The dream chase is causing trouble at the beginning, and the Fire and Yong battle is directly "exploded"?
11:16pm, 10 May 2025Basketball
On May 3, the life-and-death battle between the Warriors and the Rockets was directly "intensified" less than 4 minutes into the game! The Warriors led 3-2 in the first five games. Everyone was hoping to see the two teams fighting tactics in this game, but Zhu Meng directly made a "big job" for everyone - he took a first-level malicious foul and directly lit the powder barrel! At the beginning of the game, Shin Kyung dunked, Zhu Meng and Van Vleet scored three-pointers, and the rhythm was quite normal. As a result, the next second, Zhu Meng and Jaylen Green suddenly "didn't fire" while fighting without the ball. The slow-motion replay was clearly seen. When Zhu Meng shook off Green, his elbow hit the back of his head! The referee watched the replay without saying a word, and directly upgraded the ordinary foul to a level one malicious intention. This time, Green made both free throws, and Shin Kyung scored two more goals in a row, and the Rockets stopped the Warriors 11-7. To be honest, Huo Yong had various pushes and technical fouls in the previous few games. I thought I had to restrain myself in this game, but in the end I went to a "king bomb" directly. Who can withstand this?
Let's say that the operation of chasing dreams is simply confusing! As the "brain" of the Warriors, they were at the beginning of the game. Isn't this a cheating teammate? Originally, the Warriors were leading 3-2, and they could basically advance as long as they stabilized this game, but his foul not only made the Rockets' morale soar, but he also accumulated 2 malicious points. If you save 2 points, you will have to be suspended. How can you play in the future? What's even more outrageous is that he has committed two malicious fouls and three technical fouls in this round of series. Do he regard the "fouls as a KPI"?
And, this foul also pushed the referee to the forefront. Some people say that this action should be blown, and if you don’t blow, the game will lose control sooner or later; some people think that the scale is too strict, and chasing dreams may be an unintentional action. But no matter what, the referee's blows the game is completely messed up. When the Rockets players saw the referee "stand on the side", they played even more fiercely; on the Warriors, Curry had to score while trying to calm his teammates' emotions, and the pressure was so full!
After all, the playoffs are intensified and stressful, it is understandable that players' emotions are easily out of control, but as a veteran, Zhu Meng really should take good care of his temper. Whether the Warriors can advance now is still unknown. If the follow-up game is ruined because of this foul, fans will not "cry and faint in the toilet"?
Brothers, do you think the foul of chasing dreams was intentional? Is the referee's penalty fair and strict, or is it too strict?
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