Page B2 December 1, 1999 ¡Tiu ÿbrtlanb ©beeruer ■ Metro/Sports Blazers flirt with disaster... and he show's up PORTLAND. Ore. (AP) - The Portland Trail Blazers have been close to this kind o f loss for som e time. A nd the Indiana Pacers w ere in just the m ood to give it to them. “W e are not tough right now ,” said Brian Grant, the only Blazers player w ho show ed any grit in M onday nig h t’s 93-91 loss to Indiana. “W e have got to get tough; we have no s c ra p . L a te ly w e h a v e b e e n struggling, the last four or five games. Just getting by . T he Blazers had won three straight and nine o f 10, but since a 36-point win over Atlanta on Nov. 13, Portland has hardly looked like the dom inant team everyone expected when ow ner Paul A llen put together a starting lineup with a salary o f about $53 million. D uring that span, the Blazers were pushed to the lim it by O rlando, Philadelphia, C harlotte, M innesota and H ouston - w hich are a com bined 32-37, and they lost to Cleveland. “W e have been flirting with disaster for som e tim e now ,” Blazers coach M ike D unleavy said after his team fell to 13-3 overall and 5-1 at home. “A lot o f things contributed to this loss. We d id n ’t have good shot selection and u p -fo r-g ra b s reb o u n d s an d hitting shots when they had to. After Sundaynight’s 102- 91 loss at Seattle - In d ia n a ’s fifth in sev en gam es - coach L arry Bird ripped his veterans, s a y in g i f th e y w ouldn’t put forth the effort, he would p lay his y o u n g er players. “T h ere’s no secret in this game: If you play hard and play with som e desire, y o u ’re going to win a lot o f gam es,” he said. S till, he d id n ’t sound satisfied. A sked ifhis players were listening when he told them h e’d shake up the lineup if their play didn’t improve, Bird said: “They better be, because I’ve had enough o f it. I really have. Guys get paid a lot o f m oney to play hard, and they sho u ld com e out here and respect the gam e, and go after it like w e d id n ’t get m any loose balls. Indiana played a really energetic game. T hey deserved to win it.” The Pacers w orked harder, snaring they w ant to w in.” “I’m still the go-to guy on this team ,” M illersaid. “ Id o n ’tc a r e if l goO-for- 20. The ball better be in m y hands at T he A ssociated P ress T he A ssociated P ress the end o f the game. If the ball is not going to be in m y hand, I shouldn ’ t be around here.” “W e’ve been stum bling for the last couple o f w eeks, and it’s som ething we felt w as going to catch up on us,” Pippen said. “W e’re not getting out and running and scoring.” Rasheed W allace had 20 points and 11 rebounds for Portland. Sampras ready to do battle with Agassi in 2000 « 1 ....... M « h tn C m I Toronto 786 • 8-2 W-3 7-1 4-2 8-2 • 533 3* 4-6 »-2 4-1 46 5-3 Milwaukee totton 7 7 500 4-6 1-3 6-3 H 76 M ana Xlando 7 « W-l 3-3 4-4 56 Oetrort ’hitoiMphia 1 7 a 500 4' 4 467 4Z. 6-4 W-2 34 4-4 6-2 Cleveland 10 ¿86 7 >7 1-2 36 16 2-9 Atlanta 16 F7 H Chicago 4 m York 4 •ashmqton t2 2 few Jersey 9 143 n rk o n F9 1-2 Charlotte 9 • • 8 7 6 S 1 9 6 < 7 7 6 • 12 ftv x rti in il lF V h p C eat BB UB M 643 - 6-4 l W-2 .571 1 1 6-4 1-1 5-5 L-1 56 W-1 « 571 « 5-3 5-3 M 5-2 1-5 6-4 34 46 46 56 533 V, 500 7-3 H 5-3 *4 6-7 56 W-1 5-2 M 56 357 2 2 4 46 W-l 4-2 FT 54 077 7Z. W 1-7 0-9 16 Away C e rt 500 1-3 Western Conference Sacramento « 9 BwINnB 13 L Bet 2 8» 3 813 Seattle fl 3 786 L A Labels to 4 no Rvoenli 9 l. A O w e n 4 2 4 1 308 1 64 Golden State 692 « LIB MB. rz, 8-2 - 62 1 82 2 7-3 2Z. 7 3 rz» 3-7 9Z» 2-8 1 Away M m m Cart. 4-1 W L Bet BB LM M L San Antonio 12 3 800 - 8-2 W6 7-0 5-3 62 7-1 Utah 8 6 571 316 6-4 W-1 62 2-4 64 H 7-0 2-2 U 5-1 62 W-2 6-0 5-3 7-1 Minnesota 6 5 545 4 6-4 W-l 5- 2 F3 54 W-2 6-2 42 63 Oenver 6 500 4'/, 56 LI 6- 2 04 36 W-5 7-1 2-3 2-3 Dallas 5 6 ■ 333 U 4-2 16 36 24 26 17 Houston 4 n 267 7 8 3-7 1-2 46 W-1 H 36 48 1-6 16 1-8 Vancouver 3 9 214 » /. 