SPORTS WEEKEND, APRIL 18-19, 2015 Sports shorts Manziel hopes to earn back respect after stint in rehab CLEVELAND (AP) — Browns quarterback Johnny Manziel has apologized to the team and its fans and asked for privacy during his recovery from an undis- closed substance problem. Manziel released a statement through the Browns on Friday. He thanked doctors and staff at Caron, a Pennsylvania facility which specializes in the treat- ment of drugs and alcohol. Manziel was discharged last week following a 2 1/2-month stay. Manziel says he takes “full responsibility for my actions” and he intends to “work very hard to regain everyone’s trust and re- spect.” Manziel, who earned his “Johnny Football” nickname while winning the Heisman Trophy as a freshman at Texas A&M, intends to attend Cleveland’s offseason practices next week. NBA Blazers limping into playoffs Portland weighed down by glut of injuries By ANNE M. PETERSON Associated Press PORTLAND — The Trail Blazers limp into their ¿ rst-round playoff series against the Memphis Grizzlies on a four-game losing streak, as injuries ¿ nally appeared to catch up with the Northwest Division champions. Now the question is whether those woes will extend into the postseason. The Blazers will likely start the playoffs on Sunday in Memphis with guard Damian Lillard, center Robin Lopez and forward La- Marcus Aldridge but those appear to be the only real certainties to start. Nicolas Batum, who joins Aldridge and Lopez up front, is nursing a right knee contu- sion that kept SPORT him out of the regular-sea- son ¿ nale, a 114-98 loss to #4 Portland # 5 Memphis the Mavericks Blazers Grizzlies in Dallas on (51-31) (55-27) We d n e s d a y • Sunday, 2 p.m. night. • at FedEx Forum CJ McCol- lum, who had been thrust into the starting lineup following Wesley Matthews’ season-ending Achilles in- jury and Arron AfÀ alo’s shoulder injury, also missed the Dallas game with a sprained left ankle. Aldridge came back for the ¿ nale after missing two games with a sore left foot and Portland ended the regular season 51-31. The Blazers wound up with the higher seed be- See BLAZERS/3B “This is not acceptable.This is a worldwide event that the city of Las Vegas is involved in. It’s one of the craziest things I’ve ever seen.” — Bob Arum Boxing promoter on the lack of ticket sales for the highly-anticipated Manny Pacquiao-Floyd Mayweather fi ght at the MGM Grand on May 2. Tickets have yet to go on sale, which is unheard of according to promoters such as Arum. Arum has heard of people cancel- ling their reservations to Las Vegas because they’re afraid they can’t get tickets. THIS DATE IN SPORTS 1966 — Bill Russell of the Boston Celtics becomes the ¿ rst African-American head coach of an NBA team. 1999 — Wayne Gretzky ends his NHL career at Mad- ison Square Garden with an assist, setting up a second-pe- riod goal as his New York Rangers fall to Pittsburgh 2-1 in overtime. Contact us at 541-966-0838 or sports@eastoregonian.com AP Photo/LM Otero Portland Trail Blazers forward LaMarcus Aldridge, left, is defended by Dallas Mavericks center Tyson Chandler (6) during the fi rst half of an NBA bas- ketball game Wednesday in Dallas. UMATILLA OUR VIEW Viks sizzle in the heat Moore an Umatilla’s Fabian Carde- nas leads the pack in the boys’ 1500 meter run on Friday at the River’s Edge track meet in Umatilla. Hall of Famer Abdul-Jabbar has bypass surgery LOS ANGELES — Basketball Hall of Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is recovering after undergoing quadruple coronary bypass surgery. A hospital statement FACES Friday says on Abdul-Jabbar had the surgery on Thursday at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center. Abdul-Jabba r Dr. Richard Shemin, who performed the surgery, says the 68-year-old former NBA and UCLA star is expected to make a full recovery. Abdul-Jabbar is the NBA’s all-time leading scor- er with 38,387 points during a 20-year career with the Los Angeles Lakers and Mil- waukee Bucks. The 7-foot-2 center was known for his trademark sky hook. In the statement, Ab- dul-Jabbar says he’s looking forward to getting back to his usual activities soon and he asks that people cherish and live life to the fullest. 