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...
After the halftime break, Lin Yi, who had caught his second wind, couldn't wait to get back to lighting it up.
Forget all that talk about scorers—this was about confidence. Call it reckless, call it bold, but Lin had trained all summer for nights like this. Strength, endurance, muscle memory—every rep was for this moment.
Sure, he was still a long way from his idol's level, but if you don't dream big, what's the point? That's what all those cheesy motivational ads say.
Back to the game: to start the third quarter, the Knicks sent out Tyson Chandler, Lin Yi, Gallinari, Wilson Chandler, and Shaun Livingston.
Coach D'Antoni didn't bring Tony Allen out right away, knowing full well that trying to lock down LeBron for 48 minutes was wishful thinking. The focus now was on maintaining the lead.
And frankly, Miami's ability to claw back from a deficit had been underwhelming. The Knicks weren't running flashy sets or fancy plays. They were keeping it tight and simple—lots of pick-and-rolls and iso plays to avoid turnovers.
It worked—just two turnovers in the first half.
Miami opened the third with Joel Anthony, Bosh, LeBron, Wade, and Chalmers.
LeBron, fired up from the break, had delivered a passionate halftime speech.
Heat fans at American Airlines Arena hadn't lost hope. They believed the team just needed to settle in. Maybe that slow first half was just chemistry issues.
And right out of the gate, they had a reason to believe.
LeBron took the ball up top, charging in like a gladiator, tossing his shield aside. Gallinari stood his ground for about half a second before remembering he was Italian.
It looked chaotic, but it was part of the Knicks' defensive scheme. Still, Chandler, the help defender, clearly wasn't expecting LeBron to come that hard—and got dropped by the King James like a heavyweight KO. The one-handed tomahawk slam that followed sent shockwaves through the arena.
"MVP——!!!"
The fans erupted.
Wade hyped him up with a chest bump as they jogged back.
Tyson Chandler looked a little miffed, but Lin Yi gave him a pat on the shoulder.
"No worries," Lin grinned. "Not much you can do when he's in that mode. Remember that crazy shot I made earlier? Same thing."
Time for the Knicks to answer back.
Chris Bosh looked jumpy. Lin's three early triples had left an impression. Even though Lin's shooting had cooled a bit, Bosh didn't dare close out too tightly. Lin took the opening, blew past him—
—and here came James to help.
Lin didn't challenge him. He flicked a high lob instead—
Tyson Chandler rose, caught it clean, and smashed it home!
Boom!
The arena went dead silent for a beat before Knicks fans roared back to life.
Charles Barkley, on commentary: "The Lin-Tyson connection goes from defence to offence as they set up an alley-oop."
That dunk sparked something in Chandler. On the very next play, he chased down Wade's layup and swatted it away.
Lin grabbed the rebound and turned up-court. Chalmers tried to swipe the ball—but Lin spun behind his back, smooth as silk.
The Heat scrambled to get back. James, the fastest in transition, stayed locked on Lin. But Lin had already begun his misdirection—ball behind the back bounce into a bullet pass—
Right to Gallinari in stride.
The rhythm kicked in for Knicks fans.
Gallinari stepped up and let it fly from deep.
Swish!
He high-fived Lin.
Spoelstra had seen enough.
Timeout, Miami.
That dunk from LeBron had given them a spark—but now the Knicks were on a 5–0 run again.
Shooters like Mike Miller and James Jones sat on the bench, watching with envy. The Knicks' offense was a shooter's dream.
Even after the timeout, the Heat still couldn't slow the Knicks. James and Wade combined for a solid bucket, but New York kept coming.
Lin started fading physically midway through the third. Bosh, to his credit, found a rhythm. Lin, though competitive, knew when not to force things.
That's when Wilson Chandler stepped up. He'd been lights-out in summer workouts and was finally getting minutes. Two straight threes and a fierce putback dunk—eight points in a flash.
Spoelstra was forced to call another timeout.
Out of the break, the Knicks brought in Lance Stephenson for Livingston. The Heat tried to exploit mismatches through pick-and-rolls, but Lance... well, Lance had his approach.
While defending LeBron, he leaned in and muttered something into his ear.
Fate works in strange ways.
Already frustrated, LeBron nearly retaliated with an elbow. But Lance flopped like a veteran, drawing the offensive foul.
A clear bait. The refs blew the whistle.
Lin Yi pulled Stephenson aside.
"Lance, we're up by 30. No need for the theatrics, alright?"
He nodded.
Wait—was that a no for now, or a yes if the game gets close later?
