Saturday, February 11th, 2012 at 9:00 am  |  143 responses

Post Up: Gotta Love It

Linsanity continues, two overtime games plus a CP3 game winner.

by Peter Walsh / @goinginsquad

With the football season ending Sunday, the NBA certainly filled the void nicely thanks to the surprising play of Jeremy Lin. Despite what the media would have you believe, there are other basketball games being played around the country–and great ones at that. Last night saw 2 overtime contests, a shootout in Minnesota, and a plethora of great dunks, blocks and assists. Catch up on everything you may have missed here…

Raptors 86, Celtics 74

The Celtics may attribute this loss to tired legs or having to travel to Toronto a few hours after a tough overtime loss to the Lakers. But, there really is no excuse for losing to the Raptors who were playing sans Andrea Bargnani. The Celtics only scored 14 first quarter points as Toronto led from wire to wire and led by as many as 16 to snap their three game losing streak. DeMar DeRozan had a game high 21 points and Amir Johnson had a double-double with 12 points and 12 rebounds. The Raptors beat up the C’s down low, outscoring them 42-28 and outrebounding them 42-34–a surprising stat considering the Raps starting frontcourt consisted of Aaron Gray and Amir Johnson. The Celtics committed 13 turnovers in the first half and really never had a chance in this game. Fresh off an All-Star nod, Paul Pierce played poorly, scoring 12 points on 4-11 shooting. KG led Boston with 17 points and 8 boards. The Celtics are in danger of falling under .500; they play the Bulls Sunday and Thursday next week.

Clippers 78, Sixers 77

The Clippers may have lost Mr. Big Shot for the year to injury, but Chris Paul proved last night that he’s capable of hitting a few big shots of his own. In a back and forth game between two of the better teams inthe league, it came down to the final seconds of play to determine a winner. Trailing 77-76 with only a few ticks remaining, CP3 hit a turnaround 17-foot jumper that silenced a sold-out crowd at the Wells Fargo Center. Paul finished the game with 24 points and 4 assists in the low scoring affair. As a team, LA shot under 40 percent from the field, including 10 percent from beyond the arc, but were able to outscore Philly in the paint 42-24. Blake Griffin had 16 points and 11 boards while Mo Williams came in and dropped 14 off the bench. The Sixers got their customary full team effort with five players scoring in double figures, but none of them scored over 12. Andre Iguodala continues to fill up the stat sheet; last night he had 12 points, 8 boards and 7 assists. For the season, he is averaging 13 points, 6.7 boards and 5.2 assists and is making management look smart for not trading him.

Heat 106, Wizards 89

The hapless Wizards had no answer for Miami’s Big 3 who dominated the game en route to an easy victory down in DC. Dwayne Wade had 26 points, Chris Bosh had 24 and 11 rebounds and LeBron had 18, 9 assists and only 1 turnover. How do you compete with that? Miami had its usual package of highlight reel plays and have now won nine of their last 11. The Wizards did cut it to one point late in the third quarter before Miami ripped off a a 19-5 run to take a 15 point lead, effectively ending any hopes of a Washington win. JaVale McGee had a season high 24 points but also admitted that the Wizards were starstruck by Miami: “Sometimes, they (my teammates) see LeBron out there. They see D-Wade out there. They say: ‘Oh my God, he’s going to work on them.’ Sometimes the guys don’t go out there and play like they’re any other players.” C’Mon Son!!

Bulls 95, Bobcats 64

With Derrick Rose looking on from the bench, the Bulls absolutely destroyed the Bobcats. Joakim Noah led the charge for Chicago leading all scorers with 17 points while grabbing 14 rebounds. Chicago is playing great basketball, having now won five straight including four in a row by at least 20 points. Carlos Boozer chipped in with 16 points and Luol Deng had 12. The Bobcats shot 33 percent from the field and only had one player score in double-digits. Charlotte has now lost 13 in a row.

Hawks 89, Magic 87

Two of the biggest All-Star snubs this year are Josh Smith and Ryan Anderson. Last night they proved why. In a game that went to overtime, Josh Smith had a game high 23 points and 19 rebounds while Anderson had a team high 21 and 9 boards. Orlando scored eight straight points in the final quarter and tied the game on Dwight Howard’s (18 and 18) dunk with 1.8 seconds left. In in the extra session, Anderson hit a momentum swinging 3-pointer to cut it to one and the Magic had a chance to tie it on their next possession. But, Jason Richardson couldn’t hit his free throws and the Hawks were able to win their fifth road game in six tries.

