The Heat's locker room at halftime was unusually quiet.
Riley, for once, hadn't exploded in anger. He sat back in his chair, hands clasped, as though searching for someone—anyone—to blame. But the truth gnawed at him: there really wasn't a target this time.
Blame LeBron and Wade? That didn't make sense. Without their combined 38 points in the first half, the Heat would've been dead in the water.
Blame Bosh? Hardly. Bosh had worked his tail off defensively, holding Lin Yi to just 4-of-11 shooting.
Blame the role players? Miller had knocked down his open looks, James Jones was hustling, and Chalmers was doing exactly what was asked of him.
Riley rubbed at his temple. He almost wanted to dunk his head in the ice bucket just to cool off, but when he glanced over, someone had already hauled it away. That little moment somehow summed up the night—everything felt just slightly out of his control.
And criticizing Spoelstra? Forget it. Spoelstra was his protégé, his guy. Half of Spo's playbook had Riley's fingerprints all over it. To question the tactics now would be like slapping himself in the face.
Finally, Riley broke the silence. His voice was low, heavy.
"The Knicks… they're just so damn unreasonable."
The players nodded. They felt it too. It wasn't just that Lin Yi hit that wild three from another zip code—it was the timing. Those kinds of shots don't just change the scoreboard; they drain the fight out of you. It was like getting punched in the gut after you thought you'd done everything right.
Lin Yi's long-range bombs had the Heat's morale skating on thin ice.
This was his calling card all season—deep, audacious threes. The hit rate? Thirty-six percent, give or take. Not outrageous by the numbers, but when you factored in momentum and spacing, those shots carried weight far beyond the stat sheet.
It was basketball heresy and genius all at once.
The only card the Heat could realistically play was ramping up their defensive intensity, praying that Wade and LeBron could explode again and drag them out of the hole. But across the court, the Knicks had depth—twelve men Spoelstra could throw at them in waves, always fresh, always grinding.
New York was just biding their time, waiting for another surge.
"Unless he clanks 27 in a row," someone muttered, half joking.
Nobody laughed.
..
On the broadcast, Kenny Smith shook his head. "I'll be honest, the Knicks are changing how I see the game. Back when I was playing with guys like Ole Gunnar Solskjær—"
Charles Barkley cut him off with a laugh. "Wrong sport, Kenny. But go on."
Kenny chuckled. "Alright, alright, but seriously—our coaches back then drilled it into us: 'pound the paint, play inside.' Three-pointers? That was last resort stuff. And now here we are watching a team live off them."
Barkley leaned back in his chair, grinning. "You remember what Bird used to say? That taking threes was a coward's shot. Man, I agreed with him at the time. But looking at the Knicks now… you can't call this cowardly. You gotta call it ruthless."
"Exactly," Kenny said. "Those threes are like buckets of ice water. Every time the Heat start to build momentum, the Knicks throw one in and just kill it."
Barkley pointed a finger at the monitor. "But let's not act like LeBron and Dwyane are just gonna roll over. Those two aren't wired that way. And the thing is—New York doesn't just shoot. Look at the box score. Everyone thought the Heat were owning the paint, but the Knicks have 36 points inside to Miami's 28. They're beating them at their own supposed strength."
The analysts exchanged a look. This wasn't just about one hot shooting night. It was about philosophy.
What Dirk had started with his face-up jumper, Lin Yi was taking a step further with the deep three. And if the Knicks pulled this off, the rest of the league would follow.
The third quarter tipped off, and right away, LeBron set the tone. He drove hard, absorbed contact, and still finished through Chandler for an and-one. The whistle drew groans from the Knicks' bench—Tyson now saddled with his third foul.
LeBron calmly sank the free throw, pushing his tally to 24.
Wade slapped him on the back. "Stay with it, Bron. If you need me to take it, just say the word."
LeBron just exhaled, eyes flicking up to the scoreboard. 65–56. Still single digits. Still hope. But he knew it meant one thing—defense had to crank up another level.
The problem was, Lin Yi didn't care about their hope.
Denied the drive, he simply drifted outside the arc, rose, and launched another bomb.
Bosh closed hard, arm outstretched, desperation all over his face.
"No way…" he muttered.
The ball clanged off. Relief washed over him. If that had dropped, he might've lost his composure completely.
..
Somewhere in California, Steph Curry sat on the couch with Ayesha, going through a shooting motion, groaning at the miss.
"Ahh, man, that was close!" he said, leaning forward.
Ayesha folded her arms, unimpressed. "Steph, it's Valentine's Day. And you thought a Heat-Knicks game was our big romantic plan?"
Steph grinned sheepishly. "Babe, you gotta understand—Lin's my guy. I can't just not support him."
Ayesha rolled her eyes so hard it almost hurt. "Support him? You're sitting here in sweatpants yelling at the TV. That's not supporting, that's… that's bro-crushing."
