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It can pay-off to follow former Norfolk State star, current NBA standout Kyle O’Quinn

Posted at 11:28 PM, Jun 20, 2018
and last updated 2018-06-20 23:28:52-04

Kyle O'Quinn of the New York Knicks. (Photo by Abbie Parr/Getty Images)

NORFOLK, Va. - After the best season of his six-year NBA career, former Norfolk State star Kyle O'Quinn has reportedly declined his $4.2 million contract with the New York Knicks for the 2018-19 season. The move positions O'Quinn, who spent the past three seasons in New York, for a massive payday - perhaps in the form of a $30 million contract.

But O'Quinn is not the only one who is in line to make some cash.

Last season, as his Knicks stumbled to a 29-and-53 record - the fifth-worst in the NBA's Eastern Conference, O'Quinn would regularly take to Twitter to release frustrations. He'd do so in the form of cryptic acronyms. Even now that the season is over - he'll still send the coded tweets to his nearly 30,000 followers.

Kyle O'Quinn of the New York Knicks. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

"Nobody will ever know what I'm saying," O'Quinn explained to News 3 during an appearance at Coach Robert Jones' Green and Gold Basketball camp held at his alma mater. "I'm not putting anything up there that doesn't have meaning - it always stands for something. It's a way for me to write on social media, blow some steam off and get my point across to myself."

Fans and followers often try to guess what the acronym means.

"You see people trying to translate it and they're totally off," O'Quinn said smiling. "But if you get an acronym, word-for-word, totally correct - I will give you $1,000 on the spot. That's the deal."

Kyle O'Quinn and Robert Jones

From 2008 to 2012, O'Quinn appeared in 129 career games for NSU, averaging 12.5 points/game, 8.5 rebounds/game and 2.19 blocks/game. He was named the 2011-12 MEAC Player of the Year and was a two-time MEAC Defensive Player of the Year (2010-11, 2011-12). As a senior (2011-12), Kyle played in 36 games, averaging 15.9 points/game, 10.3 rebounds/game in 31.3 minutes/game. He helped the number 15-seed Spartans to a historic upset of number 2-seed Missouri during the NCAA Tournament with 26 points and 14 rebounds.

Coach Jones' second Green and Gold Basketball camp is set for June 25-28. For more information, click here.