Pistons 109, Nets 92

The Pistons have now won four games in a row and last night may have been their most impressive victory to date. Detroit had five players score in double-digits including a combined 34 from Jonas Jerebko and Ben Gordon off the bench. As a team, the Pistons shot 54 percent from the field and were able to overcome their 20 turnovers by forcing the Nets into 18. Greg Monroe had another double-double with 18 points and 11 rebounds as he continues to impress. Detroit scored a season-high 56 points in the paint and are averaging 51 during their current winning streak. After going on a 12-0 run in the first quarter, the Pistons never trailed again and led by as many as 30 points. They look to build on their winning streak with a game against the Wizards on Sunday.

Bucks 113, Cavaliers 112

Another All-Star snub had a big game in this one as Brandon Jennings scored 24 points, dropped 8 dimes, and grabbed 5 boards; though he only shot 8-23 from the field. The Bucks were able to overcome a 15 point deficit on the road and escaped Cleveland with a win in overtime. The Cavs had a chance to end it in regulation but Antawn Jamison, who was having his best game of the season with 34 points and 11 boards, left 2 points at the stripe and the game went to OT. The Bucks were able to hold Jamison scoreless over the last 7 and a half minutes allowing Milwaukee to crawl back into it. In the extra session, Drew Gooden scored 6 of his 19 points and took a huge charge with 11.8 seconds remaining to seal the win. The Cavs were playing without rookie sensation Kyrie Irving who is sidelined with concussion like symptoms.

Knicks 92, Lakers 85

Kobe Bryant definitely knows who Jeremy Lin is now. The NBA’s newest sensation continued his stellar play with a 38 point , 7 assist effort and had the Garden crowd in hysterics. Lin’s rise has been both mystifying and meteoric and the entire country is swept up in the Linsanity. With Lin at the helm, the Knicks have now won 4 straight and look reinvigorated. Against the Lakers, he did it all. He torched LA offensively, but his biggest play came on the defensive end. Late in the game with the Lakers threatening, Lin stepped in front of Matt Barnes and took a game-sealing charge. Jared Jeffries, who has benefited more than anyone from Lin’s play, scored 11 points and grabbed 9 boards. Iman Shumpert made a few big plays in the fourth and finished with 12 points. For the Lakers, Kobe had 34 and 10 boards, but those numbers are deceiving. The Mamba shot 11-29 from the field and benefited from a few phantom calls that allowed him to go 11-13 from the stripe. Linsanity: 1, Black Mamba:0.

Grizzlies 98, Pacers 92

In yet another great game that saw 18 lead changes and 17 ties, the Grizzlies got a team high 21 points from Rudy Gay and squeaked by the Pacers. The game pitted first time All-Stars Marc Gasol and Roy Hibbert against one another and Gasol came away the victor. Gasol scored 15 points, grabbed 7 boards and dropped 5 dimes while holding Hibbert to 5 points. Gasol was the X-factor for the Grizz, hitting clutch free throws and making big defensive stops down the stretch to help his team put away Indy. For the Pacers, David West had a 22 point, 13 rebound double-double and Danny Granger scored 19. The game was tied after the first, second and third quarters before Gasol’s takeover in the fourth quarter.

Blazers 94, Hornets 86

When a team finds itself in the middle of a two game losing streak, a trip to New Orleans is usually the remedy. Portland got a game high 31 points and 8 assists off the bench from Jamal Crawford while Ray Felton scored 18 and dropped 6 dimes. For the fifth time in the last six games, the Hornets led at halftime but couldn’t put a team away in the second half. Trevor Ariza did all he could scoring 23 points, grabbing 9 rebounds and dishing 5 assists in 46 minutes of play but it wasn’t enough. I’m officially putting an APB out for Eric Gordon.

Mavericks 104, Timberwolves 97

Dirk Nowitzki and Kevin Love put on a great show out in Minnesota last night, matching each other bucket for bucket. The reigning Finals MVP had 33 points while KLove had 32 to go along with 12 boards in his first game back from a two-game suspension. The Mavs led by as many as 17 late in the third before Minnesota went on a 16-3 run to cut Dallas’ lead to three. But, the defending champs roared right back with a 14-4 run of their own before ultimately leading by 14 with five and a half minutes left. JET scored 16 off the bench and JKidd chipped in with 8 points and 10 assists–but it was all about Dirk for Dallas. For the T’Wolves, Michael Beasley had 10 points off the bench and Ricky Rubio had 10 points and 8 dimes. Minnesota may have found a quality center in Nikola Pekovic who had 10 points and 9 rebounds last night. Per 48 minutes, the big man is averaging 19.4 points an 10.4 boards–take that for whatever it’s worth.

