The Knicks just stunned everyone.
They kicked off the new season by crushing the Miami Heat 115–98 on the road, and Knicks fans? Yeah, they're losing their minds.
I mean, c'mon—this is the Heat we're talking about. One of the toughest playoff teams in the league. Meanwhile, the Knicks were scraping the bottom of the standings last year. But now? They walk into Miami and dominate. Suddenly, it feels like the Knicks are for real.
Knicks fans are hyped, and a big chunk of the credit's going to Lin Yi and Gallo.
Sure, the Knicks looked decent in preseason, but most folks brushed that off. No one takes preseason seriously, right?
ESPN had them ranked 21st in the league going into the season, and that was generous, mostly because of Lin's potential. But after watching that opening game? Let's just say that ranking might need an update.
The Knicks absolutely lit it up from beyond the arc—took 41 threes, nailed 19 of them, a scorching 46%. And it wasn't just the shooting. They threw down a bunch of dunks, ran clean plays, and Lin Yi? He showed fans something brand new.
He wasn't just some flashy rookie. He played like a vet. Ran the offense from the high post, banged in the low block, and made reads like a point guard. Dude looked complete.
Knicks fans are already all over the Clippers' management.
"The Clippers must've pitied us," one fan said online. "How else do you explain us getting a guy like this?"
Lin's debut stats were straight-up nasty: 19 points, 10 boards, 8 assists, 3 blocks, 1 steal. He shot 6-of-10 from two, 1-of-3 from deep, and knocked down all four of his free throws. And he did all that in just 30 minutes.
Honestly, the game was over by the third quarter. The Heat made a tiny push in the fourth—Wade played five minutes and helped close the gap a little—but it never felt close.
Coach D'Antoni was about to sub Lin back in, but Lin waved him off. "Coach, we've got this. Let the other guys get some burn." D'Antoni scratched his head. Most rookies are begging for more minutes, and here's this kid turning them down?
But it made sense. With the lead that big, no point running the starters into the ground.
Gallinari ended up leading the team with a career-high 32 points, going 8-for-17 from three and 4-for-6 at the line and 1-for-1 from two.
Harrington chipped in 20 and 8.
Duhon had 10.
Douglas added 12.
Both David Lee and Lin cracked double digits. Six players in double figures—beautiful balance.
If there was one complaint from fans, it was about Nate Robinson.
"If Nate didn't tank the shooting percentage, we could've blown them out even worse," one guy tweeted.
Meanwhile, Wade dropped a ridiculous 47 points, almost a triple-double, and still couldn't save Miami.
Beasley went 1-of-11.
Chalmers 1-of-7.
Heat fans were calling them "undercover agents."
After the game, Gallinari couldn't stop smiling. "Coach has changed everything," he told reporters. "I love what Coach D'Antoni's drawing up. Lin and he encourage me to shoot more, He doesn't feel like a rookie. Feels like a vet who knows exactly how to make his teammates better. I love playing with him."
Harrington echoed the love. "We're better now. It's obvious. Lin being unselfish with the ball and always looking for the best passing option with his vision has boosted our offense. Sets screens, boxes out, and does the dirty work. And believe me, if he wanted to score 30, he could. But he doesn't—because he's leading this team the right way."
Coach D'Antoni didn't hold back either. "I feel lucky to coach Lin," he said. "His basketball IQ is through the roof. He just gets the game. Gallinari was also a big boost to the offense. He made the most of the opportunities, helping to win this game."
Of course, the media had to stir the pot. Someone asked D'Antoni if Lin's rookie season might be even better than LeBron's. The coach, being diplomatic, answered, " It is just a game, too early for such comparisons. Plus, they're different players, different styles, different roles. LeBron scores a lot, and Lin organizes the team. He's our core."
That comment blew up.
"Wait—so LeBron can't organize a team?" fans snapped. "Is he throwing shade at King James?"
" D'Antoni doesn't know the f##k he is talking about! You know the other 29 teams would kill for LeBron."
"LeBron is the most unselfish player in the league. He passes up game-winners to involve teammates!"
"What the f##k is this Coach with no rings talking about!?"
Meanwhile, Lin Yi was just sitting there like, "...What did I do?"
But he got it. LeBron James, heir apparent to the NBA throne of Michael Jordan, being in the same conversation with a one-game rookie ticked some fans off. But if they made the playoffs? That changed everything.
And Lin wasn't some selfish, ball-hogging rookie. He moved the ball, set up teammates, and played team-first. That kind of guy? Everyone loves playing with him.
If he wanted, Lin could put some pressure on management on decisions. He had the clout. He was the No. 1 pick. But he wasn't that type. He was about winning.
And with KD's rise still fresh in everyone's minds, the Knicks wouldn't mind giving Lin a season to figure things out—even if it meant he missed shots.
Popovich even chimed in. "I think scouts blew it with this draft class. These kids are smart. Especially Lin. As long as New York keeps it together, they're a playoff team."
"No way I'm going to San Antonio," he joked to a teammate later. "You've seen how Pop runs his players into the ground. Old man Duncan is probably gonna disappear after he retires."
He wasn't trying to be the next Duncan.
He was trying to be the first Lin Yi.
Meanwhile, across the league, 2009 rookies were making noise.
Steph Curry dropped 18 and 6 in his debut, even while sharing the ball with Monta Ellis.
James Harden came off the bench for OKC and quietly put up 14, 5, and 4.
DeMar DeRozan, written off as "just a dunker," went off for 19, 4, and 3 for Toronto—and even drained a top-of-the-arc three.
Jonny Flynn added 15 and 4 for the Timberwolves.
More importantly? All of their teams won their first games.
Even Wade shouted them out after the loss. "This rookie class was underrated. Scouts messed up. I like their energy—keeps the league fresh."
Kobe, in an interview, grinned. "Might be time to write a book. These kids need some guidance."
Back in the league office, David Stern was already thinking ahead.
Lin was gold. The whole rookie class was heating up. Another wave of hype was incoming.
Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver, half-joking, said, "We could call them the 'Miracle Generation' if they keep this up in the coming years. No one expected anything from them—and now they're changing everything."
Stern gave him a thumbs-up. The man knew good PR when he saw it.
Only downside? Ricky Rubio was out with an injury. Otherwise, they'd have the perfect six-man lineup of breakout stars.
Every one of them had something to prove.
As for Lin?
Forget being someone else's successor. Forget comparisons.
He was building his legacy, starting in New York.
...
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