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Friday, June 27, 2003

Sense of relief for Sonics after draft
Seattle took forward Nick Collison and guard Luke Ridnour with their two first-round picks

By DANNY O'NEIL
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER

Luke Ridnour's court vision was the first thing Sonics coach Nate McMillan praised about his new point guard.

It was Ridnour's eyes, however, that showed how happy the University of Oregon junior was to be one of two players chosen by the Sonics yesterday in the first round of the NBA draft.

"I looked at him and I could see tears," said Rob Ridnour, Luke's father, from the Ridnour family home in Blaine.

Luke Ridnour was selected No. 14 overall, two spots after the Sonics took Kansas senior Nick Collison, a 6-foot-9 power forward.

Ridnour may have been Seattle's second pick, but the Sonics were his first choice.

"It's a feeling I've never had before in my life," Ridnour said. "It's just relief, a lot of relief and a lot of excitement, and I'm very thankful."

He was the state's player of the year in 2000 after his senior year at Blaine High School. That made the selection a homecoming of sorts, since he will be playing professional basketball about 100 miles south of the border town where he grew up.

In Collison and Ridnour, the Sonics chose a pair of players who were college tested to fill the two most significant voids on the roster:

  • A power forward who could score close to the basket;

  • A point guard.

    Taken as a twosome, Ridnour and Collison give new legs to an up-tempo offense, twin clamps on a set of jumper cables.

    In Seattle, the crowd of a few hundred fans watching the draft at the team's training facility in lower Queen Anne cheered both selections.

    "We went offense over defense," Seattle general manager Rick Sund said. "Coach McMillan really wanted help with our running next year."

    So if McMillan talked of Ridnour as if he were a quarterback after the draft, that's because it is the role he foresees in the Sonics' perimeter-oriented offense.

    "He can deliver the ball," McMillan said.

    And Ridnour's selection was like a good no-look pass.

    He didn't know it was coming. Not until he saw NBA commissioner David Stern read his name on television. No phone call before the pick. No tip-off as to what was about to happen.

    After the pick, the celebration was ad-libbed, as spontaneous as Ridnour on a fast break.

    Twenty friends and family members gathered around the television in the living room of his family's two-story farmhouse in Blaine.

    "Everyone was yelling," Luke said. "It was incredible."

    It also was the end of a suspenseful month. Because while the Sonics were agonizing over whether Collison would be available with the 12th pick, it was Ridnour who was sweating out the 14th pick.

    His month of workouts for NBA teams was hampered by a strained abdominal muscle, which he suffered in May and reaggravated earlier this month. Working out for the Sonics on June 17 was his last for any NBA team.

    Yesterday was like the entire month leading up to the draft for Ridnour, long and full of uncertainty. His father got up at 5 a.m. to water the lawn and saw that Luke was already up. Had been for 30 minutes, in fact.

    "He was pacing," Rob Ridnour said.

    By the time the draft started, people had gathered at the house. The principal of Blaine High School was there. So were friends, Ridnour's parents and sister.

    No one was invited. It's a small town and people knew to come.

    "People just start showing up," Rob said. "That's how it always is."

    The house got quiet at about the No. 11 pick held by Golden State, which used the choice on 6-6 swingman Mickael Pietrus from France.

    That left Collison for the Sonics, and a little more of a wait for Ridnour, who kept his upper lip stiff even as the living room stayed silent.

    "I thought I might have a chance to go at No. 14," Ridnour said.

    "I know Nick is a great player, he's going to fit in real well there also."

    The Memphis Grizzlies chose Nevada-Las Vegaas point guard Marcus Banks with the 13th pick -- a pick later traded to Boston -- but even if Banks had been available, McMillan said the team wanted Ridnour.

    "He was our guy," McMillan said.

    After the draft, there was no doubt the Sonics were Ridnour's team.

    It wasn't just relief Ridnour felt. It was happiness.

    His dad could see it in his son's eyes.

    SECOND-ROUND SWAP: The Sonics made a trade of second-round picks last night, acquiring cash and the rights to French guard Paccelis Morlende from Philadelphia for the rights to Detroit Mercy senior guard Willie Green.

    Seattle chose Green with the No. 41 pick with an agreement that he would be traded to Philadelphia, which believed another team would take Green before they could select him at No. 50.

    Morlende is 22, and will be asked to play on the Sonics' summer-league team next month in Long Beach, Calif.

    The Sonics' have been successful with their second-round picks. Earl Watson was a second-round choice in 2001 and was a strong contributor as a rookie before leaving as a free agent. Eric Snow was a second-round choice in 1995 who developed into a starting point guard after he was traded.

    THE PICKS

  • 1. Cleveland, LeBron James, g, St. Vincent-St. Mary HS, Akron, Ohio.

  • 2. Detroit (from Memphis), Darko Milicic, f, Hemofarm Vrsac (Serbia-Montenegro)

  • 3. Denver, Carmelo Anthony, f, Syracuse.

  • 4. Toronto, Chris Bosh, f, Georgia Tech.

  • 5. Miami, Dwyane Wade, g, Marquette.

  • 6. L.A. Clippers, Chris Kaman, c, C. Mich.

  • 7. Chicago, Kirk Hinrich, g, Kansas.

  • 8. Milwaukee (from Atlanta), T.J. Ford, g, Texas.

