Luv those Knicks wrote:coldgrip1 wrote:The only player in history to win California state player of the year and didn't get a college scholarship.
The only player in history to be a finalist for the NCAA Bob Cousy and didn't get drafted.
People see him play and they can see he gets his job done, but they have this thing in the back of their head that tells them "this kid is Asian.. he looks soft... he's too pale" lol...
With all due respect, if he was 6'7 and asian, he'd have been drafted. if he was 6'3 and had one of the top sprint speeds, he'd have been drafted. If he had a bulls-eye 3 pt shot and he was asian, he'd have been drafted.
Try to imagine a 6'3 BLACK combo guard with shorter than average arms for the NBA, less sprint speed than the average NBA PG, not a good enough shot for a SG, but he played SG / backed up PG in college. Now imagine that guy was impressive at a good (but not elite) college team. - would you draft him?
Teams look for an edge - they look for the guy who's the longest, who's the fastest, who's got the 3 pt shot. Team's don't look for the undersized combo guard who has to convert to fulltime PG who isn't an elite athlete and doesn't have a great shot. - he's maybe a guy you draft in the 50s. Doesn't matter what color his skin is.
. . .
so, I'm just saying, it's possible that Lin wasn't snubbed due to racism. It's just as likely, maybe more likely that he was snubbed cause scouts look at skillset over overall-game. It's possible they saw Lin as a college player who didn't have the tools for the NBA.
Not saying Racism didn't play a role either, but I feel it's worth pointing out that scouts look for skillsets when they draft players. I've never heard the line before "he doesn't look as good in practice as he looks in the game", but, that might be a line scouts start to pay attention to if Lin stays this good.