Fast-paced attacking in the opening minutes of the final. Both teams came out swinging freely.
Madrid, with the addition of
Ndiaye in place of
Deck, and
Hezonja in their starting five. The forward, with seven points, responded to the initial sharpness of Perry (3 three-pointers), and it was
Musa (9) who provided the offensive punch for our team against a Unicaja team that didn't cause any problems in the paint but did from the outside and on the counter-attack.
Chus Mateo's men tightened up their defence in the last two minutes of the first quarter and a spectacular dunk by
Yabusele closed out a 17-21 lead, although it could have been bigger if they had hit their free throws (they missed 7 points).
Sergio Rodríguez, first; then Campazzo
In the second quarter Madrid started to open up a gap with the two point guards playing a leading role, which made the difference. Sergio Rodríguez got off to a flying start with seven minutes in which he got the team playing the way he knows how, pulling out his best repertoire to cause problems for a strong defender like Alberto Díaz. He scored (4), assisted (2) and worked hard at the back (1 steal). The individual and zone defence, led by an outstanding Ndiaye, didn't allow many chances for a Unicaja team that Carter was pushing. Holding a small lead of 5-6 for a good part of this period, Campazzo emerged with force. Taking over from Sergio Rodríguez, just as he did in the third quarter yesterday against Barça, he went straight in and scored eight consecutive points to take our team's lead to more than 10 points (31-44, min. 20).