The Star Malaysia

Jeremy Lin, the new NBA sensation

He wasn’t born in Taiwan but to the Taiwanese, American Jeremy Lin is ‘God’ in a basketball T-shirt.

- By BENJAMIN YEH

HE’S not quite a local boy made good, but he’ll do: National Basketball Associatio­n sensation Jeremy Lin, born and bred in America, is inspiring a feverish following in his ancestral home of Taiwan, a society craving true heroes.

Lin, born 23 years ago in the United States to Taiwanese parents, only speaks halting Mandarin, but his triumphs with the New York Knicks are being hailed as grounds for island-wide celebratio­n.

Lin-sanity: coming from behind to score five wins in a row, Taiwan’s mass-circulatio­n United Daily News roared across its front page after another successful weekend for Lin, the first Us-born NBA player of Chinese descent.

Both the print and electronic media have pulled out all the stops to add to the adulation of the 191cm Harvard graduate, citing every new achievemen­t with relish.

The joy knew no bounds after point guard Lin’s career-high 38 points over the last weekend led the Knicks to victory, outshining LA Lakers’ superstar shooting guard Kobe Bryant.

Hao the god: writing a New York legend, the Taipei-based China Times said, coining a nickname based on the basketball prodigy’s Chinese name, Lin Shu-hao.

Sports journalist­s have gone into overdrive to unveil new tidbits of Lin-ology, interviewi­ng relatives in central Taiwan and excavating long-forgotten examples of academic work that got him into Harvard.

The Lin craze has also set off new interest in basketball in Taiwan, which has only a semi-profession­al league, with thousands of players now heading for the courts in their precious spare time.

“I couldn’t sleep last night. I just couldn’t wait to play basketball,” said 29-year-old Winston Lin, a Taipei resident who spent several years in France and has so far been a football devotee. Even for members of Taiwan’s seventeam basketball league, Lin’s story is an inspiratio­n. “The past record suggests it’s nearly impossible for Chinese players to

survive in the NBA, unless you’re 229cm like (China-born) Yao Ming,” said Michael Lee, deputy secretary-general to the Chinese Taipei Basketball Associatio­n.

“It’s dominated by Westerners, and especially African-americans, but Lin has overcome his natural restrictio­ns and played smart as a point guard.”

Lin was undrafted after playing at Harvard University and cut in December 2011 by Golden State Warriors and Houston Rockets, but when he got his opportunit­y with the injury-hit Knicks, he grasped it with both hands.

Yueh Ying-li, a member of the Taipei-based Dacin Tigers, said he was moved by Lin’s determinat­ion and rigourous preparatio­ns, which paid off handsomely when he made it into the Knicks team this month.

“Chance favours the prepared mind,” he said.

Hung Chia-chun, a 16-year-old Taipei student, hailed Lin as a star in the mould of Yani Tseng, the world’s No.1 female golfer, and Chen-ming Wang, formerly baseball team New York Yankees’ ace pitcher. “He’s another glory of Taiwan,” Hung said. Over the past two weeks, Lin stories have competed for attention with another major story involving a young celebrity, who has been in the public eye for very different reasons. Makiyo, a Taiwanese-japanese starlet known for her hard partying, has been indicted for involvemen­t in the beating of a Taipei taxi-driver, setting off a bout of soul-searching about the lack of civility in Taiwanese popular culture.

By contrast, Lin is a positive role model, and despite his tenuous links to Taiwan, he is a point of pride on an island which struggles for internatio­nal recognitio­n, according to political science professor Hsu Yung-ming.

“Taiwan has few stories with which to impress internatio­nal society,” said Hsu, of Taipei’s Soochow University.

“So when persons like Lin emerge, people here share the pride and see him as their hero, even though he has few ties with Taiwan,” he added.

For some Taiwanese, however, the Lin-sanity is getting a little crazy.

“It’s a bit weird to regard him as a Taiwanese hero, since after all he has only distant links with Taiwan,” said Jo-jo Cheng, a 25-year-old Taipei office worker.

“But then again, his outstandin­g performanc­e is an example for Asian basketball players who would like to get into the NBA.” – AFP

 ??  ?? Lin-sanity: New York Knicks point guard Jeremy Lin in action on court. Last week, fans had graduated o bringing giant cutouts of Lin’s face to his games! Lots of love: Lin’s fans are ingenious in coming up with creative ways to show their love. This...
Lin-sanity: New York Knicks point guard Jeremy Lin in action on court. Last week, fans had graduated o bringing giant cutouts of Lin’s face to his games! Lots of love: Lin’s fans are ingenious in coming up with creative ways to show their love. This...

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