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Chapter 330 - Knicks vs Heat 2

The second quarter opened with the Knicks rolling out a second-unit lineup of Whiteside, Battier, Danny Green, Lou Williams, and Marbury.

Miami, meanwhile, made its adjustments. James Jones checked in—a loyal sharpshooter who would go on to spend years alongside LeBron, one of the league's most reliable role players.

LeBron himself, after putting up 12 points in the opening quarter, caught a breather to start the second. That left Dwyane Wade to shoulder the offensive load. Wade managed to carve out some space for a three-point attempt, but it clanged off the rim. Not entirely surprising—his career three-point percentage hovered below 30%.

For the Knicks, the interior was holding firm. Hassan Whiteside—still raw, still learning—was improving by the game under Tyson Chandler's guidance. Offensively, he didn't need to do much besides roll, catch, and finish. But defensively, his sheer presence in the paint was already becoming a problem for Miami.

On the perimeter, Marbury took the reins patiently. He probed, looked for mismatches, and waited for his shooters. James Jones was known for his steady outside touch—he could knock them down in catch-and-shoot situations with the best of them—but defensively, he had a hard time tracking Danny Green's constant motion.

The Knicks ran what looked like a simple corner screen, but Battier and Whiteside set it up perfectly. It wasn't just a screen—it was an elevator cut, with both bigs closing the door on Jones and freezing Miami's rotation. Green slipped into daylight.

Danny Green knew this shot was his.

Since arriving in New York, the message from both the coaching staff and his teammates had been consistent: don't hesitate.

"Danny, if you're open and you don't shoot, we'll fine you!" Lin Yi had joked during practice.

Even D'Antoni, who rarely raised his voice, had been blunt: "If you're hesitating with an open look, you're hurting us. Shoot it."

He caught the pass in rhythm, tightened his core, and let it fly. His release was quick, compact, and efficient.

The ball traced a high arc through the air.

Swish!

26–30. The Knicks narrowed the gap.

Green turned, spotting his teammates on the bench already on their feet. They celebrated with a gesture—hands swiping across their shoulders in unison. He grinned, flashed the three-finger salute, and ran to the sideline for a high-five from Lin Yi.

Kenny Smith couldn't hide his admiration on the broadcast.

"This Knicks team is something else. Plug a guy in, and suddenly he looks like he's been here for years. Everyone contributes."

Charles Barkley, ever the skeptic, shook his head with a laugh.

"And that even includes Stephon Marbury. Tell me—have you ever seen Marbury actually stick to a set play before? Now he's running elevator screens like he's Steve Nash."

The camera caught Green jogging back on defense, but his mind flickered briefly to the past. He remembered the first time he'd faced LeBron James in Cleveland.

Back then, he was just a nervous rookie, a second-round pick fighting for relevance. LeBron had clapped him on the shoulder during training camp and said warmly, "Welcome to Cleveland."

Green had been over the moon. He rushed to tell his old North Carolina teammates that LeBron had spoken to him. He even asked his coaches how he could grow into a real role player.

The Cavaliers' staff smiled, nodded, and told him to be patient. But patience turned into neglect. Before long, he was glued to the water cooler, watching from the shadows while LeBron led the team.

The only other time LeBron really spoke to him was the day Cleveland shipped him off to New York. "Danny, good luck," James had said quietly.

Green thanked him, but deep down, he felt discarded. Once upon a time, he'd been one of the best prospects at North Carolina. In the NBA, he was just a name on the transaction sheet.

New York changed that.

When he met Lin Yi for the first time, Lin had smiled. "Keep working on your threes and your defense. You'll be an important piece for us," he'd said.

An important piece. That stuck.

D'Antoni echoed the sentiment. "You'll get minutes, but you've got to commit to your shot. And to his credit, the coach kept his promise. Even when Green bricked open looks as a rookie, the minutes kept coming.

The Knicks also had their own unique punishments. If Green passed up an open shot? He'd be made to sing in the locker room—or worse, run extra laps the next day.

So Green had spent the summer grinding away, drilling corner threes, shots from the wings, and deep looks from the top of the arc.

