only once passed the first round of the playoffs. This year they have high hopes for the playoffs. Due to the absence of Celtics general Kevin Garnett, the Magic's confidence has increased and they have a great chance of entering the Eastern Conference Finals. Ben Wallace and head coach Stan Van Gundy are both confident. "If you can't go deep enough into the playoffs, then he and I are the most likely to be fired." Van Gundy even joked.

However, the game was not as easy as expected, and the Magic was sniped by the 76ers. Although Ben Wallace scored 12 points in the first quarter, they did not have the advantage, but instead fell behind 25-27. Yang scored 8 points for the 76ers.

The two teams alternated several times in the second quarter. Both sides fought 44-44 with 2 minutes and 15 seconds left in the quarter. Since then, the 76ers only scored 2 points at the end of the quarter, and the Magic scored a 6-2 wave, ending the first half with 50-46. Ben Wallace continued to dominate the basket and scored 18 points in the first half.

Halfway through the third quarter, the 76ers were behind 58-64. After that, Ben Wallace grabbed an offensive rebound and dunked. The Magic launched a 15-3 attack, and opened the gap with 1 minute and 12 seconds left in the quarter. In the 5 minutes, the 76ers failed to make a goal. In the last 50 seconds of the quarter, the 76ers made two shots before chasing the score to 65-79.

The 76ers started with a 16-5 wave in the fourth quarter, and Marshall made multiple shots. Halfway through the quarter, Miller made a layup and tied the score to 81-84. On the contrary, facing the 76ers who were blooming inside and outside, the Magic's hit rate dropped sharply. With 3 minutes and 53 seconds left in the quarter, Miller made another layup, and Marshall also made a three-pointer. They scored 5 points in a row, tied the score to 91-91.

At the critical moment, the Magic still had to rely on Ben? Wallace, who made a close shot and took the lead again for the Magic. Immediately afterwards, Tekglu stole from Marshall. After the timeout, he took the Ben? Wallace passed the ball and made a backward shot. The Magic led 95-91.

With 1 minute and 31 seconds left in the game, Theo Ratliff dunked vigorously, chasing the score to 95-96. After that, the 76ers had a good opportunity to overtake, but Iguodala missed two free throws at the critical moment. Ben Wallace made a dunk, and the Magic led 98-95 with 49 seconds left in the game.

Marshall's sword is not old. With 34.8 seconds left in the game, he scored another three-pointer, helping the 76ers to score at 98-98. Since then, Lewis missed the shot, and the 76ers made a shot with 2.2 seconds left in the game, and surpassed 100-98. This is their first lead in the second half.

The Magic lost a good situation, and Tekeglu missed a three-pointer in the last moment, and unfortunately lost.

No one was optimistic about it, and the 76ers and the Magic played a stunning game. After all, many teams this year are extremely short of personnel, and they are not as talented as those rich families. The 1:0 score also keeps them suspense.

At least everyone thinks that the Celtics' off-duty division is the world of the Celtics, because of their battle with the Bulls, no one is optimistic about the Bulls. Although the Celtics who left Ace added Ray Allen and Rajon Rondo, the four giants like this, only the Clippers and have such a lineup with the Lakers, so how is their game with the Bulls...

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Chapter completed!
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