A6 THE ASTORIAN • THuRSdAy, MARcH 3, 2022 Neah-Kah-Nie player is passionately persistent Spellman hasn’t let disability keep him from basketball By TOM HALLMAN JR. The Oregonian The Neah-Kah-Nie High School boys varsity basketball team assembled in the locker room before the game to go over strategy. The Pirates were restless and fool- ing around, expected after a two-hour bus ride from Rockaway Beach to Gaston to face the Greyhounds. “Listen up,” shouted coach Erick White. Nothing. “Hey, listen up.” Silence. “Let’s huddle up,” ordered White. “All seniors are starting tonight. We want to work on early buckets, get that lead right and then bring in the quick group.” White surveyed the room, turning to point at No. 13, Matt Spellman, an 18-year- old senior with a classic basketball body — 6 foot 2 — and an instinct for the game as well as a near photographic memory, able to recall the strengths and weaknesses of the pros from current NBA teams back to the old timers of the 1970s. “Spellman,” said White, “I want you popping out on the corner. You get a shot, you take it.” Spellman nodded. “Let’s go,” said White. “Let’s do it.” The team jogged to the gym. Spellman lagged, dragging his left foot and moving with an uneven gait. His left knee turned inward toward his right knee. His left arm remained tucked close to his waist. He can’t fully extend it. His grip is weak, and he can’t turn his left palm to face the ceiling. After birth, he was diagnosed with periventricular leukomalacia, brain damage that led to a form of cerebral palsy affecting his left side. The visiting Pirates took the floor first, an announcer introducing them to the crowd. “No. 13, Matthew Spellman.” Spectators watched Spellman move awk- wardly onto the basketball court dragging that left foot. He’s worn out the toes of every left shoe he’s ever owned. The Pirates got an early possession and attacked the basket, the guard dribbling up court to set the offense. After a series of passes, the ball ended up in the hands of Spellman, who’d drifted out to the corner. He shot. He missed. No. 13 will never dunk. No. 13 will never make a pass between his legs. No. 13 will never make the game-win- ning shot. No matter. No. 13 was never expected to walk. An attraction to the game Spellman was born nearly three months premature after his mother’s water broke while she and her husband were vacationing in Bend. He weighed 3 pounds, 9 ounces. Remember that number – 3.9. It’s mysterious and meaningful, per- haps spiritual in the broadest meaning of the word, a number that summarizes a jour- ney that began in a hospital where Spellman spent five weeks in the newborn intensive care unit fighting for life before returning home to Bay City. His parents drove to a Portland hospital when they saw that their son, while meet- ing intellectual benchmarks, had difficulty trying to crawl. A scan revealed PVL. Sec- tions of the boy’s brain’s white matter — what transmits information between nerve cells, the spinal cord and within the brain — had been damaged. The medical team was blunt, telling the couple it was unlikely their son would walk and would need an assistive device. “This wasn’t going to be the fairytale life we’d dreamed of,” said his mother, Cheryl Spellman. “We grieved and we grieved. But we decided we’d never become consumed with why or what if. This was now our life, our son’s life, and we were going to do everything possible for him.” And so a new chapter began in Tilla- mook County, a place that has much to do with what happened to Spellman. The cou- ple lived in Bay City, a town of about 2,500 people, in the heart of Tillamook County. The Spellmans arrived there in 1995 from La Grande after Brandon Spellman lost his job as a soft-drink distributor when the local mill closed, which sent an economic ripple through Eastern Oregon. The couple had always enjoyed vacationing on the Ore- gon Coast, and they thought this might be their chance to move to the beach. Spellman called companies up and down the coast, finally landing a job as a soft-drink distrib- utor based in Tillamook, about 7 miles from Bay City where they had a home. The Spellmans were quietly taken in, sup- ported in the unspoken and subtle rhythms of a way of life so often found in towns seen by outsiders as little more than dots on a map. After their son’s diagnosis, the news traveled from Bay City to towns throughout the county. People offered to bring meals or do anything the parents needed. The family began making frequent trips to Portland’s Shriners Hospital, where their son underwent multiple surgeries. He received extensive physical and occupational ther- apy and was outfitted with devices, all in the hopes of keeping him out of a wheelchair. Medical records, in such precise language, reveal what’s happening within the body, but they can’t explore the soul. “Matt was so stubborn,” said his father, Sean Meagher/The Oregonian Matt Spellman of Neah-Kah-Nie High School shoots a three-pointer during the Pirates’ basketball game against Gaston last month. Sean Meagher/The Oregonian Spellman gets a few words of wisdom from his father during the Pirates’ basketball game against Gaston. Brandon Spellman. “He was determined to one another as if they were brothers and sis- ters. But the middle school years – big city