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Harvard Education + basketball talent = first billionaire athlete
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Originally Posted by dyyhard
[h2]http://www.nola.com/newsflash/index.ssf/story/dave-hyde-heats-haslem-tells-a-story-that-puts-lins-run-with-knicks-in-context/775e09dd4cb218fa64bbe0f11f3b8ca5
[/h2][h2]
[/h2][h2]Dave Hyde: Heat's Haslem tells a story that puts Lin's run with Knicks in context[/h2]
Feb. 22, 2012, 8:36 p.m. CST
McClatchy/Tribune - MCT Information Services
MIAMI _ But that's not the story Haslem wants to talk about. That day didn't even have an effect on Dallas. It didn't keep Lin for training camp.
No other team did, either.
Lin spent a while in the minor leagues before signing with Golden State, but was released. Ditto with Houston. He then signed with the Knicks and sat at the end of the bench.
In late January, he played in just one game during a seven-game stretch. That appearance was the definition of garbage time: The final six minutes of a 33-point win against Charlotte.
That's when the Knicks came to AmericanAirlines Arena on Jan. 27th. This is where Haslem tells his story.
"Before each game, I go to chapel," Haslem said.
It is held an hour before tip-off in a small room between the two teams' locker rooms. A handful of players attend. A pastor oversees it and typically asks the players if there's anything they want to pray for.
Often, players talk of health or loved ones or maybe a friend going through a tough time. Haslem has been attending these chapels for eight NBA seasons and has heard it all.
Until this one.
Lin did something Haslem never heard before.
"Can you pray I don't get cut?" Lin told the pastor and other players.
This wasn't a joke or a passing thought. Lin already was cut twice, after all. He felt he was at the end again.
Haslem never had played against Lin, never talked with him, never even seen him before this chapel. But he looked at him that night and immediately appreciated his story.
Haslem knows what it's like to go undrafted, to be not wanted by any team and forge a career through hard work and self-belief.
"I understood where he was coming from," Haslem said.
The pastor prayed for Lin that night. Haslem did, too. Then Lin went out and did what he usually did. He didn't play in the Heat's win.
"But a week later it was da-da-da," Haslem says, giving the ESPN SportsCenter entry noise.
Lin scored 25 against the Nets. He then had 38 against the Lakers. And hit a game-winner against Toronto.
He kept the improbable on the court by leading the Knicks to victory and the impossible off it by making them a lovable team for the first time in decades.
Now he's a known story. Something called the Harvard Sports Collective Analysis compared his effect on ticket prices to Tim Tebow's effect (Lin has made a greater effect). There's a movement for him to play for China in the Olympics.
Haslem will go to chapel again before Thursday's game. He expects Lin will be there, too. Maybe they'll trade hellos. Maybe not.
But Haslem is sure one thing has changed in 27 days since they last sat there.
"I don't think he'll be praying not to get cut," he says
Originally Posted by dyyhard
[h2]http://www.nola.com/newsflash/index.ssf/story/dave-hyde-heats-haslem-tells-a-story-that-puts-lins-run-with-knicks-in-context/775e09dd4cb218fa64bbe0f11f3b8ca5
[/h2][h2]
[/h2][h2]Dave Hyde: Heat's Haslem tells a story that puts Lin's run with Knicks in context[/h2]
Feb. 22, 2012, 8:36 p.m. CST
McClatchy/Tribune - MCT Information Services
MIAMI _ But that's not the story Haslem wants to talk about. That day didn't even have an effect on Dallas. It didn't keep Lin for training camp.
No other team did, either.
Lin spent a while in the minor leagues before signing with Golden State, but was released. Ditto with Houston. He then signed with the Knicks and sat at the end of the bench.
In late January, he played in just one game during a seven-game stretch. That appearance was the definition of garbage time: The final six minutes of a 33-point win against Charlotte.
That's when the Knicks came to AmericanAirlines Arena on Jan. 27th. This is where Haslem tells his story.
"Before each game, I go to chapel," Haslem said.
It is held an hour before tip-off in a small room between the two teams' locker rooms. A handful of players attend. A pastor oversees it and typically asks the players if there's anything they want to pray for.
Often, players talk of health or loved ones or maybe a friend going through a tough time. Haslem has been attending these chapels for eight NBA seasons and has heard it all.
Until this one.
Lin did something Haslem never heard before.
"Can you pray I don't get cut?" Lin told the pastor and other players.
This wasn't a joke or a passing thought. Lin already was cut twice, after all. He felt he was at the end again.
Haslem never had played against Lin, never talked with him, never even seen him before this chapel. But he looked at him that night and immediately appreciated his story.