Thunder 101, Jazz 87

The Thunder have short memories. After last night’s win against the Jazz, OKC is now 5-1 after losing and 7-2 on the second or third night of a back-to-back-(to-back). The Jazz played the Thunder tough until a 16-4 Thunder run in the third put the game out of reach. Kevin Durant finished with 19 points, Serge Ibaka had 16 and 11 boards and Russell Westbrook led all scorers with 28 points. After a hot start, the Jazz are now 13-12 and have cooled off considerably. Despite boasting one of the best young frontcourts in the L, Utah was outrebounded 46-32 in the paint and were outmuscled down low. Coach Ty Corbin needs to get his group refocused before next week’s three game road swing.

Stat Line of the Night: Jeremy Lin with 38 points, 7 dimes, 4 rebounds and 1,000 editorial pieces.

Play of the Night: CP3 for the win.


Dunks of the Night: SKYenga


Derrick Williams with the tip-slam.


KD down the lane.


DWade to LBJ.


Tonight: 8 games on the schedule including an interesting matchup between the Nuggets and the Pacers, a Western Conference showdown between the Blazers and the Mavs, and Rubiomania meets Linsanity in a game that might break the internet. Catch y’all tomorrow.

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  • ripslam

    So everyone who posted those snarky skeptical comments yesterday are looking pretty dumb, huh?

  • shutup

    that was a great Knicks game, it feels weird to that. but anyone else catch the fact that he has the record for most total points in first 3 starts since the merger? I love his energy and his passion is contagious, def makes basketball fun to watch, like when the Clippers are rolling or when Miami gets out on the fast break. what im trying to say “I Love This Game” lmao

  • http://www.fiba.com Darksaber

    airs: your sarcasm meter is turned way down.

  • http://www.fiba.com Darksaber

    @Myung: exactly, buddy.
    Like a damn disney feel-good flick.
    Uncanny and VERY inspiring. I live in Asia now and went to my fav outdoor court a few hours ago, the S’porean and chinese players were all talking about one thing: Lin.
    The pride and joy they all displayed was too nice.
    Was like a watercooler cliché, everyone talking about how incredible he’s playing.

  • IAMORANGE4EVER

    Great TEAM win by the Knicks last night. The whole Knicks team stepped up defensively. Heck even Steve Novak had a nice defensive strip of Gasol that lead to a Lakers turnover. Also, I agree with Peter Walsh, that charge Lin drew late in the 4th was huge. Those are the kind of (get your hands dirty) defensive hustle plays BOTH Amar’e and Melo need to be part of when they get back. On the other end of the floor I loved how Shump attacked the paint and drew a foul on Bynum for a three point play. These are the type of plays that WIN games in the REAL SEASON. The Knicks are playing so hard and for one another right now. All that matters to them is winning and grinning, not stats. When Amar’e and Melo get back in the lineup, the Knicks will get good bench production after going through this stretch without the two. I’ve read and heard a lot of talk Melo won’t thrive in the offense, and I just chuckle. Melo will play a similar type role in the Knicks offense as Paul Pierce does for the Celtics right now. Melo is the Truth, and he can score from anywhere on the floor in any situation. Offensively speaking, Melo’s the most talented and flexible piece on this entire Knicks roster. I’m not worried about Melo fitting in at all, because I know for a fact he’s a WINNER. Speaking of “ball stoppers,” it was great to be able to STICK IT TO Kobe Bryant last night. Felt real good.

  • http://bulls.com airs

    Haha, my bad. It doesn’t translate well in type.
    Never know, some ppl really believe that nonsense.

  • IAMORANGE4EVER

    Face it, datkid is bitter, delusional, and insecure. He couldn’t see the light if you opened up the blinds in his bedroom. And speaking of intollerable, reading his comments is just that. It’s like being in a store and hearing some kid sceam at the top of their lungs and embarass his parents in front of everyone because they didn’t buy the kid what he/she wanted. lol

  • Justin G.