  • 9. New York, Mike Sweetney, f, Georgetown.

  • 10. Washington, Jarvis Hayes, g, Georgia.

  • 11. Golden State, Michael Pietrus, g, Pau Orthez (France).

  • 12. Seattle, Nick Collison, f, Kansas.

  • 13. a-Memphis (from Houston), Marcus Banks, g, UNLV.

  • 14. Seattle (from Milwaukee), Luke Ridnour, g, Oregon.

  • 15. Orlando, Reece Gaines, g, Louisville.

  • 16. a-Boston, Troy Bell, g, Boston College.

  • 17. Phoenix, Zarko Cabarkaba, f, Buducnost (Serbia-Montenegro).

  • 18. New Orleans, David West, f, Xavier.

  • 19. Utah, Aleksandar Pavlovic, g, Buducnost (Serbia-Montenegro).

  • 20. a-Boston (from Philadelphia), Dahntay Jones, g, Duke.

  • 21. Atlanta (from Indiana), Boris Diaw, g, Pau Orthez (France).

  • 22. New Jersey, Zoran Planinic, g, Cibona Zagreb (Croatia).

  • 23. Portland, Travis Outlaw, f, Starkville (Miss.) HS.

  • 24. L.A. Lakers, Brian Cook, f, Illinois.

  • 25. Detroit (from Detroit through Sacramento), Carlos Delfino, g, Skipper Bologna (Italy).

  • 26. Minnesota, Ndudi Ebi, f, Westbury Christian HS, Houston.

  • 27. a-Memphis (from Sacramento through Orlando), Kendrick Perkins, c, Clifton J. Ozen HS, Beaumont, Texas.

  • 28. b-San Antonio, Leandrinho Barbosa, g, Bauru Tilibra (Brazil).

  • 29. Dallas, Josh Howard, f, Wake Forest.

    Second Round

  • 30. New York (from Denver), Maciej Lampe, f, Universidad Complutense (Spain).

  • 31. Cleveland, Jason Kapono, f, UCLA.

  • 32. L.A. Lakers (from Toronto), Luke Walton, f, Arizona.

  • 33. Miami, Jerome Beasley, c, North Dakota.

  • 34. L.A. Clippers, Sofoklis Schortsanitis, f-c, Iralkis (Greece).

  • 35. Milwaukee (from Memphis), Szymon Szewczyk, f, Braunschweig (Germany).

  • 36. Chicago, Mario Austin, f, Mississippi State.

  • 37. Atlanta, Travis Hansen, g, BYU.

  • 38. Washington, Steve Blake, g, Maryland.

  • 39. New York, Slavko Vranes, c, Buducnost (Serbia-Montenegro)

  • 40. Golden State, Derrick Zimmerman, g, Mississippi State.

  • 41. c-Seattle, Willie Green, g, Detroit.

  • 42. Orlando, Zaur Pachulia, f, Ulker (Turkey).

  • 43. d-Milwaukee, Keith Bogans, g, Kentucky.

  • 44. Houston, Malick Badiane, f, Langen (Germany).

  • 45. e-Chicago (from Phoenix), Matt Bonner, f, Florida.

  • 46. Denver (from Boston), Sani Becirovic, g, Vitrus Bologna (Italy).

  • 47. Utah, Maurice Williams, g, Alabama.

  • 48. New Orleans, James Lang, c, Central Park Christian HS, Birmingham, Ala.

  • 49. Indiana, James Jones, f, Miami

  • 50. c-Philadelphia, Paccelis Morlende, g, Dijon (France).

  • 51. f-New Jersey, Kyle Korver, f, Creighton.

  • 52. Toronto (from L.A. Lakers), Remon Van de Hare, c, F.C. Barcelona (Spain).

  • 53. Chicago (from Detroit through Miami), Tommy Smith, f, Arizona State.

  • 54. Portland, Nedzad Sinanovic, c, Zenica Celik (Bosnia-Herzegovina).

  • 55. Minnesota, Rick Rickert, c, Minnesota.

  • 56. Boston (from Sacramento), Brandon Hunter, f, Ohio.

  • 57. Dallas, Xue Yuyang, c, Hong Kong Flying Dragons (China).

  • 58. Detroit (from San Antonio), Andres Gliniadakis, c, Greece.

    a-Memphis and Boston traded selections; b-Traded rights to Phoenix; c-Seattle and Philadelphia traded selections; d-Traded rights to Orlando; e-Traded rights to Toronto; f-Traded rights to Philadelphia

    NBA DRAFT TRADES 1 -- Boston -- Traded the rights to G Troy Bell and G Dahntay Jones to Memphis for the rights to G Marcus Banks and C Kendrick Perkins.

    2 -- San Antonio -- Traded the rights to G Leandrinho Barbosa to Phoenix for a future first-round pick.

    3 -- Milwaukee -- Traded the rights to G Keith Bogans to Orlando for cash.

    4 -- Philadelphia -- Traded the rights to G Paccelis Morlende and cash to Seattle for the rights to G Willie Green.

    5 -- New Jersey -- Traded the rights to F Kyle Korver to Philadelphia for cash.

    6 -- Chicago -- Traded the right to F Matt Bonner to Toronto for a future second-round pick.

    P-I reporter Danny O'Neil can be reached at 206-448-8209 or dannyo'neil@seattlepi.com

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