PORT ARTHUR — TJ ex Kevin Everett is the subject of the best, most compelling piece of writing I’ve seen in a long, long time in the current issue of Sports Illustrated. Everett, who is on the magazine’s cover, is the subject of a story titled, “Against All Odds” that chronicles his remarkable road back from a devastating spinal injury in the Buffalo Bills 2007 season opener. Author Tim Layden meticulously and skillfully details every step along the road to Kevin walking again, right down to the disagreements between attending doctors over the revolutionary treatment orthopedic surgeon Andrew Cappuccino opted for, with the understanding he was putting his career on the line. If you don’t take the magazine, find somebody who does, or look the story up on SI.com. You will be glad you did . . . Everett, by the way, is coming home to Port Arthur on Thursday, Jan. 10 to be the guest speaker at Memorial’s football banquet. Memorial offensive coordinator Kenny Harrison, who goes way back with Everett, ran the idea by his friend last week and says he didn’t hesitate about accepting the offer. “He was excited about doing it. He wants to come back here and coach,” said Harrison. What Harrison and Memorial head coach Ronnie Thompson now must decide is whether to open the banquet up to everyone who would like to hear what Everett has to say. If they go that route, and it would only be done with Everett’s approval, they will need a much larger venue than Memorial’s cafeteria. And they better brace for ESPN, The NFL Network and hordes of other national media.
Absolutely no surprise here that Roger Clemens was the poster boy for baseball’s Mitchell Report that rocked the sports world on Thursday. Clemens’ before and after pictures are almost as contrasting as Barry Bonds’, and I’ve always thought it was classic ‘Roid rage’ when he threw a shattered bat at Mets catcher Mike Piazza in the 2000 World Series. Clemens’ spike in stats late in his career are every bit as suspicious as Bonds’, especially when you consider he’s a power pitcher. He’ll deny, deny, deny, but for now the Rocket deserves every bit of the scorn being heaped on baseball’s home run king . . . Nice timing for the Astros to bring in long-suspected steroid user Miguel Tejada the day before the Mitchell Report was made public. But I’m betting the timing wasn’t an accident. And isn’t it interesting that Drayton McLane’s team, long considered one of baseball’s most wholesome, is tied into so many juicers, starting with Ken Caminiti? You add Clemens, Andy Pettitte and Tejada and it’s little wonder NBC’s Keith Olberman was saying the “geographical center of the steroid world would either be New York City or Houston.” . . . Most fans, of course, especially those who don’t think about the influence steroids-using-pros have on impressionable kids, will have basically forgotten the whole thing by spring training. Tejada will be a Houston hero if he dumps enough balls into the Crawford boxes. With Tejada, Lance Berkman, Carlos Lee and Hunter Pence, the middle of that Houston lineup really does look imposing. But, given the questionable nature of Astros pitching, you’ll probable see a record number of games when both teams score more than 10 runs.
Former Memorial quarterback Donovan Porterie gets some rare national TV exposure next Saturday as he leads 8-4 New Mexico against 6-6 Nevada in the New Mexico Bowl. Porterie finished the regular season as the No. 3 ranking passer in the Mountain West Conference, completing 223-of-380 passes for 2,636 yards and 13 touchdowns. The game is being carried on ESPN at 3:30 p.m. . . . Jamaal Charles was presented the Darrell Royal Most Valuable Offensive Player Trophy and shared the Team MVP trophy with Colt McCoy at Texas’ recent awards banquet. Charles, however, despite rushing for nearly 1,500 yards and averaging 6.3 yards per carry to run away with the Big 12 rushing championship, may be looking at reduced carries if he returns for his senior season. UT head coach Mack Brown was recently quoted as saying Texas will have offensive packages next year to give backup QB John Chiles and backup running back Vondrell McKee an expanded role . . . Although he didn’t have much success against the Texans’ Thursday night, Longhorn ex Selvin Young went into the game with the second highest average per carry (5.7) in the NFL. Included in Young’s near 600 rushing yards this season are two games where he topped 100, including a 156-yard explosion last week against Kansas City. Isn’t it amazing, then, that with Young and Jamaal Charles in the backfield last year, working behind a couple of lineman who would be drafted by NFL teams, Texas had virtually no running game. Gee, you think that might have something to do with the offensive coordinator?
Most people in these parts didn’t see it, but the Texans delivered a really impressive performance in stuffing Denver, 31-13, in a Thursday night game telecast by the NFL Network. Considering that the Texans, for the third season in their brief history have put more players on injured reserve than any team in the NFL, you have to give second-year coach Gary Kubiak a lot of credit for keeping his team together. For Houston to be 7-7 is pretty amazing, in light of the players it has lost and is without. If they can add a couple more pieces in the off-season, the Texans could be pretty salty in 2008 . . . Cowboys coach Wade Phillips doesn’t have much time to watch movies during football season, but you can bet he’ll find a way to take wife Laurie to see Charlie Wilson’s War. The film about the Lufkin congressman, which stars Tom Hanks and Julia Roberts, casts the Phillips’ daughter, Tracy, in the role of a Fort Worth belly dancer who was one of Wilson’s companions during his clandestine support of anti-Soviet rebels in 1980s Afghanistan. Tracy, who is in her late 20s, was hand-picked for what is her most significant role to date by noted producer Mike Nichols. “This is her best part yet,” says Wade. “We’re hoping it opens some doors.” The movie premieres Friday . . . PN-G ex Lew Ford will be breaking new ground for a Southeast Texas baseball player in 2008. Ford, who spent the past five seasons with the Minnesota Twins, has signed to play in Japan for the Hanshin Tigers. He was plagued by injuries in 2007 and wound up hitting only .233 in 55 games. His career best came in 2004 when he hit 15 homers, drove in 72 runs and stole 20 bases.