    IAMORANGE, I understand that you’re wearing your blinders but you kind of contradict yourself here. You say the Knicks are playing so hard and for one another right now, which is true. But you say Melo will just fit seamlessly back in, as will Melo? Those two (and even you have to admit) have two of the biggest ME attitudes in the league. And they aren’t going to be taking those charges either. Neither has shown any inclination to do the dirty work that it takes to play championship ball and it’s not going to start now.

  • IAMORANGE4EVER

    @Justin G How will Amar’e not fit in with a point guard who can run pick and roll? Did you watch him with Nash in Phoenix or even with Felton last year before the trade? And as for Melo, he’ll be much more effective now that he’s not forced to bring the ball up so much as a point forward. With poor point guard play Melo was getting the ball put in his hands like a hot potato with the shot clock about to go off, which led to bad shots. With a true floor general in D’Antoni’s offense, the spacing will be better, and Melo will pick his spots and get much better shots. The team is buying in. Guys wants to win, especially Melo in NY, his home. He wanted the NY stage and the pressure that comes with it.

  • http://thetroyblog.com Teddy-the-Bear

    @ datkid: That’s cool holmes, but when they’re performing and getting better each day… There’s a point where you have to start doubting your doubts, lol.

  • shutup

    I dont see Amare being a problem he actually thrives when the offense is free flowing (still have nightmares of what he was putting up against the spurs) its Melo that concerns me, I hope that seeing Lin’s enthusiasm will inspire him to step it up defensively, and if he can defer to Lin and let lin get him easier shots there is no reason that this team cant be successful.

  • Justin G.

    Stoudemire is going to fit in better as long as they actually run those pick and rolls for him. For whatever reason Chandler has been getting those play calls. You act like Melo has never played with a good point guard before. He has, almost his entire time in Denver and certainly the last 3 or 4 years. How’d that work out for him there. A good point is not going to change the way Melo approaches the game other than not having to bring the ball up. He’s still going to be a ball stopper and he’s still going to play terrible defense

  • AdamD

    I could be wrong, but did Stat not play very very well pre-Melo? he didn’t make the Knicks world beaters in any shape or form but they were a very solid squad. He does know how to play with a solid point guard on his team, in D’antonis system, it’s essentially how he was brought up in Pro-ball. I can’t see him being a massive problem on his return. Melo’s return will be the litmus test for the Knicks.

  • AdamD

    Wow, three posts with the same point in the time it took me to reply…

  • http://sdjfklf.com Jukai

    28 points, 8 assists, and almost 2 steals in four games… I don’t think that’s going to continue, but you just can’t be a scrub to average those numbers for any four game stretch in the NBA. And it’s all wins.
    I tried to convince everyone his nickname should be Jeremy “Storybook” Lin but no one was digging it. Is sh*t like Lintendo really going to win out? Can’t we give him something without his name?

  • http://sdjfklf.com Jukai

    Wai.. what? there were other games on?

  • http://sdjfklf.com Jukai

    I don’t see Stat hindering the Knicks when he returns, but don’t expect Amare to return to his 25ppg like he was under Nash and Felton. And that’s not a knock on Lin in anyway. D’Antoni has given all the pick-and-roll opportunities to Chandler and wants Amare to get his buckets other ways. Amare has not looked comfortable at all trying to score in post isolations or off-ball backdoor screens so I don’t think he’s gonna be magically rejuvenated. Don’t think he will hurt the team though.
    Melo… well…

  • Zabbah

    Lin’s a good player and he’ll have a long nba career. I need to see more games before I can call him a franchise player, though.

  • http://slamonline.com. datkid

    SLICK RIC- I was talking about mid-season when the media decided rose can do no wrong Jacka**, and when people were acting like there were no flaws in his game and when bulls22 was sucking him off daily. Maybe I wasn’t clear enough but you really should’ve been able to figure that out. and MYUNG- lmaooo I hear you. I figured you were kidding with the jordan comparisons, but I’m chilling tho. UGLYFISH- you can’t read. read what i said again. CAREFULLY this time. IAMAB*TCHFOREVER your delusional and in love with men you’ve never met. Everything you say is invalid troll. You’re free to speculate on the size of another man’s genitals while we talk basketball

  • Drew

    Knicks need to dump Melo. He’s the NBA’s black hole and once he’s back NYK will be back to their old losing ways.

