The Emergence of Jeremy Lin
He joined the Knicks at the end of last December and barely got any playing time until the end of January, when he got his first chance to start. Since then, he’s somehow scored more points in his first five starts than any player in modern NBA history. Since he stepped into the spotlight and breathed air into the Knicks. The Asian sensation has been setting the media ablaze.
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guardian.co.uk - 11/05/2012

The Miami Heat moved into the second round of the NBA playoffs with a 106-94 win over the New York Knicks on Wednesday that completed a 4-1 series victory.

LeBron James had 29 points, eight rebounds and seven assists, while Chris Bosh and Dwyane Wade both scored 19 points for the Heat, who progressed to a second-round series against the Indiana Pacers, starting in Miami on Sunday.

"We will savor this win tonight," James said. "And then we get to work tomorrow and get ready for Indiana."

Carmelo Anthony scored 35 points for the Knicks, but it wasn't enough and the man chosen two spots behind James and immediately ahead of Bosh and ...

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twitter.com - 11/05/2012
twitter.com - 08/05/2012
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online.wsj.com - 08/05/2012

Jeremy Lin has lived a pretty typical life of a fad. He exploded in February, peaked in March, dipped in production and then got injured. He looked like he'd end up the Knicks equivalent of Pogs or a pet rock. But six weeks after a torn meniscus, he has the chance save the Knicks' season.

After Baron Davis's gruesome partial tear of his patella and complete tears of his ACL and MCL in Sunday's Game 4, the Knicks' point guard depth is paper-thin. They'd already lost rookie guard Iman Shumpert to a torn ACL in Game 1. And so the spotlight turns to Lin, who has been a question mark for the series for weeks. He's been reluctant to commit to a specific game when ...

nbcnewyork.com - 18/04/2012

At this point, everyone should really know better than to write anything in ink about the Knicks.

After Sunday's loss to Miami, the great howl was that there wasn't enough help for Carmelo Anthony on offense and that the Knicks were surely doomed as a result. That conventional wisdom must not have been well-received inside the Knicks locker room because they responded on Tuesday night with a performance for the ages.

Led by J.R. Smith and Steve Novak, the Knicks knocked down 14 threes in a first half that ended with 72 points on their side of the scoreboard and the ...

l75_75

Apr 16, 2012 - Round and round goes the Ferris wheel that's the 2012 New York Knicks. So much talent on this squad to start the season, yet they seem poised to squander that. Amare Stoudemire turned into a shadow of his former explosive self and he's pretty much become a one-sided (NOT DEFENSE) player). The Knicks devolved into the worst kind of ugly isolation basketball, the type where barely anything happens offensively and everything is given up defensively. Once Carmelo Anthony got hurt, it looked as if the season was ...

espn.go.com - 11/04/2012

Point guard Jeremy Lin said his knee rehabilitation is going well, but he doesn't expect to ...

l75_75
twitter.com - 11/04/2012
huliq.com - 19/03/2012

Scholastic Books, the popular forum for educators and parents in search of creative, intellectual and engaging reading for young people, proves again that's it "in the loop," with its latest, academic "Linsanity."

Jeremy Lin: Rising Staris the first biography produced on Lin geared to readers ages 8 and up. Jeremy Lin, the Knicks' point guard, is 23-years-old. James Buckley Jr. authored the work that covers Jeremy Lin's rise from humble beginnings and traces his years of hard work and practice from his high school days in Palo Alto, CA to his hoop days at Harvard.

Part, if not most or all of Lin's popularity lies in his Asian ancestry. Since its inception, the ...

New York Knicks out of NBA playoffs after defeat to Miami Heat | Sport | guardian.co.uk

The Miami Heat moved into the second round of the NBA playoffs with a 106-94 win over the New York Knicks on Wednesday that completed a 4-1 series victory.

LeBron James had 29 points, eight rebounds and seven assists, while Chris Bosh and Dwyane Wade both scored 19 points for the Heat, who progressed to a second-round series against the Indiana Pacers, starting in Miami on Sunday.

"We will savor this win tonight," James said. "And then we get to work tomorrow and get ready for Indiana."

Carmelo Anthony scored 35 points for the Knicks, but it wasn't enough and the man chosen two spots behind James and immediately ahead of Bosh and Wade in the 2003 NBA draft has now won just two of 11 postseason series.

New York's Amare Stoudemire scored 14 points before fouling out, Landry Fields and J.R. Smith both scored 12 and Tyson Chandler grabbed 11 rebounds.

The Knicks cut the margin to 11 points four times in a 2-minute span, and Miami answered every time, the last of those a 3-pointer by Shane Battier with 54 seconds left.





Miami Heat's Dwyane Wade and LeBron James embrace as New York Knicks' Amare Stoudemire walks off the court following the first round of the NBA Eastern Conference playoffs, Wednesday, May 9, 2012, in Miami. The Heat won 106-94 to win the series 4-1 and advance to the second round to play the Indiana Pacers.

That sent the white seat covers flying in all corners of the arena, the fans knowing it was finally over.

The first game day salvo came eight hours before tipoff, when Wade sent a verbal jab toward former teammate Mike Bibby.

"I know Mike has made more shots in this series than he made all last year. I know that. Send that to Mike," Wade said.

Bibby averaged 0.5 points in first-quarter appearances this season, but he scored eight in the opening minutes Wednesday as the visitors jumped out to a 14-8 lead.

It was one of New York's few moments to enjoy. James had 13 points on only six field-goal attempts by halftime, Wade shook off a scoreless first quarter with 12 in the second, and Miami went into the break leading 55-44.

The margin was less than 10 points for only 90 seconds of the third quarter. Stoudemire went to the bench with his fifth foul with 6:41 left in the third, and Miami went on an 11-2 spurt not long after that all but sealed the outcome.





