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Jeremy Lin shackeling hurts the Rockets: Almost treated with Tim Tebow disdain
The Houston Rockets have one near superstar player, one second round draft pick turned surprise shot maker and one attacking point guard. James Harden, Chandler Parsons and Jeremy Lin are the only three players in Kevin McHale's rotation who can put consistent pressure on an opposing defense.
So why are only two of the three treated like indispensable pieces while the other is often left to languish and allowed to get lost?
It's the side story of the Rockets' endlessly entertaining season and it will become the story if Houston somehow blows it and fails to make the playoffs for the fourth straight year. It comes up again because the Rockets managed to lose by 30 points to the team they are chasing in the playoff race and shoot 32.6 percent from the field Sunday night while not feeding the one hot hand among their admittedly small-time version of a big three.
Why is it so hard for McHale to feature Jeremy Lin?
They paid him $25 million, but they sometimes act like Lin is Tim Tebow on the New York Jets: A novelty act they don't know what to do with.
Even Calvin Murphy, the CSN studio commentator who often seems to be holding back a little to make sure he doesn't offend anyone in the team's front office, noted the lack of touches for Lin.
"Jeremy Lin was shooting the ball well," Murphy said on air. "He should have gotten more shots."
Yes, much of the Rockets' offense depends on moving the ball and hitting the open man. But when a team like Golden State is happily daring guys like Parsons (2 for 13) and Donatas Motiejunas (2 for 11) to shoot, it's time to put the ball in Lin's hands and let him attack the rim.
The Rockets never have any difficulty in highlighting Harden or Parsons when they have the hot hand. Only Lin is never force feed. He is the only one among this little big three who would be left with just 16 shots on a night when he is the one player firing at anything close to a 50 percent rate.
It all goes back to the Rockets perplexing reluctance to treat Jeremy Lin like a bona fide, budding potential point guard star.
They paid him $25 million, but they sometimes act like Lin is Tim Tebow on the New York Jets: A novelty act they don't know what to do with — and a talent they've never fully embraced. It's no secret that Rockets owner Leslie Alexander pushed general manager Daryl Morey to reacquire Lin after the cut blunder.
An advanced stats guy like Morey should be thrilled. Jeremy Lin's Player Efficiency Rating of 15.07 is ultra close to the beloved Parsons' 15.13 PER.
Heck, Alexander hung up on Morey during the height of Linsanity in anger.
But the crazy thing is Alexander has been proven to be largely right. Whether the Lin signing is owner driven or not, it's proven to be a smart basketball move. Lin is playing better than could reasonably be expected considering the circumstances: Young player in a new offense on a new team coming off knee surgery.
He's shown flashes of being the difference maker he was in New York (see that post trading deadline win over Oklahoma City when Houston was short handed and the coaches had no choice but to play Lin huge minutes). He's certainly outplayed his Gotham replacement Raymond Felton of the sputtering Knicks.
An advanced stats guy like Morey should be thrilled. Jeremy Lin's Player Efficiency Rating of 15.07 is ultra close to the beloved Parsons' 15.13 PER.
Yet Lin only plays an average of 32.5 minutes per game, far below guys like Arron Afflalo (36.6), Klay Thompson (35.7) George Hill (34.8), Kemba Walker (34.2) and Mike Conley (34.1). And beyond even the numbers (which say plenty), it's the way Jeremy Lin's time is yo-yoed around that brings up serious questions about how committed the Rockets are to developing him. Long fourth quarter benchings are not uncommon for Lin.
When Kelvin Sampson filled in during McHale's heartbreaking absence, he clearly favored the horrific-shooting Toney Douglas (he of the 12.59 PER) over Lin, showing as much care and sense as he did while running Indiana's program.
Getting rid of Douglas has helped some, but the Rockets still seem hesitant to fully embrace Lin as a prime building block.
And please don't bring up defense. Parsons hasn't played much defense his second season either and he's still guaranteed big minutes. Everyone knows Daryl Morey does not care about defense.
NBA Playoff Implications
For a while the curious use of Jeremy Lin arguably only affected Lin. But now it's threatening to deliver a critical blow to the team's playoff chances. The Los Angeles Lakers are not going to stop surging because Kobe Bryant is hobbled. The Warriors finally showed the same type of fight as their coach Sunday night in Houston. And as poorly as Utah has played it's only a Wednesday win in Toyota away from throwing a serious panic into the Rockets.
These work-in-progress Rockets do not have a real big three yet. They can only rely on the three they do have.
"There's something wrong with your determination," Murphy said of Houston's showing against Golden State.
No, there's something wrong with the rotation.
If you're going to go down, you have to go down with your best players. These work-in-progress Rockets do not have a real big three yet. They can only rely on the three they do have.
That means turning Jeremy Lin loose and letting him play free. There's no question Lin deferred too much on his own earlier in the season. Now, it's clearly more about coaching and opportunity.
