This is Steve Garfield's personal tumblrblog.

Steve Garfield's Tumblr Blog

  • My Book
  • Archive
  • About
gotemcoach:

On February 3rd, the New York Knicks lost to the Boston Celtics.  Third-string point guard Jeremy Lin played just over six and a half minutes.  He missed all three of his shots and turned the ball over once to boot.
The next day, Jeremy Lin scored 25 points, dished out 7 assists, and had 4 rebounds in 35 minutes.  Ever since, basketball fans have been inundated with Jeremy Lin news, Jeremy Lin back story, and worst of all, a seemingly unending stream of tired Jeremy Lin puns.
I mean, honestly.  If Russia ever found out how many man hours we’ve spent thinking of words that start with “IN,” they’d invade.  Our nation would surely fall.
In the span of a week, Jeremy Lin went from being an interesting story, to a great story, to an obnoxious story.  Then last night happened.
As I do every year, I made the decision to eat cereal for a week, so I could afford to buy a ticket to see the Los Angeles Lakers’ only trip to Madison Square Garden.  I paid for Kobe. I got my money’s worth from Lin.
After missing the Knicks’ first shot, Lin scored the Knicks’ first basket - a 22-foot three pointer.  He followed that up with an assist to Tyson Chandler, a 19-footer, another assist to Tyson Chandler, a 16-footer, and a steal which he took in for a breakaway layup.
Timeout Los Angeles Lakers.  It was an ambush.

After establishing his outside game (a supposed weakness), Lin went inside, shooting runners in the lane, and finishing at the basket with his soon-to-be-patented spin move (no doubt regrettably called the “Lin Cycle”…here come the Russians!!!).  He had 18 by halftime. 
When Lin continued his attack in the 3rd, the Lakers’ big men adjusted, but so did Jeremy, on the fly.  He drew contact, and either got to the free throw line, or kicked the ball outside to his teammates.  When Kobe Bryant willed the Lakers back within 3 during the 4th quarter, and the Knicks needed Lin the most, he was there.  He was there, like a battle-tested, “been there before,” cold-blooded killer.   Ice cold, Jack.
A rebound, an assist, another rebound, and a 19-footer he stroked right in Pau Gasol’s Spanish face.  In 83 seconds, the Knicks lead was back to 9.  Timeout Los Angeles.  Déjà vu.

Lin wasn’t done.  It was time to keep working the outside.  The Lakers were on their heels.  On three consecutive plays, the Knicks’ new starting point guard stuck another long jump shot, followed by Kobe missing one of his own, after which Lin drilled another three pointer.  Game over.  The last two of his career-high 38-points came when Lin sliced through the Lakers’ Top 5 team defense, then deftly slipped past the 7-foot Gasol, to reverse his layup.
I couldn’t even see it.  I had to ask someone.  The two guys in front of me were hugging.  And screaming at each other.  I’ve never heard Madison Square Garden louder.

I spent the whole game mystified.  At times it seemed like the fans were carrying Lin to new heights - as though the raucous applause and booming MVP chants were fueling him.  At other times, Lin was the one waking up the crowd, snatching momentum back for his Knicks.  Was Jeremy Lin’s confidence through the roof because the fans were cheering him on?  Or were the fans cheering him on because his confidence put him in the zone?
I spent a lot of time (read as: “almost all of it”) trying to decide whether Jeremy Lin was legit or not.  Did I just want him to be legit?  The Garden faithful clearly wanted him to be legit, so was that emotion affecting me?  Is “legit” even really a word?  Don’t I have to say “legitimate?”
I just kept asking myself, “Is Jeremy Lin for real?”  During timeouts.  In between plays.  Over and over and over.  And then the answer hit me.
It doesn’t matter.
I saw one hell of a performance at 32nd and 7th in New York City.  Maybe it wasn’t Kobe’s 61, but it was quite similarly supernatural.  Tonight, I saw a human being, just like you and me, not just overcome his opponent, but overcome the limitations of his own body and mind, to excel at the highest level.  Whether he becomes the next Walt Frazier doesn’t matter.  Tonight, Jeremy Lin touched greatness.  Tonight, Jeremy Lin was Great.
Isn’t that why we watch sports?  Don’t we hope to see something amazing?  That’s why I wrote this.  I needed to tell you to turn on your televisions.  Go to the Garden.  Find out when the Knicks come to town.  Don’t miss what’s going on because you’re trying to analyze it.  Just take the time to enjoy this.
Granted, I don’t exactly know what this is, but I do know it’s special.
Or maybe I’m just certifiably Linsane?
@gotem_coach