walk. He’d pulled himself up to things and or small town – can be tough, a reality Spell- hang on to stand, even just for a moment or man found out in the sixth grade. He told no two.” one until one night when he was at his moth- Doctors did more surgeries, changed the er’s house sitting and talking with his stepfa- braces and continued therapy, telling his par- ther, Mike Bentley. ents that he should be given a walker, but the “He said no one wanted to play basket- child would have none of it back in Bay City. ball with him at recess,” Bentley said. “The “He wouldn’t even hold my hand,” kids said he couldn’t walk or run like them. Cheryl Spellman recalled. “He wanted He started crying right there in front of me. to walk. But he was so unstable. That boy He said people said no one wanted to be would fall backwards and hit the floor. He’s stuck with Spellman.” experienced more falls in his life than any- one I’ve ever known. He never cried or com- At school one day, Spellman saw a sign plained. He just got up and tried again.” about an upcoming contest a few months Spellman doesn’t recall those early years. away involving basketball. Students were “What I really remember is when I started invited to compete in a free throw compe- tition to determine the best shooter in the school,” he said. “I’d see these other kids school. To enter, a student had to get 10 pay- walking and running. I’m not going to lie. ing sponsors with the all the money raised There were times it was terrible. I couldn’t going to support OHSU Doernbecher Chil- even step over something with my left leg. dren’s Hospital. It was easy for Spellman, I’d get mad and wonder why it was happen- ing to me.” an outgoing kid, to go hit up adults for a A younger sister was born. His parents donation. divorced when he was 7. They agreed to Then reality hit. joint custody — the kids coming to spend The boy no one wanted on the team a week at a time at the other home. Bran- would have to go out on the court in front don Spellman moved to Tillamook, less of all the students and attempt to make a than 6 miles away from his ex-wife’s place. shot from 15 feet into a basket 10 feet off Spellman’s parents eventually found love the ground. with others, bringing stepchildren into an “It wasn’t going to be easy,” he said. “My extended family. balance is super affected because of my left When Spellman was at his father’s house, side. I had to get some strength and learn he watched basketball games on televi- how to use my left arm as a guide.” sion. His father showed him highlights of So began an intense period of training. Michael Jordan, con- He practiced shooting sidered the best player free throws at the hoop ‘WHAT I REALLy in NBA history. He at his father’s house, told his son that Jor- he was up at 5 a.m. REMEMBER IS WHEN and dan was great not just doing daily strength and because of his obvi- I STARTEd ScHOOL. balance exercises. ous athletic ability, “He walked through but also because of his I’d SEE THESE OTHER the house constantly drive to win. pretending he was KIdS WALKING “I studied Jordan shooting the ball,” said like a religion,” Spell- Cheryl Spellman. “It ANd RuNNING. I’M man said. “It made me drove us crazy, and we NOT GOING TO LIE. want to be like him.” kept asking him to stop. At his mother’s refused.” THERE WERE TIMES He On house, he became the day of the obsessed with try- event, the rules were IT WAS TERRIBLE. I ing to use a basket- simple: The winner ball, difficult at first cOuLdN’T EVEN STEP would be determined by because he had to rely who made the most free OVER SOMETHING on only one arm. throws in 20 attempts. WITH My LEFT LEG. Spellman was realistic “I had a great room we never used,” said and hoped only not to I’d GET MAd ANd Cheryl Spellman. “I make a fool of himself. cleared everything “There were some WONdER WHy IT WAS out and put a plas- real basketball players HAPPENING TO ME.’ in the contest,” he said. tic hoop out there. I could never find that “Some eighth graders, Matt Spellman kid anywhere but in too.” that great room. He Then it was his turn. couldn’t even make a He concentrated, basket, let alone hit it. He had no power in thinking about his form and balance, all the his arms.” shots and exercises he spent hours perfecting. His father began taking his son to basket- “I made 14 out of 20,” he said. “I won.” ball games at the local YMCA. It was, in that young life, a turning point. “He’d watch us play, a bunch of older “People underestimated me,” he said. “I guys,” said Brandon Spellman. “He loved may not always be first. But I’ll never be the game. I got an adjustable hoop I could last.” lower, and I put it on a court at our house. I’d ‘He does everything we do in play him one-on-one. I mean hundreds and practice’ hundreds of games. He was always trying When he started at Neah-Kah-Nie High to do his best. He never gave up. There’s no School, he learned the school is so small that quit in the boy. I have to tell you, I’m envi- ous of that.” administrators instituted a “no-cut” rule for Spellman’s speech and intellect were first kids who wanted to join a team or participate rate. He made friends in school and earned in a sport. The freshman got a spot on the good grades. The Neah-Kah-Nie School junior varsity team but was in over his head District has