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Jeremy Lin reveals how he was ‘crushed’ by New York Knicks despite a $29m offer in hand from Rockets

Jeremy Lin has reopened one of the most painful New York Knicks what-ifs by revealing how badly he wanted to stay after Linsanity changed his life.

Lin’s 2012 run remains one of the most unforgettable stretches in modern NBA history. For a few weeks, he turned Madison Square Garden into the center of basketball, gave the Knicks a new face, and became a global story almost overnight.

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That is what makes his latest admission sting. The Rockets had life-changing money ready, but Lin says the ending in New York hurt because he never even had a Knicks offer to consider.

Photo by Chris Trotman/Getty Images

Photo by Chris Trotman/Getty Images

Jeremy Lin says New York Knicks crushed him after Houston Rockets offer

Legion Hoops shared Jeremy Lin’s comments on how his Knicks exit unfolded after Houston put a major contract in front of him.

“The Rockets offered $29,000,000… I would’ve taken $8,000,000 with the Knicks. I was crushed when my agent told me ‘There’s no offer from New York on the table,'” Lin said.

That quote changes the emotional weight of the old story. The public focus in 2012 was on Houston’s backloaded offer sheet and whether the Knicks would match it, but Lin’s memory is simpler and harsher.

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He did not just leave for more money. He says he was ready to take far less to remain in New York, only to learn that the team had not put anything real in front of him.

Jeremy Lin’s Linsanity rise made New York Knicks exit harder to accept

Lin’s heartbreak lands because of how fast everything had happened. In February 2012, he went from end-of-bench guard to phenomenon, leading the Knicks on a winning streak and producing one viral night after another.

His 38-point performance against Kobe Bryant and the Lakers became the defining Garden moment of the run. Days later, his game-winning three in Toronto pushed Linsanity beyond New York and into a global sports obsession.

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When free agency arrived, Houston’s offer sheet was structured in a way that made it painful for the Knicks to match because of luxury-tax concerns. New York eventually let him walk, after also adding veteran point guards Jason Kidd and Raymond Felton.

That decision has always been argued financially, but Lin’s version brings it back to loyalty. For a player who felt his heart was still in New York, the hardest part was not leaving the Knicks; it was realizing the Knicks were willing to let him go.

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