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Chapter 166 - Spurs vs Knicks 5 ( Youth vs Legacy)

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...

Tonight, the Spurs rolled out what people were already calling the Lin Yi Rules. Their goal was simple: shut down the Knicks' ball movement and throw a wrench into their offensive rhythm.

Pop didn't just lean on defense either—he got crafty. He had the Spurs go small, give up the offensive boards, and focus on transition defense, all to stop New York's fast breaks.

In Popovich's mind, it was basic math: shut down the Knicks' two main offensive engines, and they're done.

But the Knicks weren't about to roll over. In the second half, they made a change, shifted away from the usual Lin Yi solo act, and let Lou Williams take the wheel more often.

Suddenly, single-core Knicks became dual-core.

That didn't mean Lou was the new star—it just gave Lin some breathing room. Even if the Spurs locked up the role players, they now had two scoring threats to worry about.

It was starting to feel like a preview of those wild, future NBA shootouts.

Now, Lou Will had the flair. He had the burst. He could rise and fire without warning. But his problem? Stability. When Lou's on, he's on. But when he's off…

Let's say the Knicks weren't willing to bet the house on a microwave scorer—at least not in the first half.

But the Spurs? They came out swinging. Duncan, Parker, Manu—the whole gang was locked in. With New York backed into a corner, D'Antoni knew they had no choice.

They had to gamble.

The Spurs weren't like the Lakers. You couldn't just wait them out and hope they'd self-destruct. You had to beat them.

And no matter how many pep talks Lin and Coach D'Antoni gave Lou Will, no matter how fired up he was, Lou wasn't Kobe.

Let's be real—if the Knicks were gonna win tonight, it still had to be Lin Yi who dragged them there.

People always saw Lin as this dribbling big man—a 7-foot point magician. A high-flying unicorn who could post, pass, and throw it down. But what most fans didn't know?

Back in college, Lin once played a completely different role.

He played blue-collar basketball. Offensive rebounds, hustle, grind.

Despite being 7'2" and having bounce and length for days, his college rebounding numbers were weirdly low.

Why? Because Lin never hung around the rim. He was either attacking, passing, or spacing out on the wing. He didn't crash the glass much—not because he couldn't, just because that wasn't his job.

But tonight?

It was his job.

The Spurs had gone small to get faster. On the floor, the only real rebounder they had left was Tim Duncan.

The problem was, Duncan wasn't 25 anymore. At 33, his game was still polished, but his legs weren't what they used to be.

Jason Richardson? Solid fundamentals, sure. But at just about 6'6", he was giving up way too much size.

If the Knicks wanted any shot at a comeback, they had to play to their strength.

Youth.

Athleticism.

Energy.

Lin had just upgraded his Rebounding Maniac badge to silver. Combine that with David Lee, another relentless board monster, and they had no excuse not to go hard at the glass.

If those two couldn't bully Duncan and J-Rich on the boards?

They might as well retire and start a podcast.

Coach D'Antoni simplified the game plan: crash, run, and keep it simple.

And then…

BOOM.

"OH MY GOD! LIN YI JUST TOOK OFF!" Kenny Smith shouted, holding his head like it was about to explode.

"Richardson's still standing there like he just saw a UFO," Barkley chimed in. "He even looked up at the replay—Lin went way too high! WAY too high! His second jump is insane."

Back at Madison Square Garden, the crowd rose from their seats, slowly, stunned. Their jaws slackened, frozen like mannequins.

If you had to sum up their reaction in one expression?

Error 404.

Spike Lee's drink? Long gone. Slammed to the floor. He didn't even notice.

That tomahawk putback?

Straight art.

Even the guy wiping the floor threw him a death glare for the mess, but deep down, he was waiting for the big screen replay like everyone else.

"So sick!" he mumbled as he wiped.

"So. Damn. Sick."

On the sidelines, the Knicks cheerleaders just about lost it.

That tomahawk putback? Insane.

And Lin?

Respect for Popovich—Lin had always admired him, but the Spurs weren't getting the W if he had any say in it.

No mercy.

The Garden exploded.

"LIN ———— YI!!!"

"LIN ———— YI!!!"

"LIN ———— YI!!!"

The whole building shook. Fans who had stepped out for snacks sprinted back, popcorn spilling, drinks forgotten, just in time to catch the replay.

Too late.

They'd missed a moment of madness.

Back on the floor, the Spurs didn't flinch. Tony Parker and Duncan ran their usual smooth pick-and-roll.

But this time... Lin didn't bite. He hung back. Waited.

The Knicks had switched it up.

They were now running a zone, and Lin Yi was the anchor in the paint. The rest rotated hard. Anyone who dared drive in got one answer: Lin Yi waiting at the rim.

Pop read it immediately. "They're using Lin like his position should be. Like Dwight Howard?"

Parker tried to test him anyway. Drove hard.

But no matter how quick the Frenchman was, Lin's wingspan was ridiculous.

SMACK!

Get that weak stuff outta here!

David Lee scooped the ball off the bounce, and the Knicks were off.

Fast break.

Lou Will in a full sprint.

Soft layup. Buckets.

61-55. Knicks cutting it close.

Pop didn't call a timeout right away. He wanted more data. He watched, calculated, like the chess master he is.

A few possessions later, he had seen enough.

Timeout, Spurs.

9:07 left in the third.

Their offense? Simple.

Give Lou Will the ball, let him dance.

If that didn't work, pick-and-roll with Lin or Lee.

And if the shot didn't fall?

Send in the big boys to crash the boards.

They were young.

They were hungry.

They were everywhere.

Popovich sat on the sideline, watching Lin Yi gobble up rebound after rebound, and felt something weird in his chest.

Was it fear?

No.

It was envy.

Damn... what a player, Pop thought. If Lin were on the Spurs right now, with him being mentored by Duncan, we could have a shot at another dynasty.

But he shook it off. The game wasn't over.

He turned to the bench and called on DeJuan Blair, pairing him with Duncan to try and hold down the paint. Time to fight fire with size.

Meanwhile, on the Knicks bench, Lin and Coach D'Antoni were deep in conversation.

"Pop's definitely going to up the size now," Lin said. "No way Duncan can carry the rebounding alone."

D'Antoni nodded, already adjusting rotations.

As the players got ready to head back in, Lin paused for a second and turned to D'Antoni.

"Coach," he said. "Let's be real. They've got more experience than we."

D'Antoni raised an eyebrow. "Yeah?"

"They've been here. They're battle-tested. But that also means something else."

Lin smirked.

"It means they're old."

D'Antoni started to smile. Lin kept going.

"Look, a full seven-game series? That's gonna be tough. But just one game? We can win one game."

He pointed at the floor.

"This one."

"Young legs are our secret weapon. Not tricks. Not fancy plays. Just pure energy."

"We run faster. Jump higher. Go harder."

D'Antoni was grinning now.

"Let's go burn 'em out."

...

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