Time to decide

Clancy Meadows walked into the lobby of the Moment In Time corporate office with all his paperwork completed and, more importantly, the non-refundable amber token needed to pay for the company’s services.

An “amber” – which amounted to 100 dollars in early American currency – seemed like an extremely cheap price to pay to not only travel through time, but to change it.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Threads @sladamson1960 and Adamsonmedia on Facebook.

But that’s what made Moment In Time so popular. While it didn’t allow extended visits to the past or future, or give clients license to completely rewrite their history, it promised to help them make one adjustment during a relatively specific point in their lives.

In the case of Clancy that point was February 28, 2087. He had been taking guitar lessons for three weeks but baseball season was approaching. If he wanted to try out for the team – and make it – the lessons would have to go.

His guitar teacher worked with him every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 4 p.m., and those times would be in direct conflict with lessons.

So, as 10-year-olds sometimes do, he chose chasing balls in the sun rather than plucking away on a six-string.

Sixty years later, he regretted that decision.

His baseball “career” ended during his second year at Learn Camp when he took a line drive to the knee. The stiffness had only gotten worse as the years went by, and he wondered how different his life would be if he had only learned to shred the axe.

Maybe he wouldn’t have become a rock star, but then again, perhaps that’s exactly what he’d become.

So, instead of choosing baseball, he would continue his lessons.

“Hello, Mr. Meadows, is it? I’m Ross Wilbanks and I’ll be helping you.”

Wilbanks was perched behind an antique desk, and Clancy sat across from him and handed over his papers and token.

“Uh huh … yep,” Wilbanks muttered as he looked them over. “Very good. You’ve got an exact date which helps tremendously. Now, are you familiar with the procedure?”

Clancy shrugged.

“I guess so,” he said. “I assume I go into a room that has that portal thing, undo what I did, and then when I come back through, everything will have changed. I gotta say, it’s kinda creepy, though. Didn’t his building used to be a crematorium?”

Wilbanks smiled.

“It did … a long time ago. Turns out the design makes it perfect for our time travel apparatus,” he said. “Anyway, when you come back through the portal, you’ll have no idea what happened. In fact, chances are, you’ll freak out a bit. So, what we do is inject you with a sedative almost immediately and put you in a recovery room. You’ll be out for 90 minutes to an hour and when you come to, we’ll have an associate there to explain who you are and what you went through.”

Clancy frowned.

“Explain who I am?” he asked. “You mean I’m not gonna have any memory of this life? What about my wife and kids? And friends.”

Wilbanks grabbed the token and began rolling it with his fingers.

“Mr. Meadows, time travel is extremely complex,” he said. “So many people seem to think they can relive their life, yet still maintain memories from a life they already lived. Think about it … if you change the arc of your life, this – you right here, right now – won’t exist. The person who comes back through the portal will be the person who made the decision to play guitar, not play baseball. Will you marry the same woman? I have no idea. Will you have kids? Maybe, maybe not.”

“But,” Clancy said, “if I don’t marry the same woman, I won’t have the same kids. Are you saying there’s a chance my kids won’t exist if I go back?”

Wilbanks raised his eyebrows.

“Well, yes,” he said. “That’s one of the by-products of time travel. It’s not just your time that changes, it’s everyone you interacted with. But look at it this way, if your kids are never born, it’s not like they’ll miss being alive. Plus, how cool will it be to know you chased the dream you should’ve chased to begin with? You might even find out you’re famous and wealthy.”

Clancy stood up and began rubbing his forehead.

“I can’t do this,” he said. “I didn’t realize … I didn’t think about how this might affect other people. Just throw the paperwork away. And since the token is non-refundable, I’m just gonna chalk it up to a lesson learned. Goodbye.”

Wilbanks watched his client leave the building before pressing the small button beneath his desk.

“Telford,” he said. “How many tokens have we collected today?’

There was a slight pause.

“Looks like … 47. No … 48.”

“Not bad. Not bad at all. Did anybody go through with it?

“Just one guy. I gave him every opportunity to walk away but he was determined.”

Wilbanks sighed.

“OK. Well, just incinerate the body and tell whoever he listed as a contact that he chose not to return from the past. You know, Telford, one of these days people might just get wise to the fact that time travel isn’t a thing. Until then, I’m just gonna keep counting the tokens.

“You ready for lunch? I could eat.”

Squadron well worth watching

I’m guessing in years to come, the Birmingham Squadron’s 124-112 victory over the Memphis Hustle last Sunday will not be discussed by sports historians.

