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Chapter 159 - Lockers, Loaded Guns

After a string of wins, the Knicks' classic inconsistency kicked back in.

On December 20th, they managed to lose at home to the Bobcats.

Yep. The Bobcats.

Larry Brown shook things up by sliding Gerald Wallace to power forward. He and Tyson Chandler basically tag-teamed Lin Yi the whole night and made sure he didn't get anything easy.

But honestly, that wasn't even the main reason for the loss.

The real issue?

The Knicks collectively laid a giant brick house.

...

December 21, 2009.

Verizon Center, Washington, D.C.

NBA locker room.

The mood should've been light—it was mid-season, and they had some momentum going. But behind the scenes? Tension was simmering. Then one day, it boiled over.

It started over something dumb. Real dumb.

Gilbert Arenas and Javaris Crittenton—two players who probably shouldn't have been anywhere near a power dynamic—got into a dispute over a card game on the team plane. A bet gone sideways. Words were exchanged. Ego flared.

And then Arenas, in what he thought was a prank, brought multiple unloaded guns into the locker room a few days later. Put them in Crittenton's locker. With a note. Something along the lines of: "Pick one."

Except this wasn't a movie.

And Crittenton didn't laugh.

He brought his loaded gun and confronted Arenas. 

Suddenly, what was supposed to be locker room banter turned into something darker. There were guns in an NBA facility. Guns. In a professional sports team locker room.

Word got out fast.

The media pounced. NBA Thugs headlines flooded the internet. Talking heads screamed about blackculture problems in basketball. Stern was furious. Not just at the incident, but at how it blew up in the public eye. This wasn't just bad optics; it was a PR disaster.

The league moved fast.

Gilbert Arenas, Agent Zero, the fan-favorite, meme machine, walking bucket, was suspended for the rest of the season without pay and punished with communal labour. Crittenton, too. But the difference? Gilbert was a star. Crittenton never really recovered. And in the future, a tragic, bizarre turn of events, he'd later be convicted of a real shooting incident and sentenced to prison.

Just like that, both careers spiraled.

...

Lin Yi had watched the news unfold back then from the outside. He'd liked Gilbert. Who didn't? Dude dropped 60 on Kobe once. He was funny, wild, unpredictable. But that unpredictability? It turned on him.

After the incident, Arenas was never the same.

Not mentally. Not physically. He came back briefly, but the magic was gone. He'd once been one of the most fearless scorers in the league. But after the gun scandal, it felt like he was playing in a shadow—his own.

The incident didn't just hurt two players—it put the entire league under the microscope.

Locker rooms became more tightly regulated. Security protocols were reviewed. PR teams doubled their vigilance. The NBA realized that it wasn't just about basketball anymore. Image mattered. Public trust mattered.

And to David Stern, this wasn't just a blip—this was an inflection point.

Lin Yi shook his head, thinking about it.

It was easy to forget sometimes, under the lights and behind the highlights, that players were just people. Young. Rich. Emotional. Some from tough backgrounds. Some still carrying trauma. And sometimes, they brought the real world with them into the game.

What happened between Gilbert and Javaris?

It was more than just a locker room beef. It was a reminder.

This league didn't hand out second chances easily.

...

Later that day, after a light practice and some shootaround drills, Coach D'Antoni called the team into the film room. No clips today—just silence, and a news article projected on the screen. It was about Gilbert and Javaris.

"Some of you weren't in the league back then," D'Antoni started, arms crossed, his tone flat but heavy. "But I need y'all to understand what can happen when emotion gets ahead of judgment."

The room got quiet. Even Danilo stopped spinning his water bottle.

"I coached some wild locker rooms in Phoenix," Mike said. "Tensions happen. Cards, trash talk, egos. But what happened in Washington... that was different. That wasn't basketball. That was life catching up fast."

He looked around the room, his eyes lingering a little longer on Lin Yi.

"You think you've made it? Good. But that doesn't mean the past lets go of you. Doesn't mean bad decisions can't blow up everything you've built."

Lin sat back, arms folded, listening. He'd never heard Coach this serious. It wasn't about X's and O's anymore.

"Gilbert was a star," D'Antoni continued. Loved by fans. A leader. And Crittenton? Young, hot-blooded, still trying to prove himself. A bad moment. A stupid choice. And now... both are out of the league."

He tapped the side of the screen.

"You're not just playing for stats out there. You're playing for your name. Your family. Your future. Don't forget that."

...

December 22, 2009

After putting yesterday scandal behind them and reset, the Knicks bounced back at MSG, beating the Bulls in a grind-it-out kind of game.

The final score? A close score of 88-91.

The Bulls brought the fight, though. Coach Vinny Del Negro had them pushing the pace hard from the tip, and their game plan was clear: no shot attempts under 24 seconds, play slow, play tough.

They completely gave up on offensive rebounds, just sprinted back on every miss to stop the Knicks from running in transition. It worked—kind of. The Knicks couldn't get out and run, but Chicago's offense was ice-cold.

And poor Derrick Rose…

He got stuck in the Knicks' pseudo-zone trap again. Couldn't figure it out.

Lin Yi remembered how Rose always looked underwhelming in international play, too. Sure, part of that was him coming off injuries, but the bigger problem?

FIBA defenses don't play pretend. That's real D.

In this game, Rose hit just five shots. He finished with a goose egg in points, plus 5 assists and 4 boards—tough night.

Lin, on the other hand, logged 35 minutes, shot 8-of-8 on two-pointers, 2-of-4 from deep, 4-of-4 at the line. Ended up with 28 points, 2 assists, 2 blocks... and somehow, zero rebounds.

Knicks: 21-7 and second in the Eastern Conference, just behind the Boston Celtics.

...

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