作者wings2u2me (飛)
看板Knicks
標題[外電] 直擊暴龍主場尼克休息室
時間Thu Feb 16 22:31:51 2012
轉載來源:yahoo Sports
http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/blog/ball_dont_lie/post/behind-the-locker-room-doors-before-and-after-lins-game-winning-shot-against-the-raptors?urn=nba,wp14500
Wed Feb 15 10:00am EST
Behind the locker room doors before and after Lin’s game-winning shot
against the Raptors
By Holly MacKenzie
(非常棒 感動人的好文 希望有強者翻譯跟大家分享啦)
TORONTO — Fifty-five hours.
That's how much time had elapsed between Kobe Bryant's game-winner for the Los
Angeles Lakers on Sunday afternoon and Jeremy Lin's game-winner for the New
York Knicks on Tuesday night.
Two heroic shots, two players at opposite ends of their careers, one 23-year-
old in the middle of a real-life daydream that has made everything else pale
in comparison.
Bryant's dagger against the Toronto Raptors was the 16th game-winning shot in
a career that had spanned 49,386 minutes. The shot was brilliant, but it was
expected.
Lin's 3-pointer to beat the Raps was the first game-winning shot in a career
that has seen him play just 576 minutes. The shot was brilliant, but it was
something none of us could have ever expected.
When Bryant finished his television interview, he sauntered toward the locker
room and looked over at the reporter and locker room attendant standing
beside
the locker room door. He smiled. He shrugged his shoulders. He shook his head
and chuckled. He had made this walk many times before.
Fifty-five hours later, Lin raced toward the locker room, welcoming an escape
from the attention, cameras and questions. Exhausted, he glanced over in my
direction. He looked straight through me, though, a dazed look on his
slightly
smiling face. As he entered the locker room, his team erupted. Before the
attendants could close the door to allow the team privacy to celebrate their
hero, the booming cheers zipped through the air and into the hallway.
This is what Jeremy Lin has done.
More thrilling than sinking the game-winner and more crucial than the six
consecutive victories, Lin has given the Knicks life.
In the span of 10 days, he has made them believe.
He has made them act like a group of high schoolers in a locker room. He's
made them fall over themselves praising him, defending him and encouraging
him. He has had his life turned upside down as he's gone from last man on
the bench to fully guaranteed contract to writers-flying-to-Canada-from-all-
over-the-U.S.-to-see-him-play status, and he's barely batted an eye.
Occasionally,
he has allowed himself to break into a sheepish smile as he takes it all in.
He has made the sports world stop, listen and look, wide-eyed and fully
engaged,
as he continues to simultaneously defy expectations and exceed the ever-
mounting hype. Perhaps most importantly, he has reminded us all why we fall
in love with sports in the first place, why we pass that love along to our
children and why we want to see someone have their dream come true so that
we have something to believe in.
Lin represents hard work. He represents staying true. True to one's faith,
one's dream. Committed to one's own path. He didn't get here by following
the road map created by someone else. From Harvard to Golden State, Houston
to New York, this blueprint is his and his alone. He's earned it, just like
he's earned the respect his opponents are learning they have to give him.
* * * * *
Looking around the Knicks locker room during pregame media availability, you
would assume the Lakers are in town. You then remember that they were here but
55 short hours ago, their superstar hitting that game-winning bucket that
was
replayed on highlight reels for 24 hours afterward. You realize that buzz was
nothing like this buzz, this electricity in the Knicks locker room before a
Tuesday night game against a 9-20 Raptors team. There were never fewer than
25 people in the room for the duration of media availability. Everyone wants
to observe the spectacle, experience the mayhem.
The problem is, there isn't anything special or out of the ordinary outside
of the throng of reporters.
