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Harvard's Lin Signs with NBA's Warriors
Courtesy of Harvard Athletic Communications
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- Former Harvard guard and
three-time All-Ivy League honoree Jeremy Lin has
signed a multiple-year professional contract with the Golden State
Warriors of the National Basketball Association. Lin is attempting
become the first Asian-American player to play in the NBA since
Rex Walters was a member of the Miami Heat in
2000.
Lin is in line to be the first Ivy League player to play for an
NBA team since Penn’s Matt Maloney suited up for the Atlanta
Hawks and Yale’s Chris Dudley was a member
of the Portland Trail Blazers in 2003. With his first game for the
Warriors, Lin would join former Harvard standouts Saul
Mariaschin (Boston Celtics) and Edward
Smith (New York Knicks) as Crimson players who have seen
time in the NBA.
A native of Palo Alto, Calif., who guided Palo Alto High School to a state championship, Lin will now join his hometown professional franchise. Lin recently averaged 9.8 points, 3.2 rebounds, 1.8 assists and 1.2 steals per game, while playing with the Dallas Mavericks Summer League team earlier this month. He scored 13 points against Washington July 15 and enjoyed a pair of 12-point efforts against Denver July 9 and Sacramento July 18. Lin, who stands at 6-3, also shot 54.5 percent from the floor and 66.7 percent from behind the arc while averaging 18.6 minutes in those five games.
As a senior in 2009-10, Lin, 21, was a finalist for the Bob
Cousy Award, which goes to the nation’s top point guard as
well as the John R. Wooden Award for the national player of the
year. A four-time Ivy League Player of the Week honoree this
past season, Lin led the Crimson in scoring as a senior with 16.4
points per game. He also paced Harvard with 4.6 assists per
contest and topped the Ancient Eight with 71 steals, marking the
third straight year he finished first in the Ivy League in
steals. Harvard also enjoyed the program's winningest season
in 2009-10, as the team recorded 21 victories and qualified for the
postseason for the first time since 1946.
A USBWA and NABC all-district team honoree, as well as a Lou
Henson All-America selection, Lin completed his Harvard career as
the only player in Ivy League history to record 1,450 points
(1,482), 450 rebounds (494), 400 assists (406) and 200 steals
(225). Lin helped rewrite the Harvard record books, as he
finished his career first in all-time games played (115) and was
second in steals and fifth in points and assists.