1-9 18 3-5 06 26 1-5 Fred Couples took a wild trip through the 1999 Skins Gam e, whacking shots out o f rocks, sand and even a flowering shrub. A model o f inconsistency. C ouples still m anaged to rewrite a string o f records as he took the tournam ent title for the third time and won $635,000 in the 18-hole event. His total take was a Skins G am e all-time high, and he won $410,000 o f that on one hole, also a tournam ent record, w ith a scram bling birdie on No. 18. The finishing hole was typical o f Couples ’ play over the two days, w hen he either w as hitting into trouble or knocking in birdie putts. O n No. 18, he did both. “I had nine birdies, and I bet I still only shot par,” said Couples, alluding to the fact that individual scores aren ’t kept. Despite already being the Skins G am e career-leading money-w inner. Couples h ad n ’t planned to play this year. He joined the foursome as a replacement for the late Payne Stewart. W ith the $410,000 and tournam ent title riding on No. 18, Couples began by pulling his drive o ff the fairway to the left. The ball sailed into a shrub and w edged in between bloom s, 6 inches o ff the ground. N o problem. Couples poked a recovery shot into the fairway, then sailed a4-iron shot some 210 yards, stopping the ball 15 feet from the pin. A fter watching Sergio Garcia A ssociated P ress w L T P et Seattle 8 2 0 800 Kamas City 5 5 0 SOO lakland •»an Diego indianapoiis M am Huff alo New England N V Jets .«Kksonvilie •nnessee S 5 0 4 8 0 4 7 0 Eart 8 2 0 • J 0 sot» 4 00 164 800 tu Sometimes, the em otional highs o f the football playoffs are tempered w ith pain. That w as the case Friday night at Civic Stadium. As M arshfield lined up for the finish o f its Class 4A quarterfinal game against Central Catholic, its leader lay sedated on morphine in a Portland hospital bed. TrevorW oods’ left leg was in traction. A Central Catholic player hit him low after he com pleted a 13-yard pass; the bone snapped above the knee. T he injury ended the high school careerofoneofM arshfield football’s great leaders. Later, with 1:12 left, Marshfield trailed 21-17. The Central Catholic fans were celebrating as backup quarterback Luke M orrow took the snap. O n fourthand28 from the Pirates’ 16, th e d esp erate p lay u n fo ld ed as planned. Three receivers raced down the left sideline. M orrow heaved a long pass to a clum p o f players. The ball, w hich was tipped twice, floated into the arm s o f an uncovered M itch W ade. T h e M a rsh fie ld rec eiv e r sprinted untouched for the winning score. Back at Legacy Emanuel Hospital & H ealth Center, new s o f M arshfield’s 7 4 0 .636 6 4 0 .600 4 6 0 Contrai 9 t 0 8 2 0 400 900 8 00 «’»tsDwgh 5 5 0 500 Hattimore 4 8 0 400 • levetand 2 9 0 182 < mt innati 1 10 0 091 Advertise in JJortlanh Observer January 23, 2000 at 4 p.m . Join the celebration and see the Portland Observer family and friends take on the Portland Trailblazer’s Alumni Team. This benefit will create scholarship funds for those less fortunate and will create a monument to what Joyce Washington stood for...equal opportunity and an education for everyone. weakened, blood thickens and J?is heart beats faster Magnify that by a day, Sponsored by Citizens for a Healthy Workplace Everybody deserves smokefree air. 45 years. M orrow told W oods not to worry. The Pirates w ould w in for him. They kept their word. W oods w ill b e on th e sid e lin e Saturday at A utzen S tadium for M arshfield’s sem ifinal gam e against Beaverton. “They w o n ’t be able to keep me aw ay from that,” he said. The team w o n ’t have W oods’ 1,730 yards passing or his 18 touchdowns, but it will have the best part. Even on crutches, Trevor W oods will find some w ay to contribute. Les Schw ab / Blazer A lum ni vs. The Portland O bserver C ory C o u g a r’s C harity B asketball G am e After just minutes of expo- sure jo secondnana smoke fir^nniune system is You want your teenagers to start working, not smok ing. Call your elected officials and demand smokefree air1 shined. Late in the gam e, W oods led the trailing Pirates on a 70-yard drive. M arshfield overcam e a sack and two 15-yard penalties. O n second and 25, W oods com pleted a 17-yard pass. On third and eight, he ran the option for a first down. W ith 40 seconds left, the Pirates scored to w in 21-17. W oods is not a rah-rah leader. He is quiet before games. But he do esn 't miss a chance to praise his teammates. A nd he never criticizes them for mistakes. And so on Friday, w hen W oods was carried into his father’s van in the first quarter, his substitute ran over to speak to him. M orrow , a junior, also grew up w ith football. M orrow ’s father, G ene, retired this year after coaching N ew port H igh School for The Joyce Washington Memorial Scholarship Fund Presents It's a scientific fact - s fuming inside a week, a year, and he may as well be smoking, himself his putt. Skins game com petitors donate 20 percent o f the money they win in the tournam ent to charity, and C ouples