gotemcoach:

On February 3rd, the New York Knicks lost to the Boston Celtics.  Third-string point guard Jeremy Lin played just over six and a half minutes.  He missed all three of his shots and turned the ball over once to boot.

The next day, Jeremy Lin scored 25 points, dished out 7 assists, and had 4 rebounds in 35 minutes.  Ever since, basketball fans have been inundated with Jeremy Lin news, Jeremy Lin back story, and worst of all, a seemingly unending stream of tired Jeremy Lin puns.

I mean, honestly.  If Russia ever found out how many man hours we’ve spent thinking of words that start with “IN,” they’d invade.  Our nation would surely fall.

In the span of a week, Jeremy Lin went from being an interesting story, to a great story, to an obnoxious story.  Then last night happened.

As I do every year, I made the decision to eat cereal for a week, so I could afford to buy a ticket to see the Los Angeles Lakers’ only trip to Madison Square Garden.  I paid for Kobe. I got my money’s worth from Lin.

After missing the Knicks’ first shot, Lin scored the Knicks’ first basket - a 22-foot three pointer.  He followed that up with an assist to Tyson Chandler, a 19-footer, another assist to Tyson Chandler, a 16-footer, and a steal which he took in for a breakaway layup.

Timeout Los Angeles Lakers.  It was an ambush.

After establishing his outside game (a supposed weakness), Lin went inside, shooting runners in the lane, and finishing at the basket with his soon-to-be-patented spin move (no doubt regrettably called the “Lin Cycle”…here come the Russians!!!).  He had 18 by halftime. 

When Lin continued his attack in the 3rd, the Lakers’ big men adjusted, but so did Jeremy, on the fly.  He drew contact, and either got to the free throw line, or kicked the ball outside to his teammates.  When Kobe Bryant willed the Lakers back within 3 during the 4th quarter, and the Knicks needed Lin the most, he was there.  He was there, like a battle-tested, “been there before,” cold-blooded killer.   Ice cold, Jack.

A rebound, an assist, another rebound, and a 19-footer he stroked right in Pau Gasol’s Spanish face.  In 83 seconds, the Knicks lead was back to 9.  Timeout Los Angeles.  Déjà vu.

Lin wasn’t done.  It was time to keep working the outside.  The Lakers were on their heels.  On three consecutive plays, the Knicks’ new starting point guard stuck another long jump shot, followed by Kobe missing one of his own, after which Lin drilled another three pointer.  Game over.  The last two of his career-high 38-points came when Lin sliced through the Lakers’ Top 5 team defense, then deftly slipped past the 7-foot Gasol, to reverse his layup.

I couldn’t even see it.  I had to ask someone.  The two guys in front of me were hugging.  And screaming at each other.  I’ve never heard Madison Square Garden louder.

I spent the whole game mystified.  At times it seemed like the fans were carrying Lin to new heights - as though the raucous applause and booming MVP chants were fueling him.  At other times, Lin was the one waking up the crowd, snatching momentum back for his Knicks.  Was Jeremy Lin’s confidence through the roof because the fans were cheering him on?  Or were the fans cheering him on because his confidence put him in the zone?

