February 14th. Valentine's Day.
American Airlines Arena was dressed in red lights, though not for romance tonight—it was for battle. The Knicks had arrived in Miami, chasing their 16th consecutive win, and standing in their way were the desperate Heat, losers of their last few games and still searching for rhythm.
It was the third clash of the season between the two sides; the Knicks had taken the first two.
"LeBron and Dwyane have got to figure this out sooner rather than later," Kenny Smith said during the pregame panel. "We're already halfway through the season, and they can't keep hiding behind the excuse of chemistry. At some point, this roster has to click."
Charles Barkley, usually one of Lin Yi's loudest supporters, gave a rare nod to the other camp. "Look, I still like the kid, I still like what the Knicks are doing. But you don't build a team around three stars like LeBron, Wade, and Bosh, just to keep losing big games. At some point, pride kicks in. I think tonight might be the night Miami snaps out of it."
Why the sudden praise for the Heat from Barkley? Even the sharpest critics knew that a core of James, Wade, and Bosh couldn't keep dropping games forever.
Pat Riley, ever the shadow lurking behind Miami's bench, had already fired back in the media earlier in the week. "People keep saying New York's the best team in the league. I don't buy that."
Of course, Riley also added—straight-faced—that the Heat were only focused on the postseason and that "a couple of regular-season losses don't matter."
And yet, on game day in the locker room, his tone was entirely different.
"We need to stretch them out. Shoot more threes," Riley barked at his players, pacing. "Otherwise, the Knicks will just shrink the floor and choke you out defensively. And don't forget—we need home-court advantage in the first two rounds of the playoffs. That starts here. That starts tonight!"
The madman said one thing to the cameras and quite another to his men. Everyone in the room knew it.
…
The lights dimmed. The crowd roared. LeBron chalked his hands with the usual chalk toss, but there was something different in his face tonight. No grins, no showmanship. Just a hard stare across the floor, straight at Lin Yi.
Once upon a time, James had actually liked the young Knicks forward—he'd even admitted to tuning into Davidson games during March Madness, curious about this lanky shooter who refused to play by the book. But that was before Lin Yi became New York's centerpiece, before the Knicks started embarrassing Miami in their own conference.
Now? Now Lin Yi was the obstacle standing between James and redemption. And James wasn't smiling anymore.
The arena screen flashed the lineups:
For the Heat—James, Wade, Bosh, Chalmers, and Mike Miller.
For the Knicks—Chandler, Lin Yi, Gallinari, Tony Allen, and Billups.
The Valentine's Day Game was ready to tip.
Lin Yi outjumped Bosh on the opening ball. But right away, it was clear Miami had shifted. Bosh picked up Lin Yi directly, James slid into the power forward spot, and the Heat tightened into a man-to-man scheme with zone principles waiting behind the first line.
It was exactly what LeBron had hinted at months ago.
"I don't like playing the four," he'd said in December, "but I'll sacrifice if that's what it takes."
On the Knicks' opening set, Lin Yi caught the ball in the high post, one hand on the rock, back to the basket. The collision with Bosh was instant—shoulder into chest, muscle into muscle, neither giving an inch.
Lin Yi faked the spin right, Bosh bit, and slid with him. In that instant, Lin Yi snapped the ball back between his legs, stepped back, and rose for a jumper.
Bosh stretched his arms wide. Lin Yi's shot clanged off the rim. Rebound James.
And then the arena shook.
LeBron didn't hesitate. He lowered his shoulder and barreled downcourt, every stride like a runaway freight train. Chandler backpedaled, braced, but it was too late—
Bang!
One step through contact. One massive slam. Foul. And-1.
The American Airlines Arena exploded, fans bellowing in unison:
"KING! KING! KING!"
"KING! KING! KING!"
James pounded his chest, veins bulging, eyes blazing. Lin Yi glanced over at D'Antoni on the Knicks' sideline. The coach didn't need to say anything—both of them knew instantly: this was not the same Miami team they'd beaten before.
LeBron bricked the free throw, leaving it 0–2.
New York reset. Lin Yi set a screen for Billups at the elbow, slipped into space, and caught the ball against Chalmers. He posted, ready to punish the mismatch—only for LeBron to peel off his man and double. Chalmers darted back, creating a soft zone shell with Bosh.
Lin Yi stared James down, testing him with a jab. But this time the shot rimmed out again. Wade snatched the board, cheeks puffed as he weaved through traffic before handing it back to James.
And then—the dagger.
One hard dribble to the left, a sudden pull-up three from LeBron. No hesitation.
Swish.
Miami led 0–5.
Lebron had sent his first message of the night: he wasn't here to share the stage.
D'Antoni glanced at Lin Yi from the sideline, raising his hand to ask if he wanted a timeout. Lin Yi gave a small shake of the head. No panic, no hurry. The Knicks stuck to their sets.
