Official Jeremy Lin Thread.

Originally Posted by Luong1209

Originally Posted by Bob Lobblaw

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What...is this?
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And Lin is now pushing a Benz? Son was probably driving his mom's Camry when he was with us.

BD is definitely a shell of his former self. As mentioned, his shot is flat and he's a huge chucker now.
He was driving a Benz by the end of his rookie season, he pushes Volvos now.
 
Originally Posted by AllenIversonFan01

Originally Posted by NooEra

Are all NY newspapers grimey tabloids ?
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Unless ur undefeated. Every loss is the end of the world.

And although it was fairly obvious from the way some of you post. Its good to see who is a "Knicks fan" because of Lin and who actually wants the team to succeed.

Lin should be more than fine getting 12 with 8+ assists in the new offense that centers around Amare and Melo. And just like ATGD said, Linsanity didnt end because of Melo or Amare. It just happened to be that it ran its course about a game before they both came back and then it was just downhill from there. Not solely on Melo or Amare. No Lin lead team is doing @%@$ in the playoffs. I like the guy as our PG, but those are the facts.

Yup, dude is mad overrated.
 
Originally Posted by AllenIversonFan01

Originally Posted by NooEra

Are all NY newspapers grimey tabloids ?
laugh.gif
Unless ur undefeated. Every loss is the end of the world.

And although it was fairly obvious from the way some of you post. Its good to see who is a "Knicks fan" because of Lin and who actually wants the team to succeed.

Lin should be more than fine getting 12 with 8+ assists in the new offense that centers around Amare and Melo. And just like ATGD said, Linsanity didnt end because of Melo or Amare. It just happened to be that it ran its course about a game before they both came back and then it was just downhill from there. Not solely on Melo or Amare. No Lin lead team is doing @%@$ in the playoffs. I like the guy as our PG, but those are the facts.

Yup, dude is mad overrated.
 
Originally Posted by Andrew630

Originally Posted by Luong1209

Originally Posted by Bob Lobblaw

fed8c.gif
What...is this?
roll.gif
roll.gif
roll.gif


And Lin is now pushing a Benz? Son was probably driving his mom's Camry when he was with us.

BD is definitely a shell of his former self. As mentioned, his shot is flat and he's a huge chucker now.
He was driving a Benz by the end of his rookie season, he pushes Volvos now.
He's had that Benz for a while now he was driving it in some youtube video of him training.
 
Originally Posted by Andrew630

Originally Posted by Luong1209

Originally Posted by Bob Lobblaw

fed8c.gif
What...is this?
roll.gif
roll.gif
roll.gif


And Lin is now pushing a Benz? Son was probably driving his mom's Camry when he was with us.

BD is definitely a shell of his former self. As mentioned, his shot is flat and he's a huge chucker now.
He was driving a Benz by the end of his rookie season, he pushes Volvos now.
He's had that Benz for a while now he was driving it in some youtube video of him training.
 
[h1][/h1]
[h1]Jeremy Lin had lunch with the since-fired editor who inadvertently referenced his heritage[/h1]
By Kelly Dwyer
Editor

By Kelly Dwyer | Ball Don't Lie – 2 hours 10 minutes ago


In February, a few eagle-eyed NBA fans spotted what turned out to be an inadvertently racially insensitive headline penned by an editor on ESPN's mobile site. The cliché "+$%%! in the armor" was used to describe Asian-American New York Knicks guard Jeremy Lin's turnover-prone growing pains, but because the first word in the headline can also be used as a racial epithet to describe Asians, the editor was eventually fired. Anthony Federico, the editor, claimed that his use of the phrase, while distressing, was unintentional. And we believed him.

On Tuesday, Lin had lunch with the editor, in an attempt to show that there were no hard feelings. Outside of ESPN re-hiring Federico, this is as good as these stories usually end. From Newsday:
"The fact that he reached out to me," Federico said. "The fact that he took the time to meet with me in his insanely busy schedule ... He's just a wonderful, humble person. He didn't have to do that, especially after everything had kind of died down for the most part.

