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Jeremy Lin plays in first game as a New York Knick

December 29, 2011 Leave a comment

*** see the updated complete list of asian basketball players in the NBA ***

Oakland – Jeremy Lin entered the game with 1:27 minutes left to an ovation in his hometown crowd. Except this time, Lin played for the other team – New York Knicks. Lin had a nice drive and dish that almost led to an assist but Jerome Jordan was fouled on the dunk attempt. Lin finished the game 0/1 shooting. Here is the video clip of Lin making his New York Knicks debut,

Jeremy Lin returns to Oracle Arena tonight on NBATV

December 29, 2011 Leave a comment

Golden State Warriors cheerleaders

Jeremy Lin is returning to Oracle Arena tonight, but it will be as a Knick. The former Warrior was claimed off waivers by New York on Tuesday and confirmed he will be on the visiting sideline for the first time Wednesday. The Palo Alto native had something of a cult following since signing with the Warriors in October 2010. The second-year guard out of Harvard said his return to Oracle will be emotional. “I’m so thankful for the Warriors fans, I have no way I can even express it,” Lin said.

December has been a long, difficult month for Lin. The second-year guard was pulled from the first day of Warriors training camp Dec. 9 and told he was being waived. Golden State did it to create salary cap space for an offer to Los Angeles Clippers restricted free-agent center DeAndre Jordan.

The Warriors’ offer was matched by the Clippers, meaning Golden State gave up Lin for nothing. But he said he remains in good spirits and is taking a positive approach. “That’s what I’m understanding through all this — it’s a business,” Lin said in a phone interview. “It was a calculated business decision they made to benefit the team. I have no hard feelings.”

After being waived by the Warriors, Lin was picked up by Houston. But on Christmas Day, the Rockets waived Lin, making him available for the Knicks to grab. So Tuesday night, Lin joined his third team in less than three weeks. “God is teaching me to control what I can control and be thankful for what I have,” Lin said. “Everything I expected coming into the season has been flipped upside down.”

Golden State was not able to claim Lin off waivers per league rules. A team source did say the Warriors would have signed Lin if he had cleared waivers. But the Knicks are in need of a guard after Iman Shumpert sprained his right knee Christmas Day.

“I’m thankful that people want me,” Lin said. “I understand my position: I’m competing for a backup spot, and people see me as the 12th to 15th guy on the roster. It’s a numbers game.”

via Golden State Warriors notebook: Stephen Curry misses practice with bad ankle – San Jose Mercury News.

Now a Rocket, Jeremy Lin Hopes To Take Off

December 24, 2011 Leave a comment

A lot has changed over the past few months for former Harvard basketball star Jeremy Lin ’10. But one thing has remained the same: Lin’s fight to make it in the NBA continues to be an uphill battle. Lin left Harvard as one of 11 finalists for the Bob Cousy Award for the nation’s best point guard and as the only player in Ivy League history to record 1,450 points, 450 rebounds, 400 assists, and 200 steals.

He went undrafted, but caught on with the Dallas Mavericks’ summer league team. One standout performance against No. 1 overall pick John Wall later, Lin had signed a three-year endorsement deal with Nike and had the ability to choose his NBA destination from a number of offers.

The Palo Alto, Calif. native picked the Golden State Warriors, his hometown squad and his favorite team growing up. In the blink of an eye, he had a two-year contract and was living the dream. “It was unbelievable,” Lin recalls. “Everything happened so fast; looking back it’s like a blur. I just remember it was obviously really fun to play in the summer league and then to all of a sudden sign with the hometown team was definitely very exciting. I was thankful I got to do that.” But from there, Lin’s rookie year was a roller coaster of highs and lows.

In his third career game, he played 16 minutes and had four steals while scoring his first NBA points against the defending champion Lakers. A fan favorite, Lin notched a career-high 13 points in 18 minutes against L.A. a month later. And he finished the year on a high note, registering 12 points, five rebounds, and five assists in the Warriors’ final game of the season against the Blazers. But in between was a struggle for the rookie, who had a hard time finding playing time and was thrice sent down to the NBA Developmental League. Though he shined there for the Reno Bighorns—averaging over 20 points per game and being named to the All-NBA D-League Showcase First Team—the constant change was not easy on Lin. “It was just a tough year,” he says. “Not knowing where I was going to be, going up and down to the D-League—it was tough. But in the end, I got better. I think that was the most important thing. It was a learning experience, and it showed me what I needed to work on and what the holes in my game and areas of improvement were.”

With the NBA lockout stretching into December, Lin had an extended amount of time to focus on those holes. That he did, while also taking the time to rest a knee injury he had suffered during the season. He thus calls the lockout “a blessing in disguise” because it gave him more time to recover. But in addition to working hard, Lin also had some fun as well. He recorded a number of popular YouTube videos, such as “How to Get into Harvard” and “Jeremy Lin: A Day in the Life.” And though he couldn’t play in NBA games, Lin did partake in two charity exhibitions with some of the league’s best players.