Steph scooted over and started trailing kisses down Ayesha's neck, before whispering a promise into her ear.
She soon cuddled up to him with a content smile.
Mission accomplished.
..
Back in Miami, LeBron zipped a bounce pass to Wade, who slashed through the lane like a knife. The Flash twisted midair, absorbed contact, and kissed in a ridiculous pull-up finish.
The crowd exploded, finally sensing life. The gap was down to seven. Heat fans roared, their frustrations at the Knicks momentarily forgotten.
But the Knicks weren't done being unreasonable.
Billups initiated the high pick-and-roll, slipped a pass to Lin on the perimeter. Bosh was ready this time, sprinting out to contest.
Lin, reading the moment, leaned into the contact, arced the ball skyward, and waited.
Bosh froze. "Don't tell me…"
Whistle. Contact. The ball arced, rattled—then dropped.
American Airlines Arena groaned in unison.
Four-point play.
And Lin Yi, smiling faintly, jogged to the line like it was just another day at the office.
Bosh slumped his shoulders, exasperated.
It felt like another one of those superstar whistles. But what crushed Bosh wasn't the call itself—it was the fact that Lin had the nerve to fling the ball up and actually sink it.
"If he makes the free throw, that's eleven again," Kenny Smith muttered on commentary, almost wincing.
Barkley let out a heavy sigh. "And given Lin's free-throw numbers, unless Shaq and Dwight jump into his body at the same time, he's not missing."
At the line, Lin Yi dribbled once, twice, then settled into his routine. He wasn't even the headline act tonight—just 5-of-12 from the field—but somehow every fan in the arena had turned him into public enemy number one.
The chorus of boos in the American Airlines Arena was deafening. To Heat fans, Lin Yi wasn't just a shooter—he was the devil in white and blue.
James and Wade had clawed and scraped for every basket, but Lin's off-balance prayers kept stretching the gap. That sort of thing breeds hate.
Swish. Net, no rim. The lead was back to double digits.
"Guy's got nerves stronger than steel," Shaq chuckled from the broadcast desk.
Lou Williams piped up with a grin, "Shaq, speaking of Lin, you've been to the Great Wall, right? What's thicker—the Wall or Lin's face?"
O'Neal blinked, then smirked.
But Marbury cut in before Shaq could even answer. "C'mon. Even if you stacked the Great Wall on top of the Forbidden City, it wouldn't match Lin's shamelessness."
The Knicks' bench howled with laughter, a few players giving Marbury thumbs-up like he'd just nailed the line of the night. Shaq shook his head, chuckling—risking life and limb with that kind of banter was fast becoming this team's tradition.
.
Back on the floor, Miami had its turn to answer.
LeBron exploded into action.
BANG!
His dunk rattled the rim like thunder, sending a jolt through the arena. LeBron's eyes scanned the crowd, fierce, almost daring anyone to doubt him.
Wade ran over, pounding his chest like a boxer's glove hitting a heavy bag. Their celebration oozed energy, but barely five seconds later, New York struck back.
Gallinari, Second Battalion Commander, caught the signal, squared up from deep, and let it fly.
Splash. Nothing but net.
This was his specialty—contested, fearless threes. His future career would be filled with them, which explained his steady 40% from beyond the arc.
The Heat crowd groaned as the scoreboard flipped again. One point behind.
Which was better: LeBron's earth-shattering dunk or Gallo's smooth triple? The numbers told the cruel truth.
LeBron inhaled sharply, telling himself to stay composed. Believe in the grind, believe in the work—he repeated it like a mantra.
But then came another drive. He lowered the shoulder, bulldozed through, and drew Chandler's fourth foul. The Knicks had no choice but to bring in Whiteside to patch the rim defence.
LeBron stepped up to the line, split the pair of free throws.
Still eleven down.
He slapped his hands together and barked at his teammates, "C'mon! Their anchor's out. Push it!"
And to his credit, James was tearing the Knicks' defense apart piece by piece.
But Chauncey Billups wasn't going to let the moment slip. His calm, surgical eyes locked onto the Heat defense.
He probed once, missed the first look.
Brick.
Lin Yi, lurking, swooped in for the rebound and instantly kicked it back out.
Billups reset, feet set, shoulders squared. Release.
Whoosh. Right through.
Fourteen-point lead. The dagger cut deeper, and cruelly, every Knicks point in the half so far had come from beyond the arc.
Lin jogged back, a sly grin tugging at the corner of his lips. He didn't even need to speak, but the cameras caught him mouthing something anyway:
"You won't come out? Fine. We'll kill you from the outside."
The close-up lingered. His grin wasn't just a grin—it was the kind of expression that could calm or terrify, depending on which side you were on.
For Heat fans, it was the latter. A chill swept the arena.
...
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