"We talked more about matters of faith [and] reconciliation. We talked about our shared Christian values and what we're both trying do with this situation .. . We didn't talk about the headline for more than three minutes."


Newsday's Anthony Riebar reports that it was Lin's family that got in touch with the editor via email, after Federico's apology following his dismissal. The only reason it took this long for the two to meet is because, as you may have read, Jeremy Lin is the starting point guard on an NBA team that is playing a slapdash 66-game schedule.

A Knicks spokesman and Jeremy Lin's representatives both told Newsday that Lin would like to decline comment on the lunch. Bummer. The least he could have done was take some Instagram pictures of his club sandwich to post on Twitter.

From the outset, we were dubious that Federico's headline was some lame attempt at frat boy humor. It's always possible to use a phrase with racial implications — as Steve Kerr, Rick Kamla and I have found out in our time in media — and be unaware that the phrase was that bad, on a level with other words we won't even reprint. But because the phrase that Federico used is such a go-to move for those of us in the business of churning out endless amounts of copy, it makes sense that he was the victim of two significant factors (the fact that Lin's turnover issues were a mitigating influence on his game, and his Asian-American heritage) aligning in an unfortunate way.

ESPN's defense, and it is a fair one, is that Federico should have given the headline the once-over, known that some would construe it as a reference to the racial epithet, and gotten rid of it. And yes, you are supposed to spend your time working at a computer coming up with headlines for ESPN's mobile phone application in the first few hours of a Saturday morning as if you're dreaming up front-page ledes for the Washington Post at the height of the Watergate scandal, so pointing out that relatively few people actually saw the headline isn't much of a defense. The relative obscurity of Federico's output is no excuse for the misstep.

It was a mistake, regardless of the intent, and Federico claims that it was unintentional. We take his word on that, and whatever the intent, Lin has forgiven his slip-up. And though Federico would probably like his job back, his class and tact in this whole affair is to be commended.

He also got to have lunch with the starting point guard of the New York Knicks. Not a bad capper, if you ask me.
 
[h1][/h1]
[h1]Jeremy Lin had lunch with the since-fired editor who inadvertently referenced his heritage[/h1]
By Kelly Dwyer
Editor

By Kelly Dwyer | Ball Don't Lie – 2 hours 10 minutes ago


In February, a few eagle-eyed NBA fans spotted what turned out to be an inadvertently racially insensitive headline penned by an editor on ESPN's mobile site. The cliché "+$%%! in the armor" was used to describe Asian-American New York Knicks guard Jeremy Lin's turnover-prone growing pains, but because the first word in the headline can also be used as a racial epithet to describe Asians, the editor was eventually fired. Anthony Federico, the editor, claimed that his use of the phrase, while distressing, was unintentional. And we believed him.

On Tuesday, Lin had lunch with the editor, in an attempt to show that there were no hard feelings. Outside of ESPN re-hiring Federico, this is as good as these stories usually end. From Newsday:
"The fact that he reached out to me," Federico said. "The fact that he took the time to meet with me in his insanely busy schedule ... He's just a wonderful, humble person. He didn't have to do that, especially after everything had kind of died down for the most part.

"We talked more about matters of faith [and] reconciliation. We talked about our shared Christian values and what we're both trying do with this situation .. . We didn't talk about the headline for more than three minutes."


Newsday's Anthony Riebar reports that it was Lin's family that got in touch with the editor via email, after Federico's apology following his dismissal. The only reason it took this long for the two to meet is because, as you may have read, Jeremy Lin is the starting point guard on an NBA team that is playing a slapdash 66-game schedule.

A Knicks spokesman and Jeremy Lin's representatives both told Newsday that Lin would like to decline comment on the lunch. Bummer. The least he could have done was take some Instagram pictures of his club sandwich to post on Twitter.

