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    Jeremy Lin Exerts His Will

    Jeremy Lin exerts his will: Rockets coach Kevin McHale forced to treat guard like a star

    Chris Baldwin
    Dec 26, 2013 | 5:23 pm

    It all starts with Jeremy Lin pushing the pace, driving the lane, moving the ball. The Houston Rockets' biggest win of the season will be fueled by its most doubted player.

    He won't get much of the credit of course. That largely goes to box score stuffer James Harden, rebound machine Dwight Howard and even budding male model (and 40-percent 3-pointer shooter) Chandler Parsons. But make no mistake, Lin sets the Rockets course with a brilliant first quarter, propelling Houston to a 40-25 lead and that eventual statement-making 111-98 Christmas night victory in San Antonio.

    This is what the Rockets look like with a real starting point guard. They're fast, explosive and precise.

    Lin finishes the quarter with four points, four assists and one highlight block. He gets everyone involved, sets Terrence Jones up for an easy dunk with a no-look bounce pass, feeds Howard for another uncontested slam. The Spurs will be running uphill the rest of the game.

    Few players in the NBA have been more efficient than Jeremy Lin this season.

    It all happens with Lin playing nine minutes and 19 seconds in the first quarter — starter's minutes. This is what happens when Lin is treated with the same respect as Mike Conley, the point guard of the Grizzlies, the Rockets' Thursday night comeback victim. This is what happens when Lin is trusted as much as a Kemba Walker, the Bobcats' hardly superstar point.

    Rockets coach Kevin McHale has little choice but to play Lin more at the moment. With Patrick Beverley out for more than a month with a broken hand, McHale's essentially forced to do what he should have been doing from the season's opening tip: Play Jeremy Lin like a true starting point guard.

    The result in the Christmas national TV showcase is compelling. Lin finishes with 13 points on only 10 shots, eight assists and two blocks in 34 minutes of action. His plus-minus is at team-high +24 for the game. This one game after he scores 20 points on only 10 shots in his return from a back injury.

    And the night after Christmas? Lin scores 18 points on 13 shots, with 14 of those points coming in the fourth quarter as the Rockets roar back for a 100-92 win.

    Few players in the NBA have been more efficient than Jeremy Lin this season.

    If he was starting all season like he should have been, Lin easily would be averaging around 17 points and six assists right now. More importantly, the Rockets would be higher than fifth in the Western Conference standings.

    Jeremy Lin's Time

    Over the next several weeks with Beverley out, Lin will make his case, prove he should be starting. McHale can only play Aaron Brooks so many minutes before the veteran's flaws become magnified.

    Still it's a little hard to imagine McHale making the permanent switch to Jeremy Lin once Patrick Beverley is back. It's one of the curious things about a Rockets season that has been both promise packed and perplexing.

    Lin's level of play has been consistent. His role and minutes are not.

    It's a dangerous way to treat a 25-year-old with star potential. Good players have been crippled with far less yo-yoing than Jeremy Lin's received.

    It doesn't seem to matter if Lin answers McHale's direct defensive challenge and shuts down Spurs All-Star point guard Tony Parker on Christmas night (a season-low six points, 3-for-11 shooting) like Beverley could not in the teams' earlier Alamo City meeting (when Parker went off for 27 points on 13 for 27 shooting).

    Or if he helps harass Conley — the Grizzlies' head — into a 4 for 14 shooting night while logging 37 crucial minutes.

    Lin's still the one who still must prove his worth night after night after night. He's still the one who is sure to have his defense dissected while Beverley is unquestionably lauded as a "stopper."

    It's a dangerous way to treat a 25-year-old with star potential. Good players have been crippled with far less yo-yoing than Jeremy Lin's received in his time in Houston. McHale's coaching is the NBA equivalent of Gary Kubiak yanking Case Keenum in and out of games.

    Bob McNair and Rick Smith stepped in for Keenum with the Texans. Will Daryl Morey step in with McHale for Lin?

    With Dwight Howard playing with more force than he has in years, it's the perfect time for the Rockets to have a real point guard in the starting lineup. Lin will get Howard some easy baskets and keep the ball moving. The weeks to come should bring plenty more highlights and wins.

    And if McHale doesn't realize it, some other team in the NBA will: The Houston Rockets are sitting on a very underappreciated asset. Every full-court push, every fearless foray to the rim, every easy set up, every quarter like that opening stanza in San Antonio drive home the real point.

    James Harden cannot carry the Houston Rockets by himself.

    James Harden arms up
      
    Photo by Scott Halleran Getty Images
    James Harden cannot carry the Houston Rockets by himself.
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    remembering big george

    Legendary Houston boxer and Olympic champion George Foreman has died at 76

    Associated Press
    Mar 22, 2025 | 8:39 am
    Big George Foreman Atlanta Screening
    Photo by Paras Griffin/Getty Images for Sony Pictures Releasing
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    George Foreman became the heavyweight champion of the world in his 20s, only to lose his belt to Muhammad Ali in perhaps the most memorable fight in boxing history.

    A full 20 years later in 1994, the 45-year-old Foreman became the oldest man to win the heavyweight championship, throwing one perfect combination to steal Michael Moorer’s title in an epic upset.

    Few fighters ever had more big moments than Big George Foreman — and even after he finally left the ring, he was only getting started.

    The fearsome heavyweight, who lost the “Rumble in the Jungle” to Ali before his inspiring second act as a surprising champion and a successful businessman, died Friday night. Foreman was 76.

    Foreman’s family announced his death on social media, not saying how or where he died.