  • IAMORANGE4EVER

    @JustinG Actually the first year Melo had a true floor general he got to the Western Conference Finals. Even KG didn’t get out the first round and to the WCF’s with Minnesota until he had Sam Cassell. Another thing I’d like to point out, let’s not mistake the Eastern Conference for the strong Western Conference back when Melo played on the Nuggets who usually faced the eventual NBA Champ in the first round. 50 win teams were barely getting into the playoffs in the Wild Wild West. Bottom line, Melo will fit in with Lin, because he’s a cold blooded assassin, who will do whatever it takes to win. And come real season, when the game slows down, you need guys like Melo, who are going to get you to the free throw line, and get you shots when everyone else is cold.

  • IAMORANGE4EVER

    datkid needs counseling. lol

  • http://slamonline.com. datkid

    S/O to myung, teddy and airs who you can actually have an argument with w/o them getting in their feelings about a disagreement. I hear what ya’ll are saying. Lin will probably prove ya’ll right soon. and UGLYFISH- here’s what i was saying. every team Lin has beaten has A) either HORRIBLE team defense(nets wizards, jazz) or a pg who is too old to play defense(lakers, although I think devin harris defense has fallen off considerably as well) and for the record, devin harris hasn’t been good for about 2 years. now shut up.

  • http://slamonline.com. datkid

    justin i’m not allowed to be skeptical of somebody? oh……

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    Call me a hater if you want but I don’t think this will last. Also, Magic has to be the dumbest cat on TV when he compared Lin to JStockton. I know it’s easy to get swept up in the hype and make outrageous statements but dude is nothing like Stockon. Stockon was one of the best if not the best at creating good looks for his teammates on damn near every possesion and Lin is more a scoring PG than Stock ever was.
    I appreciate Lin’s talent and what he’s doing at this very moment but please…I beg of the media and fans not to turn this into another Tebow-like saga.

  • http://idunkonthem.blogspot.com/ albie1kenobi

    if Jeremy Lin is a Create-A-Player, his offensive and defensive awareness must be 99. His feel for the game is immaculate. he’s almost always at the right spot to make a play on both ends of the floor. you can’t deny that. his IQ won’t ever be lost so he’s here to stay.

  • AdamD

    Orange, as I’ve said, i think Melo will be a bigger threat to the flow of the offense when he returns than Stat. On your point about Melo reaching the WCF with a good PG, that is true enough, but if i re-call correctly that Denver team was very good collectively on D, i think that was the Dahatny Jones, Martin, Birdman crew. (that was also when Kobe described guarding Melo as being like wrestling a bear) Currently, the Knicks aren’t at that level which can’t really be ignored, Offense and D are equally important. Also, just the point about the game slowing down and Melo drawing fouls, John Schumann on NBA.com put up an interesting blog about how the Bulls were very good at not fouling, but he specifically focused on Melo. That may show that later in the post-season those easy points might not be there. Not trying to hate, in case anyone starts.

  • http://bulls.com airs

    Not many of lins points came outside of the offensive scheme.
    Say what you like but he’s got a team of bill walkers and novaks flowing smoothly, he’s running that floor. He ain’t no stockton but he’s definitely no scrub

  • Eli Porter

    He’s like a 2k12 create-a-player. He came into the league out of nowhere and he gets better at things each game

  • http://www.slamonline.com Slick Ric

    I gotta agree with jtaylor21 man, some things are just out of hand, the kid is playing great but to say you see john stockton in him is blasphemous .

  • http://slamonline.com The Philosopher

    Genuinely happy for the kid, Lin.
    One can look into his eyes, and see the fire. The passion. His swag.
    The intellect, for he is a cerebral player.
    Anyways, again, happy for the kid.
    If he never has a decent game after this, he made his point.(s)
    He’s here to stay.

  • IAMORANGE4EVER

    First it was J-Lin is a fluke. Then comes the Melo can’t play with Lin angle. Afer that myth is BUSTED, what will it be next? Oh and @AdamG the Knicks team defense is getting much better, which is a testament to the hard work they’ve put in, as well as the addition of Tyson Chandler who’s played a key role in changing the culture at the defensive end. In the past ten games alone the Knicks are #9 in PPG defense, and for the season they’re #14. You’ll see the Knicks DIFF start to go upwards with their offense getting more on “point.” Bottom line, I’m happy with the progress I’m seeing from the Knicks…they’re definitely headed in the right direction. The TEAM came together in the “Knick of time!”