Lin didn't realize Lance had just gotten exactly the green light he wanted.
James and Wade were mentally gassed. Part of it was how seriously—or not—they'd prepped for this Knicks team.
End of the third quarter:
Knicks 85, Heat 50.
Game, set, and match.
The Big Three didn't even come out for the fourth. D'Antoni pulled the starters too—but then came the surprise.
The Knicks' bench wasn't just deep. It was good.
Fourth-quarter squad: Shane Battier, Wilson Chandler, Marco Belinelli, Danny Green, and Livingston.
And the Heat? Still chasing shadows.
...
Coach D'Antoni hadn't expected the game to be this smooth. He didn't even bother bringing a traditional big man for garbage time, and O'Neal wasn't exactly the best fit for a blowout. So, the old man got creative.
He patted Shane Battier on the shoulder.
"Shane, you're playing center for a bit."
Battier gave a wry smile. He didn't say anything, but you could tell he was wondering if Coach had lost it.
Still, it wasn't the worst idea. The Heat's lineup wasn't exactly towering, and even though the Knicks' Death Five weren't elite rim protectors, they were quick. Aside from Belinelli's soft defense, the rest moved well and rotated smartly.
With the lead ballooning past 40, Miami threw in Ilgauskas to attack the paint and at least claw back a bit of pride.
D'Antoni didn't counter. He let the bench unit play freely. Danny Green, feeling it, knocked down two more threes in the fourth quarter.
Meanwhile, LeBron sat on the bench, visibly frustrated. It felt like no matter which five the Knicks put on the court, they clicked. They just worked.
Sure, the Heat's offense picked up a bit in garbage time—but the Knicks' bench wasn't slouching either. Every time Miami looked like they might build momentum, Livingston calmly orchestrated a response, keeping things under control.
Final score: Knicks 112, Heat 80.
A dominant win on the road to open the season.
Lin Yi led all scorers, finishing with 39 points in 30 minutes. He shot 13-of-27 from the field, 3-of-6 from deep, and 10-of-11 from the line. He also tallied 13 rebounds, 4 assists, 4 blocks, and 2 steals.
Tyson Chandler logged the same minutes, putting up 6 points on 3-of-5 shooting, 10 rebounds, 4 blocks, and 2 steals. And if he hadn't let Lin grab a few rebounds for the box score, he might've pulled down 15.
Livingston was a pleasant surprise: 23 minutes, 14 points on 6-of-8 shooting, with 3 rebounds and 3 assists.
Danny Green chipped in 12 points in 18 minutes, hitting 4-of-5 from beyond the arc.
All 12 Knicks players saw the floor. All 12 scored.
As for Miami, LeBron logged 34 minutes but struggled: 6-of-17 from the field, just 1-of-4 from three, 2-of-2 from the line—finishing with 14 points, 8 rebounds, and 4 assists.
Wade had 18 points on 7-of-15 shooting, and Bosh scored only 8 points on 3-of-10 shooting. The three combined for fewer points than Lin Yi alone.
But it wasn't just the raw numbers.
When Lin was matched up with LeBron, they only combined to go 1-for-5 against each other. His shooting against Bosh wasn't efficient either. But the Knicks won—and Lin had the edge where it mattered.
...
After the game, Coach Spoelstra chalked up the loss to growing pains.
"We're still figuring things out. The Knicks played well. Their defense is no joke—there's a lot of talent on that end."
But the media wasn't buying it.
"Coach, that's not what you were saying before tipoff," one reporter pressed.
Spoelstra didn't exactly have a way with words, and it didn't help that critics now suspected he was downplaying Lin Yi's performance to shield LeBron from MVP chatter..
His teammates didn't hold back, though.
Livingston, beaming post-game:
"Lin's the leader of this team. We won this game due to him."
He was also thankful to Lin for convincing him to bulk up and tweak his game, but the media spun it differently: Lin was taking more shots because of New York's tactical design—smart, necessary, calculated.
That's how good the press was. They could flip anything into a positive for Lin Yi.
Danny Green's praise didn't go unnoticed either.
"Lin's the most down-to-earth guy I've ever played with. Coming to New York? Best thing that's happened to me."
That comment made waves—especially among Cavaliers fans. After all, Green wasn't exactly prioritized in Cleveland.
And Lin? He didn't just soak it in—he gave credit right back.
"I'm lucky to have these guys. Shaq's hilarious. Shane and Chandler are locks on the wings. Danny, Williams, Pat, Lance, Livingston. We don't win because of one guy. We win because we play as a team."
For once, he dropped his quippy speeches and kept a buck.
...
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