Lin scores 28, carries short-handed Knicks again

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Lin scores 28, carries short-handed Knicks again

The New York Knicks' Jeremy Lin (17) drives past Utah's Earl Watson (11) during the second half of their game on Monday in New York. Lin scored 28 points during the Knicks' 99-88 win. Kathy Kmonicek / Associated Press

Mike D'Antoni shook his fists in the air as Jeremy Lin's clutch shot fell through the net.

It wasn't just the basket that had D'Antoni giddy. It's the feeling that he's found the point guard who can get his offense running.

"It's fun, you can actually draw a play up and (say), this might work," D'Antoni said. "So it was good."

Lin scored a career-high 28 points in his first career start, Steve Novak added a season-best 19, and the New York Knicks overcame the absence of Amare Stoudemire and early loss of Carmelo Anthony to beat the Utah Jazz 99-88 on Monday night.

Stoudemire left the team to join his family in Florida after older brother Hazell was killed there earlier on Monday in a car crash, then Anthony left after just six minutes with a strained right groin.

Despite missing two All-Stars and using a lineup of second-teamers, the Knicks won their second straight thanks to another remarkable performance from Lin, the former Harvard point guard.

"Basketball's so fun when you play on a team where people want to work together and work through tough times and overcome them and have victories like this," Lin said. "This one was ugly and we lost a couple of players, but this team has a lot of will."

Al Jefferson scored 22 points in a disappointing effort for the Jazz, which may have lost its edge when it saw who the Knicks were missing.

"As you seen out there tonight, you come in here with that attitude, you're in trouble," coach Tyrone Corbin said. "These guys can play, man, and they got pride. They get an opportunity to play and they make the most of their minutes.

"They stuck it to us, really."

Going nowhere all season without a real point guard, the Knicks turned to Lin on Saturday against New Jersey, and he delivered 25 points. He was even better in this one in front of a crowd that again chanted his name much of the night, adding a career-best eight assists.

He made the biggest basket of the game, a desperation 3-pointer with the shot clock winding down and 1:58 remaining, that gave the Knicks a 95-86 lead. He previously converted two three-point plays in the period, the latter pushing the lead to 10 with 4:29 left.

He did have eight turnovers, surely influenced by fatigue while playing 45 minutes, but D'Antoni was going to keep riding him.

"I'm riding him like freakin' Secretariat," D'Antoni said.

Lin and Novak, whose photocopied bios are included in the game notes package because they were signed too late to make the media guide, helped the Knicks overcome the absence of about 42 points per game from their two stars. So did Jared Jeffries, who added 13 points and eight rebounds while battling the much bigger Utah front line.

"It wasn't the starters out there but it was definitely guys that are aware that this is the NBA, where on any given night any five can beat any five," Novak said. "That's kind of an understood thing in the NBA. I don't think it will typically happen, that a team that has their starters against a team that doesn't will win. But I think tonight we just really pushed together, played well and were able to get the win."

D'Antoni decided to start Lin, the first American-born NBA player of Chinese or Taiwanese descent, earlier Monday, and the position could be his for a while. Baron Davis, the expected starter when he becomes available, revealed that an infected right elbow had recently caused him to stop his workouts and it is unknown when he will resume practicing. D'Antoni said it would probably be a week to 10 days from the time he returns to practice to when he's ready to play in games.

Jefferson grabbed only four rebounds in 35 minutes. Power forward Paul Millsap was limited to nine points on 3-of-10 shooting before fouling out.

"We dug ourselves in a deep hole. You can't do that no matter who's on the floor," Jefferson said. "We're all professionals. Everybody is a pro. So no matter they didn't have their star player, they're still a team that you just can't go out there and take for granted. We dug ourselves in a deep hole and they got the momentum, got their confidence up and made shots."

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