It was, after all, simply a late season NBA G League game contested by teams trying to work themselves into playoff position in their respective conferences.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Threads @sladamson1960 and Adamsonmedia on Facebook.

But you know what? I consider myself something of a sports historian, and I’m gonna talk about it today.

Why?

Because what Birmingham accomplished in Southaven, Mississippi, is one of the reasons I watch the G League.

And it’s one of the reasons you might want to consider watching it, too.

Being a farm club of the New Orleans Pelicans, the Squadron – like all G League squads – is a team in constant flux. Players go up, players come down, some are restricted in the minutes they can play. Any given game is a chess match for the coaching staff – and the chess pieces keep moving on their own.

The day before the Memphis game, T.J. Saint and his coaches learned that Malcolm Hill and two-way player Dereon Seabron had been transferred from the Squadron to the Pelicans.

Hill had started all 35 games he appeared in for Birmingham in 2023-24, and averages 21.9 points per game.

Seabron, who has battled injuries but been a standout with the Squadron for the past two seasons, pumps in 18.2 points per night while repping the Magic City.

Losing those guys was tough, but things got even tougher.

New Orleans also recalled Jalen Crutcher and E.J. Liddell from Birmingham.

Crutcher is good for 17.3 points in G League games, and Liddell pumps in 17.9 points and averages 8.2 rebounds each time out.

So, basically, Saint and company had 24 hours to put together a team that could be competitive on the road.

Mission accomplished.

Only seven players took the court, but all seven were key to the Squadron’s 12-point conquest.

“That win was a result of the culture we’ve built dating back to last season,” Saint said. “The players deserved to win, but earned it with how they believe in each other and the commitment to just doing your job. Whoever wears our jersey, there are standards we call Bars (readiness, attention to detail, being connected) to uphold in order to rep our organization and give yourself the best chance to make the NBA by being the most connected team in the league.”

Landers Nolley II recorded his second-career triple-double with 28 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists. Tevian Jones tied Nolley for team high-scoring honors with 28, and Izaiah Brockington scored 27 points and snared 14 rebounds for a double-double.

Newcomer Karlo Matkovic continued his outstanding play with 17 points; Galen Robinson Jr. had nine points and eight assists; Josh Nzeakor came off the bench to score 20 points; and Nate Bradley – added to the roster on Sunday and a member of the inaugural Squadron team – scored five points in 12 minutes.

Birmingham shot 50 percent from three-point range and remains undefeated on the season when making at least half of its treys.

The Squadron (11-12) is now riding a three-game winning streak and heads into two-game road set against the Capital City G-Go just one and a half games out of the Eastern Conference’s final playoff spot.

The Memphis game was an object lesson in just how talented G League rosters and coaches are. Regardless of the situation and regardless of who dresses out, they find a way to adjust.

And often – as was the case Sunday  –  the results are remarkable.

Look, I’ve made no secret of the fact that I’m a huge fan of this team. It started in 2021-22 when Ryan Pannone – now a member of Nate Oats staff at Alabama – ran the show, and continues on in Saint’s second season at the helm.

Birmingham has only six regular season home games left at Legacy Arena. The Greensboro Swarm comes to town Friday, March 8, and the Long Island Nets provide the opposition on May 10-12.

The Osceola Magic pays a visit on March 19 and 21, and the Cleveland Charge is here on March 30.

It’s the best brand of domestic basketball this side of the NBA, and I absolutely love it.

Give it a chance, and you might learn to love it, too.

“We have four NBA contract players playing for us right now,” Saint said. “It’s the closest thing to the NBA. We play a fun style of offense and we play hard.

“Everyone be there next Friday versus Greensboro.”

Squadron sweeps Celtics

Karlo Matkovic is already proving to be an impact player for Birmingham.

Heading into Friday night’s clash between the Birmingham Squadron and Maine Celtics, the New Orleans Pelicans affiliate had only one season sweep of a two-game set against the same opponent. That came in December when T.J. Saint’s took two on the road against the Osceola Magic.

Now they have a pair on their 2023-24 resume – and the first at home.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Threads @sladamson1960 and Adamsonmedia on Facebook.

Maine’s JD Davison – a 2022 second round draft pick out of Alabama – missed the second of two free throw attempts with 1.2 seconds left and Birmingham hung on for a 99-98 win in front of 2,233 fans at Legacy Arena.

A hotly contested fourth quarter was ultimately settled at the charity stripe as Squadron two-way player Dereon Seabron hit the first of two freebies with 8.5 seconds left to make the score 99-97.