chose to donate 30 percent o f his earnings to the Payne Stewart M em orial Fund, honoring his friend who died in a plane crash on O ct. 25. G arcia donated 20 percent o f his m oney to the sam e fund, and O ’M eara split his donation betw een the Stew art fund and another charity he picked to honor the late W innie Palmer, A rnold Palm er’s wife. Couples, w ho w on a record 11 skins as he added the 1999 title to his victories in 1995 and 1996, again proved well- suited to the Skins G am e format, in w hich horrible play on som e holes can be offset by good shots and big putts at the right time. victory boosted W oods. W oods, who has a 4.0 grade-point average, is a terrific athlete, but an even better teamm ate. “ He is the best leader I’ve had in 29 y e a rs o f c o a c h in g h ig h sc h o o l football,” M arshfield coach K ent Wigle said. “He is pretty special when it com es to that.” T h is seaso n w as th e C o o s B ay n ative’s first as a varsity starter. Few Pirates quarterbacks, how ever, were b e tte r p r e p a re d . W o o d s ’ lo n g apprenticeship began in the fourth grade as a M arshfield ball boy. He played flag football and trained as a gym nast in grade school. In the seventh grade, he began pole vaulting and playing tackle football. The speed and agility required by the v a u lt m a d e W o o d s a b e tte r quarterback. W hat helped him most, though, was the m ental discipline he developed at national track meets. W oods’ poise was param ount in a s e a s o n - o p e n in g v ic to r y o v e r M idw estern League rival Churchill. T h e p o w e rfu l L an cers k n o ck ed W oods dow n an d h arassed him throughout the game. But the lanky senior stood in the pocket and m ade plays. In the first round o f the playoffs a g a in s t G le n c o e , W o o d s ag ain ?Ì F L Wort miss a 10-foot try for birdie, Couples then calm ly rolled in Trevor Woods is down, but not out as Marshfield prepares for 4 A championship 11 I in when free from injury, he w as still in a class o f his own. “ I ’ve n ever questioned m y ability w hen I play against the best players in the world but to be honest I d idn’t except I couldplay at that level here. ’ ’ Despite com peting in so few tournam ents this year, Sam pras still found tim e to earn a few m ore lines in the record books, becom ing the only player this century to win six W imbledons and equalling A ustralian Roy Em erson’s record o f 12 grand slam titles. After w inning in Los Angeles in August, he becam e the m an with most weeks num ber one in the history o f the ATP rankings w ith a total 271 weeks — one m ore than Lendl. Eastern Conference « L Bet UB M l 9 7 n z» deserves it.” But Sam pras, who ended the year as the num ber one player for a record sixth consecutive tim e in 1998, did not dism iss a suggestion that he rem ained the best player in the world despite A gassi’s achievements. “ W e could argue about that all day ,” he said after equalling Ivan L endl’s record o f five trium phs in the year- end event with an impressive 6-1 7- 5 6-4 victory. “M aybe it sent him a m essage but that’s not the w ay I look at it. It’s not a personal thing with Andre.” Sampras, who hasdominated m en’s tennis in the 1990s, com pleted only eight tournam ents this year but P ete S am pras m a d e a p o in t by outplaying A ndre A gassi in the last m atch o f the decade, setting up an intriguing battle for tennis supremacy next year. A fter closing a frustrating, injury-dogged season by beating the w orld num ber one in straight sets at the A TP Tour w orld cham pionship final on Sunday, Sam pras was elegant enough to adm ire his long-tim e rival. “A ndre has played m ore and been m ore consistent, ’ ’ he said o f A gassi ’ s trem endous run w hich saw him finish the year in top spot for the first tim e in his career. “W inning tw o grand slam s and being in the final ofanother Alami U d o e s n ’t h ap p e n v ery o ften . H e A ssociated P ress V I s . Couples hacks way out of shrub to records, big payday S elf Enhancem ent C enter Inc. 3920 N. K erby A venue, Portland, O R $3 A dvance $4 D oor C all M ark W ashington for tickets or special group rates at 288-0033 Get Your Tickets While They Last A t These Locations: Simply Cellular 3939 NE MLK Blvd. Suite 109 280-8000 A Tisket A Tasket 1305 NE Fremont 284-7344 Mrs. C ’s Wigs 707 NE Fremont 281-6525 Johntae’s Imported Tobacco & A ccessories 2535C NE. 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