JeremyLin:End of Season - YouTube




Tweeted by Jeremy Lin




Tweeted by Jeremy Lin




Can Jeremy Lin Save the Knicks? - WSJ.com

Jeremy Lin has lived a pretty typical life of a fad. He exploded in February, peaked in March, dipped in production and then got injured. He looked like he'd end up the Knicks equivalent of Pogs or a pet rock. But six weeks after a torn meniscus, he has the chance save the Knicks' season.

After Baron Davis's gruesome partial tear of his patella and complete tears of his ACL and MCL in Sunday's Game 4, the Knicks' point guard depth is paper-thin. They'd already lost rookie guard Iman Shumpert to a torn ACL in Game 1. And so the spotlight turns to Lin, who has been a question mark for the series for weeks. He's been reluctant to commit to a specific game when he'd return but has repeatedly stated he could come back later in the series if all went to plan. With Wednesday's crucial Game 5 looming, Lin could revive the insanity one more time. On Monday, Knicks coach Mike Woodson was pessimistic but no official word has come down. "I'm not counting on Jeremy Lin to play," Knicks coach Mike Woodson said. "We've got to continue where we've been as far as guys in uniform but I'm not counting on him to play."



But, Woodson said, it will be the decision of team doctors and Lin himself. "I guess we'll gauge it as we go along. They've been keeping close tabs on Jeremy as far as training work, his running and a little contact, and they will make the final decision."

Lin's possible return makes for a dilemma for the Knicks, who are down 3-1 in their best-of-seven series with the Heat. The current offense is built around Carmelo Anthony and Lin's uptempo style may clash with Anthony's slow tendencies. Anthony averages 16.1 points per game when Lin is the starting point guard. That's down eight points from his career average and since Lin was injured in March, Anthony has averaged a staggering 28.5 points per game. Lin has a similar problem—in the seven games Lin started while Anthony was sidelined with a groin injury, he had 24.6 points per game. When Anthony returned, Lin plummeted to 15.7 points.

The problem for the Knicks now is that Lin may be the only option that could help them. With Davis and Shumpert out, and Woodson hesitant to play Toney Douglas, they'll have to start veteran Mike Bibby on Wednesday.

Woodson said the Bibby isn't as "fast and crafty as he used to be but he's still capable in short minutes running a basketball team. Sometimes it doesn't look pretty based on how he moves up and down the floor...but yes i do feel comfortable starting Bibby in a big game like that."

Even if Lin cannot play in Game 5 he could still return for potential games 6 or 7. Woodson said he'd like to have a chance to see Lin play five-on-five scrimmages and bang bodies with other players. "I've watched him shoot and get up and down he's not in great shape and you know playoff basketball you've got to be at an all-time high and he hasn't played in a while," Woodson said.

Jeremy Lin has lived a pretty typical life of a fad. He exploded in Februarypeaked in March, dipped in production and then got injured. He looked like he'd end up the Knicks equivalent of Pogs or a pet rock. But six weeks after a torn meniscus, he has the chance save the Knicks' season.





The Knicks Triple Their Pleasure

At this point, everyone should really know better than to write anything in ink about the Knicks.

After Sunday's loss to Miami, the great howl was that there wasn't enough help for Carmelo Anthony on offense and that the Knicks were surely doomed as a result. That conventional wisdom must not have been well-received inside the Knicks locker room because they responded on Tuesday night with a performance for the ages.

Led by J.R. Smith and Steve Novak, the Knicks knocked down 14 threes in a first half that ended with 72 points on their side of the scoreboard and the Garden crowd as giddy as anything but a schoolgirl can get. In the second quarter, the threes were falling so furiously that even the zombiefied Mike Bibby got to feast on some Celtic brains.

Really, though, it was Novak (8-10 from three) and Smith (7-10 from three) who were leading the charge in what played out like a "Can you top this?" contest between the two gunners. It got to the point where it felt like the scoreboard operator would just throw the three points on the board when the ball left their hands so that they could join the celebration when the ball fell through the hoop.

They wound up tied with 25 points, more than enough to help the Knicks to a 118-110 win that kept alive both their hopes of winning the division and their hopes of moving higher than the seventh spot in the standings. Their performance also showed just how dangerous the Knicks offense can be when everything is clicking.


With the Celtics forced to account for the hot shooters on the outside, Tyson Chandler had acres of room in the paint to use as a launching pad for dunks. He finished with 20 points on 10 shots, which is the kind of efficiency normally associated with German automobiles.

And then there was Anthony, who we saved for last simply because it was worth noting that the team won a huge game on a night when Paul Pierce dropped 43 points without relying on Melo for every little thing. But it is also worth noting that Anthony might just have played his best game of a stretch that has seen him play as well or better than everyone else in the NBA.

In a performance that had to make Mike D'Antoni's mustache twitch in whichever undisclosed location he's using for his next Pringles can photo shoot, Anthony wound up with a triple double (35 points, 12 rebounds, 10 assists) for the second time in his career. The alleged ball stopper with poor decision making hit 13 of 24 shots while passing out of double-teams and setting up his teammates whenever the moment was right.

The narrative about Anthony's me-first profile was helped immeasurably in the early part of the season by the fact that he wasn't playing with anyone who could hit a shot. It's a different team now coached by a different man and suddenly Anthony isn't looking like such a nightmare of a human being anymore.

Does that mean the Knicks are destined for good things? Look back at the top for a reminder that we don't write things in ink around these parts.

Banking on that kind of shooting every night isn't the route to making a fortune, but having it in your arsenal means that there's always a chance that the Garden shakes the way it shook on Tuesday night. After this undulating season that looked lost so many times, that chance is something worth clinging to with all your strength. 