While Steve Roccaforte and his Lamar Cardinals are still looking for their first win over a Division 1 team, the Southland Conference is having unprecedented success. With 8-0 Sam Houston State leading the way, three SLC teams are ranked in the Mid-Major Top 25 poll. Entering weekend play, SHS was No. 9, 8-0 Texas-Arlington was No. 14 and 7-1 Stephen F. Austin, which won at Oklahoma last Saturday, is No. 25. Fortunately for Lamar, all three are in the SLC’s West Division . . . The Houston Rockets, who have undergone all sorts of problems making the adjustment to new coach Rick Adelman from Jeff Van Gundy, sank to embarrassing depths at the free throw line Wednesday night. The Rockets missed 14-of-their first 15 free-throw shots and wound up 6-of-21. Remarkably, they walked away an 80-77 winner . . . No team has undergone as dramatic a facelift as the Astros since the end of the 2007 season. New GM Ed Wade, in addition to lopping off the likes of Brad Lidge, Luke Scott, Troy Patton, Chris Burke, Adam Everett and others, has acquired 15 players. Houston’s projected starting lineup for 2008 includes only two position players — Lance Berkman and Carlos Lee — from the 2007 opener.
Sports editor Bob West can be e-mailed at rdwest@usa.net. His Sportsrap radio show airs Thursday at 8:05 p.m. on KLVI (560-AM).
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SLIDESHOW: Giants beat Patriots in Super Bowl XLVI
The New York Giants won their fourth NFL championship Sunday in Indianapolis, scoring in the final minute to defeat New England 21-17.
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Seahawks overcome player shortage, win easily
Matt Cross wondered Wednesday whether Lamar Port Arthur’s basketball team had enough healthy players available to face Kilgore College.
The Lamar State program literally was falling apart before head coach Cross’ eyes. The game clock didn’t work. The players were dropping like Lakeshore mosquitoes.
Point guard Derrick Dawkins had crutches after sustaining a knee injury Saturday. Wing man Elton Roy missed last Saturday’s game with a knee sprain. Opposite wing Eldridge Moore was hobbled by an ankle sprain. Power man Jayon James was sick with bronchitis. Post man Elijah Pittman seemed out of sorts too.
“I’m only about 75 percent,” said the Seahawks third-year coach after canceling a lunch appointment.
It got worse at the start of this 75-50 victory in Carl Parker Center before life improved any on the good ship Seahawk.
Playmaker deluxe Brandon Peters said he was “hit in the mouth” by a Kilgore player’s shoulder.
“I’m going to have to go to the dentist tomorrow morning,” Peters said, shaking his head. “The guy knocked my teeth all the way back.”
Battered and beaten to a pulp, the Seahawks (especially Peters) proved that basketball definitely is played above the shoulders, too.
More than anything else, Lamar State simply relaxed and rebounded. And rebounded some more.
The Seahawks crashed the boards in a way that they have not pounded them in a couple of weeks. They knocked home seven three-pointers and welcomed a special addition to their star of the game show. Lamar State College-Port Arthur, meet Lakeem Duncan.
“We asked one person to step up in practice with Derrick going to the doctor tomorrow (Thursday) and Lakeem did,” his head coach Cross said.
Duncan led the way with 16 points and backcourt buddy Shondel Stewart added 15. Peters changed jerseys (to 32 from his usual 23) after losing blood from being hit in the mouth. Peters had 11 points and 8 boards. Roy patiently treated his wounded knee all weekend with ice and also scored 11. Bum ankle or not, Moore managed 10 boards and 8 points.
And a clean shaven head coach smiled afterwards after every one in Seahawk Nation told him that his team needed to rebound better. After Trinity Valley outrebounded Lamar State by seven on Saturday, the Seahawks returned to work and captured the backboard battle on this night, 33-22.
“I thought we rebounded the ball well consistently,” Cross said. “We’re still No. 1 in our conference and if we can get everybody healthy, we can still have a very good chance to defend our championship.”
Parker Center’s game clock has been malfunctioning for the past three home games and it had a way of really dictating a lot about this game. The game officials had to frequently counsel Kilgore head coach Brian Hoberecht about the clock and its unpredictable nature.
A very good indicator of Seahawks prosperity arrived eight minutes into this one when Roy penetrated on a weave and dished out to Moore in the left corner. The 6-5 sophomore knocked home a three-pointer for a 15-8 Lamar State lead. Kilgore never got within five points the rest of the game.
Another telltale moment developed right before the half when Roy missed a jumper, but followed his own shot on a layup to give the Seabirds a 36-19 cushion. Kilgore never got closer than 10 after that.
Lamar State (18-5 and 10-2) will welcome all the support in Baytown that it can receive on Saturday night. The Seahawks visit Lee College that night at 7:30 p.m. - LU to honor Gilligan as distinguished alumnus
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