“In the entire G League season, including the Showcase Cup, I believe we’re now 12-4 in close games,” Saint said. “Games like this make us better.”

The big story, however, involved Birmingham’s new big man – Karlo Matkovic. Just two games into his G League career, Matkovic recorded his first double-double with 21 points and 10 rebounds.

“He’s really good,” Saint said. “And he’s going to be – over time – a very good NBA player. He’s been playing pro for a while (six seasons and three different teams in Croatia, Serbia and Slovenia) and we need a five (center) because we lost two in twelve days when Trey (Jemison) got called up and Ike (Anigbogu) got hurt. He fits in with exactly what we need.”

Matkovic was all smiles after the game. In two nights, he’s racked up 40 points and pulled down 19 boards.

“When I transferred from Europe to here, I expected there would be an adjustment,” said Matkovic, who played for KK Cedevita Olimpija of the Adriatic Basketball Association last season. “But the guys have really talked to me a lot and helped me out, and think that’s what’s really got me going.

“It’s an adjustment from Europe to here with the three-second lane violations and faster game play, and also knowing where to be on the court. There’s a lot of little stuff.”

All five starters for the Squadron (10-12) finished in double figures. Aside from Matkovic, E.J. Liddell scored 16 points, Malcolm Hill and Seabron each netted 14, and Jalen Crutcher accounted for 12 points.

Landers Nolley II came off the bench to score 11.

Birmingham is now two and half games out of the final playoff position with 12 games to go.

The Boston Celtics developmental team (11-11) was paced by Davison’s 19 points. Other Maine players to hit twin figures were Joe Wieskamp (15), Drew Peterson (13), Brandon Slater (13), DJ Steward (12) and Neemias Queta (12), who also had 12 rebounds for the double-double.

Birmingham got the upper hand early, leading by as many as 10 points in the first quarter. But Maine made a push late in the frame and the Squadron’s lead was down to five – 28-23 – when the horn sounded.

The Celtics managed to tie the score at 34-34 at the second period’s 7:49 mark, but the hosts never allowed them to take the lead. A surge in the final two minutes of the period helped Birmingham enter the locker room on top, 55-48.

The Squadron looked to blow this one open in the third, going up 63-50 9:29 into the quarter and grabbing all the momentum.

But Maine kept chipping away, slicing the deficit to one on a pair of occasions.

Heading into the fourth, Birmingham was clinging to a 74-71 lead.

The Celtics managed to take the lead once at 75-74, but when the final horn sounded it was the home team that owned the one-point edge.

Next up: The Squadron travels to Southaven, Mississippi, to meet the Memphis Hustle Sunday at 1 p.m.

Coaching ‘em up: Here’s a trivia question for you … who is the winningest coach in Birmingham professional basketball history?

That would be none other than the current Squadron coach.

Saint, who is winding down his second season guiding Birmingham’s G League team, won his 29th game on January 11, which put him atop the leaderboard among Magic City pro hoop bosses.

Records of his predecessors are 28-20 (Ryan Pannone, Squadron, inaugural season); 27-34 (Mo McHone, Birmingham Bandits, Continental Basketball Association); 21-18 (Jim Price (interim coach of both the Birmingham Vulcans and Birmingham Steelers of the Southern Professional Basketball League); 17-5 (Fred Lewis, Birmingham Skyhawks, Professional Basketball League of America); 14-13 (Wheeler Fleming, Vulcans); 8-3 (Ben Chapman, Steelers); and 5-8 (Cherry Foster, Vulcans).

After tonight’s rematch with Maine, Saint is 37-51 overall.

Of course, the main goal of G League coaches is to get players ready for the next level, and Saint is certainly getting the job done in that respect.

“Coach Saint has distinguished himself in the area of player development for many years both in the G League and NBA levels,” said David Griffin, executive vice president of basketball operations for the Pelicans. “His growth as a head coach has been profound.”

OTD in 1992: The Birmingham Bandits of the CBA lost to the Columbus Horizon, 105-104.

Skeeter Henry had a career-high 42 points for Birmingham, while Dave Popson finished with 16 points.

Eric Johnson had a double-double with 15 points and 18 assists, and Michael Cutright also had 15 points.

OTD in 2023: The Squadron fell to the Oklahoma City Blue, 113-111, with 1,813 fans at Legacy Arena looking on. James Kelly Sr. had a double-double to lead Birmingham (18 points, 12 rebounds). Other double-digit me for the Squadron were Kelan Martin (16), Javonte Smart (15), Feron Hunt (14), Seabron (12) and Zylan Cheatham (11).