The New York Knicks Need Jeremy Lin Back

Apr 16, 2012 - Round and round goes the Ferris wheel that's the 2012 New York Knicks. So much talent on this squad to start the season, yet they seem poised to squander that. Amare Stoudemire turned into a shadow of his former explosive self and he's pretty much become a one-sided (NOT DEFENSE) player). The Knicks devolved into the worst kind of ugly isolation basketball, the type where barely anything happens offensively and everything is given up defensively. Once Carmelo Anthony got hurt, it looked as if the season was over, and New York would be on the verge of blowing up once again.

And then out of nowhere, Jeremy Lin arrived. And suddenly everything started working again.

The Palo Alto star gave every player a purpose, a reason, a way to play off his creative abilities rather than try to create things themselves. As has been the case since forever, a good point guard could heal all the problems. Lin's creativity allowed Imam Shumpert to thrive off the ball and start showcasing his defensive abilities, pick-and-rolled with Tyson Chandler, found Steve Novakand J.R. Smith for those big threes--the New York offense just looked so much better, even if they weren't getting any contributions from the stars.

Of course, once Stoudemire and Anthony came back, things got all cloggy, and the adjustment period was harsh--the Knicks ran into the hardest stretch of their schedule, and their record plummeted. Still, after the rough patches, it seemed like the Knicks were starting to learn from each other--at least until Stoudemire went out, and everyone had to readjust to each other once again.

Then it was Lin's turn to go down, and it was Anthony's turn to grow back into New York.

With Lin's success, Anthony really needed to regain the confidence of the MSG faithful, and it appears he finally captured the spirit of the Knicks by taking over and beating the Chicago Bullssingle-handedly. Anthony has regained the confidence he seemed to lack. The Knicks have managed to stay afloat thanks to fantastic hero-ball by Anthony. The Knicks are 7-4, and Anthony has hit 25 points in seven of them, 32 in five of them, and 40 in two of them.

However, the deficiencies of relying so heavily on Melo were on full display Sunday, when Miami was happy to let Carmelo put up the points, taking the ball out of the hands of the remaining Knicks players. Then the Heat put LeBron on him in the final few minutes and they couldn't score anymore. Hero ball works great until the other team you face is full of Superfriends or kryptonite (great defense).

Still, in the long run this might have been good for both of these players, and good for New York. Combined as a whole, the Knicks are a messy sort of collective that overwhelms everyone, even players like Lin and Anthony. Everyone wants the ball, everyone wants to make things happen, but they just struggle to make it happen. Perhaps now that they've each had their turn trying to carry the load, they can better understand how to work off each other to make New York go deep into June.

The New York Knicks are in the discussion as one of the deepest teams in the NBA, but they can't show it unless they're all together. The way they're currently constructed, they have plenty of talent, but just not enough defense to put around Chandler, not enough scorers to put around Melo, not enough creating without Lin out there running the show. Whenever a piece is missing, it shows in the lack of consistency of the team. Lin, Shumpert, Chandler, Anthony and Fields could really do damage in the playoffs (with Stoudemire floating off the bench to really fluster the opposition, along with Novak, J.R. Smith and Baron Davis); they're so offensively potent and versatile they can kill teams. There's so many ways for Lin, Anthony and their legions to attack even the best of defenses. They'd be one tough out if they could play even passable D.

The Knicks probably don't need Lin to win a series, maybe even two. But to achieve the lofty goal of winning a championship? They need this team whole again, and they need their confident point guard playing with their confident star. This type of partnership between Anthony and Lin can help fuel a championship run, particularly if Stoudemire learns to play as a secondary option and Chandler can continue to anchor the paint. It has to be a group effort, and it has to be with a complete squad.

Forget Linsanity. The Knicks could use Linormality right now.






New York Knicks' Jeremy Lin feels good but doubts return for first round

Point guard Jeremy Lin said his knee rehabilitation is going well, but he doesn't expect to play in the first round of the playoffs, if the Knicks qualify.

"I think unless something goes really well I wouldn't get there," Lin said before Sunday's Knicks-Bulls game.

Lin underwent surgery Monday to repair a meniscus tear in his left knee. He's been walking and riding a bike and hopes to have a full range of motion soon.

The second-year guard hesitated to predict he'd be back sooner than six weeks, which was the original timetable provided by the Knicks, who entering Sunday stood a half-game in front of the Bucks for the eighth and final playoff spot in the East.



"All the doctors are saying this is normal," said Lin, who hopes to resume running next week. "After about 1½ to 2 weeks is when you can see how well you're doing."

Lin doesn't want to rush his return to the court. He also didn't want to risk hurting the team's chemistry if he returned in the middle of the playoffs.

"I want to get to 100 percent and then come back, hopefully see what I can do. By then it'll be a different team identity, chemistry, so it gets tricky, too," Lin said.

A telling sign in Lin's recovery will be when he starts to cut laterally and jump.

"I'm trying to be cautiously optimistic I guess," said Lin, who will not travel with the team this week. The surgery last week put a pause on Lin's storybook season.

New York signed the undrafted guard and former Harvard standout after he was waived by two teams in the preseason. Lin was buried on the Knicks bench for his first six weeks with the team, even spending a short stint with the Knicks' D-League affiliate. But given a chance to play in late February, he led New York to seven straight wins and attracted worldwide attention in the process.

Lin played extensive minutes once he took over as the Knicks starter. He said on Sunday that the condensed schedule created wear and tear on his knee.


"Really, that's what it was because the games came so fast. Playing three, four games a week, there was really never a week except for All-Star," said Lin, who logged 35.1 minutes per game in February and 30.8 minutes per game in March after playing just 24 total minutes in his first month with the team.

Lin will be a restricted free-agent next season. The Knicks are expected to be able to match any offer to Lin, due to a clause in the collective bargaining agreement. Some have speculated that New York would also make a run at Steve Nash, who is expected to test free agency.