one middle school and one high that year and his sophomore season. school, which has 250 students. “The coach at the time was all about That means students are as familiar with working the ball inside for layups,” he said. “Those are hard for me. I’d get into a game for a maybe a minute, but I never scored.” For one game he and the team traveled by bus 80 miles to play. He never left the bench. He came home and told his mother he was considering quitting the team. “I wasn’t getting anything out of it,” he said. “I had my moment of anger and then started to look at the big picture. I was get- ting an experience I’d never get again. I was getting to be with my teammates. I told myself that even if I never got to play again, I should enjoy the memory.” Spellman began working out daily, work- ing to raise both arms to catch a pass thrown from far away, something he’d need to be able to do if he was going to be a long-dis- tance shooter. The pandemic disrupted everything. The JV basketball coach left, and the coach of the girls’ varsity squad, Erick White, was asked to fill the vacancy while continuing to work with the girls. All the kids knew White, who was born and raised in Nehalem and graduated from Neah-Kah-Nie High School in 1997. He has two daughters and a son, and over the years volunteered to coach multiple youth basket- ball teams. When his best friend, the high school’s athletic director, asked him to coach the girls varsity team, White agreed and then suddenly also had the boys JV team dropped into his lap. “I knew Spellman,” said White. “He’d been going to school with my kids, and they ran in similar groups. I think one thing that’s pretty valuable about being a coach in a small town is you get to be more present. You’re not just a coach a couple hours each evening. You bump into these kids and their families year-round in the community.” During that COVID-19-shortened JV season of Spellman’s junior year, White saw progress in the kid whose professional bas- ketball idol was no longer Jordan but Ste- phen Curry, the Golden State Warriors point guard and prolific outside shooter. “I knew what I couldn’t do in basketball,” said Spellman. “I was never going to be able to take the ball to the rim. I knew I was never going to be able to out jump another player. I knew I could never be physical or fast. All that was left for me was to learn how to shoot.” During tryouts for this season’s varsity team, White saw Spellman had developed into a player with a shot that was impossible to ignore. Spellman, who expected to remain on the JV squad, was stunned when White named him to varsity and assigned him No. 13. “This was no charity pick” said White. “I don’t believe in that. He does everything we do in practice. Sometimes his leg gets sore, and he’s got to sit something out. But he never, and I mean never, expects special treatment. We all treat him like he can, not like he can’t.” White is reflective. “Honestly it’s not just about the product on the floor,” he said. “Spellman’s a great teammate. He notices the little things. We were doing film study the other day and he was pointing out things other players miss. He told me, with a smile, that when he’s sitting on the bench so much, he learns to notice a lot of things.” Teammate Matt Erickson said Spell- man’s work ethic is “crazy.” “If he didn’t have cerebral palsy,” Erick- son said, “he’d be the best player on our team.” Erickson said a player on another team was “talking mad trash” and making fun of Spellman in the weeks before the two teams met, saying that Spellman would never con- tribute to the team. When Spellman entered the game that night, the trash talker guarded him. “He was rough, adding an extra shove and doing cheap stuff the ref wouldn’t be able to see,” said Spellman. “Later, a teammate kicks the ball out to me. That kid guarding me came running out and I shot it over him. It was a rainbow. It went in and the crowd freaked out and I knew that trash talker was demoralized. The player who wouldn’t con- tribute made a three-pointer over him.” Spellman relishes the memory. “I didn’t say a word,” he said. “My shot spoke for me.” Spellman has begun considering his future beyond high school. A couple years ago he started a business, sourcing and sell- ing high-end collectible basketball shoes to buyers around the country. He’s turned a profit and now plans to attend college in Oregon and major in marketing and minor in recreational sports management. This year’s basketball season was up and down. Practices were called off and games had to be rescheduled because of COVID- 19. Even so, the Pirates were in contention for a final league playoff spot if they could beat Columbia Christian Knights at an away game in Portland. From his spot on the bench, Spellman knew the Pirates were going to lose. He dealt with what he called waves of emotion – sadness, melancholy and an awareness that nothing is permanent. Losing didn’t matter. What hurt was knowing that his life on a high school team would soon be over. He’d miss the fooling around, the rides on the bus and wearing that uniform. Coach White interrupted his thoughts. “Do you want the last seconds?” The clock showed 3.9 seconds left in the game. 3.9. “You want in?” A nod. And with that, No. 13 checked into the game one last time.