illr'JjJortlanh ffibscruer________ Page A6 lanuary 25. 2006 S ports Seahawksin Super Bowl Joyous trip 30 years in the making The Seattle Seahawks will be making their first appearance in the Super Bowl against the Pitts­ burgh Steelers in Detroit on Sun­ day. Feb. 5. The Seahawks earned their Su­ per Bowl XL berth by outclassing the Carolina Panthers, 34-tO-l4 to win the NFC championship Sunday. Seahawks fans chanted "Super Bowl, Super Bowl" as Shaun A lexandercarried the NFC championship trophy down the field at Qwest Stadium in Seattle, a joyous trip that was 30 years in the making. Alexander, a killer defense and playing on a field where they did n 't lose this season, all com ­ bined perfectly Sunday to help the Seahawks rout the Panthers in the NFC title game. "I think we got people excited Seattle Seahawks defensive ends Grant Wistrom, (left) and Bryce Fisher celebrate their 34 -14 win over the Carolina Panthers Sunday about football again here in the in Seattle in the NFC Championship football game. (AP photo) Movie 'Glory Road' Documents Texas Western’s Historic Win 1966 NCAA champs broke color barrier (AP)— Don Haskinsdidn't real­ ize the impact of what he had done until a few days later. That's when the letters started arriving. Thou­ sands of them, mostly from the South. Almost all began the same way: “Dear n------ lover:” His Texas Western basketball team had won the national champi­ onship. But Haskins was no longer in any mood to celebrate. "The worst time of my life was the next few weeks after we won the national championship," Haskins said. “It didn't really dawn on me what this was all about until that time.” Haskins’ crime — an unpardon­ able one incertain parts of the coun­ try — was that he started five black players against Kentucky's all- white team in the NCAA final. W orse yet, his players had beaten the Wildcats 72-65 to be­ come national champions. It was 40 years ago, March 19, 1966, to be specific. America was a different place then, and basketball was a different game. A world away, blacks were fight­ ing and dying alongside their fel­ low white soldiers in Vietnam. They weren’t, however, playing basket­ ball at many schools in the South, where de facto segregation still reigned. Just two years earlier. President Johnson had signed landmark civil rights legislation prohibiting dis­ crimination of any kind. But change came slowly, even on the basket­ ball court where ability was sup­ posed to matter more than the color of a player’s skin. Haskins and his Miners weren’t trying to change all of that when they took the court against Ken­ tucky in the national final, and the argument could be made that they really didn't. It would be another season before a black player took the court in the Southeastern Con­ ference, and two more after that before Kentucky's team was inte­ grated. Putting five black players on the court wasn't meant as a statement for racial equality. It was a lineup Kobe Bryant goes to the hoop past Toronto defender Matt Bonner on his way to scoring 81 points in the Lakers' 122-104 victory over the Raptors Sunday. Kobe Hits Mind Boggling 81 Points Highest since Wilt Chamberlain The Los Angeles Lakers' star Kobe Bryant scored a staggering 81 points Sunday night against the Toronto Raptors in a 122-104 win. The mind-boggling high point score has only been outdone by retired Wilt Chamberlain's 100- pointgam ein 1962. By halftime. Bryant had 26 points, not a bad tally for most players By the end of the game, he had put up the second-highest to­ tal in NBA history. His response to how he did was. "It just happened, man" Bryant said. "To sit here and say I grasp what happened, that would be ly­ ing. No, even in my dreams." The N B A s leading scorer left to a standing ovation with 4.2 sec­ onds remaining, having shot 28-of- 46 from the tloor. including 7-of-13 from 3-poin, range and 18-of-20from the foul line. With the fans at Staples Center chanting “MVP! MVP!" Bryan, made two free throws with 43.4 sec­ onds remaining for his final points. He scored 27 points in the third quarter, 28 in the fourth. put together to win a basketball game. "We had one goal,one objective and tha) was to win the baskeball game," said Harry Flournoy, aTexas Western forward immortalized on the cover of Sports Illustrated that w eek b lo ck in g a shot from Kentucky's Pat Riley (yes, that Pat Riley). "Glory Road” opened last week­ end around the country, and Haskins and his players say the movie makers got most of it right. The Seahawks' Shaun Alexander crosses into the end zone for a touchdown against the Carolina Panthers during the fourth quarter Sunday. Seattle will be making their first appearance in the Super Bowl against the Pittsburgh Steelers in Detroit on Sunday, Feb. 5. (AP photo) Pacific N orthw est,” coach Mike Holmgren said. “T hey’re all com­ ing to D etroit with us, everybody in the stadium ’s coming. They were great for us all year. Home- field advantage in this place means everything." In this case, it m eans the Seahawks (15-3) will meet the Pittsburgh Steelers, 34-17 win- ners over Denver in the AFC, in lina stars Jake Delhomme and Steve the Super Bowl. That game will be Smith into oblivion. "We have an played in Detroit on Feb. 5 and unbelievable team, an unbelievable the Steelers already are favored group of fans,” Alexander said. "Prayer works. 1 get knocked out by 3*/ î points. Alexander, the league’s MVP, and guys step up. One guy goes came back from last week’s con­ down and another guy steps up.” cussion to rush for a team playoff- The Seahawks picked off three record 132 yards and two touch­ passes in winning their 12th straight downs, and Seattle pressured Caro- home game. The movie “Glory Road" imparts a sense o f what it meant in 1966 to have black players outnumber white players on a college basketball team.