On his pending free agency, Lin said: "We'll talk to them on July 1. I'm restricted, too, so that puts another element to it. I'm just going to let it happen the way it's supposed to happen and not going to worry about it too much right now."

Lin did say that he'd take a different approach to the offseason now that he knows he'll play extended minutes.

"We're already creating the plan to get my legs ready and my back," Lin said. "... Hopefully next year is going to be a lot different in terms of my body being able to maintain energy at a higher level."





Tweeted by Jeremy Lin




Surprising and uplifting Jeremy Lin biography for kids | HULIQ

Scholastic Books, the popular forum for educators and parents in search of creative, intellectual and engaging reading for young people, proves again that's it "in the loop," with its latest, academic "Linsanity."

Jeremy Lin: Rising Staris the first biography produced on Lin geared to readers ages 8 and up. Jeremy Lin, the Knicks' point guard, is 23-years-old. James Buckley Jr. authored the work that covers Jeremy Lin's rise from humble beginnings and traces his years of hard work and practice from his high school days in Palo Alto, CA to his hoop days at Harvard.

Part, if not most or all of Lin's popularity lies in his Asian ancestry. Since its inception, the NBA has been dominated by African American and white American players, many with hard luck stories or backgrounds that changed after being recruited from college into the NBA. Lin's parents emigrated to the US from Taiwan and raised Lin in the San Francisco Bay area of Palo Alto. After high school, Lin chose Harvard's athletic program, even though Harvard doesn't offer athletic scholarships.

Author James Buckley Jr. has penned more than 60 sports books for kids, including The Ultimate Gude to Basketball, NBA Inside, Eyewitness Baseball and the NFL's Top 100, among many others. Buckley is a former editor with Sports Illustrated and NFL Publishing; he's written many books on various subjects and resides in Santa Barbara with his family.



Rising Star documents Lin's trades or "bounding around" in the NBA to today where he's made, finally, "astounding performances with the New York Knicks." Lin's very recent success with the Knicks has inspired and spurred massive media attention. The catch phrases, "linsanity" and "lincredible" among many others are coined in Lin's honor.

"Jeremy Lin's story is that feel-good sports story that is surprising and uplifting," said, Debra Dorfman, Vice President and Publisher, Scholastic. "His hard work, determination, and perseverance serve as an inspiration to sports fans of all ages. Jeremy Lin is a role model and we look forward to publishing this book and getting it into the hands of kids as soon as possible through our retail and school distribution channels."

While Lin may not profit from the Scholastic endeavor, Lin is about to announce to announce an endorsement deal with Volvo today (USA TODAY). The ad campaign is Lin's first since landing in the NBA.

Jeremy Lin is listed at 6'3". His parents are a reported 5'6" but his his maternal grandmother's family was tall, and her father was over 6 feet. Lin and his brothers learned to play basketball at their local YMCA.






Volvo scores global endorsement deal with Jeremy Lin

Volvo Cars has signed New York Knicks point guard Jeremy Lin to a global endorsement deal and will announce details today in New York City.

Volvo is owned by China's Zhejiang Geely Holding Group Co.

According to a statement from Volvo, Lin "is expected to help in the marketing efforts of Volvo in several international markets and help establish the brand with younger and performance-oriented customers."

Lin, 23, was born in the United States of Taiwanese immigrant parents. He is expected to become the focus of an ad campaign for the brand's important, and expanding, Chinese automotive market.

Volvo hopes to double its global sales to 800,000 by 2020; it sold about 47,000 cars in China last year.

In an interview in Germany in September, Volvo's head of global marketing, Richard Monturo, said the company is focusing on social media and digital.

"We think the primary device in auto marketing is the internet," Monturo said. "We have teams focusing on how we can upgrade the user experiences in all our social presences. We're using the 'designed around you' idea but trans-creating around the world."

Lin may fit with that strategy. The 6-foot-3-inch guard ascended to NBA fame amid a eruption of "Linsanity," blogs in both Mandarin and English.

His Twitter feed has more than 664,000 followers.

Volvo, which had been owned by Ford Motor Co. before it was bought in 2010 by Geely, has long been known in the United States for safety and reliability, and its station wagons became a symbol of suburban affluence in the 1980s.

In the United States, Volvo's sales rose 214 percent last year to 67,240 units. U.S. deliveries have advanced 7 percent this year to 9,724 through February.

Lin was signed by the Knicks late last year after appearing in 29 games with Golden State.

In his 12 starts before the All-Star break, Lin averaged 22.5 points and 8.7 assists, and New York had a 9–3 record.






Rampant Bulls overpowers fading Knicks





Knicks Look Awful Losing to Philadelphia 76ers: Fan's View - NBA

The Knicks have had a wild roller coaster type of year. Starting outthe season 6-4, then losing 11 of their next 13 games. ThenJeremy Lin emerged to lead the team to seven straight wins, and 10 wins out of 13 games.

Knicks Lost to Philadelphia 76ers for Fifth Loss in a Row

The Knicks have since lost five games in a row, and yesterday, Sunday, March 11, 2012, the Knicks looked awful losing to thePhiladelphia 76ers, 106-94, at Madison Square Garden. The loss dropped the Knicks to 18-23 on the season, and Philadelphia improved to 25-17.

The fans at the Garden let the Knicks know they looked awful yesterday too, as some boos rained down on the team. The Knicks actually came out against the 76ers and played well, as they had a 24-22 lead at the end of the first quarter. Philly then came out and outscored the Knicks by four in the second quarter, 29-25, to take a two point halftime lead at 51-49.

After Being in the Game in the First Half, Knicks Blown Out in Third Quarter

I don't know what Knicks head coach Mike D'Antoni said to the team at halftime, but whatever he said, it didn't work as the 76ers outscored the Knicks, 38-24 in the third quarter.



