The Knicks' charter jet hummed through the night sky. O'Neal leaned back in his wide leather seat and grinned at Lin Yi.
"Bet you anything Riley's got one of those nightmare training camps waiting," he said.
Shaq knew Pat Riley's playbook by heart. Toward the end of his own career, he'd battled his weight, and he still remembered the endless conditioning sessions Riley demanded.
Lin Yi said. "If Riley isn't running a boot camp, is it even Riley?"
When the team landed in Miami, the Knicks' advance staff was already there to shepherd them straight to the hotel.
Lin Yi's phone buzzed. "Huh. Text from the Mamba."
O'Neal craned his neck. "Kobe? What's he saying?"
"He's looking forward to us reaching the Finals," Lin Yi said, scrolling. "And he likes the way I ran the last game."
"That's it? Come on, what else?" Shaq pressed.
Lin Yi shot him a look. "You two really worked together, and you still can't tell when he's playing it cool?"
Shaq chuckled, but Lin Yi kept scrolling. "Okay, okay—he added, 'Tell the big guy to get some rest.'"
"That's it?" Shaq threw his hands up. "Man, that's short!"
Lin Yi shook his head. "You two could just text each other and spare me the middleman duty."
Still, Lin Yi suspected Kobe's message carried a subtext. News had been swirling about Kobe's frustration with Bynum's lax workouts. Shaq might be taking it easy; Bynum wasn't working at all—very different situations.
…
Game Day – May 20
The Knicks treated the day before Game 3 as a light recovery session. D'Antoni and the analytics crew figured Miami's defense was already maxed out; the only real adjustment the Heat could make was to crank up their offense.
Lou Williams, quiet through the first two games, got word that his minutes would climb. Even the non-roster guys—Whiteside and Pat Jnr—traveled to Miami, a show of team unity.
At the pre-game presser, D'Antoni brought Marbury along and kept things loose. While the Heat's press room felt tense, the Knicks' side was all smiles.
"True gold fears no fire," Marbury told the reporters, then added with a grin, "Iron sharpens itself."
"We take the game seriously," he continued. "But we believe in keeping players fresh and improving through smart work, not just more work."
The American journalists looked puzzled, as if they'd heard this philosophy somewhere before—but there was no arguing with it.
Privately, Marbury had already told Lin Yi this would be his last NBA run; he planned to finish his career in China. Lin Yi respected the decision.
…
Tip-Off – AmericanAirlines Arena
By the time the lights dimmed, Twitter and Weibo were overflowing with support from Lin Yi's fans. Chinese supporters flooded both platforms, and even U.S. fans started noticing.
Back in Miami, the Heat's pre-game show fell flat online. Critics called it uninspired. But once the ball went up, the home crowd roared.
Lin Yi out-jumped Chris Bosh on the opening tip, but his first shot rimmed out. Wade grabbed the rebound and streaked coast-to-coast for a quick bucket.
0-2.
The arena erupted.
Moments later, Wade swiped the ball and lobbed to LeBron, who hammered it home.
0-4. The place was shaking.
"The Knicks need to settle down fast," commentator Yu Jia warned on the Chinese broadcast.
Chauncey Billups slowed the next possession, locking eyes with Lin Yi. Your turn.
Lin Yi nodded. James shaded him tightly, daring a drive. Lin Yi thought about a pick-and-roll—then felt that old spark.
Limitless Range activated.
He stepped back, deep behind the arc. James blinked. He's not really—
Swish.
3-4.
The crowd fell into a sudden hush.
Zhang's voice cut in on the broadcast. "That's why he works on those deep threes every day. James can't press up too much, or Lin Yi will blow by him. A big shot to shut the home noise down."
.
The Heat looked like a team backed up to the cliff.
They'd already dropped six straight to the Knicks between the regular season and playoffs, but every game had been a crash course in how to slow New York down.
Miami's plan was simple: you don't really stop Lin Yi from shooting—you try to bother him into missing. Bosh could crowd him, LeBron could shade him, but no one could take away his attempts.
It wasn't about Lin Yi being some untouchable superstar towering over James or Bosh. Nobody stops a pure scorer completely—just like nobody ever truly shut down Kobe in his prime.
Tonight, the Heat played their best version of that strategy. Switch every pick-and-roll, rotate like mad, and trust their athleticism. It takes brutal conditioning to keep that up, but after Riley's endless drill training, James and Wade had the lungs for it.
Six minutes in, New York trailed 9–14, and D'Antoni signaled a timeout.
The Knicks' offense had stalled. Lin Yi could get 40 or even 50 if he forced it, but he knew better: one man can't set the rhythm all night.
