The Knicks, who had been enjoying a relatively smooth ride through the season, ran into a painful twist during the Spring Festival game.
Midway through the first half, Shaun Livingston, who had been steadily proving his worth all season, went down in a cruel moment of misfortune. On a fast break, he elevated beautifully, aiming for a dunk that looked destined to make the highlight reel. But as he came down, his foot landed awkwardly on Luis Scola's instep. The landing was ugly—Livingston winced immediately, clutching his leg, the arena falling silent.
The game halted at once. Teammates rushed over while the medical staff carefully helped him off the floor. Livingston tried to walk it off, but the pain was obvious, and soon he disappeared down the tunnel toward the locker room.
The injury meant he would also miss the following games, and early word from the team doctors wasn't encouraging.
Lin Yi, despite all his unique gifts, couldn't help this time. His healing factor did not affect teammates.
The reality was much harsher: Livingston's accident came from his own adrenaline. The dunk looked picture-perfect, but the aftermath was brutal. If he had the chance to do it over, Livingston himself would've settled for a safe layup.
It was a reminder of how cruel the NBA calendar can be. A season is long, and no team survives without bruises. Last year, the Knicks had been lucky to avoid major setbacks, with only a mild sprain to Toney Douglas barely scratching the rotation. But this time was different. Livingston wasn't just another player—he had become a vital piece of the Knicks' bench unit.
Through the season so far, he was averaging just under 18 minutes a night, with 8.4 points, 3.2 rebounds, and 3.5 assists, shooting an efficient 51.4%. Those numbers didn't scream star, but his steady mid-range game and veteran presence had quietly balanced the Knicks' second unit. Losing him left a hole that would have to be filled quickly.
In the TNT booth, the analysts couldn't hide their concern.
"I just hope Shaun's alright," Kenny Smith said with genuine emotion. "He's been through so much already, and he was finally reminding people of the player he could be."
Charles Barkley shook his head. "This is the reality of the NBA. Injuries… they're every player's nightmare. Sometimes it doesn't matter how smart you play or how much you prepare, it just happens."
For Livingston, this was a bitter déjà vu. His entire career had been a battle against injuries, from the catastrophic knee injury in 2007 to the setbacks that followed. Back in the locker room, unable to hold it in, he broke down in tears.
It was heartbreaking for his teammates. Livingston had come to New York on a minimum deal the previous summer, humbling himself and reshaping his game just for the chance to contribute again. And he had done more than that—he'd earned the trust and respect of the entire roster.
At halftime, several Knicks players embraced him. His voice cracked as he turned to Lin Yi, whispering, "I'm sorry, man… I ruined everything."
Lin rested a hand gently on his shoulder. "Shaun, stop it. This isn't the end of the world. We'll hold it down, and when you're ready, we'll be here waiting for you."
The Knicks managed to regroup and pull out the win with composed offense and defense, but the mood in the locker room was far from celebratory. For all the smiles on the scoreboard, the injury cast a long shadow.
Livingston's impact went far beyond his numbers. He was on a minimum contract, yet he often did the little things that guys on bigger deals wouldn't. He defended, he organized, he encouraged. And in a locker room held together by Lin Yi's leadership, Shaun's professionalism added another layer of glue.
The next day, back in New York, an MRI revealed some relief—it wasn't as catastrophic as feared. The diagnosis was a grade two sprain of the medial collateral ligament. The timeline: four to eight weeks. Painful, yes, but survivable.
The medical staff recommended patience, suggesting a cautious return deep into the playoffs, perhaps not until the second round. That gave the Knicks some hope, and more importantly, it gave Livingston a target.
Livingston himself stayed upbeat. He promised to keep coming to Madison Square Garden during his recovery, supporting his teammates from the sideline. True to his nature, he wasn't going to sulk.
Lin Yi and a few teammates visited him at home soon after. They found him in surprisingly good spirits, cracking jokes and brushing off the setback. Lin couldn't help but think ahead: Livingston's resilience would one day be recognized. Years later, he would play a vital role with the Warriors, earning the respect of stars like Kevin Durant, who once admitted he didn't mind taking a pay cut if it meant Shaun could be properly rewarded.
Before leaving, Lin clasped Shaun's shoulder and looked him dead in the eye. "Playoffs, Shaun. That's what we're aiming for. We'll see you back out there when it matters most."