The Knicks looked just awful in the third quarter, and then didn't play much better in the fourth quarter, though they outscored the 76ers 21-17 in the fourth quarter.

In the fourth quarter, Mike D'Antoni kept Carmelo Anthony andAmare Stoudemire mainly on the bench. Not sure that was a great move, but nothing worked too well for the Knicks in the second half.

Carmelo Anthony Scored 12 Points in First Quarter but Didn't Make Another Field Goal in the Game

Carmelo Anthony came out firing in the game, scoring 12 points in the first quarter, while making five of seven shots from the field. Melo scored 22 points in the game, but he never made another field goal after the first quarter, and shot five for 13 from the field in the game. He did draw fouls though, and made 11 of 12 free throws.

Jeremy Lin was ice cold in the game, making just five of 18 shots (27.8), and scoring 14 points with seven assists. Tyson Chandler came back from his injury to play, and scored eight points and grabbed 12 rebounds.

For the 76ers, Evan Turner played great, scoring 24 points on nine of 14 shooting from the field, and grabbing 15 rebounds for his fourth double-double on the season. Lou Williams killed the Knicks in the second half. For the game, Williams scored 28 points, including making three of five threes.

Next Up for the Knicks is Another Tough Game in Chicago vs theChicago Bulls Tonight

Things do not get any easier for the New York Knicks, as they play tonight, March 12, 2012, in Chicago against Derrick Rose and the Chicago Bulls. The Bulls have lost just three times this season at home.

The Knicks are desperate for win, as the Milwaukee Bucks won yesterday, and the Knicks lead over the Bucks for the final playoff spot in the East is just one game. As a Melo fan, I might be crazy, but I think the Knicks are a desperate team and will play incredibly hard and have a chance to knock off the Bulls tonight.





New York Knicks -- Jeremy Lin has weaknesses that might take time to correct

There's an Eastern Conference scout who, like the rest of the sports world, has been "completely caught up" in the Jeremy Lin story over the past four weeks.

"It's the perfect storm. It's the perfect system for him and he's the perfect person for it," the scout said.

Of course, it's not all perfect for Lin, despite the New York Knicks' 9-5 record in games Lin has started.

According to the scout, weaknesses have emerged in Lin's game over the past month -- weaknesses that opponents will key on until he forces them to do differently. His ability to correct those flaws is key for a Knicks team hoping to make a deep postseason run.


GO LEFT, YOUNG MAN

One of Lin's deficiencies, scouts say, is his inability to go left with any consistency. This is nothing new. The same scout enamored with Lin says his tendency to go right was noted in early scouting reports.

According to ESPN Stats & Information, Lin drives right in 70 percent of his isolation plays. Boston and Miami both had success against Lin by trying to force him left. Lin shot a combined 7-for-37 against the Heat and Celtics; the Knicks lost both games.

"Once you go through the league it becomes a bigger disadvantage," another scout said of Lin's proclivity to go right.

So how do you fix it?

Scouts say the repetition of offseason drills (both strength and ballhandling) should help fix the problem. One person familiar with Lin's game believes he has to strengthen his right leg to become more comfortable pushing off to his left.

But there's little the Knicks' staff can do to correct it right now, given the lack of practice time in the shortened season.

"You can always tweak things -- switch the angle of his screens, bring him to the other side of the floor, change where he starts a play. But I don't think you'll see a dramatic improvement in his ballhandling the rest of the way," one scout said.



TOO MANY TURNOVERS

Sixteen percent of Lin's possessions end in turnovers -- the fourth highest turnover percentage among point guards playing at least 20 minutes per game.

Most of Lin's turnovers are a result of his aggressive style of play, scouts say.

"I love his aggressiveness and it has worked in a lot of cases, so you don't necessarily want to settle him down," one scout said. "You want to see him make better decisions, but that's difficult to do."

Essentially, scouts say, it comes back to practice time and experience -- things that will be in short supply the rest of the season. The Knicks have 28 games in the final 50 days of the season. Most days in between games will be used as recovery days. The team won't have much opportunity to scrimmage.

That means Lin will have to work out his issues during the games.

"It's decision-making -- if you have a lane, go ahead and take it. But he's forced it sometimes," one scout said. "And in [Mike] D'Antoni's system, he's encouraged that 'If you think you have an advantage, go ahead and take it.' It's not a big 'structure' system."


BEWARE THE TRAP

To try to limit Lin's pick-and-roll opportunities, many teams have sent two defenders at him as a perimeter trap. Scouts have seen Lin handle this scheme with mixed results.

At his best, Lin will lure both defenders and exploit the subsequent weakness created in the defense. Or he'll lure the bigger defender and use his speed as an advantage; this is what Lin did so well against Dallas the first time, when he had 28 points and 14 assists.

But he struggled against the trap versus Miami and, to a lesser degree, Boston. He had a combined 14 turnovers in the two games.

"That's something he's going to have to get better at, because he's going to see it more and more," one scout said.

To make teams pay, one talent evaluator suggests sending a shooter to set the screen for Lin. Then the shooter slips the screen, giving himself an open look.

Lin can also engage both defenders. "If you can string it out and have two people play you, you're definitely creating an advantage," the scout said.

PROGNOSIS: POSITIVE

Even while dissecting the deficiencies in his game, scouts made it clear that they believe Lin can and will improve in all areas.

"I think he's talented enough to work on it and really get better," one evaluator said. "He's a student of the game."

Lin recognizes that he has plenty to learn. After all, he has just 14 NBA starts to his name.

"I'm learning a lot and absorbing information right now," he said. "Obviously it doesn't feel good at all and [I] have some long nights after some bad games. But that's part of the growth process."





