May 24, 2000 Metro/Sports }.lu rtlnud (Tfye ^lortlanò ffibeerUer Suspect arrested as Wolves grapple with loss The M innesota T im berw olves are trying to focus on M alik S ealy ’s life and not the w rong-w ay and possibly drunken driver who ended it. “ If being angry brought back Malik Sealy, 1 think w e’d all be angry,” vice W ednesday to present the case to the H ennepin C o u n ty A tto rn ey ’s O ffice for formal charges. Investigators said Phengsene was driving the w rong w ay on H ighw ay 100 early Saturday m orning w hen his pickup sm ashed into S ealy ’s sport u tility tru ck in th e M in n eap o lis suburb o f St. Louis Park, fatally injuring the popular player who was retu rn in g from te am m ate K evin G arnett’s 24th birthday celebration. An em ergency w orker reported that Phengsene, w ho w as convicted o f drunken driving in Des M oines, Iowa, three years ago, sm elled o f alcohol as he was extricated from the wreckage. Blood tests are pending. M cHale said the team was trying to rem em ber the good tim es such as Sealy’s buzzer-beating basket against Indiana this season, the first gam e­ w inning bucket o f his career. “ W e w a tc h e d th e sh o t a g a in s t Indiana w hen he banked it in and h e’s on the floor and h e ’s got his hands raised and h e’s kicking his legs,” M cH ale said, sm iling. “ I think th a t’s president K evin M cH ale said. “ But nothing anybody’s going to do or say right now is going to change the events o f 4 a.m. on M ay 20. T hat’s w ritten in stone.” O n M onday, the State Patrol arrested Souksangouane Phengsene, 43, o f M inneapolis, w ho rem ained under guard at H ennepin C ounty M edical C enter, w here h e’s being treated for se rio u s in ju rie s from th e crash. I n v e s tig a to r s h a v e u n til n o o n the way I’ll always remember him, just the smile. And the interview s and the intelligence.” M cHale insisted the team held no anim osity for Phengsene. “Y ou can be angry at a lot o f things,” M cH ale said. “ W hat good does that d o ?” T he Timberwolves are planning to fly to the funeral Friday on the cam pus o f St. John’s, where Sealy starred before being drafted by the Indiana Pacers Malik Sealy A ssociated P ress Page B3 Reversal leaves Lakers facing ‘atmetest’ in 1992. A ll th e p la y e rs e x c e p t R a sh o N esterovic, w ho has returned to Slovenia, are expected to attend. On M onday, Tim berw olves coach Flip Saunders attended a m em orial cerem ony for Bill M usselman, w ho coached him at the University o f M innesota in the 1970s and served as the W olves’ first coach. Saunders broke dow n as a prayer at that service was said for Sealy, w ho is survived by his newlywed wife, Lisa, and their 3-year-old son, M alik Remington. “ I had a tough tim e today,” Saunders said. “ But I think it’s going to be that w ay for a while. It’s going to be like that for our players for a while.” Sealy w as com ing o ff the best season o f his eight-year N BA career, and he w as a big part o f their franchise-best 50-32 record. “ I hear people say w e had a great year, 50 wins. But that doesn’t matter. Because no matter what, thisyearw ill go dow n as a loss,” Saunders said. Lisa Sealy released a statement saying the fam ily was deeply moved by the sym pathy o f the Tim berw olves, the NBA, friends and the public. Shesaid the family was “thankful to know that M alik was loved by so m any.” Sealy was one o f the more affable and intelligent players in pro sports. He had parts in com m ercials and m o v ie s a n d w as a s u c c e s s fu l busin essm an . He played for the Pacers, Clippers and Pistons before finding a niche with the W olves A ssociated P ress There was no need forhack-a-Shaq tactics M onday night at the Staples Center. Now, how about som e CPR for the Los A ngeles Lakers? Shaquille O ’Neal was m issing free throws, all right, but it had little bearing on theTrail B lazers’ 106-77 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers to even the best-of-seven W estern Conference finals 1 -1. The Blazers seized control