Garden. It was a meeting between the
10th and 11th best teams in the East, two floundering franchises
seemingly destined for failure. The Knicks had lost of 11 of 13 games
when Jeremy Lin, a twice-released point guard out of Harvard,
unassumingly checked into the action.
At
times, the nightmares concocted by talking heads -- issues with
spacing; a lack of offensive concentration -- were realized. After
racing to a 13-3 lead to open the game, the Knicks were outscored 39-20
over the next 14:41
The
rest is history. Lin scored 25 points in that Feb. 4 game to spark a
99-92 victory over New Jersey. He averaged 25 points and 9.5 assists
over his next eight starts, improbably lifting the Knicks to .500. His
story captivated the world -- a refreshingly genuine
nobody-believed-in-me tale that dominated headlines from Brooklyn to
Beijing.
On
Monday, however, that script was flipped. Despite Lin's best efforts
(21 points, nine assists, seven rebounds), the Nets upset the surging
Knicks at home, 100-92. And with it, New York's roller coaster of a home
stand (beat Sacramento, lost to New Orleans, beat Dallas, lost to New
Jersey) took another surprising twist.
"The whole team was out of sync," said Knicks coach Mike D'Antoni. "We lost what we were doing the last eight or nine games."
That
much was clear, with the Knicks displaying a carelessness that was
absent against the defending champ Mavericks. It prompts the inevitable
question: Will the newfound allegiance between Lin and Carmelo Anthony
-- who scored just 11 points in his first game back since suffering a
strained groin on Feb. 6 -- develop into the perfect union that New York
so fiercely hopes?
"Any
time you have new players coming back, your identity as a team is going
to change," said Lin. "That's what we need to figure out, what our
identity is gonna be."






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