Haslem knows what it's like to go undrafted, to be not wanted by any team and forge a career through hard work and self-belief.
"I understood where he was coming from," Haslem said.
The pastor prayed for Lin that night. Haslem did, too. Then Lin went out and did what he usually did. He didn't play in the Heat's win.
"But a week later it was da-da-da," Haslem says, giving the ESPN SportsCenter entry noise.
Lin scored 25 against the Nets. He then had 38 against the Lakers. And hit a game-winner against Toronto.
He kept the improbable on the court by leading the Knicks to victory and the impossible off it by making them a lovable team for the first time in decades.
Now he's a known story. Something called the Harvard Sports Collective Analysis compared his effect on ticket prices to Tim Tebow's effect (Lin has made a greater effect). There's a movement for him to play for China in the Olympics.
Haslem will go to chapel again before Thursday's game. He expects Lin will be there, too. Maybe they'll trade hellos. Maybe not.
But Haslem is sure one thing has changed in 27 days since they last sat there.
"I don't think he'll be praying not to get cut," he says
Originally Posted by dyyhard
[h2]http://www.nola.com/newsflash/index.ssf/story/dave-hyde-heats-haslem-tells-a-story-that-puts-lins-run-with-knicks-in-context/775e09dd4cb218fa64bbe0f11f3b8ca5
[/h2][h2]
[/h2][h2]Dave Hyde: Heat's Haslem tells a story that puts Lin's run with Knicks in context[/h2]
Feb. 22, 2012, 8:36 p.m. CST
McClatchy/Tribune - MCT Information Services
MIAMI _ But that's not the story Haslem wants to talk about. That day didn't even have an effect on Dallas. It didn't keep Lin for training camp.
No other team did, either.
Lin spent a while in the minor leagues before signing with Golden State, but was released. Ditto with Houston. He then signed with the Knicks and sat at the end of the bench.
In late January, he played in just one game during a seven-game stretch. That appearance was the definition of garbage time: The final six minutes of a 33-point win against Charlotte.
That's when the Knicks came to AmericanAirlines Arena on Jan. 27th. This is where Haslem tells his story.
"Before each game, I go to chapel," Haslem said.
It is held an hour before tip-off in a small room between the two teams' locker rooms. A handful of players attend. A pastor oversees it and typically asks the players if there's anything they want to pray for.
Often, players talk of health or loved ones or maybe a friend going through a tough time. Haslem has been attending these chapels for eight NBA seasons and has heard it all.
Until this one.
Lin did something Haslem never heard before.
"Can you pray I don't get cut?" Lin told the pastor and other players.
This wasn't a joke or a passing thought. Lin already was cut twice, after all. He felt he was at the end again.
Haslem never had played against Lin, never talked with him, never even seen him before this chapel. But he looked at him that night and immediately appreciated his story.
Haslem knows what it's like to go undrafted, to be not wanted by any team and forge a career through hard work and self-belief.
"I understood where he was coming from," Haslem said.
The pastor prayed for Lin that night. Haslem did, too. Then Lin went out and did what he usually did. He didn't play in the Heat's win.
"But a week later it was da-da-da," Haslem says, giving the ESPN SportsCenter entry noise.
Lin scored 25 against the Nets. He then had 38 against the Lakers. And hit a game-winner against Toronto.
He kept the improbable on the court by leading the Knicks to victory and the impossible off it by making them a lovable team for the first time in decades.
Now he's a known story. Something called the Harvard Sports Collective Analysis compared his effect on ticket prices to Tim Tebow's effect (Lin has made a greater effect). There's a movement for him to play for China in the Olympics.
Haslem will go to chapel again before Thursday's game. He expects Lin will be there, too. Maybe they'll trade hellos. Maybe not.
But Haslem is sure one thing has changed in 27 days since they last sat there.
"I don't think he'll be praying not to get cut," he says
Originally Posted by dyyhard
[h2]http://www.nola.com/newsflash/index.ssf/story/dave-hyde-heats-haslem-tells-a-story-that-puts-lins-run-with-knicks-in-context/775e09dd4cb218fa64bbe0f11f3b8ca5
[/h2][h2]
[/h2][h2]Dave Hyde: Heat's Haslem tells a story that puts Lin's run with Knicks in context[/h2]
Feb. 22, 2012, 8:36 p.m. CST
McClatchy/Tribune - MCT Information Services
MIAMI _ But that's not the story Haslem wants to talk about. That day didn't even have an effect on Dallas. It didn't keep Lin for training camp.
No other team did, either.