with a 20- 0 third-quarter run, punished the Lakers the rest o f the way, and left o w n e r P aul A lle n , s ittin g at courtside, with a nodding smile at gam e’s end. “T hat’sone,” Allen said. “It is going to be a tough series. It will be good to be hom e for the next two gam es.” The Blazers had lost 17 consecutive playoff road gam es to the Lakers dating to the 1977 cham pionship season. Beyond that, the Lakers were 42-5 at hom e this season, including 6-0 in the playoffs. It d id n ’t m atter M onday. T he Blazers blanketed ShaquilleO ’Neal, shut dow n Kobe Bryant and made their 109-94 G am e 1 loss a distance memory, handing the Lakers their most one-sided loss o f the season. We w ere bad; they were good,” said O ’Neal, who scored 14ofhis 23 points in the fourth quarter. “(The Blazers) didn’t make any adjustments; we ju st relied on jum pers too much. They were packing it in on me, daring our shooters to shoot.” Just like Saturday. This tim e, though, the Lakers w ere m issing. They shot 39.1 percent from the field, including 6 o f 23 from three-point range. The Blazers led only48-45. then broke it open by outscoring the Lakers 28- 8 in the third quarter. T he Blazers used a huge advantage at the free- throw line (35-17) and won the second- h alf rebounding battle 26-12. They even got three third-quarter three- pointers from Rasheed W allace, who had been 8 for 50 from three-point range in the regular season. “That was quite a gam e by Portland," Los A ngeles coach Phil Jackson said. “They d id n ’t shoot that well, but they had a gam e plan that worked wel 1 against us. T hey pounded the ball in, drove it to the hoop, created foul situations and put us on our heels. W e played on our heels in the second half. “They played great defense — you can ’t take anything aw ay from them — but our offense execution was poor. W e got a little ragged there in the third quarter. But their defense in that third quarter was great.” Jackson said the Lakers played an “awful” first half. “ I went i nto the locker room and said, ‘ If that is as good as they can do with us playing that poorly, and they are only on top by three points ... we surely can play a much better second half.’ We came out and played w orse.” O ’Neal finished with 23 points and 12 rebounds in 39 minutes, but he had just nine points through three quarters and was 5 o f 17 from the free-throw line. A rvydas Sabonis and Brian Grant had defensive coverage, and Scottie Pippen came with help every tim e the ball went in deep. Pippen also went to the basket hard, getting 21 points and 11 rebounds. He m ade nine o f his 12 free throws. “ Scottie hurt us m ore w ith his offense than his defense,” Jackson said. “Then, in the second half, it was W allace who got untouchable for a bit. That really bombed us.” Bryant, who had 13 points in the opener, was 2 for 9 from the field and finished with 12 points. Already, he had an eye on Friday’s Game3 at the Rose Garden. “That place is going to be rock and ro llin ’,” Bryant said. "W e will be ready. This makes it a little more fun. It’s all about challenges. It’s about o b stacles.” The Lakers made one for themselves M onday night. “ We won all our hom e gam es in the first two rounds oftheplayoffs,” 0 ’Neal said. “Now we have our hands full. This is going to be a true test for us.” The next streak: Tiger takes aim at Byron Calkins caps his career with third straighttitle J s* T iger W oods’ streak o f consecutive PGA T our victories ended at six in San Diego. A nother streak ended in G erm any w hen, for the first tim e in 16 tournam ents w orldw ide. W oods failed to win after having at least a share o f the 54-hole lead. O K , h e’s human. But with each tournam ent, W oods creeps closer to a record that has stood for m ore than 50 years — Byron N elson’s streak o f 113 tour events w ithout m issing the cut. W oods is not even halfw ay there — 48 going into the M em orial. But considering he has m issed only one true cut in his career, the only thing that figures to stop him is injury. If