Tuesday, October 16th, 2012 at 10:05 am  |  88 responses

Jeremy Lin Feels He Must Prove Himself on the Court Because He’s Asian


Jeremy Lin opens up to GQ about his incredible ascension and the fame he gained last season. Lin also talks about the challenges he faces as an Asian baller: “The key part of Lin’s story, the reason the world was so inspired by him, was that he was never really given a chance. He was undrafted out of college and spent a year-plus in the Development League or at the very end of an NBA bench. ‘I’m going to be honest, playing in D-League games is tough,’ he says. ‘We got way more fans at Harvard games. It feels like a demotion, and it feels like if you have one bad game then the thought gets in your brain: I might get cut.’ Lin felt this acutely. He tells me, to my shock, that when he graduated from Harvard in 2010 and wasn’t selected in the NBA Draft, he decided that if it turned out that he needed to play overseas (as is commonplace for those who don’t make the NBA), he was going to give himself one more year, and then he would quit and get a real job. ‘I absolutely would not have liked playing in Spain or somewhere like that, so I was just gonna do it a year,’ he says. ‘Then I was gonna be done.’ As a Harvard graduate, I ask him, what would you have done instead? He laughs. ‘I have no idea, man.’ Lin really was that close to hanging up his sneakers at 23. You might think his race has something to do with those perceived limitations after turning pro; Lin certainly does: ‘If I can be honest, yes. It’s not even close to the only reason, but it was definitely part of the reason.’ And it didn’t end with Linsanity. ‘There’s a lot of perceptions and stereotypes of Asian-Americans that are out there today, and the fact that I’m Asian-American makes it harder to believe, even crazier, more unexpected,’ he says. ‘I’m going to have to play well for a longer period of time for certain people to believe it, because I’m Asian. And that’s just the reality of it.’ It’s not all that dissimilar from what Yao Ming went through. ‘When Yao came out his rookie year as the first pick of the Draft, you have Charles Barkley saying, ‘If he scores seventeen points in a game, I’m going to kiss a donkey’s butt,’ Lin says. ‘If you do it for long enough, I think you would get the respect.’”

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  • upnorthboss

    mannnn asians always bitchin about how hard it is to be asian…..get over it

  • Ismael Sandiego

    No Jeremy, You must prove yourself coz of that FAT contract. Stop using the race card man. Good move by the Knicks not singing him long term.

  • http://twitter.com/GRenaissance19 William

    And the blacks are always bitching about welfare and food stamps. What’s your point.

  • T-Money

    you mean longer than 25 games? yeah, probably.

  • K_HOLIDAY

    When have you ever heard black people b*tch about welfare and food stamps? That comment was stupid

  • K_HOLIDAY

    Jeremy, its not about your race at this point. It’s about proving you’re as good as all the hype you received during that run last season. You just signed a huge contract, not because you were Asian, but because Houston believed you were that good. I understand your way of thinking, but it’s simply time to show and prove!

  • spit hot fiyah

    don’t go there, both of you

  • vtrobot

    To all the people saying that he’s making it too much about race. 1) He was talking about the time BEFORE he signed the contract. 2) He said “It’s not even close to the only reason, but it was definitely part of the reason.” PART. Not the whole thing. Jesus Christ, please read. Yes, NOW of course being as valuable at that contract is most of what he needs to prove. 3) Unless you’re an Asian NBA point guard, who was temporarily hyped as much as Muhammad Ali, you might not be able to relate (F me, who else gets back-to-back SI covers?). Peace.

  • Redd

    Wow you’re an idiot.

  • Da-Meat-Hook

    Jeremy Lin wasn’t bitching about how hard it is to be Asian, he was simply saying that there are pre-conceived notions about Asians which he has had to dispel and still faces today. There has yet to be an Oriental player in the NBA who wasn’t 7’6 that has made an impact on the league. Him being Asian is a blessing (marketing) and a curse (stereotypes). Whether you admit it or not, your achievements and failures are magnified when you’re the minority in your expertise (Tiger, Eminem, The Fresh Prince of Belair).

  • http://twitter.com/niQknacks niQ

    So did Charles Barkley ever end up kissing a donkey’s butt?

  • http://twitter.com/GRenaissance19 William

    The Media, made him into the hype he is. The rockets offered him 25 mil, it wasn’t him who demanded the salary. So, why does he have to prove anything to anyone?

  • http://twitter.com/niQknacks niQ

    cosign.

  • K_HOLIDAY

    Think Darko and Greg Oden! Theres a certain expectation when you are put in certain positions. As high draft picks, they were expected to produce no matter what! When they dont, they get destroyed in the media. Same goes for Lin. You have to prove you weren’t a flash in the pan. Doesnt matter if the media hyped him or not. You accepted that huge contract; now you have to prove you were worth it!

  • bike

    Considering how fast and the way he rose to brief stardom last year, some self-doubt is bound to creep into his psych. I really hope we don’t start hearing a list of excuses out of him—he’s Asian, his knee still bothers him, he’s in a different system, etc. Plenty of players have to deal with stereotypes and high expectations so Lin’s not alone.

  • TBRK

    get ‘eem outta here!