From the outset, we were dubious that Federico's headline was some lame attempt at frat boy humor. It's always possible to use a phrase with racial implications — as Steve Kerr, Rick Kamla and I have found out in our time in media — and be unaware that the phrase was that bad, on a level with other words we won't even reprint. But because the phrase that Federico used is such a go-to move for those of us in the business of churning out endless amounts of copy, it makes sense that he was the victim of two significant factors (the fact that Lin's turnover issues were a mitigating influence on his game, and his Asian-American heritage) aligning in an unfortunate way.

ESPN's defense, and it is a fair one, is that Federico should have given the headline the once-over, known that some would construe it as a reference to the racial epithet, and gotten rid of it. And yes, you are supposed to spend your time working at a computer coming up with headlines for ESPN's mobile phone application in the first few hours of a Saturday morning as if you're dreaming up front-page ledes for the Washington Post at the height of the Watergate scandal, so pointing out that relatively few people actually saw the headline isn't much of a defense. The relative obscurity of Federico's output is no excuse for the misstep.

It was a mistake, regardless of the intent, and Federico claims that it was unintentional. We take his word on that, and whatever the intent, Lin has forgiven his slip-up. And though Federico would probably like his job back, his class and tact in this whole affair is to be commended.

He also got to have lunch with the starting point guard of the New York Knicks. Not a bad capper, if you ask me.
 
Originally Posted by Bob Lobblaw

next jeremy lin?

Kid dunked on me during Wootten camp in VA (plucked me first, not gonna lie). Came to camp wearing jean shorts and some Converse Wades and destroyed everyone. He even won the dunk contest when he was 14. My HS coach (Joe Wootten, son of Morgan Wootten, coach of Kendall Marshall) tried to get him to come but he already was set on going to school at VA beach or wherever it was. His dad played professionalin China and his mom was an olympic track runner.. good genes.
 
Originally Posted by Bob Lobblaw

next jeremy lin?

Kid dunked on me during Wootten camp in VA (plucked me first, not gonna lie). Came to camp wearing jean shorts and some Converse Wades and destroyed everyone. He even won the dunk contest when he was 14. My HS coach (Joe Wootten, son of Morgan Wootten, coach of Kendall Marshall) tried to get him to come but he already was set on going to school at VA beach or wherever it was. His dad played professionalin China and his mom was an olympic track runner.. good genes.
 
That Tang kid is a beast. They aren't going to able to keep him down in Hampton. One of the big time DMV WCAC programs or Oak Hill or another regional prep powerhouse is going to snatch him away.
 
That Tang kid is a beast. They aren't going to able to keep him down in Hampton. One of the big time DMV WCAC programs or Oak Hill or another regional prep powerhouse is going to snatch him away.
 
Originally Posted by DIOR PAINT

That Tang kid is a beast. They aren't going to able to keep him down in Hampton. One of the big time DMV WCAC programs or Oak Hill or another regional prep powerhouse is going to snatch him away.

Kid looks like a mini Chinese version of Charles Barkley the way he comes down the lane... and he's only 15, too.  Plenty of time to grow 
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Originally Posted by DIOR PAINT

That Tang kid is a beast. They aren't going to able to keep him down in Hampton. One of the big time DMV WCAC programs or Oak Hill or another regional prep powerhouse is going to snatch him away.

Kid looks like a mini Chinese version of Charles Barkley the way he comes down the lane... and he's only 15, too.  Plenty of time to grow 
sick.gif
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Originally Posted by DIOR PAINT

That Tang kid is a beast. They aren't going to able to keep him down in Hampton. One of the big time DMV WCAC programs or Oak Hill or another regional prep powerhouse is going to snatch him away.

O'Connell tried to. Problem is he's not living with his parents right now. He's doing some sort of foreign exchange student program or whatever and his guardians here live in Hampton.
 
Originally Posted by DIOR PAINT

That Tang kid is a beast. They aren't going to able to keep him down in Hampton. One of the big time DMV WCAC programs or Oak Hill or another regional prep powerhouse is going to snatch him away.

O'Connell tried to. Problem is he's not living with his parents right now. He's doing some sort of foreign exchange student program or whatever and his guardians here live in Hampton.
 
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