W oods w ere to keep pace with his current schedule — and continue to m ake the cut — he w ould tie N elson’s mark around the 2003 U.S. O pen. T he “cut w atch” has been issued tw ice this year. W oods w as on the bubble on the back nine o f the Buick Invitational, squeezed in and had a share o f the lead Sunday before finishing second to Phil Mickelson. He w as on the cut line again tw o week ago in the Nelson Classic, m ade it w ith three strokes to spare, then w ent 67-63 on the w eekend and finished one stroke out o f a playoff. W oods never paid too m uch attention to the winning streak because a) it spanned tw o seasons and b) he failed to win a European tour event during that stretch. W hy is this streak so special? “ It m eans that even when y o u ’re playing bad, y o u ’re still fighting and you have the m ental tenacity to hang in there on those bad days and get it around w here you m ake cuts,” W oods said. “ I ’m not going to dog it out there. T h at’sju st not m y style.” W oods counts his streak at 52, dating to the 1997 Canadian O pen in M ontreal, the only 36-hole cut he missed. The PGA T o u r’s num ber o f 48 dates to Pebble Beach in 1998, where W oods w ithdrew instead o f returning seven m onths later in A ugust to com plete 54 holes. W oods w as at 4-over 148 after two rounds and would have needed a 65 to m ake the cut. T r a i l B la z e rs from page 1 Los A ngeles is 43-6 at home. W a lla ce , w h o drew h is se co n d technical in G am e 1 for glaring at referee Ron G arretson, said he had no special m otivation M onday night. “ I’m just going out there and playing,” W allace said. “ My preparation for this gam e w asn ’t any different than G am e I.” W allace had 11 points and five rebounds in the third quarter, w hen the Blazers outscored Los A ngeles 28-8, tying the Lakers’ playofflow for that quarter and ju st tw o short o f the N BA record-low for a third quarter, set by A tlanta against B oston on May 6,1986. “T he first h a lf was just aw ful and we w ere only dow n by three points,” Lakers coach Phil Jackson said. “We certainly could play a better second h alf was my m essage to the team at halftim e, and we went out and played w orse.” Scottie Pippen had 2 1 points and 11 rebounds for Portland. He scored 17 points in the first hal f as the Blazers took a tenuous 48-45 lead. Sm ith scored 24 for the Blazers, who are 3-3 against Los A ngeles this season and the only team to win twice on the L akers’ court. “M y m indset w as to attack,” Pippen said, “establish that w e w eren’t going to be a jum p-shooting team .” The Lakers m ade just tw o o f 15 shots in th e th ird q u a r te r an d w e re outrebounded 14-5, even though O ’Neal played the entire 12 m inutes. Bryant said it w as the best defense, and the w orst quarter, the Lakers experienced all season. Brian Shaw ’s 3-pointercut Portland’s lead to 56-51 w ith six m inutes left in » the third, but it would be the L akers' last field goal o f the quarter. S m ith 's inside basket started the run and W allace's third 3-pointer ended it, putting the Blazers ahead 76-51 w ith 8.5 seconds left in the quarter. “T hey pressed the ball and drove to th e h o o p an d p u t us in fo u l situations,” Jackson said. “They had us back on our heels.” B ryant’s two free throw s with 1.3 seconds allow ed the Lakers to avoid tying the NBA p layoff record for lowest-scoring third quarter and made it 76-53 going into the fourth. “W e got a little desperate in the m iddle o f the third quarter,” Jackson said, indicating he should have cal led tim eout. “ I take credit for this. I left them to hang out to dry a little bit too long and try and find their ow n w ay back out o f that m orass, and they ju st couldn’t find their w ay out.” A ssociated P ress M ichael Calkins, called by his coach “arguably the best high school kid to e v e r p la y te n n is in O r e g o n ,” com pleted a brilliant career Saturday with his third Class 4A boys singles cham pionship. The Jesuit senior becam e the third player— and first in more