  • http://Slamonline.com nbk

    This is great for Lin. He’s pretty damn close to being a majestic galloping unicorn. I do not however think this will last that long at this level

  • Albie1kenobi

    I believe with Jeremy Lin, melo and amare will actually become unstoppable. The General(TM) will get them both such easy shots that they won’t even have time to hold the ball long enough to be ball stoppers.
    Think about it: Lin running pick n roll with amare and melo at elbow extend on the weakside. The General(TM)’s decision making will create a monster that not many teams can contain.
    Seriously, just imagine it.

  • http://slamonline.com The Philosopher

    @Teddy-the-Bear:
    This has been bugging me for a couple of days;
    What’s your opinion on Toney Douglas now that it’s been established that J. Lin is better than him? Should they trade him? What should happen with Douglas?
    I mean, not too long ago, you were lobbying for him pretty good.
    Peace.

  • Albie1kenobi

    One thing on Jeremy Lin: D’Antoni better dial down his minutes soon. He plays all out every possession, so he’s gonna get burned out within a month. He’s a long term solution, not a short term fix. Treat him as such, and you’ll be rewarded, dantoni. I hope you are smart enough to realize that.
    On the other end, The General(TM) need to ask Nash to be his mentor. Their game is similar (high IQ crafty playmaker), so it’s immensely beneficial for Lin to learn from Nash. I can’t wait for the next Suns/Knicks game.

  • http://Slamonline.com Caboose

    I’ll admit it, I was wrong about the majestic galloping unicorn that is Jeremy Lin (please let that name stick). He’s not a star athlete, not an elite shooter, and doesn’t have great court vision. However there are two things he does have that go overlooked in this league: intelligence and footwork. So I was wrong. Kid is good and he’ll stay around for a while. To be clear, I’m not hopping on tha bandwagon; I just like the kid and hope he does well.

  • http://slamonline.com The Philosopher

    Oh, I’m on the bandwagon!! lolol
    definitely on the bandwagon.

  • http://nyill.wordpress.com Enigmatic

    Someone posted a link on Twitter of a blog post someone else wrote before the 2010 draft.
    In it, he argued that Jeremy Lin was the second best point guard prospect behind only John Wall.
    He implored GMs to not let the fact that he was in the Ivy league cloud their judgment of him because he actually performed even better against power conference schools, like when he put up 30 or so against UConn.
    I bet that post got some laughs back then.
    Now?
    Any NBA team needing an assistant GM might wanna seek dude out.

  • http://nyill.wordpress.com Enigmatic

    Oh, and even though I knew about Lin when was at Harvard and I always thought he was worthy of being in the NBA, I always thought he was more suited to be a reserve or even 3rd string PG.
    I also expressed my doubts after his first big game but now I have no problem admitting I was wrong too.
    I’m a big fan of Lin also.

  • http://Slamonline.com nbk

    Matic if you find that will you send it my way?

  • http://slamonline.com The Philosopher

    When a rookie comes into The League, I try to say nothing. Unless he’s undeniable like, a Shaq or The King.
    I take pride in trying to give a good assessment of a player.
    LaMarcus Aldridge is an example, when I called him out as a franchise player. My guy, Jukai, tried to say otherwise… but, that is neither here, or there. As is such, Aldridge is making me look good.
    Jennings is making me look good.
    There are others.
    Now, in conclusion, I am self aggrandizing. Proudly.
    Shout out @Riggs.

  • http://slamonline.com. datkid

    well damn. Yeah enig, I’d like to read that as well.

  • webstarr

    I woulda loved to have seen Lin in Jerry Sloan’s offense…I think it would have fit him like a glove.

  • http://Slamonline.com nbk

    Check twitter kid

  • http://slamonline.com. datkid

    ight thanks soop

  • http://nyill.wordpress.com/ O

    If Lin is able to keep this up for the rest of the season, the question becomes, will the Knicks be able to resign him. I mean, the Knicks can only offer 5 mil a year. I’m sure there will be another team who’ll want the skills AND Asian fan base that Lin brings with him and offer him more paper.

  • shutup

    ROASTED!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!LMFAO

  • http://thetroyblog.com Teddy-the-Bear

    Caboose: That was a wonderfully backhanded compliment, and a skillful way of admitting you were wrong while not really admitting you were wrong. Nicely done, man!

  • T-Money

    Lin is playing awesome ball but I see no comparison with Nash. As a bigger guard with a streaky jumper, he reminds me more of Kidd. And I dont think his basketball IQ is off the charts.

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