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Portland Power (basketball)

American basketball team


Summary

American basketball team

FieldValue
namePortland Power
color1#ffffff
color2#1f7707
color3#102099
logoPortland Power.png
leagueAmerican Basketball League
founded1996
folded1998
arenaMemorial Coliseum
capacity10,934
locationPortland, Oregon
colorsgreen, blue, white
coachGreg Bruce (1996)
Lin Dunn (1997–98)
Missy Bequette (assistant coach)
managerLinda Weston (general manager)
div_champs1 (1997–98)
official languages
websitewww.portlandpower.com (archived on July 4, 1998)

| vice-presidents = Lin Dunn (1997–98) Missy Bequette (assistant coach) The Portland Power was a women's professional basketball team in the American Basketball League (ABL) based in Portland, Oregon. The Power began play in 1996, and disbanded when the ABL folded at the end of 1998. The Power hosted home games at Veterans Memorial Coliseum, which had a capacity of 10,934.

1996–97 season

The Power held their pre-season training camp at Western Oregon University in Monmouth, Oregon. A scrimmage was held in Monmouth on October 6, 1996, against the Seattle Reign. Portland's first head coach was Greg Bruce, who had previously been the head women's basketball coach at Portland State. The Power's first roster included:

  • Lisa Harrison, forward for Tennessee's 1991 national championship team
  • Michelle M. Marciniak, guard for Tennessee's 1996 national championship team
  • Katy Steding, Portland native, 1996 basketball Olympic gold medalist, and forward for Stanford's 1990 national championship team
  • Coquese Washington, guard for Notre Dame
  • Natalie Williams, center for UCLA's basketball team and volleyball national championship teams in 1990 and 1991

The Power got off to a poor start, going 5–17 under Bruce. Power players reported to ABL management on at least two occasions that Bruce was difficult to work with. The league met with Bruce, who resigned on January 1, 1997, citing personal reasons. He was replaced by former Purdue coach Lin Dunn. Under Dunn, the Power managed to go 9–9 the rest of the first season, and finished last in the Western Conference. Regional cable television network Prime Sports Northwest broadcast four Power games.

1997–98 season

In their second season, the Power showed much improvement. The team acquired Sylvia Crawley from North Carolina's 1994 national championship team and Delisha Milton from Florida among other players, and won the Western Conference. Coach Dunn was named ABL Coach of the Year, and Williams was named the league's MVP. In the playoffs, the team met the conference runner-up, the Long Beach Stingrays, and lost 2 games to 0.

Season ticket costs ranged from $176 to $265 ($ to $ adjusted for inflation). Individual game tickets cost $11, $13 or $15, depending on the section ($, $, $, respectively, adjusted for inflation).

1998–99 season

For their third season, the Power acquired Steding's former Stanford teammate, point guard Sonja Henning. Though they got off to a slow start, the Power was leading the Western Conference after completing a five-game win streak when the ABL abruptly folded due to financial difficulties on December 22, 1998.

At the time of their demise, the Power's starting lineup was:

  • Katy Steding, forward
  • Delisha Milton, forward
  • Natalie Williams, center
  • Elaine Powell, guard
  • Sonja Henning, guard

After the franchise folded, many Power players went on to continue their careers in the WNBA.

Team records

SeasonWLWin %Result
1996–971426.3504th Place, Western Conference
1997–982717.614Western Conference Champion
199894.6921st Place, Western Conference

1997–98 playoff results

DateResult
February 27, 1998at Long Beach 72, Portland 62
March 1, 1998Long Beach 70, at Portland 69
Long Beach wins series, 2–0

ABL statistical leaders

1997–98 season:

  • Natalie Williams, 1st in ABL in scoring (913 points, 21.7 points per game)
  • Natalie Williams, 2nd in ABL in rebounding (477 rebounds, 11.4 rebounds per game)
  • Natalie Williams, 1st in ABL in field goal percentage (336 of 604, .556 average)
  • Natalie Williams, 4th in ABL in blocks (47 blocks, 1.1 blocks per game)

1998 season (partial):

  • Natalie Williams, 2nd in ABL in scoring (258 points, 19.9 points per game)
  • Natalie Williams, 2nd in ABL in field goals percentage (94 of 162 .580 average)
  • Katy Steding, 1st in ABL in three-point goals (32 of 74 .432 average)
  • Natalie Williams, 2nd in ABL in rebounding (129 rebounds, 9.9 rebounds per game)
  • Sonja Henning, 2nd in ABL in assists (78 assists, 6.0 per game)

Rosters

1996–971997–981998–99

All-Star players

  • Natalie Williams (First Team All-ABL, 1996–97 and 1997–98)

League honors

  • Natalie Williams, 1997–98 ABL Most Valuable Player
  • Lin Dunn, 1997–98 ABL Coach of the Year

References

References

  1. "ABL Teams". ABL Tribute.
  2. (7 October 1996). "Power: Real hoop dreams". Statesman-Journal.
  3. (2 January 1997). "Coach of Portland ABL team resigns". Albany Democrat-Herald.
  4. (January 2, 1997). "Power's Bruce resigns". The Oregonian.
  5. (18 October 1996). "Power on TV". Statesman-Journal.
  6. "1998 League Awards". ABL Tribute.
  7. "ABL Playoffs 1997–98". Infoplease.com.
  8. (7 October 1997). "Power, ABL boast quality; The first women's pro basketball league has a lot to prove, following WNBA's success". Statesman-Journal.
  9. "ABL-Portland Power". CNNSI.com.
  10. "Final ABL Standings 1996–97". Infoplease.com.
  11. "Final ABL Standings 1997–98". Infoplease.com.
  12. "ABL Regular Season Individual Leaders 1997–98". Infoplease.com.
  13. "'98–'99 ABL Player Statistics". finchhaven.com.
  14. "Portland Power 1997–98 Statistics". CNNSI.com.
  15. "Portland Power 1998–99 Roster". CNNSI.com.
  16. "1997 League Awards". ABL Tribute.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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