It's too late to turn Lin into Tim Tebow. It's time to commit. He's one of the Rockets' best options and has to be treated like one.
Time's running out. Grab the playoffs and the future. Stop running from Jeremy Lin.
MTV:Jeremy Lin Kept His Eye On The Ball During 'Linsani
Video link: HERE
Jeremy Lin Still Has To Pinch Himself Watching 'Linsanity' Documentary
Basketball star says the new film captures what he was 'too busy' to really pay attention to the year of 'Linsanity.'
Jeremy Lin conquered Harvard, the NBA and Sundance. But given the "Linsanity" of his past year, these accomplishments shouldn't be surprising.
Lin set off a media frenzy when he became the first Asian-American to start in the NBA. Former MTV News producer Evan Jackson Leong immortalized the ascent in his "Linsanity" documentary. It's a look at how Lin made history and challenged the stereotypes America didn't admit it had. However, the basketball phenom was oblivious to all of it. Lin tells MTV News he was too busy living the dream to read about it.
Jeremy Lin conquered Harvard, the NBA and Sundance. But given the "Linsanity" of his past year, these accomplishments shouldn't be surprising.
Lin set off a media frenzy when he became the first Asian-American to start in the NBA. Former MTV News producer Evan Jackson Leong immortalized the ascent in his "Linsanity" documentary. It's a look at how Lin made history and challenged the stereotypes America didn't admit it had. However, the basketball phenom was oblivious to all of it. Lin tells MTV News he was too busy living the dream to read about it.
MTV: Jeremy, congrats on this film. This is a helluva story, and a lot of us know it, but to see it in this format is more powerful, in a way. It's a lot to absorb for an audience. I mean, for me, I can count, in the last couple years, the number of times on one hand that I've had goosebumps while watching a film, but I felt them watching it. Give me a sense of what you go through watching this story of yours.
Lin: I just told Evan [Leong] on the way up here, it's crazy to watch this thing and think, "This all actually happened." I still have to pinch myself. It's crazy. It happens and you go through it, but it's kind of a blur, but when I take a step back and look at it, I think, "Whoa, that was pretty incredible." It was a lot of fun.
MTV: I would think a film like this is kind of a great marker for you. It's this ultimate memento in a way. You went through this, this "Linsanity" at the time, and it's still going on in different ways. But now you have this kind of document that can help with your perspective on what happened. Do you feel like in that moment, in those weeks when all the insanity was happening, it was kind of hard to absorb? And this is helping you to remember it in a different way?
Lin: Yeah, definitely. I did zero absorbing during the process. I was just focused on one game to the next, and trying to not get complacent, and worry about the season and the next opponent. I think now I can start to appreciate everything that really happened. I can take a step back and say, "Wow, this was an incredible thing that happened." And now we have this film that I can always look back on, and I can show it to my kids, and show them all the cool things I got to do in my life during that stretch.
MTV: Seeing the people who pop up in this film, from The Rock to, literally, the President of the United States, again, were you absorbing this at the time? When you saw these talking heads popping up and talking about you in that way — Give me a sense of what it was like to hear the President of the United States talking about you in that way.
Lin: I actually did know, didn't even hear anything until the rough cut of the documentary when I actually realized he had said stuff. So it was crazy. It was crazy to see all the different things, because I don't really watch much TV or read the papers much. So when I saw all the different things, like what Kevin Durant [Oklahoma City Thunder] had said, I just thought, "Whoa, I didn't realize that."
MTV: It also captures that infamous game with the Lakers and, obviously, Kobe [Bryant]'s comment became huge at the time. How are you and Kobe doing today? Have you worked it out, is it all good?
Lin: Everything is all good. We're kind of in this tight play-off push against each other.
MTV:One thing that the film does touch on, which was a dark side to the story, was this undercurrent of racism. Whether it was headlines or allusions, it was almost like people weren't even thinking in the way they were speaking about you at times. Did that register, at the time? Did it shock you, the kinds of things you were hearing? Or was that lost amidst all the great stuff that was happening?
Lin:For me, personally, that was definitely lost because I just didn't care anymore about the racist stuff. I didn't pay attention to it at all. And I didn't even know most of the things that had happened. I had heard about the bigger ones, like the 'Chink in the Armor' headline and stuff like that. But I feel that, for me at this point in my life, I don't really get caught up in that stuff anymore. It's just whatever.
MTV:Last thing for you. Obviously, thanks to your position and your play in the last year plus, you're a role model for people nowadays. And through your efforts to help kids, that's something it sounds like you're embracing, you want to help younger kids. But is there an inherent pressure with that? Do you feel more pressured than ever in terms of being someone that people look up to?
Lin:I love kids, and I love being able to help out in that way. I feel like if I focus on being who I feel like I should be as a person and being a Godly person, everything else should just take care of itself. It doesn't put on any extra pressure. I just want to be as real and authentic as I can, and whatever the impact is, I'll be thankful for it.