When I saw Yang Ming's interview after the Liaoning-Guangdong game, I suddenly remembered my college basketball days

2025-11-12 03:36:05

I was scrolling through Weibo during my lunch break at a local café here in Toronto when I came across that interview with Yang Ming. The video kept buffering - you know how it is when you're trying to watch Chinese sports content from overseas. But through the pixelated screen, I could still see the exhaustion and emotion in his eyes after that intense Liaoning-Guangdong semifinal.

Yang was talking about Zhao Jiwei's injury - how he had to leave the game and go straight for an MRI. It reminded me of my college basketball days back in China, when our point guard sprained his ankle during the inter-university tournament. The smell of the gym floor mixed with the sharp scent of pain relief spray still comes back to me sometimes.

'Liaoning-Guangdong matchups have been the hottest topic in Chinese basketball for nearly a decade,' Yang said in the interview. He's not wrong. I remember watching these games with my dorm mates, crowded around a small laptop, passing bags of spicy chips and yelling at the screen. The sound of sneakers squeaking on the court and the roar of the crowd became the soundtrack to our college years.

But what really got me was when Yang mentioned his worries about the future. 'Realistically speaking, it's hard to say if we'll continue to have epic battles like Liaoning-Guangdong,' he said, his voice tinged with that particular mix of pride and regret that only athletes who've given their all can understand.

It made me think about my own basketball team after graduation. We promised to keep playing together, but life happened - jobs, families, some of us moving overseas. Still, like Yang said about his team, 'No matter what, Liaoning will always fight to the end with whatever players we have.'

That fighting spirit - it's something that stays with you even when you're thousands of miles away. Last weekend, I tried to organize a casual game with other Chinese expats here. The court smelled different - cleaner, somehow less passionate than the dusty courts back home. But when someone brought out a portable speaker playing old CBA highlight music, for a moment, it felt like being back in that crowded dorm room.

When I saw Yang Ming's interview after the Liaoning-Guangdong game, I suddenly remembered my college basketball days

Yang ended the interview saying, 'I hope everyone can remember the glorious moments Liaoning has created.' Funny how sports can connect you to home in ways you never expect. Even through buffering videos and time zone differences, that connection remains.

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