2C • #0 SPOl^S/tE^e Ciiarlotte $o«t Thursday, June 29,2006 Sdng ctialleiiged to accouHldr pny Continued from page 1C this. We just have to all have it at all times. We need to have aU five people on the same page...we can’t have three and two or four and Yet, in spite of agreeing with Bogues, the Sting is strugghng to play consistent basketball. Or, maybe the problem is bigger than any one thinks. Maybe the words are getting through, but this team just isn’t that good. Center Tammy Sutton- Brown believes Charlotte still has a chance to turn the sea son around, but each player must pull her weight. ‘We just have come out and establish ourselves on defense,” she said. We all have to hold our own selves accountable, not relying on someone else to get us pumped up, but go out there and have pride in ourselves and focus. So it’s an individ ual thing, definitely.” If the Sting has any hope of improving, it begins today against expansion Chicago, where Charlotte is trying to win a second straight road game. The Sting returns Charlotte Bobcats Arena Saturday to face the Sacramento Monarchs at 6 p.m. Jordan, Bobcats face long list of hurdles to win converts Continued from page 1C about the team’s direction in the one area where the Bobcats have appeared to be on firm footing - building a playoff contender. Johnson has said Jordan’s new role - his official title is managing member of basket ball operations _ means coach and general manager Bemie Bickerstaff will take all major player decisions, such as trades and signings, to Jordan for approval. Previously, it was Johnson who signed off on such deci sions. ‘We’ll exchange ideas,” Bickerstaff said. “I think it would behoove both of us to listen.” On Thursday, Jordan helped run a workout with Rudy Gay of Connecticut, one of several players the Bobcats are considering tak ing with the third pick in Wednesday’s draft, and sev eral other potential draft picks. Jordan helped conduct drills during most of the workout, but retreated from the practice court to a bal cony by the time reporters were let in. A Bobcats spokesman said Jordan would not speak with reporters, but the team’s newest part-owner later spoke with the hometown Charlotte Observer and two other newspapers. “I think I have enough (credibOity) to go to Bob and say, We need X amount of dollars to make sure we can build the foundation,’” Jordan said. "Unless we do that, the business is never going to flourish and that’s been proven in the past.” The draft has been the cen terpiece of Bickerstaff and former team president Ed Tapscott’s plan to build the Bobcats around a core group of young players, including Emeka Okafor, Raymond Felton and Sean May. Tapscott was ousted last month in a front-office shake-up, before Jordan came on board. But the plan has shown some signs of suc cess. Despite a roster deci mated by injuries, the team improved from 18 to 26 wins this past season and ended the year with a franchise- record four-game winning streak. Jordan’s only previous NBA management experi ence was in Washington, where he reigned as the Wizards’ top decision-maker from 2000 to 2003. At first, as part owner and president of basketball operations, he tried to run the team from his home in Chicago - a strat egy that often left the rud derless team to falter on its own. His selection of high school player Kwame Brown with the top pick in the 2001 draft was a disaster. And when he decided to return to playing in 2001-02, he junked a care ful rebuilding plan in favor of a veteran-heavy push for the playoffs that failed miserably - and was followed by Jordan’s 2003 ouster by Wizards owner Abe Pollin. This-time, there appears no chance Jordan will take the floor. He doesn’t plan to move his family to Charlotte, but said his brother lives in the area. "I do come in more than you guys know,” he said. “I’m more of a local than you think.” Johnson has said he does not intend to use Jordan’s star power to market the franchise - the area in which the Bobcats need the most help. “I’m not a seller,” Jordan said. “He is fully aware I’m not a part of a dog-and-pony show. I want to build this team so that the team sup ports itself” Sportscorp’s Ganis doesn’t buy it. “Of course (Johnson is) going to leverage him to mar ket the team,” Ganis said. “That’s what Michael Jordan does best, now that he’s not playing basketball anymore. ... It would be the height of foolishness not to use Michael Jordan for what he does best.” The Bobcats stiU are fitt ing bad feelings left over from the 2002 departure of the Hornets for New Orleans, and the long and ugly fight in Charlotte over building a new arena. The team added to the problems with its own mis takes. Before the first season, Johnson signed a cable dead that put most Bobcats games on a new, team-owned regional sports network. But Carolina Sports and Entertainment Tfelevision WEIS only available to digital cable subscribers and flopped so badly that Johnson folded it after one season. But he remains locked into a long-term cable deal, and the team’s games are now shown on a local cable news channel. The team also generated ill will when it boosted ticket prices after moving into the new arena. Burned by mediocre attendance, Johnson announced in February that he would drop 2006-07 season ticket prices Why lead ihePostP ITS essential “I couldn’t imagine being a resident of Charlotte and not subscribing to The Charlotte Post. It covers a wide range of news and serves a vital function for the African American community and for the entire Charlotte community. The Post does a great job in covering the local issues; not just news, but sports and leisure aS well.” Chris Weiller, executive vice president for marketing and communications, Charlotte Bobcats Call (704) 376-0496 to link with news that’s important to you. ®l)e Cljarlolte ^oeit for about 11,500 seats, of 70 percent of the arena. The push to put fans in the seats even has the team seUing $199 season tickets to seats in the arena’s upper comers. “Mistakes have been made and some decisions should have been second-guessed,” Jordan said. “What’s been asked of me is my opinion about how we should attack this scenario, and I feel it has to be done on the basketball court.” While Jordan might not woo those thinking about buying nosebleed seats, Ganis envisions the team using him as a “closer” to sell luxury suites or to play golf with a CEO who’s close to buying a sponsorship or putting his company’s name on the arena. ‘If it’s used well and they are not too afraid of asking Michael to join 'them at cer tain events and activities, then it could be a real boon,” he said, "If he intimidates the staff, if Bob Johnson is afraid to ask him to partici pate ... then the3^re wasting a phenomenal aspect of this opportunity.” On the Net: Charlotte Bobcats: wwwjiba.com/bobcats LIVINGSTONE HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES PHOTOAVADE NASH Livingstone inducted nine individuals to its athletic hall of fame earlier this month in Charlotte. The inductees are from left: Lavilla Watson, Marjorie Kinard (posthumous induc tion for the Rev. John Kinard), Keiiee Dillard Watkins and Shannon Cherry. Back row: Troy Veale, Produs Perkins, Clifton Huff, Robert Wiley, and Dorsey Montgomery. From pros to pee-wees, your source for Charlotte sports Cliarlottc