Lin spent a while in the minor leagues before signing with Golden State, but was released. Ditto with Houston. He then signed with the Knicks and sat at the end of the bench.
In late January, he played in just one game during a seven-game stretch. That appearance was the definition of garbage time: The final six minutes of a 33-point win against Charlotte.
That's when the Knicks came to AmericanAirlines Arena on Jan. 27th. This is where Haslem tells his story.
"Before each game, I go to chapel," Haslem said.
It is held an hour before tip-off in a small room between the two teams' locker rooms. A handful of players attend. A pastor oversees it and typically asks the players if there's anything they want to pray for.
Often, players talk of health or loved ones or maybe a friend going through a tough time. Haslem has been attending these chapels for eight NBA seasons and has heard it all.
Until this one.
Lin did something Haslem never heard before.
"Can you pray I don't get cut?" Lin told the pastor and other players.
This wasn't a joke or a passing thought. Lin already was cut twice, after all. He felt he was at the end again.
Haslem never had played against Lin, never talked with him, never even seen him before this chapel. But he looked at him that night and immediately appreciated his story.
Haslem knows what it's like to go undrafted, to be not wanted by any team and forge a career through hard work and self-belief.
"I understood where he was coming from," Haslem said.
The pastor prayed for Lin that night. Haslem did, too. Then Lin went out and did what he usually did. He didn't play in the Heat's win.
"But a week later it was da-da-da," Haslem says, giving the ESPN SportsCenter entry noise.
Lin scored 25 against the Nets. He then had 38 against the Lakers. And hit a game-winner against Toronto.
He kept the improbable on the court by leading the Knicks to victory and the impossible off it by making them a lovable team for the first time in decades.
Now he's a known story. Something called the Harvard Sports Collective Analysis compared his effect on ticket prices to Tim Tebow's effect (Lin has made a greater effect). There's a movement for him to play for China in the Olympics.
Haslem will go to chapel again before Thursday's game. He expects Lin will be there, too. Maybe they'll trade hellos. Maybe not.
But Haslem is sure one thing has changed in 27 days since they last sat there.
"I don't think he'll be praying not to get cut," he says
Originally Posted by biglan4312
Originally Posted by dyyhard
[h2]http://www.nola.com/newsflash/index.ssf/story/dave-hyde-heats-haslem-tells-a-story-that-puts-lins-run-with-knicks-in-context/775e09dd4cb218fa64bbe0f11f3b8ca5
[/h2][h2]
[/h2][h2]Dave Hyde: Heat's Haslem tells a story that puts Lin's run with Knicks in context[/h2]
Feb. 22, 2012, 8:36 p.m. CST
McClatchy/Tribune - MCT Information Services
MIAMI _ But that's not the story Haslem wants to talk about. That day didn't even have an effect on Dallas. It didn't keep Lin for training camp.
No other team did, either.
Lin spent a while in the minor leagues before signing with Golden State, but was released. Ditto with Houston. He then signed with the Knicks and sat at the end of the bench.
In late January, he played in just one game during a seven-game stretch. That appearance was the definition of garbage time: The final six minutes of a 33-point win against Charlotte.
That's when the Knicks came to AmericanAirlines Arena on Jan. 27th. This is where Haslem tells his story.
"Before each game, I go to chapel," Haslem said.
It is held an hour before tip-off in a small room between the two teams' locker rooms. A handful of players attend. A pastor oversees it and typically asks the players if there's anything they want to pray for.
Often, players talk of health or loved ones or maybe a friend going through a tough time. Haslem has been attending these chapels for eight NBA seasons and has heard it all.
Until this one.
Lin did something Haslem never heard before.
"Can you pray I don't get cut?" Lin told the pastor and other players.
This wasn't a joke or a passing thought. Lin already was cut twice, after all. He felt he was at the end again.
Haslem never had played against Lin, never talked with him, never even seen him before this chapel. But he looked at him that night and immediately appreciated his story.
Haslem knows what it's like to go undrafted, to be not wanted by any team and forge a career through hard work and self-belief.
"I understood where he was coming from," Haslem said.
The pastor prayed for Lin that night. Haslem did, too. Then Lin went out and did what he usually did. He didn't play in the Heat's win.
"But a week later it was da-da-da," Haslem says, giving the ESPN SportsCenter entry noise.
Lin scored 25 against the Nets. He then had 38 against the Lakers. And hit a game-winner against Toronto.
He kept the improbable on the court by leading the Knicks to victory and the impossible off it by making them a lovable team for the first time in decades.
