"45 to 4."
The tragedy of Julius Erving and Larry Bird ultimately repeated itself on Jordan.
Was it fate? No, it was Jordan's inevitability.
A man who shouldn't have come back did, and the twilight he brought was bound to affect everyone.
A person like Yu Fei wouldn't let the short life be wasted by such a twilight-enshrouded old man; the twilight belonged to yesterday, to tonight, to the Wizards, but not to him. He would just take a deep breath, inhale all the twilight, exhale it, and then it was trash.
Just like Jordan lying on the ground.
All trash!
After that, both Yu Fei and Jordan (due to injury) were substituted out.
In the fourth quarter, with a 38-point lead, the Bucks didn't need to put Yu Fei back on the court.
But George Karl, considering that Yu Fei had scored 60 points in three quarters, thought that with a bit of effort, perhaps he could break through the 70 or even 80-point barrier.