First, on Nov. 5, he joined Stephen Curry, David Lee, and the rest of his Warrior “Young Dubs” teammates at Oracle Arena to challenge the 2007 “We Believe” Warriors squad—featuring Baron Davis, Stephen Jackson, and Jason Richardson, among others—which famously knocked off the heavily favored No. 1-seeded Mavericks in the opening round of the NBA playoffs.

Two weeks later, Lin returned to Lavietes Pavilion to take part in the Boston Charity Classic along with Paul Pierce, Rudy Gay, Rajon Rondo, and a host of other NBA stars in his first game back on Harvard’s campus. “Basically we were just playing for fun, and for supporting charities,” explains Lin, who entertained the Boston crowd by throwing down a number of dunks and scoring 11 points in a two-minute stretch in the third quarter.

One week later, the lockout had ended, and the guard was ready for year two with the Warriors. Yet the delayed start to the season brought about a brief offseason, forcing teams to make a flurry of roster moves in a short amount of time. The Warriors needed a center, and after missing out on Tyson Chandler, they decided to pursue the Los Angeles Clippers’ DeAndre Jordan. But Jordan was a restricted free agent, meaning Golden State would have to scrap together every dollar it could find to make the biggest offer possible with the hope that LA would not be able to match. The team thus looked to cut costs where it could, and after having selected guards Klay Thompson and Charles Jenkins in this past year’s draft, Lin—with a non-guaranteed contract—was expendable. In a move he says he did not anticipate, Lin was waived by the Warriors on Dec. 11, ending his brief stint with the team. Two of the team’s stars were sad to see him go.

“To my man @jlin7…can’t say it enough man your work ethic and skills are gonna pick you right back up…keep the faith bro and keep ya head up,” tweeted Stephen Curry. “Tough day losing one of our teammates @jlin7.. JLin u are a great ball player and unbelievable teammate and person! We will miss u lil bro!” added David Lee via Twitter.

Yet at the end of every tunnel is a light, and Lin found his in Houston, where the Rockets claimed him off waivers the next day. Though Houston already has point guards Kyle Lowry, Johnny Flynn, and Goran Dragic on its roster, the squad was excited by Lin’s potential. “We have evaluated Jeremy since his time in Harvard and have also tracked his progress with the Golden State Warriors,” Rockets Vice President of Player Personnel Gersson Rosas wrote in an e-mail. “We feel he is an intriguing player with a solid all around game and a high basketball IQ. He plays to his strengths well and is developing at a solid rate.” Lin says the Rockets have already let him know what they expect from him. “Just to be a point guard and a shooting guard here in Houston,” Lin explains. “To play both positions, to make plays, bring it on the defensive end, and to be creative on the offensive end. Just the same thing that I’ve been doing.” Rosas echoed that sentiment. “Jeremy is competing for the opportunity to make the Houston Rockets roster in the role of backup point guard,” he wrote. “Our objective would be to aid him in his basketball development in what ever manner possible throughout the season.”

One of the few Asian-Americans to play in the NBA, Lin now has the chance to make his name in the city where Yao Ming—who invited Lin to play with him in Taipei in the summer of 2010—starred for nine years. For now, Lin says he does not feel there is any part of his game that could not use improvement. Barring a trade, he knows it will be an uphill climb to make the Rockets, who currently have one of the deepest rosters in the league. But challenge is nothing new for Lin, who received no Division I scholarship offers coming out of high school and just one summer league offer coming out of college. The point guard made the best of his opportunities with Harvard and the Mavericks, and now he’s ready to do everything he can in Houston to prove he belongs once again. “I’m just excited to go somewhere I’m wanted,” he says. “Right now I’m just trying to make the best of the situation. There’s an adjustment process getting comfortable with everything.” “It’s really early in the whole situation,” he added. “Hopefully it turns out well.”


—Staff writer Scott A. Sherman be reached at ssherman13@college.harvard.edu.
via Now a Rocket, Lin Hopes To Take Off | Sports | The Harvard Crimson.

Warriors waive fan-favorite Jeremy Lin and a look back at Lin’s 2010-11 season highlights

December 11, 2011 Leave a comment

During the Golden State Warriors’ first day of training camp, the team pulled guard Jeremy Lin out of practice and released the local fan favorite. Despite only having nine players available to practice on Day 1 (rookies Klay Thompson and Jeremy Tyler were present but have yet to sign their contracts in order to save cap space for free agents) and Stephen Curry‘s ankle concerns, the Warriors said goodbye to the second-year guard out of Palo Alto High School. A personal favorite of owner Joe Lacob and his son Kirk Lacob, Lin would have likely competed with recently-signed second-round draft pick Charles Jenkins for the backup point guard spot.