than a half- century — to win three 4 A boys titles when he defeated Jon Endrikat o f North M edford 6-2, 6-1 at Tualatin H illsT ennisC enter. C alkins finished his high school career with 56 consecutive victories — 17 this season — after losing the state final as a freshman. “ Mi ke also scored 3 8 o f a possible 40 points in his four state tournam ents, which would at least tie Red Bullet’s trainer happy with win A S S « I a I II l P rlss Joe O rseno was right. For the better part o f three w eeks, the trainer o f Red Bullet told anyone who w ould listen that Kentucky D erby w inner Fusaichi Pegasus was not unbeatable. On Saturday, his lightly raced colt proved him right. Red Bullet pulled o ff to a 3 3-4-length victory over Fusaichi Pegasus in the $1 million Preakness on Saturday and ended the $4 m illion co lt’s bid for a Triple Crown. “I’m excited,glow ing, I feel real good,” O rseno said. “ I'm not one to hide my em otions. I’m happy.” Orseno, who trains privately for Frank Stronach, perhaps the most influential m an in racing, decided 30 m inutes after a 4 1/4 -length loss to Fusaichi Pegasus in the W ood M emorial to skip the Derby and get ready for the Preakness. “ It ju st seem ed like the right thing to do for the colt,” O rseno said. “And it paid o ff today .” A lthough there w ere m any w ho b e lie v e d O rs e n o w a s d u c k in g Fusaichi Pegasus, Orseno simply said his colt was not experienced enough to m ove on and needed tim e off. Five weeks after his only loss, the son o f Unbridled made it four w ins in five career starts. “ T h is w as u n b e lie v a b le ,” said O rseno, w ho last w eek sad d led P im lico S pecial w in n er G olden Missile. “Turning for hom e he put in the m ove I thought he could put in. He ju st needed another opportunity to go out and do it.” PORTLAND FIRE OPENING NIGHT the all-tim e record, if not be the all- tim e record,” Jesuit coach Je ff W ood said. Endrikat took a 2-0 lead on Calkins, then got a close-up look as the C rusader blew past him to w in 12 of the next 13 games. “ I played great today,” said Calkins, 18, who defeated Dustin T aylor o f Lakeridge 6-3, 6-1 in the m orning semifinals. “ W hat can I do?” Endrikat said as he walked o ff the court. “I’m giving it my all, playing the best I can, and h e’s blowing ball after ball by me. You can ’t beat him when h e’s playing like that.” The last to win three boys titles was Tom M acdonald ofG rant, from 1946 to 1948. The only other three-tim e w inner was Emery Neale o f Grant (1937to 1939). Endrikat, a 17-year-old senior, beat undefeated Beau Smith ofC leveland 6-3,7-5 in the m orning semifinals. Jesuit also won the doubles with Jake Sunshine and Ricky Humphries, and th e C ru sa d e rs w o n th e ir th ird consecutive team title, scoring 24 points to more than double the score on the runner-up teams. L ak e O sw e g o , L in c o ln , N o rth Medford and Sheldon shared second place with 10 each. T he fourth-seeded Sunshine and H um phries beat top-seeded Todd L indbloom and R yan F elker o f Roseburg 6-2,6-1 in the final. S u b s c r ib e ! F ill o u t , C l ip o ut & s e n d t o : T he P ortland O bserver A t t n : S u b s c r ip t io n s • PO Box 3 1 3 7 • P o r tla n d , OR 9 7 2 0 8 S u b s c r ip t io n s a r e $ 6 0 . 0 0 a Y e a r ATTENTION READERS! Please take a minute to send us your comments. We’re always trying to give you a better paper and we can’t do that without your help. Tell us what you like and what you think needs improving... suggestions are welcomed and appreciated. We can take constructive criticism. Get your powerful pens out and address letters to: Editor, Reader Response The Portland Observer P.O.Box 3137Portland, OR 97208 Thank you for taking the time to give us some feedback. LET THE GAMES REGIN! MAY 31 7PM 1 9 9 9 P O R T L A N D F IR E VS W O R LD C H A M P IO N H O U S T O N T IC K E T S A »» T IC K E T S ARE IN T IC K E T S ,S T A R T ON SA I E T M f AS NOW LO W ER lO W AS R O W I * C ALL 224 4400 A I F H IK IE tH ft n t t ! t t t n * C O M E T S