OGmittee
Smugest Poster Alive
Complaining about not having a "race card" is using the race card.
I do wish I could use it in the typical fashion every once in a while

Waits for shouts of ignorance
Complaining about not having a "race card" is using the race card.

People put up better stats and didn't get a d1 scholarshipthere are a million stories similar to this , go to any hood and you can find someone with the same type of story. How can you say for sure it was discrimination . And all the Lin story shows is that the nba needs to think outside the box more when drafting like they do with euro players .
He wasn't that stand out of a prospect it happens ..
Just have a seat and shut the fukk up. You don't have to be Asian to see that Lin could play. The fact that he's a starting guard in the NBA means he always had game. College scouts and coaches just fukked up not giving him a schollie. They missed out on Stephen Curry and Damian Lillard too.
The 12th man in a Chicago high school squad could captain a squad that beat the best team in California?
Some of y'all ignorance is so thoro....
can he play yes but he slipped through the cracks . They scout all over the world but a Asian American kid is where the line is drawn ??
what about when hs players were getting drafted over college students? Was that discrimination against people with degrees ?
Everyone plays the race card but none bigger than black people![]()
Jeremy Lin thinks he would have been offered a Division I basketball scholarship -- if he wasn't Asian-American.
Lin, now the starting point guard for the Houston Rockets, led Palo Alto (Calif.) High School to a 32-1 record and a state championship in 2005-06, averaging 15.1 points, 7.1 assists, 6.2 rebounds and 5.0 steals per game.
Lin
Lin
Jeremy Lin of Houston Rockets -- Race was 'barrier' to college - ESPN
But despite being named first-team All-State and Northern California Division II Player of the Year, local schools like Stanford and UCLA passed on the 6-foot-3 Lin.
"Well, I think the obvious thing in my mind is that I was Asian-American, which, you know, is a whole different issue but ... I think that was a barrier," Lin told Charlie Rose in a "60 Minutes" interview that will air Sunday night.
"I mean ... it's a stereotype."
Lin ended up at Harvard University, where he was twice named to the All-Ivy League first team. He went undrafted out of college, but impressed in the NBA Summer League and signed with the Golden State Warriors in 2010.
STFU Already![]()
Harvard IS a D1 basketball schoolI think this is something everyone can agree with. I also think lin coming into the league was alot more raw than he how he is playing right now. Players get passed over all the time only to make you look back and think wtf were they thinking when they passed this kid over.
Harvard IS a D1 basketball school
damn I didn't even think about thatI know . The guy acts like he led a team to the final 4 or something ... The nba needs to stop messing with the second round and start trying to really find players that might develop and actually use the dleague as a source of talent . And ironically the reason he got a look when players white latino european and black With better careers didn't is because he's Asian . Yet let can newton and geno smith cry racism about how they were portrayed in those draft profile and they'd be considered malcontents .
There are players that had way better careers then Lin that didn't sniff the nbacan he play yes but he slipped through the cracks . They scout all over the world but a Asian American kid is where the line is drawn ??
what about when hs players were getting drafted over college students? Was that discrimination against people with degrees ?
Lin got no scholarship offers - from those three schools or any others - and then committed to Harvard. At the time, (now University of Santa Clara HC) Keating was an assistant coach for the Bruins' Ben Howland.
After one of Palo Alto's postseason games, Keating talked with Lin, offering him a recruited walk-on opportunity in Westwood. Lin chose to stick with Harvard.
"It's not like I didn't know he wasn't good four or five years ago," Keating said. "I watched him win a championship. ... In hindsight now, given UCLA's current state, he'd probably be starting for UCLA at point guard.
I remember when lin was drafted and he was bench fodder for the GSW. The entire asian american community in the media was hyped for him, but when he actually played he was trash. He couldn't make any of the shots he is making nowadays and he wasn't a good dribbler either. What training he did between then and when he got his shot on the knicks is anyone's guess. However, he was not some elite pg or even an average pg that should have been getting the star treatment that he is getting now, and even now he is still not an all star.
His skills then would of made him easily slip under the radar, so I don't really agree with Lin's comments that racial sterotypes held him back.
Harvard IS a D1 basketball school
If Asians are inferior to blacks why is Asia better off than Africa?
See how stupid your better than argument is?
Which country in Africa and which Asian country are we talking about hereLet me ask you this:
If Africa and Asia were to go to war, who would win?
Also, who does the world respect more in general, Asians or Africans?
