Jeremy Lin Retires After 15 Years That Included ‘Linsanity’ With the Knicks

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Basketball|Jeremy Lin Retires After 15 Years That Included ‘Linsanity’ With the Knicks

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/31/sports/basketball/jeremy-lin-retires-linsanity-knicks.html

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The journeyman played for eight N.B.A. teams and won one championship. But he is best known for a brief stretch on the Knicks where he electrified fans and the nation.

Two men in gold and purple jerseys guard a man in a white jersey as fans watch during a basketball game.
Jeremy Lin, center, flanked by Steve Blake, left, and Andrew Bynum of the Lakers, when the Knicks’ sensation scored 38 points in 2012.Credit...Richard Perry/The New York Times

Andrés R. Martínez

Aug. 31, 2025, 1:19 a.m. ET

Jeremy Lin may have never won a ring for the New York Knicks. And his star turn at Madison Square Garden lasted mere months. But in that stretch, his electric play propelled a moribund team into the playoffs, rejuvenated bored fans and started a craze: “Linsanity.”

On Saturday, Linsanity came to an end. The journeyman, who spent 15 years on N.B.A. teams and in leagues in Asia, announced his retirement from professional basketball on his Instagram account.

The unlikely star, a walk-on at Harvard who went undrafted, outshined the league’s biggest names in 2012. Few had heard of Lin, a bench player who joined the N.B.A. in 2010, when the Knicks picked him up a year later. And even fewer expected him to stand out.

But by February 2012, Lin was squarely in the spotlight.

That year’s season started the way it often had for the Knicks. Fans were demanding that Mike D’Antoni, the coach, resign; the offense was a mess; and the Knicks appeared destined for another losing season. That’s when D’Antoni decided to give Lin a chance.

The improbable starter led the team on a seven-game winning streak and averaged 22 points a game before the All-Star break. Madison Square Garden was alive again, brimming with the usual fans, like Spike Lee, and the casual fans, many of whom had lost faith in the perpetual losers.

Scalpers got in on the action as demand for tickets soared, with seats in the upper level going for $150, The New York Times reported. Fans wore masks with Lin’s face, while holding up signs that said “Madison Square Guard-Lin.”


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