    “A devout preacher, a devoted husband, a loving father and a proud grand- and great-grandfather, he lived a life marked by unwavering faith, humility and purpose,” his family wrote. “A humanitarian, an Olympian and two-time heavyweight champion of the world, he was deeply respected. A force for good, a man of discipline, conviction, and a protector of his legacy, fighting tirelessly to preserve his good name— for his family.”

    A native Texan, Foreman began his boxing career as an Olympic gold medalist who inspired fear and awe as he climbed to the peak of the heavyweight division by stopping Joe Frazier in 1973. His formidable aura evaporated only a year later when Ali pulled off one of the most audacious victories in boxing history in Zaire, baiting and taunting Foreman into losing his belt.

    Foreman left the sport a few years later, but returned after a 10-year absence and a self-described religious awakening.

    The middle-aged fighter then pulled off one of the most spectacular knockouts in boxing history, flooring Moorer — 19 years his junior — with a surgical right hand and claiming Moorer’s two heavyweight belts. Foreman’s 20 years is easily the longest gap between heavyweight title reigns.

    “His contribution to boxing and beyond will never be forgotten,” former heavyweight champion of the world, Mike Tyson, said on X, formerly Twitter, as he expressed his condolences.

    Foreman’s transformation into an inspirational figure was complete, and he fought only four more times — finishing 76-5 with 68 knockouts — before moving onto his next career as a genial businessman, pitchman and occasional actor.

    Outside the ring, he was best known as the face of the George Foreman Grill, which launched in the same year as his victory over Moorer. The simple cooking machine sold more than 100 million units and made him much wealthier than his sport ever did.

    “George was a great friend to not only myself, but to my entire family,” Top Rank president Bob Arum said. “We’ve lost a family member and are absolutely devastated.”

    In the first chapter of his boxing career, Foreman was nothing like the smiling grandfather who hawked his grills on television to great success.

    Foreman dabbled in petty crime while growing up in Houston’s Fifth Ward, but changed his life through boxing. He made the U.S. Olympic team in 1968 and won gold in Mexico City as a teenager, stopping a 29-year-old opponent in a star-making performance.

    Foreman rose to the pinnacle of the pro game over the next five years, but was also perceived as an aloof, unfriendly athlete, both through his demeanor and through the skewed racial lenses of the time.

    Jim Lampley, the veteran boxing broadcaster who worked alongside Foreman for many years at HBO, told The Associated Press on Friday night that Foreman’s initial demeanor was an attempt by his camp to emulate Sonny Liston, the glowering heavyweight champ of the 1960s.

    “At some point somewhere along the way, he realized that wasn’t him,” Lampley said.

    Foreman stopped Frazier in an upset in Jamaica in January 1973 to win the belt, with his knockout inspiring Howard Cosell’s iconic call: “Down goes Frazier! Down goes Frazier!”

    Foreman defended his belt against Ken Norton before accepting the fight with Ali in the now-immortal bout staged in Africa by promoter Don King. Ali put on a tactical masterclass against Foreman, showing off the “rope-a-dope” strategy that frustrated and infuriated the champion. Foreman was eventually knocked down for the first time in his career, and the fight was stopped in the eighth round.

    Foreman told the BBC in 2014 that he took the fight almost out of charity to Ali, who he suspected to be broke.

    “I said I was going to go out there and kill him, and people said, ‘Please, don’t say you’re going to kill Muhammad,’” Foreman said. “So I said, ‘OK, I’ll just beat him down to the ground.’ That’s how easy I thought the fight would be.”

    Exhausted and disillusioned, Foreman stopped fighting in 1977 and largely spent the next decade preaching and working with kids in Houston after his religious awakening. He returned to boxing in 1987 in his late 30s with a plan to defy time through frequent ring appearances, and he racked up a lengthy series of victories before losing to Evander Holyfield in a surprisingly competitive title fight in 1991.

    Three years later, Foreman got in the ring with Moorer in Las Vegas, more for his celebrity than for his perceived ability to beat Moorer. The champion appeared to win the first nine rounds rather comfortably, with Foreman unable to land his slower punches. But Foreman came alive in the 10th, hurting Moorer before slipping in the short right hand that sent Moorer to the canvas in earth-shaking fashion.

    Lampley, who was calling the fight, named his upcoming autobiography — which includes a prologue about Foreman — after his famous call of that moment: “It Happened!”

    Foreman quit the ring for good in 1997, although he occasionally discussed a comeback. He settled into a life as a boxing analyst for HBO and as a pitchman for the grills that grew his fame and fortune. Much of the world soon knew Foreman as both a lovable friend and a ferocious fighter.

    “He started performing as this pitchman, this product pitchman with the big, ever-present giant grin on his face,” Lampley recalled. “When I was working with him, people would say, ‘George is a big clown.’ And I would say, ‘Well, you can call him a clown, but he’s actually a genius. He may be the greatest genius I’ve ever met.’ And people would say, ‘Well, genius, what do you mean?’ I’d say, ‘Well, check the bank account. If that isn’t proof enough, I don’t know what is.’ So, he was a genius. He was a human genius.”

    Foreman briefly starred in a sitcom called “George” in the 1990s, and he even appeared on the reality singing competition “The Masked Singer” in 2022. A biographical movie based on his life was released in 2023.

    Foreman had 12 children, including five sons who are all famously named George Edward Foreman.

    “Legendary boxing champion, life-changing preacher, husband, father, grand- and great-grandfather and the best friend you could have,” WBC President Mauricio Sulaiman wrote on social media. “His memory is now eternal, may Big George rest in peace.”

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