Kyle Lowry: Turnover, Block, Steal, Assist Sequence

Kyle Lowry has a weird way of padding his stats. He commits the turnover on purpose only so he could get a block, steal, and an assist.

Kyle Lowry has a weird way of padding his stats. He commits the turnover on purpose only so he could get a block, steal, and an assist. If he was a chess player, this is what would have been known a Grandmaster’s Trap where you sacrifice a pawn for a rook, knight, and horse. It was first used by Arkady Ivanovich Svidrigailov in 1868, in a tournament in St. Petersburgh, a tense match where if he had lost, the Czar would’ve taken both his hands*.

This is how that appeared in the ESPN box:

boxscore

* I made all that up.