‘Linsanity’ reaching new heights after S&D effort over Lakers

He might be only a one-week wonder, but what a week it has been for  New York guard Jeremy Lin.

Lin capped a remarkable four-game stretch by scoring a career-high 38 points and dishing off seven assists to lead the Knicks’ 92-85 victory over  the Los Angeles Lakers Friday night. 

It was the fourth straight 20-point effort for Lin, who had been waived twice earlier in the season before surfacing with the Knicks after a brief stint in the NBA’s Developmental League. Earlier in the day, he was selected as ABC News’ “Person of the Week.”

The victory was the fourth straight for the Knicks since Lin has taken over point guard duties with leading scorers Amar’e Stoudemire and Carmelo Anthony out of the lineup. It also snapped a nine-game losing streak to the Lakers and Kobe Bryant, who scored 34 points in a losing cause.

“I didn’t try to see this game as any different,” Lin told the Associated Press. “I just try to make sure that when I get there on the floor, I play as hard as I can and try to do everything I can to help the team win.

“The only thing we established tonight is four in a row. Now we try to go for five tomorrow. I’m not too worried about proving anything to anybody. As a team we’re growing and trying to build on the momentum.”

Bryant, who dismissed Lin a night earlier in Boston, had another disdainful comment for Lin and the Knicks after the victory.

“Enjoy it,” Bryant told reporters after the game. “They’ll receive judgment next season.”

But for at least one night, Lin sat at the top of the NBA’s Studs and Duds. He’s the first Harvard product to ever receive the designation.

STUDS

New York G Jeremy Lin: Erupted for 38 points in 38 minutes, dished off seven assists, grabbed four rebounds and two steals and was plus-8 in the Knicks’ victory over the Los Angeles Lakers.

Dallas F Dirk Nowitzki: Went for 33 points, four rebounds, three assists, three blocks and was plus-22 in the Mavericks’ triumph at Minnesota.

Portland G Jamal Crawford: Came off the bench to notch 31 points, eight assists and was plus-14 in the Trail Blazers’  victory at New Orleans.

Atlanta F Josh Smith: Filled the stat sheet for 23 points, 19 rebounds, five assists, three blocks and was plus-8 in the Hawks’ victory at Orlando.

Minnesota F Kevin Love: Went for 32 points — including 14 of 14 from the foul line — 12 rebounds and three assists in the Timberwolves’ loss to Dallas.

DUDS

Minnesota G Ricky Rubio: Clanked through a 2-for-8 shooting night with four turnovers and was minus-18 in the Timberwolves’ loss to Dallas.

Orlando F Hedo Turkoglu: Went 4 for 9 from the field with six turnovers in the Magic’s loss to Atlanta.

Boston G Rajon Rondo: Clanked through a 2-of-10 shooting performance with five turnovers and was minus-16 in the Celtics’ loss at Toronto.

Philadelphia G Jrue Holiday: Went 2 of 8 from the field with five turnovers in the Sixers’ loss  to the Los Angeles Clippers.

Indiana F Paul George: Struggled through a 2-for-13 shooting night with three turnovers  and was a team-worst minus-9 in the Pacers’ loss  at Memphis.

Parker on brink of assists milestone

By Mike Monroe

Enjoying a career season distributing the basketball, Spurs point guard Tony Parker has moved within striking range of passing Avery Johnson as the Spurs’ leader in career assists.

With seven assists in the Spurs’ 93-81 victory over the Hornets on Thursday, Parker has 4,468 for a Spurs career that began in 2001. That is six shy of Johnson’s mark of 4,474, established in 10 seasons in silver and black that stretched from the 1990-91 season through 2000-01.

Parker is averaging 7.9 assists per game, a career high.

The timing of Parker’s arrival after the Spurs made him the 28th pick in the 2001 draft made it impossible for him not to immediately understand Johnson’s legacy.

“When I first arrived that’s all anybody talked about: Avery,” Parker said. “He meant a lot to this city, so it’s nice to be in the same category with him.

“I know Avery Johnson and know he was very big in this community and one of the best point guards ever in San Antonio. It will definitely be a great honor.”

Rest for the weary: After playing four games in five days, the Spurs didn’t practice Friday and will skip the typical morning shootaround before tonight’s game against the Thunder.

Even in a compressed season in which days available for practice are few and far between, the coaching staff’s decision to maximize recovery time between games was appreciated by the players.

“You know what?” team captain Tim Duncan said after Thursday’s victory. “I think we had some tired legs tonight. You could tell our shooters were worn out a little bit. It will be good for us.

“This is a crazy season and it’s taking a lot out of a lot of people. Any rest is good rest. I don’t think we’re going to lose much in just a day, so it’s good to get some rest under our belt because there’s a lot of games coming up and (we know) the kind of season that’s ahead of us.”

Learning for Leonard: After starting 13 consecutive games, rookie swingman Kawhi Leonard was replaced by Gary Neal in the starting lineup for Thursday’s game against the Hornets.

Popovich said the change was based on situational tactics rather than Leonard’s recent level of play.

“There’s some games another player doesn’t play a lot of minutes,” he said. “It’s just part of the game. In Dallas, Tony (Parker) and Tim (Duncan) didn’t play a minute in the fourth quarter. That’s just the way games go sometimes.

“Certain groups are doing well, people out there doing what you want them to do. You don’t just change it to be changing it, to give somebody minutes. It’s what you’ve got to do that night to try to win.”

Leonard, who had played a little more than eight minutes in Wednesday’s game against Houston, logged nearly 12 minutes in his reserve role on Thursday.

Neal came off the bench and played more than 34 minutes against Houston. He got 29 minutes as a starter on Thursday.

mikemonroe@express-news.net

Stern thinks Shaq will be better coach than Barkley at Rising Stars game

David Stern has never been afraid to ruffle a few feathers or stick a needle when he wanted to.

The NBA commissioner has inflamed the  Rising Stars Competition Feb. 24 in Orlando when he said that he thought that Shaquille O’Neal will be a better coach in the game between the league’s top rookies and second-year players than his fellow TNT commentator Charles Barkley.

“I can’t wait to critique Charles. Oh boy, I am on this, all over it, okay,” Stern told reporters. “I think that Shaq is going to be a better coach than Charles. And he was a better rebounder than Charles. I’ll even go to the question that he’s a better commentator than Charles … [but] that’s for after All-Star [Weekend].”

How come I feel like I’m in the middle of a WWE promotion?