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Luis-Torres/732196580 Luis Torres

    Lin do not have to prove anything, he just need to maintain that emotion throughout the games

  • nick

    As long as china is ruling the world, Lin will be making the rockets an absolute fortune, no matter how well he plays, THAT is why they signed him such a high contract…

  • nick

    lmao priceless…

  • A.dawson

    Jeremy Lin doesn’t have to prove anything to anyone. But if he were to put up 50 points a night haters would say he still not talented. It does not matter how he plays people can’t get past his race. Because if he were black they would all say “wow what a up incoming star”. You know I’m right. It’s ok though people in the days judged ” black” quarterbacks harsh in the days because their were so few. Ask Warren Moon and Doug Williams. There will be more Chinese people joining the nba in the near future since its their favorite sport!!!! Get use to it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! N

  • http://twitter.com/AjpDos Allen Powell

    Race is a part of everything. Lin got targeted for being Asian and he got hyped. Same thing happens to white cats in the NBA and black people in tennis.

  • A.dawson

    and that N was a slip of my typing ! Sorry!!!!

  • http://twitter.com/AjpDos Allen Powell

    Your hood is showing. And your cowardice.

  • Cory

    “Jeremy Lin Feels He Must Prove Himself on the Court ‘Because He’s Asian’”? Who’s the writer? Man! You’re dirty and disgusting for the last 3 words.

  • zogs19994

    WHEN I CLOSE MY EYES I BECOME JEREMY LIN
    #LITERALLY

  • Perry the PlatyPteranodon

    Oh wow this thread was looking very mature and intellectual….
    And now it’s gone.

  • zogs19994

    OK PERRY THE PLATYPTERANODON

  • Perry the PlatyPteranodon

    You know you can turn the caps lock off and type like a functional human being. :D

  • Max

    They should bring that clip of him saying that up on tnt.

  • Max

    That was kinda funny lol

  • shockexchange

    You are exactly right. The reality is that Lin piqued the interest of Asian fans who may not have been interested otherwise. However, if “black people in tennis” were as overpaid as Lin is this year, all H-E-L-L would break loose and the media would not be so kind about it.

  • LakeShow

    Co-Sign.

  • http://www.slamonline.com/ Nick Tha Quick

    He did. Too lazy to find the clip but it’s out there. Kenny had them bring in a donkey on the set.

  • http://twitter.com/AjpDos Allen Powell

    Nah, buddy. If he was black, they’d say he was Flip Murray.
    Lin is like the white cat at the playground. He might not get picked up initially, but everybody assumes he can shoot.
    Or like Rudy Fernandez getting hyped for being “athletic” when he probably wasn’t even in the top quarter of NBA athletes.
    Or Brent Barry winning the dunk contest.
    If you are unusual you will get more attention. Some of that attention will be positive and some will be negative. Lin got a decent mixture of responses. Honestly, the overwhelming response was positive.

  • bike

    Tiger Woods

  • Salty

    No he made the hype happen when he started balling out of control. And his entire career he will have to prove something to everyone, that’s not going away. That’s because we judge a player based on their career, not a part of a season.

  • Salty

    How could anyone argue that race played a part? But it’s just a numbers game: how many Asians are there in the NBA who are really making noise? The Asian puns and all that got out of control, but he is a unique individual for the NBA: an Asian-American, Harvard grad….doesn’t come along often.

  • Salty

    Argue that race *didn’t* play a part. Sorry, I for one am not a Harvard grad.

  • Salty

    He’s not using the race card, he’s using logic. But it has more to do with the media’s laziness than some sort of racism. He’s a unique player, and has a perfect name for cheap a** headline puns.

  • Salty

    He played pretty well for part of one year…what makes you think he no longer has anything to prove?

  • nick212

    um, so if a black investment banker says “when i was new to the industry, i felt like i had to prove myself more because i was the only black guy in my dept.” would we all be making a stink about it? no, y’all would say “oh yeah, good point, he’s gotta prove himself because of his race.” and you wouldn’t have white and asian bankers proclaiming “if that black banker closes a single deal, i’ll kiss your ass.” thanks, sir charles!

  • mike

    Doesn’t everyone have to prove themselves in the NBA? What does he expect?

  • zogs19994

    When I sit down at the breakfast table I usually suck my father’s hairy asshole and it gives me my daily calories. Zogs Sr. has a verrrry tasty asshole.

  • danpowers

    has had to prove himself because he is a limited athlete. he is not the first asian to make a carreer in the nba. somebody tell him to chill about that

  • ByAnyMeansNecessary

    He proved that he was a solid PG already. Now he just has to show that he can do it for a full season instead of a quarter of a season. I’m not Asian, so I wouldn’t begin to try to judge him on what he feels. You can’t tell another man how to feel or how he should feel. He knows what being Asian feels like more than me.

  • justn05

    Co-sign. Lin was way overhyped, not just because he was asian but because of his double doubles. Didn’t anyone pay attention to how many turnovers he had though? Productive NBA points guards cannot give up 5-8 turnovers everytime they want 10 assists.

  • robb

    Money Mayweather disagrees

  • zogs19994

    DAWGGG YOU GET SUCH GOOD PROTEIN FROM IT
    #GET BIG

  • danpowers

    actually they first offered 5+5+9 million. lins camp rejected that because they were unhappy about the third year. then the rockets came up with that 25mio offer. so he partly demanded that. anyway, in 3 years he might be worth it. at least i wish him all the best to live up to his contract.

  • http://twitter.com/Jzakoni Verified Account

    Finally we agree on something

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