I spent a lot of time (read as: “almost all of it”) trying to decide whether Jeremy Lin was legit or not.  Did I just want him to be legit?  The Garden faithful clearly wanted him to be legit, so was that emotion affecting me?  Is “legit” even really a word?  Don’t I have to say “legitimate?”

I just kept asking myself, “Is Jeremy Lin for real?”  During timeouts.  In between plays.  Over and over and over.  And then the answer hit me.

It doesn’t matter.

I saw one hell of a performance at 32nd and 7th in New York City.  Maybe it wasn’t Kobe’s 61, but it was quite similarly supernatural.  Tonight, I saw a human being, just like you and me, not just overcome his opponent, but overcome the limitations of his own body and mind, to excel at the highest level.  Whether he becomes the next Walt Frazier doesn’t matter.  Tonight, Jeremy Lin touched greatness.  Tonight, Jeremy Lin was Great.

Isn’t that why we watch sports?  Don’t we hope to see something amazing?  That’s why I wrote this.  I needed to tell you to turn on your televisions.  Go to the Garden.  Find out when the Knicks come to town.  Don’t miss what’s going on because you’re trying to analyze it.  Just take the time to enjoy this.

Granted, I don’t exactly know what this is, but I do know it’s special.

Or maybe I’m just certifiably Linsane?

@gotem_coach

Feb 11 2012
1,463 notes
  1. creativehut liked this
  2. bigfinance liked this
  3. live-sport liked this
  4. anime-hentai liked this
  5. thevertigoknight reblogged this from n-azz
  6. foreverchinkyxo reblogged this from n-azz
  7. n-azz liked this
  8. n-azz reblogged this from nbaoffseason
  9. selena-gomez-tattoo liked this
  10. reinnervate reblogged this from nbaoffseason
  11. reinnervate liked this
  12. aharpurr reblogged this from soupsoup
  13. looking-4-a-gentleman reblogged this from divinedecor
  14. imaginativeswagg reblogged this from divinedecor
  15. divinedecor reblogged this from cha0tic-mess
  16. pinkparisian liked this
  17. itzmoggie liked this
  18. itzmoggie reblogged this from ayeemegan
  19. ydarlinaintyoujusthesweetesthing liked this
  20. basedmikail liked this
  21. meirzirkongarciabuena liked this
  22. meirzirkongarciabuena reblogged this from gotemcoach
  23. kinggreen reblogged this from gotemcoach
  24. kinggreen liked this
  25. cumcockcockcock reblogged this from sj87
  26. 92integra liked this
  27. 92integra reblogged this from gotemcoach
  28. kiddlexx reblogged this from thewhiteboychris
  29. ijusthatesleepingalone reblogged this from thiiismy0wnw0rld
  30. mostdopeest-19xx reblogged this from thiiismy0wnw0rld
  31. thiiismy0wnw0rld reblogged this from gotemcoach
  32. itseddieduhh liked this
  33. highofflife20 reblogged this from gotemcoach
  34. bejelousimaguy reblogged this from gotemcoach
  35. harpreetkaur liked this
  36. bvaldez90 reblogged this from sinncityy
  37. avenger-seventeen reblogged this from gotemcoach
  38. sheighh liked this
  39. violetslikeeboomboompow reblogged this from gotemcoach
  40. relaxandl0ve reblogged this from boyoftomorrow
  41. curiosity-wins reblogged this from gotemcoach
  42. munchiecookie reblogged this from boyoftomorrow
  43. krimizin6668 liked this
  44. thatasiankidd18 reblogged this from gotemcoach
  45. ninopvkdbsl reblogged this from gotemcoach
  46. 658x510 liked this
  47. themorningskyline reblogged this from gotemcoach
  48. omgittherapper reblogged this from gotemcoach
  49. keep-it-trillaa reblogged this from boyoftomorrow
  50. worduppp reblogged this from boyoftomorrow
  51. Show more notesLoading...
Copyright © 2007–2012 Steve Garfield's Tumblr Blog ‒ HD Exhibit Theme by Dustin Hoffman