Off of the court, Lin is the opposite of flashy. Third from the right,
sandwiched
between Landry Fields and Jerome Jordan, Lin's locker is free of jewelry,
high-
fashion designer threads or $1,800 jars of lotion. There's a watch sitting on
the bench, a watch without any diamonds, black, white or gold. There's a book
propped up against the locker, "Mastering the Art of Success," that was hand-
delivered by former Raptor and Knick Jerome Williams.
Baron Davis sits in his locker, takes in the scene around him. It was a
setback
suffered by Davis weeks ago that put Lin into the starting lineup, a setback
that propelled all of this into motion.
"It's all opportunity," Davis explains. "That's what this league is about. You
see a lot of players that you wonder why they never have the career. They
have
the talent but not the career and it's because of opportunity. A lot of it
is
right place, right time, right situation. That can make or break somebody's
career."
As all eyes follow Lin from the doorway to his locker, Davis smiles.
"He's not one to get caught up in this stuff," Davis says. "I don't see how
this will change his perception of where he is. He's a spiritual person and
he's very grounded, he's a very humble kid. I don't think all of the hoopla
really has any effect on him at all."
But has Davis, in all of his 13 years in the league ever seen anything like
what he's currently witnessing? He laughs heartily and answers quickly. "No,
not at all. This is ridiculous. It's crazy."
A locker room attendant brings over Lin's sandals. He ducks a cameraman
positioned squarely in front of him, pats the attendant on the back while
saying, "Thank you very much." Slipping into his sandals, he slides through
the doors to the showers and leaves us to keep each other occupied until the
PR official kicks us out and closes the room.
After the game, it's the same exact thing. After the team has celebrated with
Lin and the doors are opened to the media, his teammates are laughing,
smiling
, enjoying. Enjoying the victory, enjoying the performance, enjoying the
camaraderie. Lin quietly gets ready to address the media, seemingly oblivious
to everything around him, the excitement that his six-game stretch of success
has created.
If the magnitude of this story hasn't yet been made clear, consider this: A
security guard and two PR officials escort Lin from the locker room to the
Toronto media room where a podium was set up for him. The last time this room
was used for a postgame press conference? When the space was needed to
accommodate LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in Bosh's first return
to Toronto after bolting for South Beach to join the Miami Heat.
Unlike the Heat trio, there wasn't an hour wait for the press conference or
any stifled laughter. Not a hint of anything other than a young man who could
only shake his head and admit that, no, he did not see this whirlwind coming,
either.
This is a story that begins on a basketball court, but extends far beyond
those 94 feet. It's a story of belief and perseverance, of passion and
humility.
It has captured us all because we don't know what will happen next, how long
Lin will continue to dazzle us. It's captured us because we already know that
it doesn't matter how long it lasts from here. What matters is that it's
happened at all.
Back in the Knicks locker room, Amar'e Stoudemire is dealing with reporters
in his first game back after taking time to grieve for his older brother,
who died in a car crash nine days ago. He compares Lin to Steve Nash, the
man who many credit for Stoudemire's own ascension into stardom.
Tyson Chandler is laughing, smiling over how he and Stoudemire celebrated
Lin's 3-pointer, talking of expectations and reminding us that this was the
guy who was "probably days away from being cut."
Landry Fields can only sit in his locker and continue to shake his head again
and again and again.
I ask Fields about the night that Lin crashed on his couch before his first
career start. A whopping six games ago. I ask if either of them could have
ever envisioned this, that two weeks later they'd be in Toronto with more
than 100 people on hand to talk to Jeremy.
"What's going on right now? No! You can't even write this. This doesn't
happen in movies," Fields says. "… I hope this is the beginning. It's
great. It's phenomenal. It's an inspirational story right now. It's something
that we're going to look at over time and take a lot from it.
"At times I find myself speechless, just to be a part of it," the shooting
guard continues. "Sometimes I have to step back. I'll have to write my
memoirs
about it all. It's the kind of story that we need. A lot of times people get
bad reps out there, a certain type of athlete. To see this happen, it's
really
… it's phenomenal."
