Wednesday, July 18, 2012

MSG stock dives following Jeremy Lin’s departure

  MSG is the company that owns the New York Knicks. It also owns the Madison Square Garden, the historic Beacon Theatre in New York and the gorgeous Chicago Theatre in that city's downtown loop, along with the New York Rangers and several television stations. It's a publicly traded company that would seem, considering its considerable holdings, to be impervious to the play of a pretty good point guard. Apparently that's not the case, as we look at the effect that former Knick guard Jeremy Lin has had on MSG stock.

Jeremy Lin


  When Lin busted out of relative obscurity last February to lead New York on a 10-3 midseason run, MSG's stock shot way up, as documented by the New York Observer's Foster Kamer. That boon continued even throughout Lin's trip to the bench in late March, following an MCL tear, and New York's first-round ouster from the playoffs. The stock didn't dip until the Houston Rockets made Lin an offer as a restricted free agent that made even the spend-heavy Knicks uneasy, but because the assumption at the time was that New York would match any offer no matter how ridiculous, MSG's shares stayed somewhat steady.

  Then word leaked out that New York might not match, and Knicks guard (and hopeful Lin mentor) Jason Kidd was arrested on a DWI charge. And the stock fell, by 8.5 percent. All this after a 31 percent upshot in the wake of what we'll all fondly recall as "Linsanity."

  Seriously? A point guard can do this? An unproven one that, despite his brilliant February turn, still has quite a few of us wondering if he can even man the handle as a NBA starter?

  Apparently these things count. They count more than, say, the Rangers making the Stanley Cup Finals or eight nights worth of tasty licks from the Allman Brothers at the Beacon, man.

  And now that we've realized that the NBA's "stretch provision" could have mitigated New York's risk with Lin, should he fail to pan out before his 2014-15 balloon payment hits, and that personal and typically petty politics played a role in Lin's jump to Houston, it's becoming clearer and clearer that MSG head honcho James Dolan truly is a dunderhead for the ages. With stock falling, Lin's contract was one that the Knicks could not afford to pass on, and yet they let him slip away in spite of several strong and significant reasons to keep the third-year guard.

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