Now he's a known story. Something called the Harvard Sports Collective Analysis compared his effect on ticket prices to Tim Tebow's effect (Lin has made a greater effect). There's a movement for him to play for China in the Olympics.
Haslem will go to chapel again before Thursday's game. He expects Lin will be there, too. Maybe they'll trade hellos. Maybe not.
But Haslem is sure one thing has changed in 27 days since they last sat there.
"I don't think he'll be praying not to get cut," he says
That's pretty dope
Originally Posted by biglan4312
Originally Posted by dyyhard
[h2]http://www.nola.com/newsflash/index.ssf/story/dave-hyde-heats-haslem-tells-a-story-that-puts-lins-run-with-knicks-in-context/775e09dd4cb218fa64bbe0f11f3b8ca5
[/h2][h2]
[/h2][h2]Dave Hyde: Heat's Haslem tells a story that puts Lin's run with Knicks in context[/h2]
Feb. 22, 2012, 8:36 p.m. CST
McClatchy/Tribune - MCT Information Services
MIAMI _ But that's not the story Haslem wants to talk about. That day didn't even have an effect on Dallas. It didn't keep Lin for training camp.
No other team did, either.
Lin spent a while in the minor leagues before signing with Golden State, but was released. Ditto with Houston. He then signed with the Knicks and sat at the end of the bench.
In late January, he played in just one game during a seven-game stretch. That appearance was the definition of garbage time: The final six minutes of a 33-point win against Charlotte.
That's when the Knicks came to AmericanAirlines Arena on Jan. 27th. This is where Haslem tells his story.
"Before each game, I go to chapel," Haslem said.
It is held an hour before tip-off in a small room between the two teams' locker rooms. A handful of players attend. A pastor oversees it and typically asks the players if there's anything they want to pray for.
Often, players talk of health or loved ones or maybe a friend going through a tough time. Haslem has been attending these chapels for eight NBA seasons and has heard it all.
Until this one.
Lin did something Haslem never heard before.
"Can you pray I don't get cut?" Lin told the pastor and other players.
This wasn't a joke or a passing thought. Lin already was cut twice, after all. He felt he was at the end again.
Haslem never had played against Lin, never talked with him, never even seen him before this chapel. But he looked at him that night and immediately appreciated his story.
Haslem knows what it's like to go undrafted, to be not wanted by any team and forge a career through hard work and self-belief.
"I understood where he was coming from," Haslem said.
The pastor prayed for Lin that night. Haslem did, too. Then Lin went out and did what he usually did. He didn't play in the Heat's win.
"But a week later it was da-da-da," Haslem says, giving the ESPN SportsCenter entry noise.
Lin scored 25 against the Nets. He then had 38 against the Lakers. And hit a game-winner against Toronto.
He kept the improbable on the court by leading the Knicks to victory and the impossible off it by making them a lovable team for the first time in decades.
Now he's a known story. Something called the Harvard Sports Collective Analysis compared his effect on ticket prices to Tim Tebow's effect (Lin has made a greater effect). There's a movement for him to play for China in the Olympics.
Haslem will go to chapel again before Thursday's game. He expects Lin will be there, too. Maybe they'll trade hellos. Maybe not.
But Haslem is sure one thing has changed in 27 days since they last sat there.
"I don't think he'll be praying not to get cut," he says
That's pretty dope
this is that @%@ that can bring you to tears ... good stuffOriginally Posted by Mr Marcus
Originally Posted by biglan4312
Originally Posted by dyyhard
[h2]http://www.nola.com/newsflash/index.ssf/story/dave-hyde-heats-haslem-tells-a-story-that-puts-lins-run-with-knicks-in-context/775e09dd4cb218fa64bbe0f11f3b8ca5
[/h2][h2]
[/h2][h2]Dave Hyde: Heat's Haslem tells a story that puts Lin's run with Knicks in context[/h2]
Feb. 22, 2012, 8:36 p.m. CST
McClatchy/Tribune - MCT Information Services
MIAMI _ But that's not the story Haslem wants to talk about. That day didn't even have an effect on Dallas. It didn't keep Lin for training camp.
No other team did, either.
Lin spent a while in the minor leagues before signing with Golden State, but was released. Ditto with Houston. He then signed with the Knicks and sat at the end of the bench.
In late January, he played in just one game during a seven-game stretch. That appearance was the definition of garbage time: The final six minutes of a 33-point win against Charlotte.
That's when the Knicks came to AmericanAirlines Arena on Jan. 27th. This is where Haslem tells his story.
"Before each game, I go to chapel," Haslem said.
