-
Personally, I think Miller is chasing 6 points and Maddie is chasing 8 points.
Miller was six points behind with 16 seconds left in the game. The three-pointer he shot in seconds, and then he made a steal and then shot a three-pointer, the Knicks missed the shot, and Miller moved to the rebound and the opponent fouled 2 of 2 free throws. Get 8 points.
Maddy's moment was 8 points behind with 35 seconds left in the game, 31 seconds to shoot a three-pointer, the Spurs made 2 of 2 free throws, Maddie hit a four-point success, the Spurs again made 2 of 2 free throws (the Spurs are really super solid), Maddie hit another three-pointer under Bowen's defense, and finally Maddie steals Devin. Brown. Hit the last three points.
The Spurs didn't take a timeout and Parker missed a long-range shot.
If Miller's moment is 9 seconds and 8 minutes, then Maddy's moment is 31 seconds and 13 points.
If you count the time you were behind, not the time you hit the first shot, Miller would have scored eight points in 16 seconds and Maddie would have scored 13 points in 35 seconds.
Personally, I feel like Maddie is the greater, even though I'm a big fan of Miller.
Because Miller's moment was obviously the Knicks' mistake was too big, and Maddy's moment was chasing back point by point, the Spurs really didn't make a big mistake. Like missing a free throw or something.
-
Miller scored the first 3-point second before the final game, and the final free throw was the second before the final game, a total of seconds in this time period, rather than 8 points in the last second as some people say.
-
1. In terms of visual effects, Maddie made four consecutive three-pointers (including a 3+1) against the defense, which was more shocking than Miller's one three-point + one frontcourt steal three-point + two free throws.
Two or ten years ago, Rocket, Yao Mai, and Chinese fans were unprecedentedly popular. The Miller moment is 20 years ago, when the NBA's broadcast in China was not so developed, and the Pacers did not have many fans.
Third, although Miller moment occurred in the playoffs, but at the last moment, the opponent Knicks made too many mistakes, the front court ball was stolen + two free throws missed + the front court rebound was not thrown, relatively speaking, the Spurs did everything they could do back then, free throws were scored, the defense was in place, Duncan and Bowen came to defend Maddy successively, and the only flaw was the final mistake.
Fourth, the Miller moment is equally deadly and great, and its significance is even higher than that of Maddy's moment (playoffs), but it may not be as popular as Maddy's moment.
-
In Game 5 of the 1994 Eastern Conference Finals against the Knicks, Reggie Miller made a neck gesture to Spike Lee, a die-hard Knicks fan and Hollywood director, after back-to-back three-pointers in the fourth quarter, and Miller scored 25 points in the fourth quarter to lead the Pacers to a 96-89 victory. In the first game of the 1995 Eastern Conference semifinals against the Knicks, the Pacers were still six points behind before the end of the game, but Miller scored eight points in a row with two three-pointers and two free throws in the last seconds to lead the Pacers to a two-point victory. Hence the term "Miller moment".
A Miller Moment classic, of course.
-
Maddie is certainly Maddie compared to Miller.
The first "Miller moment" was born on May 7, 1995, when it was the first game of the 1995 Eastern Conference semifinals, the Pacers and the Knicks were fighting hard, when the Pacers were 6 points behind the Knicks, and there were only seconds left in the game, according to ordinary people, the Pacers were certain to die, but Miller broke this routine, he first shot a three-pointer, and then cut off the ball from the Knicks in his backcourt, and quickly took it to the front court to score again. At this time, the Pacers were surprised to tie the score at 105-105, and Miller forced the Knicks to foul, and he hit both free throws to help the Pacers narrow the opponent by 2 points. The mention of Miller's three-pointer conjures up "Miller moments," and the final seconds of the game are often Miller's exclusive moments. In the first game of the 1995 Eastern Conference semifinals, the opponent was the Knicks. >>>More