Lin appeared in 29 games last season averaging 2.9 points, 1.2 rebounds, and 1.4 assists a game. When he was not on the Warriors’ bench, he spent time with the team’s D-League affiliate Reno Big Horns where he averaged 18 points, 5.8 rebounds, and 4.3 assists in 20 games.

Lin’s release from the team is no big surprise. Despite the short-handed roster at camp, affordable contract, and great support from the local fan community, Lin’s release is directly related to the teams efforts to sign Los Angeles Clippers restricted free agent center DeAndre Jordan or any other free agent names connected to the Warriors this offseason. Set to make nearly $800,000 had he stayed on the roster, every little bit of money will count if the Warriors do sign Jordan, Nene, or another major free agent.

Despite receiving limited action in his rookie season, Lin was courted by many teams, including the 2011 NBA champion Dallas Mavericks, out of the Summer League. Despite playing against weaker college competition at Harvard, Lin displayed some playmaking skills and good awareness last season.

In his season with the team, many fans will remember him as the first Asian-American since 1947 to play in the NBA. Despite showing capabilities of playing at the NBA level, many fans loved him for the ethnicity he represented while others questioned the Warriors’ brass for signing a player for PR reasons.

via Warriors Waive Fan-Favorite Lin and Signs Rookie Jenkins: Fan’s Take – NBA – Yahoo! Sports.

Golden State Warriors waive Jeremy Lin

December 10, 2011 Leave a comment

Bad news. The Warriors waived guard Jeremy Lin, the team announced Friday — the first day of training camp.

Lin, 23, was due to make nearly $800,000 and was going to have trouble beating out rookie guard Charles Jenkins for backup minutes at point guard. The move indicates the Warriors are trying to find cap room to make free-agent offers. They’ve signed Jenkins but haven’t inked fellow rookies Klay Thompson or Jeremy Tyler.

Lin went to Palo Alto High and Harvard and was one of the first Asian-Americans to make it to the NBA. He appeared in 29 games last season as a rookie, averaging 2.6 points, 1.2 rebounds and 1.4 assists a game. He had several stint with the Reno Big Horns of the NBA Development League, appearing in 20 games  and averaging 18 points, 5.8 rebounds and 4.3 assists a game.

via GS Warriors waive Jeremy Lin, sign Charles Jenkins | Golden State Warriors | an SFGate.com blog.

Jeremy Lin offseason and NBA lockout is over

December 1, 2011 Leave a comment

NBA owners and player’s union has verbally agreed to end the lockout. We may soon see basketball on Christmas Day.
The NBA lockout prevented Jeremy Lin from participating in this year’s Summer League games. But that doesn’t mean Lin hasn’t been busy with basketball. Lin has been working on his outside shooting. He also participated in two charity games. See the video above for highlights – Lin does a 360 dunk in the Boston Celtics charity game at Harvard.

Yi Jianlian to return for US dream

November 30, 2011 Leave a comment

Injured Yi Jianlian hopes to resume his US dream by returning to the NBA as the lockout ends.

According to team manager Liu Hongjiang, the Guangdong Tigers power forward will fly to the US for the NBA pre-season training camp kicking off December 9. “His agent in the NBA, Dan Fegan, is negotiating with several teams and the Golden State Warriors is the most potential one,” Liu said.

Yi was drafted in 2007 by the Milwaukee Bucks and switched to the New Jersey Nets next year. He returned to CBA in October 2011 after a 15-month stay with the Washington Wizards.

The China’s Asian champion team member averaged 16.7 points from three games. His CBA defending champion side lost to Beijing Ducks, which hired former NBA star Stephon Marbury, on Sunday when Yi injured out.

via Yi to return for US dream|Stars|chinadaily.com.cn.

Jeremy Lin to play another charity game at Harvard

November 18, 2011 Leave a comment


With the NBA lockout still dragging on and the player’s union likely disbanding to file a lawsuit against the NBA, there may not be any NBA games any time soon.

But members of the Boston Celtics have organized a charity game. Scheduled participants in the game include Rajon Rondo, Paul Pierce, Glen Davis, Marquis Daniels, Josh Smith, Kendrick Perkins, Rudy Gay, Leon Powe, Jeff Green, Kevin Durant, JaJuan Johnson, Jeremy Lin and Kyle Lowry among others.

Jeremy Lin was a participant in the Golden State Warriors charity game called “We Believe vs Dubs” on November 5, 2011 at San Jose State. Lin scored 22 points with a dunk and was 4-of-8 from 3-point. Over the summer, Lin made a video clip with youtube star Kevjumba. See above.

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