1B FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS Staff photo by E.J. Harris Zitterkob wins four events at home track meet By SAM BARBEE EO Media Group Two meets, two vastly dif- ferent sets of conditions. Last Saturday in Stan¿ eld, a brutal wind send javelin throws all over the ¿ eld and runners had to gameplan. Friday, near- 80-degree temperatures forced athletes, coaches and fans alike scampering for water and any shade they could ¿ nd. For Umatilla’s Amie Zitter- kob, however, the conditions were picture perfect. The Eastern Oregon-bound sprinter won four events Fri- day at the River’s Edge invite in Umatilla, an event that is not traditionally kind to the host Vikings. Sprinting coach Mike Mosher said, for whatever rea- sons, his runners haven’t run their best on their home track, and he’s not sure why. “It could be a surface thing and we have to resurface,” he said of the home struggles. “But in general, I don’t know. Maybe (it’s) pressure (from) fans (and) friends. You’re working the meet, you’re not relaxed like you would be at an away meet — you’re doing other things. Just in general for some reason, that’s kind of where it’s been.” Combine those potential pressures and distractions with See TRACK/2B unusual case H eaps of Blue Mountain Community College records have fallen with a basketball in the hands of Mar’Shay Moore. On Thursday she made more history, this time with a ballpoint pen. By signing a Letter of Intent with the University of Oregon, Moore became the ¿ rst Timberwolf player to ink with a Pac-12 school and just the third ever to sign with a Division-1 university. What she’s done on Mosby Court has already made her the T-Wolves’ greatest hoops ambassador. With a smile permanently af¿ xed across her face, she’s carved out the best two years in school history. But, what happens next, while she’s Deep in the Woods of Matthew Knight Arena, will provide a stronger endorsement for BMCC. This is a quantum leap. There’s a reason that Moore and former Yakima Valley players Earlysia Marchbanks (Oregon State) and Rosetta Adzsu Erik (Washington State) are Skopil the only ones to make Sports it this decade. It takes a special talent, with special circumstances to complete it. Moore has both. A wiry 5-foot-8 combo guard whose ability to get buckets was unparalleled in the conference this year, no one doubts that she has the game. And, a change in regime in Eugene provided the circumstances. For over a decade Kelly Graves ruled the West Coast Conference at Gonzaga. Last year he split town looking for a new challenge in Eugene. After one season it’s clear he’s found it. The Ducks won just 13 games in his premiere, and ¿ nished ninth in the Pac-12. Coaches, Graves included, typically shy away from going the JUCO route. Four- year players provide stability. But Moore offered something Graves and his staff are in dire need of — experience. “Normally they probably wouldn’t take JC transfers,” said former BMCC coach Christy Martin, who brought Moore to Pendleton from Fort Vancouver High School in Washington two years ago and whose connection with Graves helped her land in Eugene. “But, because they need See SKOPIL/3B WNBA Schimmel not selected in Draft Louisville guard keeping busy off the court East Oregonian MISSION — Louisville guard Jude Schimmel went undrafted in the 2015 WNBA Draft on Friday. Some mock drafts had pro- jected her going in the third, and ¿ nal, round. As a senior at Louisville, Schimmel averaged 7.3 points, 3.8 assists and 3.4 rebounds per game while memorably leading Louisville to a 60-52 win over South Florida in the NCAA Tournament that sent the Cardi- nals to their third-straight Sweet 16. Schimmel scored six of her 13 points in the ¿nal 69 seconds of that win. “I knew that I had to be a leader,” Schimmel told reporters after that game. “At that point we needed somebody to step up and I said ‘why not me.’” Louisville forward Shawnta Dyer said the 5-foot-6 guard had earned her teammates’ trust long before then. “She’s the smallest one on the court, but she makes big plays all the time,” she said in an interview with The Couri- er-Journal after the South Flori- da game. “Jude is always clutch. We have a lot of con¿ dence in her, and she knows it.” Louisville’s season ended in the next round with an 82-66 loss to Dayton, and Schimmel ¿ nished her Cardinals career with a senior class that is the winningest in program history at 112-31. She is seventh all-time in steals with 221 and 10th in as- sists with 392. She also ¿nished with 711 career points. She told IndianCountry.com that she’d been preparing her- self for the possibility of going undrafted, which was why she started working on master’s de- gree in sports managment after earning her bachelors degree in three years. “I got into sports administra- tion because I thought I wanted to manage my sister,” she said of older sibling Shoni, who be- came the ¿ rst Native American to be drafted in the ¿ rst round when she went No. 8 to the At- lanta Dream in 2014. “I wanted a better understanding of the political and the ¿ nancial part of the WNBA, regardless if I am a professional athlete or a manag- er. I thought I might take my sis- ter’s career as my own. Trust is a big thing out there, and it would set us both up for success.” See SCHIMMEL/3B AP Photo/Chris O’Meara Louisville guard Jude Schimmel (22) shoots over South Florida guard Shale- thia Stringfi eld (23 )during a game this season. Schimmel went undrafted in Fri- day’s WNBA Draft.