Pallacanestro Trieste, the most resilient team won in Trento

Pallacanestro Trieste, the most resilient team won in Trento

TRENTO / TRIESTE seen live, it was a high-paced match, as usual for the two teams, intense and with two very distinct owners in the two halves of the match.

The team that proved more resilient in moments of scoring drought prevailed, limiting turnovers and reaching the final stages with more freshness. Trento therefore holds the solitary lead in the standings, masterfully guided by a forty-year-old coach like Galbiati who in just a few years has had experiences that seem worth a lifetime’s career: takeover with the Italian Cup, relegation, high-level assistantship, league leader, international competitions.

But it is a recognition of a solid management group that in less than twenty years has exported a product from the C series synthetic pitches to the European top. Management and technical staff have changed, care for the youth sector has been implemented, but the perception is always the same: in an area that is the cradle of other sports, you can breathe healthy basketball air, and the climate at Palas is faithful testimony to this.

Trento and identity now recognize each other in one sense. On the field, protagonists with a common factor competed: serenity, the strength of being able to stay on the field even in the face of a mistake. Merit obviously attributable to two coaches who make this type of trust a working mantra, capable of radiating it to the entire team.

If Trento has already seen proof of this in the Cup (with young Italians often on the field), Trieste came one step away from a sensational overtaking by relying on the hands of a so far disastrous Valentine and the direction of a nervous Ross.

69/30 represents the partial of the second part of TREVISO/SCAFATI, starting from minus 10 of the interval. If curiosity arises regarding those circumstances, the creative imagination could lead one to believe that beast-like screams were coming from the TVB locker room.

Rationally one might think instead that the technical staff took advantage of the whistles coming from the stands to soften the tension and the weight of the words, empathizing with the players regarding arguments 1) he had shot badly, but with acceptable choices 2) a rougher defense would have allowed to regain a race pace lost for just 5 minutes 3) it was a turning point to show that the sweat produced in training could not be in vain. Then Scafati helped…..

That the mind counts more than technique was also seen in VARESE, where the hosts defeated Virtus Bo just one week after the “trip” on the Adriatic; or at REYER, where at the Forum there was a risk of coming out as comeback winners, starting from the lowest point (minus 20) of a complicated period to say the least. —

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