Livingston smiled, a little misty-eyed, but steadier than before. For now, all he wanted was to heal, stay ready, and, if the Knicks would have him, continue his journey in New York.
...
Livingston's injury forced Mike D'Antoni and his staff back to the drawing board. The rotation that had looked balanced only a week ago suddenly had a gap, and there was no easy fix. General manager Donnie Walsh, who had enjoyed a quiet stretch without too many fires to put out, now had to start scanning the market for solutions.
In a coach's meeting the next morning, the ideas came one by one.
The first suggestion was to bump up Pat Ewing Jr. into a larger rotation role. He was already familiar with the system, had a good size for a wing, and worked hard in practice. But everyone knew he wasn't Livingston.
As D'Antoni put it bluntly, "Pat gives us energy, but Shaun gave us organization. It's not the same thing."
The second option was Lou Williams. Lou had been lighting it up off the bench, and on paper, he could slide in as the backup point guard. But D'Antoni frowned during the film session. Lou's game was wired for scoring, not directing traffic.
"He's a bucket," the coach admitted, "but he's not Shaun. He doesn't steady the game. He speeds it up, even when we need calm."
That was the problem—the Knicks' second unit didn't have Lin Yi to anchor them anymore. Without a true organizer, they lived on chaos and energy, which worked against weaker teams. Against playoff-caliber squads, though, it was a recipe for disaster.
First Assistant coach Kenny Atkinson offered a curveball: "Why not use Lin as a point forward again with the second unit? Like last year."
But D'Antoni cut that down immediately. "We're already leaning on him for thirty-eight, thirty-nine minutes a night. If we pile more onto him, we'll break him before the playoffs. No chance."
Billups was another name thrown around, but the veteran was nearing 34 and already logging heavy minutes as the starter. D'Antoni wasn't about to repeat the mistakes of his Phoenix days when he burned his starters into the ground.
That left only one realistic path—search the free-agent market.
Walsh sighed. "At this point in the season, no one's giving up a solid guard. We'll be digging through the veteran pile."
Lin Yi had an idea about Jeremy Lin, but that door was closed. Jeremy had landed in Golden State as a throw-in during a Monta Ellis deal and was carving out a niche as their backup. The Knicks would have to look elsewhere.
"We don't need a star," Walsh muttered, "we just need someone steady. Somebody who won't kill us in the second unit."
…
February 5th brought the Knicks back to Madison Square Garden against the Milwaukee Bucks—a team hovering around the playoff line. Brandon Jennings, once brash enough to declare himself the top player in the '09 class, had dialed back the bravado this season. Every time he thought about Lin Yi's chase-down block from last year—the one that went viral—his confidence took a dent.
Andrew Bogut, too, had learned his lesson. A season ago, he'd tried to talk tough in the paint. Now, whenever Lin Yi rolled in for a screen or called for a post-up, Bogut looked far less eager to test him.
For Lin, the Bucks roster had one curiosity—Larry Sanders. Sanders was an enigma, a player who later would walk away from the league to pursue art and music. To Lin, Sanders was a case study in wasted potential.
A guy could've made tens of millions, Lin thought, and he walks away.
Reality, he knew, was harsher: when you try to come back bruised and broke, the league rarely opens the door twice.
Back on the floor, the Knicks edged out the Bucks with solid defense and Lin anchoring the offense. But the cracks were obvious. Without Livingston, the bench lacked control. Lou Williams was dazzling one possession and reckless the next. Ewing Jr. brought hustle but not enough shot creation. Against the Bucks, New York got away with it. Against a playoff heavyweight? Different story.
Donnie Walsh, watching from his seat behind the bench, felt the weight of the problem more than anyone. A few weeks ago, he'd been praised in the press for assembling the Knicks' roster. Now he was frowning.
"This job's a lot easier when you're just lying back and letting everyone tell you how smart you are," he muttered under his breath.
The truth was simple: the Knicks couldn't offer much in trade, and the free-agent pool was shallow. They needed a body, but more importantly, they needed the right one.
After the game, Lin Yi quietly slipped Walsh a name on a notepad. Walsh stared at it, blinking twice. Then he looked up at the young star.
"Are you serious about this?" Walsh asked, his tone heavy.
Lin just smiled. "How can we know if we don't try?"
...
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