Tweeted by Jeremy Lin




TIME magazine covers: worldwide differences




Jeremy Lin Gets His Own (Non-Controversial) Ice Cream Flavor - Speakeasy

Take that, Ben and Jerry’s. Linsane fans of frosty treats have another option now, and this time the dessert won’t include any controversial ingredients like bits offortune cookies.

Yesterday, New York’s own Chinatown Ice Cream Factory unveiled its own signature homage to Knicks point guard Jeremy Lin — the #17 Sundae, named after the hardcourt hero’s number, since the trademark battles over the term Linsanity™ have put the phrase commercially out of bounds.

The towering dessert consists of three scoops of ice cream — lychee, orange-colored fresh mango and blue-tinted blueberry, reflecting the Knicks’ blue, orange and white home uni hues — plus a layer of pillowy mochi bits, a shower of blue-and-orange sprinkles and a flourish of whipped cream. It’s cool, like Jeremy’s temperament! Sweet, like his midrange floater! Smooth, like his drive to the basket! And fattening, like his bank account! Sources (okay, my two kids) say it’s a slam dunk.

“We were thinking of making a Jeremy Lin sundae even before Ben & Jerry’s came out with their flavor,” says CICF proprietor Christina Seid. “I mean, everyone in Chinatown is doing Jeremy Lin specials now! And I can tell you, putting fortune cookies in it never crossed my mind. We wanted to find out what Jeremy’s favorite flavor was and use that, but we couldn’t get in touch with him. So we went with the Knicks colors instead.”

The sundae was originally custom-designed for the Museum of Chinese in America’s coming “Bal-Lin“  hoops-watch house party (March 12, free and open to the public), which will feature the Knicks taking on the Bulls on the museum’s big projection screen and a quartet of live colhinn, Grantland staff writer Hua Hsu, former ESPN magazine writer Ursula Liang and writer and standup comedian N. Rain Noe.

But the dish turned out so well that they decided to start selling it in the store.

“All of my workers are young teens, and all of them are huge Jeremy Lin fans,” says Seid. “We’d love it if he’d come try it out himself! But maybe it’s not on his diet.”

I’ll say. The #17 Sundae costs $7.50, but with almost a pint of ice cream, one of them might be enough for your whole starting squad.

Available only at the Chinatown Ice Cream Factory (65 Bayard Street).






Jeremy Lin's emergence inspires passion, hoop dreams among Boston Hurricanes

About the only consistent thing in Maneikis' life right now is basketball. He plays at least three times a week, and lately, when he's driving to the hoop, people in the gym have taken to calling him Jeremy Lin.

It's flattering, but Maneikis doesn't get it. Half-Chinese, half-white, he spent much of his life yearning to blend in with the jocks. He never advertised his Asian American roots. He saw how some of the Asian American kids got treated in his old Irish-Catholic neighborhood in Dorchester. They got stuffed into lockers and ignored on the playgrounds. As a kid, sometimes people thought he was Hispanic, and he didn't mind that. It gave him more cred on the court.

One day, when Maneikis was maybe 11, his uncle came down to watch his baseball game, and a neighborhood girl spotted his uncle and asked, "Who let the ch--- in the park?" Maneikis had a couple of choices. He wanted to hug his uncle and admonish the girl. But he didn't say a thing. "Looking back on it, I wish I'd had the courage to say, 'Screw you, that's my uncle.'"

He takes another drink of his beer and checks the time. Soon, the place will be packed with teammates and family.

Maneikis plays for the Boston Hurricanes, a basketball team made up entirely of Chinese Americans. There are hundreds of these Asian American basketball teams throughout the country, but they didn't get much attention until Lin came along. It's kind of funny. In four weeks, Lin's sudden emergence as a worldwide story has brought sports fans face-to-face with some of the same racial and cultural stereotypes that players on teams like the Hurricanes have wrestled with for decades.


"I love his fearlessness," Maneikis says as he stares up at the TV. "Like, look at that shot he just put up right there. He saw this as his last chance. He's playing his own game. I like that."

Normally in Boston, the last thing any Celtics-loving establishment would want is a New York team on its TVs. But Lin trumps city rivalry. In one month, he's global and he's everywhere. It's trivia night at Regina Pizzeria, and one of the teams is named Jeremy Lin, City of Sin.

The love, even in this well-educated corner of the world, goes well beyond the fact that Lin is from Harvard. He is the underdog, but it's more than that. He looks different from everyone else on the court, yet seems so comfortable and confident with that.

All over the country, something has changed in the past month. There have been stories of inspired pickup games, of young, timid men throwing elbows and taking charge. Maneikis can feel it, and it moves him, too. Maybe he'll train harder. Maybe he'll figure out what he's supposed to do with the rest of his life.

"The hardest thing about being an Asian American on the basketball court is you're basically invisible," Maneikis says. "Even if it's something as simple as pickup ball, you get one shot. If you mess up in that chance, you're not going to get the ball again.

"I just feel like I'm talented enough where maybe I could play overseas. Seeing him succeed really inspires me to want to give basketball another shot. I see him doing what he's doing, and I think, 'Why can't I?'"




Changing stereotypes, one assist at a time

The stereotypes have been around for decades -- Asian Americans are hard-working and agreeable; they're maniacal about school, not sports; they become engineers and mathematicians; they sure as heck can't play basketball …



Then along came Lin, Harvard graduate, stereotype-buster. His emergence has produced one of the most exhilarating -- and, for some, uncomfortable -- months in the history of the NBA. The first three weeks, there were labels, insensitive puns in headlines, tweets that referenced his anatomy, then apologies.

Perhaps a sports world so keen on prototypes didn't know how to cheer for someone as different as Lin, a 23-year-old American-born point guard whose parents are from Taiwan. There have been just three other Asian Americans in the history of the NBA, and none of them came within galaxies of the hysteria that surrounds Lin.