On the bench, D'Antoni tapped Lou Williams on the shoulder. Marbury slid the clipboard to Lin Yi without a word—this was their routine now.
"Lou," Lin Yi said, arranging magnets on the board, "they're switching everything. After the screen, you'll see Bosh on you. Forget the quick jumper—use your speed, get past him. We'll give you those small-on-big matchups."
Lou nodded, eyes sharp.
Billups leaned in. "And when you get to the lane, remember—don't fire the first pass straight to the corner, even if it looks open."
Lou blinked. "Why not? If it's open…"
"Because their weak-side help comes from that baseline," Billups cut in. "First pass is bait. Make them rotate twice."
Lin Yi added, "I'll be waiting at the left 45. You attack from the right. If they trap you, float it high to me and cut out. Simple."
"You got this," said Billups.
Lou exhaled and grinned. "Got it. I'll make it work."
When play resumed, Tyson and Billups were out.
Lin at centre, Battier checked in as a stretch four, and Lou ran the point.
From Miami's bench, Erik Spoelstra frowned. They're going small? Now?
Lou dribbled up, crossover snapping. Bosh tried to stay in front, but Lou slid past like water. Just as predicted, the weak-side defender darted over. Lou lofted a looping pass toward the left wing.
Lin Yi leapt, snatched it mid-air, and, without landing, whipped it to the corner. Wade had no choice but to follow Lou out, leaving Danny Green alone.
Splash. 12–14.
On the Knicks bench, Billups grinned. "That's the play. Five shooters on the floor. They can't cover it all."
Marbury chuckled.
Next trip down, Lou repeated the move. Same reaction, same result—this time, Battier buried the corner three. 15–16.
Lin Yi clapped both scorers on the back, pumping them with confidence. "Perfect. Keep that pressure!"
Across the court, Spoelstra finally waved for a timeout. He'd realized what New York was doing: sacrificing size for speed, trusting Lin Yi to protect the paint while everyone else stretched Miami to the edges.
.
Lou Williams played his role perfectly in the opening stretch. After one quarter of this Eastern Conference Finals clash between the Knicks and the Heat, New York held a slim 29–28 lead.
When Miami tightened its defense, the Knicks countered. Chris Bosh, unfortunately, looked like the odd man out. With New York's spacing and ball movement, the Dragon King found his wings clipped.
Lou only had four points in that first quarter, but his off-ball movement opened lanes for Lin Yi, who quietly stacked up five assists.
"Zhang, Lin Yi isn't hunting shots tonight, but the assists are piling up," Yu Jia observed on the broadcast.
"Exactly," Zhang replied. "Lin plays with real patience. He never forces it. The Knicks are committed to team basketball, and Lin's taken the role of floor general."
Early in the second, Lin grabbed a seat and watched while LeBron James kept attacking without a break. James showcased a series of mid-post fadeaways—something closer to a crab-step lean than Dirk Nowitzki's famous one-legged fade.
Those moves aren't easy. The classic Dirk shot saves energy and relies on balance and wingspan. Durant and even Kobe have used it when they needed a cleaner look late in games. LeBron's version is different—more of a wide-stance—but it was working. Lance Stephenson caught the worst of it, giving up bucket after bucket.
"We can't let LeBron score at will," someone barked from the Knicks bench as the scoreboard flipped to 33–38 in Miami's favor.
D'Antoni exchanged a glance with Lin Yi and tapped Danilo Gallinari on the shoulder.
"Danilo, give him a taste of the real fade," Lin teased, earning a half-smile from the Italian forward.
Gallinari had the size and touch to make LeBron work, and the Knicks wanted to use him to sap James' energy. The one-legged fade demands balance and finesse—not many can do it consistently—but Gallo had quietly sharpened that weapon.
Lin returned after a seven-minute breather with the Knicks down 44–47. He immediately attacked Bosh, who'd already burned plenty of energy defending the perimeter and chasing Lou Williams earlier.
Bang—easy finish inside. 46-47
"Look at that," Zhang said on the broadcast. "Bosh can't contain Lin Yi one-on-one. Last year, some people said Bosh could slow him down, but Lin owns that matchup now."
By halftime, the Knicks were back on top, 56–55. LeBron had poured in 26 first-half points, headband discarded, fully locked in. Wade added 15. Bosh, stuck rotating on defense, managed just six points and two rebounds.
"This Heat team still hasn't found the perfect balance for their Big Three," Zhang noted. "Meanwhile, these Knicks are already playing with playoff composure."
D'Antoni's up-tempo system had turned every Knick into a big-moment player, and Lin Yi knew it. But he also knew the job wasn't finished.
.
The Heat, sensing the series slipping away, came out of halftime desperate to stay alive.
