Former NBA guard Jeremy Lin announced today on Instagram that he’s retiring as a basketball player following a lengthy professional career (hat tip to RealGM).
“As athletes, we are always aware that the possibility of retirement is never far away,” Lin wrote as part of a longer statement. “I’ve spent my 15-year career knowing that one day I would have to walk away, and yet actually saying goodbye to basketball today has been the hardest decision I’ve ever made.
“It’s been the honor of a lifetime to compete against the fiercest competitors under the brightest lights and to challenge what the world thought was possible for someone who looks like me. I’ve lived out my wildest childhood dreams to play in front of fans all around the world. I will forever be the kid who felt fully alive every time I touched a basketball.”
After starring in college at Harvard, Lin went undrafted in 2010 but quickly caught on with Golden State. He didn’t play much as a rookie, only making 28 NBA appearances for the Warriors (9.8 minutes per game) and spending a good chunk of 2010/11 in the G League (then known as the D-League).
Lin, now 37, was cut by both Golden State and Houston (which claimed him off waivers) before the lockout-shortened 2011/12 season began. A couple days after being released by Houston, he was claimed again, this time by the Knicks.
While his time with New York was relatively brief, he was a major contributor during a 26-game stretch from February-March 2012, memorably averaging 18.5 points, 7.7 assists, 3.7 rebounds and 2.0 steals in 34.2 minutes per contest and helping the team turn its season around.
As a restricted free agent in the 2012 offseason, Lin signed a lucrative Arenas provision contract with the Rockets, which New York declined to match. Lin spent two seasons in Houston but bounced around the league over the following five years, playing for the Lakers, Hornets, Nets, Hawks and Raptors, winning an NBA title as a role player with Toronto in 2019.
Overall, Lin appeared in 480 NBA regular season games — including 221 starts — from 2010-19. He held career averages of 11.6 PPG, 4.3 APG, 2.8 RPG and 1.1 SPG in 25.3 MPG, with a shooting slash line of .433/.342/.809.
Lin has mostly played in China and Taiwan over the past six years, though he did attempt an NBA comeback during the ’20/21 campaign with the G League’s Santa Cruz Warriors.
Jeremy Lin may have started the trading card boom… back during “Linsanity” a man bought his rookie autographed card for around $10,000…. he then turned down a $500,000 off for it thinking it would be worth millions one day… I believe the last time that same card changed hands it was about $1500 lol
The trading card boom was actually because of crypto’s surge in 2014, and a lot of people who hated crypto all saw no problem with spending huge on cards, almost to battle crypto. People winning off bitcoin just made bitcoin haters spend more on baseball cards.
When Topps Transcendent 2016 sold out 65 boxes for $26,000 each, in an hour, that’s when the boom was officially “on”. Lin’s peak of 2011-12 was a bit before the actual boom.
I’ve been a trading card dealer since 1999… what you just said is nonsense lol… the biggest booms were the publicity from Lin, a Michael Jordan boom in 2016, then covid (which brought back pokemon and raised values drastically)… don’t believe me though… I’ve just been a vendor at multiple nationals and have over 250,000 transactions on ebay lol
I don’t believe you, I was there too, you are lying if you disagree with my factual point. Lin had nothing to do with it. There was no boom in 2012. Covid was another boom though. At least we agree there.
Davey J will just say whatever and if you don’t agree with him he’ll rage and call you stupid. Don’t take it personally.
Me, listing facts about a topic online: “When Topps Transcendent 2016 sold out 65 boxes for $26,000 each, in an hour, that’s when the boom was officially “on”.
You: “Davey J will just say whatever”
Ragebaiter. Grow up. Get off this place if you can’t read.
Not rage bating bro you be saying some wild stuff lol
““Linsanity” Craze Sparks Feeding Frenzy on Jeremy Lin’s Market-Topping Rookie Cards”
Plenty of info out there about the Linsanity card craze.
But Davey J knows more than you. He and his anti crypto 6th grade friends opted to buy sports cards over crytpo.
@TunaNoCrust yeah thats one card that sold, that did not create a “boom” for the whole trading card market.
People on here don’t even know what words mean, but will argue against them if I point out they are reading them improperly. There was as boom on that 1 card, that Lin one. Amongst Lin fans. But Lin did not create the entire boom on the entire card market, as the market did not properly explode until 2015-16.
Reading comprehension: none of you have it. I do.
You finally responded!!! Yay !!!
We good Davey J we good.
The crazy part is that aside from this one take, I agree with jeremyn on the 2016-present timeline. But he thinks the Lin card sparked the boom, which it didn’t, it was a 1-off freak event.
Crypto haters aged 40+ with big money were the ones who were spending millions in 2016 on cards. That was…not me.
A 1 off event I’ll agree with that too.
But this
“Reading comprehension: none of you have it. I do.”
This why people yap at you lmao
Crazy the word “linsanity” was not used in this article
I gotta be honest this surprised me…. thought this happened 7 years ago
I know! I mean, he hasn’t been in the NBA for a while. But apparently basketball is also played in other countries! Who knew??
I was trying to be funny but that takes away from the truth…. he balled out of control for a good period of time and have good amount of respect
Legend
Knicks legend!!!
One of the rare dudes who was on sports illustrated cover two weeks in a row.
Humor is a great recipe to get thru the down times
I 100% appreciated this dude waiving off Kobe to take the last shot . We really needed that relief during those down years and man does it still live in infamy
The look on Kobe’s face was priceless