But to say that Lin provides the same inspiration and sense of identity to all Asian Americans -- even all Asian American basketball players -- would be a stereotype, too. He means something different to everyone. He is appreciated for varying reasons. He will impact people in different ways.

In Boston, on the small, worn-out courts where a group of young Asian American adults play basketball, he represents hope, hype and unfulfilled dreams.




The old man

Asian American leagues have been around for almost a century, and were intially a response to segregation, says Catherine Ceniza Choy, an associate professor in ethnic studies at UC Berkeley. Today, thousands of people still play on Asian American teams from the East Coast to California. In some cases, it's their only chance to play basketball. The club that is now known as the Hurricanes got its start back in the 1970s when Boston's Chinatown merchants decided to sponsor a group of kids to form a traveling team.


For Sammy Moy, Maneikis' uncle, it was the perfect outlet for a boy with boundless energy and something to prove. It made him feel part of something. Uncle Sam is considered a legend in Asian American circles. There are short YouTube clips of him hustling and swishing 3-pointers.

He's 44 and plays for the Hurricanes' master team now. He can't let basketball go. Maneikis doesn't really call him Uncle Sam anymore; he's almost like a cool cousin. When Greg and his brother Charles were kids, it was Moy who used to take them to Hurricanes' practices and encouraged them to play basketball.

He wanted life to be easier for them. Every day when Moy was a kid, the townies used to shout racial slurs at him as they got off the buses. He was usually the last one picked on the playground, the last one anyone expected to be good, and when the game was over and Moy had run his body into the ground trying to make a good impression, the only compliment he'd ever get was that he wasn't too bad for an Asian guy.

It's what keeps him going. Even now, when Moy plays pickup games with Greg, he fouls his nephew incessantly. He makes him work for everything.

He says Lin is validation that Asian Americans can indeed play basketball. He loves the way Lin is confident and fearless. Those are rare traits for Asian Americans on the basketball court, he says.

He loves that Lin is going places he never could.

And still, he continues to battle the stereotypes, even in his own family. "I was telling my mother about Jeremy Lin," Moy says. "When I said he graduated from Harvard, she said, 'Then how come he's playing basketball?'"




Brandon Sang was never as hardcore as Uncle Sam. As a kid growing up in Queens, he'd get pulled out of practices to attend SAT classes. Sang didn't play high school basketball. He sized up the boys in his class and knew he didn't stand a chance. His freshman year at Northeastern University in Boston, he was playing pickup ball when someone asked if he wanted to join the Hurricanes.

It was more than a basketball team. It was family for a homesick college kid. He and his teammates would go out to eat, grab drinks and talk about their careers. Sang moved back to New York after he graduated, and he's a financial data analyst now.

But he still plays for the Hurricanes whenever they're in the area. He can still talk to his teammates about anything. Like what he was feeling the night of Feb. 4 when Lin went from the 15th player on the New York Knicks' roster to sudden stardom.

It was the day before the Super Bowl, and the city of New York was riveted to a Manning brother and a football team on another supremely unlikely late-season run. Sang was eagerly waiting for the game, when, perhaps out of boredom, he checked his cell phone for the Knicks-Nets score.

"Oh, wow," Sang thought. "Jeremy Lin just dropped 25 on the Nets."

Sang had tried to keep tabs on Lin since Harvard. A few years ago, when Lin was still in Boston, he came down with a group of guys and scrimmaged the Hurricanes. He dominated in the second half, but Sang still felt as if they had a few things in common. Like Lin, Sang's father was an immigrant. Like Lin, Sang loved basketball.

But school always came first for Sang, and it turns out that Lin, too, occasionally had to make choices between sports and his formal education. When Lin was a freshman at Harvard, he took a required writing course. The rules were rigid. A student could miss only two classes in a semester, and Lin was at his limit when the Crimson had to leave on a Thursday for a game at Cornell.

"The teacher said, 'You're going to have to choose -- the game or your class,'" says Doug Miller, a former co-captain at Harvard with Lin. "It was kind of funny. Jeremy said, 'We can't reschedule the game, I'm sorry.'"

Lin eventually worked something out and did extra work to make up for the lost class. Sang likes the fact that Lin is an example that an Asian American can have it all, academics and basketball.

When Sang sees Lin succeeding in the NBA, it makes him feel proud. He can't believe his mom is into Lin, too. She'd never watched an NBA game prior to the past month. Now she texts Sang when the Knicks play and recently asked her son what a pick-and-roll was.

"I just feel like being an Asian American, you can relate to him a lot more," Sang says. "I see so many people just watching basketball right now because of Jeremy Lin."

The dad

Jason Lam is watching. He is, according to several teammates, the player who seems most proud of his Chinese roots. He met his wife at an Asian American tournament 11 years ago. He was stretching and getting ready for his next game; she just walked up to him and started talking.

Lam, 33 with a 5-year-old daughter named Audrey, calls himself the elder statesman of the Hurricanes. He knows his best playing days are behind him. The previous Saturday, in a used-but-new-to-him SUV, Charles Maneikis packed in half the team and drove 3½ hours to Hillburn, N.Y., for the Asian Hardwood Classic. It's one of the biggest events of the year, with a hotel stay, real refs and an actual audience, albeit sparse.

Lam couldn't drive up until Sunday, the day of the tournament, because he had to work. He brought Audrey with him.

Lam started playing basketball when he was 7, and it became one of his greatest passions, despite the fact that he rarely felt as if he belonged. His role models were Scottie Pippen andMichael Jordan, but there was nobody who looked like him. Yes, there was Yao Ming. But he was 7 feet tall and wasn't American.