Lin has made them believe.
"It means everything," Fields says. "It shows the kind of relationship that we
all have with each other. We're not just players, we're not just teammates,
we're actual brothers."
After finishing his media duties, Fields sits down in his locker. "It's one
of
those things where you lay in bed at night and you just go, 'Haha.' You just
chuckle about it."
He smiles once more. "Now that I have come off my life high, I can eat."
Taking a
moment to gather himself, he begins to dig into the pasta in front of him as
the
locker room slowly empties of reporters who have deadlines looming, and his
teammate's story to tell.
================================================================================
Holly MacKenzie is a lover of all things basketball, especially rookies and
underdogs. The draft class of '96 holds a special place in her heart and she
cannot wrap her head around the fact that Kobe Bryant has been playing
professional basketball for 16 years. She has written for SLAM Magazine,
HOOP Magazine, The Basketball Jones, NBA.com and various other stops along
the way. She counts Jesus Shuttlesworth jumpers rather than sheep when she
can't sleep. You can hear her basketball ramblings on Twitter by following
@stackmack.
原來是女記者
她寫的角度的確很細膩
阿想到我們的floor general
場下竟然是用小羊笑容征服諸位大哥
不過其實場上的笑容本來就很萌啦
尼克真的變成一個打球很歡樂的球隊阿
這是球迷在場上也感受得到的
但有人埋伏在休息室是看得更實在的
推小菲說的
We're not just players,
we're not just teammates,
we're actual brothers."
難得看到外電會感動到看到想流眼淚
--
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◆ From: 123.204.74.69
※ 編輯: wings2u2me 來自: 123.204.74.69 (02/16 22:33)
1F:推 KIMBEOM:高手翻譯 02/16 22:34
2F:推 qazse000:請求高手翻譯 02/16 22:37
3F:推 xajx:摘要: 暴龍衰暴了, 55小時內被絕殺兩次. 02/16 22:49
4F:→ wings2u2me:上面摘要不是感動的重點啦 雖然的確是拿暴龍鋪梗 02/16 22:54
5F:→ wings2u2me:鋪這梗的目的是要比較kobe跟lin在絕殺後 球隊反應的不 02/16 22:55
6F:→ wings2u2me:同,一個是只有kobe一人爽而已。尼克呢?哈哈 全隊上 02/16 22:56
7F:→ wings2u2me:天堂 02/16 22:56
8F:推 xajx:我知道XD 只是好玩XD 02/16 22:57
9F:推 DialUp:感謝好文!! 02/16 23:23
10F:推 bbsjr:更衣室訪談都好有感情,推Fields 02/16 23:29
11F:推 iamcarrieok:我也有看到這篇文,文章底下的評論都很正面、很感動 02/16 23:46
12F:推 zergtide:感動推~ 02/16 23:54
13F:推 hikaruton:不能只說kobe一人爽 因為胡人對於kobe決殺都習慣了 02/16 23:59
14F:→ hikaruton:同樣的東西看太多次會麻痺~ 02/16 23:59
15F:推 ILCC23:可以請問Field說那段話是哪一段新聞嗎?謝謝 02/17 00:01
17F:→ wings2u2me:對於兩個絕殺的對比,我想記者要表達的是其他隊員對於 02/17 00:10
18F:→ wings2u2me:勝利的參與感吧 kobe是球隊的老大 是眾星拱月的主角 02/17 00:11
19F:→ wings2u2me:但Lin看起來雖然好像比較平凡 其他隊員卻把他的榮耀也 02/17 00:11
20F:→ wings2u2me:感同身受 甚至比他還激動 真的很有兄弟的感覺 02/17 00:13
21F:→ wings2u2me:結論:萌萌的小羊微笑才是真正絕殺 (無誤 02/17 00:14
22F:→ wings2u2me:小菲說的那段話就是這則新聞的倒數第三段 02/17 00:16