Taipei: Jeremy Lin said Friday he hopes to earn the respect of his new Los Angeles Lakers teammates and was relishing the chance to play alongside team star Kobe Bryant.
Lin, the point guard whose 2012 heroics for the New York Knicks sparked a brief “Linsanity” phenomenon, arrived in Taipei late Thursday for a promotional tour, just days after he was traded by the Houston Rockets to the Lakers.
“Kobe wants to win and I want to win. I think Kobe wants his teammates to train hard and I will train hard. I hope he can respect me and we can collaborate well together,” Lin told a press conference in fluent Mandarin.
Lin was the first Chinese-American to play in the NBA, with a grandmother living in China and parents from Taiwan.
He signed a three-year deal with Houston for $25 million in 2012 but the 25-year-old said he had not expected that he would be sitting on the bench in the second year.
“I am very excited to join the Lakers. I think this is a very good opportunity. I hope I can make a bigger contribution ... I hope I can play a more important role,” Lin said.
He has become a sporting hero in Taiwan after his star turn in New York and more than 200 fans gathered at the airport outside Taipei for his arrival despite the late hour.
Lin averaged 12.5 points, 4.1 assists and 2.6 rebounds a game for the Rockets last season. In 217 games over four NBA campaigns, Lin has averaged 11.9 points, 4.8 assists and 2.6 rebounds a game.
The Asian-American standout will join a talented Laker backcourt hoping to revive the form he showed in February of 2012 when he came off the bench for an injury-plagued New York squad and sparked a win streak.
The Harvard graduate became the first player in NBA history to score at least 20 points and contribute seven assists in his first five starts, twice making the cover of Sports Illustrated magazine while being named among Time magazine’s 100 Most Influential People with his rags-to-riches tale.
Meanwhile, the Lakers have acquired two-time all-star forward Carlos Boozer on amnesty waivers, the National Basketball team announced Thursday night.
The 32-year-old Boozer was available for silent bidding from any team with enough salary cap space after being waived using the amnesty clause by the Chicago Bulls on Tuesday.
“Carlos is an established veteran and a proven all-star, who will be a welcome addition to our team,” said Lakers general manager Mitch Kupchak. “We’re very pleased to have won the bidding process and to have gained his rights, and look forward to his contributions next season.”
The Lakers refused to release details of the bid but it will help offset the $16.8 million the Bulls owed him.
Boozer is a 12-year NBA veteran who has appeared in the playoffs eight-straight years.
Boozer played the past four seasons with the Bulls, averaging 15.5 points and 9.0 rebounds in 280 games.
He holds career averages of 16.6 points and 9.8 rebounds over 790 games.
In other news, NBA Hall-of-Famer Bill Russell was hospitalised Thursday after collapsing during a corporate speaking event at a resort town on the shores of Lake Tahoe.
The Boston Celtics released a statement saying that the 80-year-old Russell is conscious and recovering in a Nevada hospital, and is hopeful that he will be able to fly back to his Seattle-area home Thursday.
According to witnesses, Russell began to feel faint while making his speech and fell to the floor before being carried out of the Hyatt Regency hotel on a stretcher.
Russell was arrested nine months ago after airport officials in Seattle found him trying to board a flight with a loaded hand gun in his carry-on luggage.
Russell later apologised saying he accidentally left the .38-calibre Smith & Wesson in his bag.
Russell won 11 NBA titles during a brilliant 13-year career with the Celtics from 1956-69, serving the final three seasons as a player-coach. The former centre was selected as one of the 50 greatest players in NBA history in 1996.