James and Wade suddenly caught fire from deep, and the American Airlines Arena roared to life.
For the first time, all series Miami led by double digits—60–70.
"This is our house. We don't lose here," Wade told the bench as the Knicks called a timeout.
Sweat streamed down James' forehead. He had a towel over his head with his fingers intertwined, repeating in his head: Stay calm. Stay calm.
Back in October, even Pat Riley couldn't have imagined the Heat would be on their heels like this in the conference finals. Erik Spoelstra knew this was the night to turn things around. Cut the deficit to 1–2, unleash their talent, and maybe the tide shifts.
Bosh thought back to those battles with Lin Yi when he was still in Toronto. Live or die, we can do this.
On the Knicks' bench, Mike D'Antoni met Lin Yi's eyes. Before the coach could speak, Lin said quietly, "I got it. Leave it to me."
His expression was calm, but inside, he knew the danger. If Miami kept stretching the lead, doubt would creep in—maybe we throw this one away, save energy for the next. He couldn't allow that.
The Knicks needed a run. Tonight had to end 3–0.
.
The third quarter turned into a slugfest.
SBC Gallinari splashed a three.
James answered with a thunderous drive and dunk.
Commissioner Stern, watching from courtside, leaned toward Adam Silver. "Imagine if we got seven games of this," he said with a half-smile.
"Pure cinema," he said whilst arcing his hands in the air.
Miami held the edge. Just before the horn, Wade drilled a leaning jumper to push the lead back to ten, 88–78. James wrapped him in a hug as the crowd chanted MVP.
.
Early in the fourth, Lin was ready to play the rest without a break when Shaquille O'Neal rose, placing a huge hand on his shoulder.
"Phil always said stars need four to six minutes' rest in the fourth," Shaq rumbled. No challenge, just a veteran's nudge.
Lin hesitated. "You sure you're good, Shaq?"
"Kid, when I won MVP, you were still in school." The big man grinned. "Hold on to the Big Diesel's hand."
So the 39-year-old legend checked in with Battier, Gallinari, Danny Green, and Billups while James, Wade, and Bosh stayed on for the full forty-eight.
Shaq knew every corner of this arena. He'd one day have his jersey retired here. But tonight, Miami was the enemy.
"I promised my son I'd bring him a fifth ring," he bellowed toward the rafters, voice echoing like it was 2001 again.
Spoelstra considered the Hack-a-Shaq, but wavered—Shaq's free throws had been too good in Game 1. Billups wasted no time feeding the big man in the post. Bosh wrapped him up, Titanic-style, but Shaq powered through, flipping in a left-handed shot and drawing the foul.
"Two and the one!" the referee announced as the arena gasped.
Lin clenched a fist on the bench.
Shaq hit the free throw, beaming like a kid. For six furious minutes, he battled until D'Antoni finally called a timeout. Gallinari and Green held him upright.
"Can't fall here, Shaq. You gotta keep your image," Billups said.
Shaq only smiled, reaching out to ruffle Lin's hair as he subbed out. "Lin—your turn."
Scoreboard: 94–98. Five minutes left.
..
In New York, Elizabeth Olsen leaned toward the TV, fists tight.
"He's never let anyone down," she whispered when her friends asked why she cared so much.
..
James and Wade shared a look that said everything: Still got more?
Yeah.
Then let's finish this.
Lin delivered—four straight points to tie it. James and Wade answered, trading blows as tension thickened. Barkley knocked over Kenny Smith's water. Cameras clicked nonstop.
With 26 seconds left, Lin hit his 31st point. 107–107.
Spoelstra called the Heat's final timeout. No timeouts remained for New York. Everyone knew the plan: drain the clock, trust the stars.
The inbound went to Wade. He dribbled high, eyes calm, clock ticking under ten. Danny Green edged closer, hand on Wade's hip. The refs would let contact go now.
Wade suddenly stepped back—Green didn't expect a three.
Swish.
107–110. Just 2.9 seconds left. The arena erupted.
Wade threw his arms wide, but James' celebration froze when he spotted Lin already sprinting toward the baseline.
Tyson Chandler grabbed the ball, fired the quick inbound. Lin caught it just past midcourt with barely a blink to spare. No dribble, no adjustment. James and Bosh closed fast.
Back in college, Lin once told Steph Curry a shooter's first job is belief: Every shot is going in.
He rose from the logo and let it fly.
The horn sounded as the ball sailed, hung in the air like it was searching for home—then dropped clean through.,
110–110.
The Garden bars back in New York exploded. Across China, millions of fans shouted Lin Yi's name. On the floor in Miami, his teammates piled on top of him before he got off his gunshot celebration as the game hurtled into overtime.
...
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