It is held an hour before tip-off in a small room between the two teams' locker rooms. A handful of players attend. A pastor oversees it and typically asks the players if there's anything they want to pray for.
Often, players talk of health or loved ones or maybe a friend going through a tough time. Haslem has been attending these chapels for eight NBA seasons and has heard it all.
Until this one.
Lin did something Haslem never heard before.
"Can you pray I don't get cut?" Lin told the pastor and other players.
This wasn't a joke or a passing thought. Lin already was cut twice, after all. He felt he was at the end again.
Haslem never had played against Lin, never talked with him, never even seen him before this chapel. But he looked at him that night and immediately appreciated his story.
Haslem knows what it's like to go undrafted, to be not wanted by any team and forge a career through hard work and self-belief.
"I understood where he was coming from," Haslem said.
The pastor prayed for Lin that night. Haslem did, too. Then Lin went out and did what he usually did. He didn't play in the Heat's win.
"But a week later it was da-da-da," Haslem says, giving the ESPN SportsCenter entry noise.
Lin scored 25 against the Nets. He then had 38 against the Lakers. And hit a game-winner against Toronto.
He kept the improbable on the court by leading the Knicks to victory and the impossible off it by making them a lovable team for the first time in decades.
Now he's a known story. Something called the Harvard Sports Collective Analysis compared his effect on ticket prices to Tim Tebow's effect (Lin has made a greater effect). There's a movement for him to play for China in the Olympics.
Haslem will go to chapel again before Thursday's game. He expects Lin will be there, too. Maybe they'll trade hellos. Maybe not.
But Haslem is sure one thing has changed in 27 days since they last sat there.
"I don't think he'll be praying not to get cut," he says
That's pretty dope
this is that @%@ that can bring you to tears ... good stuffOriginally Posted by Mr Marcus
Originally Posted by biglan4312
Originally Posted by dyyhard
[h2]http://www.nola.com/newsflash/index.ssf/story/dave-hyde-heats-haslem-tells-a-story-that-puts-lins-run-with-knicks-in-context/775e09dd4cb218fa64bbe0f11f3b8ca5
[/h2][h2]
[/h2][h2]Dave Hyde: Heat's Haslem tells a story that puts Lin's run with Knicks in context[/h2]
Feb. 22, 2012, 8:36 p.m. CST
McClatchy/Tribune - MCT Information Services
MIAMI _ But that's not the story Haslem wants to talk about. That day didn't even have an effect on Dallas. It didn't keep Lin for training camp.
No other team did, either.
Lin spent a while in the minor leagues before signing with Golden State, but was released. Ditto with Houston. He then signed with the Knicks and sat at the end of the bench.
In late January, he played in just one game during a seven-game stretch. That appearance was the definition of garbage time: The final six minutes of a 33-point win against Charlotte.
That's when the Knicks came to AmericanAirlines Arena on Jan. 27th. This is where Haslem tells his story.
"Before each game, I go to chapel," Haslem said.
It is held an hour before tip-off in a small room between the two teams' locker rooms. A handful of players attend. A pastor oversees it and typically asks the players if there's anything they want to pray for.
Often, players talk of health or loved ones or maybe a friend going through a tough time. Haslem has been attending these chapels for eight NBA seasons and has heard it all.
Until this one.
Lin did something Haslem never heard before.
"Can you pray I don't get cut?" Lin told the pastor and other players.
This wasn't a joke or a passing thought. Lin already was cut twice, after all. He felt he was at the end again.
Haslem never had played against Lin, never talked with him, never even seen him before this chapel. But he looked at him that night and immediately appreciated his story.
Haslem knows what it's like to go undrafted, to be not wanted by any team and forge a career through hard work and self-belief.
"I understood where he was coming from," Haslem said.
The pastor prayed for Lin that night. Haslem did, too. Then Lin went out and did what he usually did. He didn't play in the Heat's win.
"But a week later it was da-da-da," Haslem says, giving the ESPN SportsCenter entry noise.
Lin scored 25 against the Nets. He then had 38 against the Lakers. And hit a game-winner against Toronto.
He kept the improbable on the court by leading the Knicks to victory and the impossible off it by making them a lovable team for the first time in decades.
Now he's a known story. Something called the Harvard Sports Collective Analysis compared his effect on ticket prices to Tim Tebow's effect (Lin has made a greater effect). There's a movement for him to play for China in the Olympics.
Haslem will go to chapel again before Thursday's game. He expects Lin will be there, too. Maybe they'll trade hellos. Maybe not.
But Haslem is sure one thing has changed in 27 days since they last sat there.
"I don't think he'll be praying not to get cut," he says
That's pretty dope