Billups, calm as ever, pulled up suddenly from deep on the wing. Bang—right through.
3–5.
Miami came back the other way. The possession was supposed to flow through Wade, who had been slashing all quarter, but instead he hesitated, caught Tony Allen off balance, and—without warning—rose for a three.
Even Tony's eyes widened. "Man… the guy who usually refuses to touch a discount card just decided to cash out from three?"
…
The first quarter closed with Miami ahead, 23–30.
"Charles, looks like you might've called it," Kenny Smith said during the break. "The Heat have really looked like a different side so far. They're shooting the ball with confidence, and it's forcing New York to adjust."
Barkley leaned back into his seat with seriousness. "Let's not crown them just yet, Kenny. But you're right—this is the kind of urgency Miami's been missing. That said, the Knicks' bench is tough. They're not just gonna roll over. Let's see how they answer."
Commentators love nothing more than when their predictions hold water—even if most of the time they end up eating their words.
On the Knicks' bench, Lin Yi sat down to a well-rehearsed routine. Lou Williams had a towel waiting, Hassan Whiteside slid his chair away to give him space, and Danny Green passed over a bottle of water.
Marbury, meanwhile, just sat blinking with a question-mark expression plastered across his face.
And then, almost instinctively, the entire Knicks huddled into a small circle around Lin Yi.
Shaquille O'Neal, grinning like a proud older brother, even motioned dramatically with his hands: "Go ahead, kid. The floor is yours."
Lin Yi nearly spat out his drink. "You've got to be kidding me," he muttered under his breath. "Isn't there supposed to be a coach in this building?"
But when he glanced at D'Antoni, all he saw was an encouraging smile. The head coach looked more like a professor watching a star pupil solve a difficult question on the board.
That was the thing about D'Antoni. He'd never been the controlling, iron-fisted type. He trusted his players' instincts. Years later, he'd even hand over stretches of game-planning to Chris Paul. To him, players often saw things unfolding in real-time that coaches on the sideline simply couldn't. And in Lin Yi, he saw a player with the mind of a coach already.
Lin Yi stood, towel draped around his shoulders, and started calmly.
"The Heat are stealing from our playbook."
The group leaned in.
D'Antoni nodded immediately—he'd noticed the same. "They're running a man-to-man with zone principles. No true rim protector, but they're leaning on athleticism, rotations, and length. It's giving us a different look."
Lin Yi tapped the magnets on the board. "Exactly. They're collapsing inside, then daring us to chase shooters. That's how they got to 30 in the first. Don't be fooled—it wasn't all transition buckets. They hit six threes."
He rearranged the markers. "James made two, Chalmers two, Wade one, Miller one. That stretched us out, gave them lanes, and suddenly they're feeding off rhythm."
D'Antoni frowned. He didn't say it out loud, but everyone knew the concern: when the second quarter began, Miami would still have at least two of the Big Three on the floor. Could the Knicks' reserves hold steady?
Lin Yi caught the hesitation, then smirked. "So what? Let them shoot. We'll keep shrinking the paint. Only Jones and Miller we guard tightly. The rest? If LeBron wants to pull up over a hand, if Wade wants to force it—fine. Let them."
Assistant coach Donaldson squinted. "Lin… if we sag like that, won't it just give them the green light to chuck all night?"
Lin Yi took a long sip of his drink, then asked flatly, "And what if they do?"
It was a simple point, but it landed.
"Look," Lin Yi continued, "James is 33% from deep this season. Wade? Barely 30. Chalmers is their best at 35.9. That's it. The math is on our side. Even if they get hot for stretches, those percentages won't magically turn into 40s overnight."
He paused, then leaned forward, his voice firmer.
"We can't overreact to a quarter. If they live by the three, they'll die by it. What matters is that we can keep scoring. Don't forget—we only put up 23. That's the real issue."
He pointed around the circle. "Their perimeter guys aren't as consistent as ours. To stay ahead, they'll have to defend harder than us. And that's where the cracks show. They can't keep that intensity for 48 minutes, not with that bench."
Lin Yi slapped the board shut, then patted the shoulders of the guys checking in next. "So, relax. Stick to the plan. Make them play at our pace. They won't last."
From the edge of the huddle, Marbury watched silently.
The Knicks' identity wasn't broken. They didn't need to chase shadows. They just needed to let the game bend back to them.
Because unless Miami shot the lights out for four straight quarters—something history said they couldn't—the Knicks would have the last word.
Lin Yi wiped his forehead, smiled faintly, and muttered, "Funny. Feels like we've finally got them playing our game."
The whistle blew. Second quarter inbound. James and Wade were still on the floor, Bosh resting. The battle rolled on.
...
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