Lin Yi and the Knicks' staff had been blunt with him: if he wanted to be a real piece of this team, he had to be comfortable firing from everywhere.

"All shooters grow up hitting iron," Lin told him once after practice. And Green, stubborn as ever, took it to heart.

One day, during a session at the Knicks' training facility, Green froze when he heard the words:

"Danny, come over. Today, we're running sets for you."

He even pointed to himself, eyes wide.

Me? My plays?

It was a shock, but it also lit something inside him. The Knicks were trusting him with a role, not just spot minutes. That trust wasn't something he'd let slip.

Fast forward to Miami—American Airlines Arena was buzzing. On one possession, Green found himself alone, squared up against Dwyane Wade. Just last year, Green had been clinging to a roster spot in Cleveland. Now he was staring down one of the league's legends. Wade hit him with a step-over jumper. Clang. The shot rattled out.

Green didn't even glance back for the rebound. He already knew his job.

Run. Get down the floor. That's my battlefield.

Whiteside snagged the board and, just like Lin had drilled into him, fired a long outlet. Green streaked forward like a wide receiver burning past a secondary.

Catch. Tighten the core. Quick release.

The shot dropped clean.

Swish.

Green pounded his chest, shouting up at the rafters, his voice nearly cracking from adrenaline: "You see that?! I belong here! I can play in this league!"

Forget what people said about North Carolina guards flaming out. He wasn't going anywhere. Not now. Not with this team.

Scoreboard: 29–30.

Heat coach Erik Spoelstra quickly signaled for a timeout. Green returned to the bench, swallowed up by teammates clapping him on the back.

Lin Yi, smiling as he extended a hand, didn't need to say much. "Well done."

Green dapped Lin and was brought into a hug.

Meanwhile, on the other side, LeBron James was bent over, hands on his knees, sucking in air. He stared blankly at the arena ceiling, sweat dripping down, the same old frustration creeping back.

Wade gave him a quick slap on the shoulder. "Bron, we've got to take this one."

LeBron nodded. He didn't need to be told—but deep down, he knew it wasn't going to be easy.

..

Up in the booth, the analysts were buzzing.

"Kenny, I think Miami's in a real jam here," Charles Barkley muttered, shaking his head.

"Exactly," Kenny Smith replied, gesturing to the scoreboard. "The Heat haven't been able to create separation against the Knicks' second unit. Instead, Danny Green's turned into the wild card again."

Score check: Knicks 44, Heat 45. Just a one-point margin.

And James? Still hadn't sat once. That gnawing sense of helplessness—the same one that haunted him in last year's playoffs—was back.

..

The game tightened in the second quarter. The Knicks went back to their starters but kept Green on. Tony Douglas wasn't holding his ground defensively, so Mike D'Antoni doubled down on spacing with another shooter.

Miami countered with its own full-strength lineup. James, all muscle and drive. Wade, slicing in with that lethal first step. Chris Bosh, assigned once more to duel Lin Yi.

Every possession felt like it belonged to May or June, not a midseason night in February. The Heat were trying to hold the line, but the Knicks had rehearsed answers for everything.

James even had his headband knocked loose during a collision at the rim, smacking his thigh in frustration on the way back.

And then it happened.

With 1:31 left in the half, Lin Yi found himself nearly two meters beyond the arc, Bosh crouched in front of him, locked in.

Bosh had done well—seven stops in ten one-on-one sequences. He wasn't biting on pump fakes, wasn't over-committing. It was textbook.

But Lin Yi wasn't interested in textbooks.

He rose from deep, motion fluid, almost careless. A shot taken more out of instinct than design.

Net. Swish.

That was the spark.

Suddenly, Gallinari started hitting. Then came more offense from the bench mob.

Charles Barkley couldn't stay in his chair. "This is a storm, Kenny! The Knicks are lighting up the Heat from everywhere!"

When the buzzer sounded, the scoreboard read: Knicks 65, Heat 53.

A twelve-point lead at halftime, carved out in Miami's own house.

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