Lin is just the fourth Asian American to play in the NBA, and two of them -- Raymond Townsend and Rex Walters -- sort of blended in. They had Caucasian fathers and admittedly didn't look Asian American. (Townsend, who wore his hair in an afro in the early 1980s, says he was often mistaken for an African-American). "He's given the Asian American community," Walters says, "something they've never had."

Lam moved to the United States in 1982, when he was 3 years old. His parents, who didn't speak English, worked long hours to feed the family, so Lam didn't see them much as a kid. Basketball filled a void, but it also raised some fresh barriers that left him uncomfortable in his new home.

He was mocked incessantly. "When I used to step on the basketball court, people would say, 'This is not a martial arts tournament. What are you doing on the basketball court?'" Lam says. "Sometimes, you thought, 'Hey, what am I doing on the basketball court?'"

But instead of discouraging Lam, it fueled him. Lam figures Lin probably went through some of the same things. Lam doesn't want to dwell on decades of slights. He has different dreams now. He manages a hotel by the airport, and his hopes are simple: He wants a healthy family and a good life for his kid.

He's getting there -- fast. Sometimes, Audrey runs around the house screaming, "Linsanity!" She will have role models, people who will show her she can do anything she wants.


The cynic

Long before he played for the Hurricanes, a team he joined mainly because of Uncle Sam, Charles Maneikis watched the Boston Celtics when he was a toddler. Every time the Celtics scored a basket, he and his little brother Greg would clap.

He didn't need an all-Asian American team to make him feel as if he belonged. Charles always seemed to fit in. He matriculated at Boston Latin, and was captain of his high school basketball team, which was no small feat. Boston Latin, an exam school, is steeped in academic excellence. Five men who signed the Declaration of Independence went there. It has been around since 1635, is the oldest public school in the country, and always sends large numbers of graduates to Harvard.



Charles, who went to Stonehill College, is two years older than Greg, and has a goatee and freckles. He says he does not have much of a connection to his Asian roots. When the jocks used to make fun of the Asian kids, and use racial slurs, they never thought it would faze Charles even though he was standing right there. They didn't see him that way.

"I didn't realize my mom looked Asian 'til I was 15," Charles says. "Then someone saw my mom, and they said to me, 'Wait, you're Asian?' And I said, 'How did you know that?'

"I always saw her as a white woman."

The only Asian Americans he hangs out with are the guys on the Hurricanes. He doesn't stop to think about how Jeremy Lin is breaking down stereotypes. Maybe it's something kids think about, he says. But he's almost 25 years old, and is comfortable with who he is.

But Charles is the one who labors to keep the Hurricanes together, organizing trips, doing fundraisers, emailing teammates to get headcounts. Sometimes, he has to hound them. They're adults now, caught up in their own lives. It's a pain, but he keeps doing it.

"I do it because my uncle did it for so long," he says. "The club's been around for so long. I feel like if I stopped caring, there'd be no club."




The debate

The commuter train barrels past just outside Regina Pizzeria, but Greg and Charles don't notice because they're used to it. Eddie Lee, the coach of the Hurricanes, has arrived to wish Greg Maneikis a happy birthday. They call Lee "Kilo" because he's big. In his high school playing days in the '90s, Kilo was tough. He played against Chris Webber and a handful of other big names and apparently held his own.

Lee, who's Korean American, wants to tell the group, which includes Uncle Sam, a story. Lee was standing outside earlier in the day when someone drove by and shouted, "Jeremy Lin sucks!" He thought that was funny, that it's assumed that every Asian American is a Lin fan.

Lee's a bit of a smartass, and he wonders if people have been a tad too sensitive over the past few weeks. He says he saw a poster today of an angry Asian guy that he thought was funny. It read, "You play b-ball? Why not A-plus ball?"

"It's funny," Lee says. "It's a joke. I think it's for public consumption. We shouldn't have a monopoly on being able to laugh at Asians. There's a little ignorance going on, but let's talk about it. Don't turn it into, like, a hate crime."

His father ran a dry-cleaning business, which is a stereotype, but it's true. In basketball, he says there are some annoying stereotypes, that Asians are small and slow and don't know what they're doing on the court, but those have been debunked for years.

Lee is well aware of what a man like Lin can do, and he follows him. But he worries about all the hype and expectations. He wants Lin to succeed, but needs to see more of a body of work. There is a pragmatic side to Lee, but there is also a side of him that wonders what could've been. He went to Boston University, and wanted to walk on to the basketball team. But his parents wanted him to focus on school, and then there was that doubt that creeps in, that tells so many Asian Americans that they probably can't do it.

He sets up scrimmages with all kinds of teams -- white, African-American -- because he wants the Hurricanes to be challenged and be good. "I'm sure Greg probably told you stories about pickup," Lee says. "It doesn't matter if you play with African-Americans or whites. You get one shot. They'll pass you the ball one time, and if you f--- up, they're not going to pass you the ball the rest of the game."

Lee checks the TV above him and sees the Knicks are getting smoked. The friends finish up their pizza, and the conversation shifts to LeBron James.

The final four minutes of the game against the Heat fly by; Charles looks at his phone and announces Lin's stat line -- 1-of-11 from the field with three assists and eight turnovers.

Greg quickly and rather passionately points out that the Knicks are playing the most athletic team in the NBA.

When Uncle Sam leaves, Greg is the biggest Lin defender in the room. Charles says he doesn't have a problem with what Floyd Mayweather Jr. said about Lin in a tweet last month, that the only reason he's getting this much hype is because he's Asian. Charles says he believes it's 90 percent true.

Greg believes that Lin is an inspiration. So they agree to disagree, and by the end of the night, it's clear that at least two people at the table aren't convinced that Lin will be a force in the NBA for years to come. But they'll keep watching.

They can't stop watching, because deep down, they hope he can pull it off.