The artwork of fiction is useless. Proust, Tolstoy, Atwood, pass over. While 1/2 of America slept, the Portland Trail Blazers defeated the Denver Nuggets a hundred and forty-137 in recreation with 4 – rely on them, you almost run out of arms – 4 extra periods. That didn’t come about because Dwight D. Eisenhower became the president. Yes, a person named Eisenhower turned into a president. NPR’s Tom Goldman is starting to appear to be a name town in the USA with organic ramps and fiddlehead ferns – Portland. Tom, thank you for being with us. And I’m breathless.
- TOM GOLDMAN, BYLINE: I wouldn’t leave it out.
- SIMON: What a game – what a recreation.
- GOLDMAN: Three and a half hours of the game as a diversion, entertainment, and unmitigated pride until you are from Denver.
SIMON: (Laughter) Pleasurable till the last 2d – closing five.Six seconds, definitely – yeah.
GOLDMAN: The best summing came from Portland head train Terry Stotts after the game. He stated I have no idea what occurred within the first half of the second half of the primary three overtimes. Rodney Hood came in and performed first-rate. It became a hell of a game. I’ve never been worried about a game like that. It became a terrific attempt to employ each group. Rodney Hood, who he mentioned, came into the game.
SIMON: Yeah.
GOLDMAN: There are two minutes left in the fourth beyond regular time after sitting on the bench all the time. He became the freshest player on the court. And he scored seven factors, including a monster three-point shot at the quit, which pretty much sealed it. Sadly, Scott, that leaves out such a lot of different gamers…
SIMON: Yeah.
GOLDMAN: …Both teams competed magnificently. But if I’ve piqued your interest, set aside 3 1/2 hours today and watch a replay.
SIMON: On the other hand, it is simply a two-game-to-one lead. Do the Blazers have sufficient in the tank?
GOLDMAN: I assume both teams will summon the bodily power. This is what they teach for. But I presume Portland has a psychological benefit right now. Losing a sport like that when that attempt is pretty demoralizing. And Denver has to address that. And it likely puts them in an extra inclined position. If the Blazers get via Denver, Golden State might lurk in the next round.
SIMON: Yeah.
- GOLDMAN: Blazer fans are just thinking…
- SIMON: Lurks – Golden State looms.
- GOLDMAN: Looms – but Blazer fanatics are simply thinking about the day after today’s Game Four against the Nuggets at this factor.
SIMON: Kentucky Derby, of course, today – however, this year’s race comes within the face of quite a few controversies surrounding the deaths of the greatest athletes in that recreation. And, of course, I suggest the horses.
GOLDMAN: Yeah. Today starts the Triple Crown period – 3 massive races, the Derby, the Preakness, the Belmont Stakes, over the next month. This time continually captures even the informal racing fan. But as you say, horse racing is already inside the spotlight with the deaths of 23 horses in recent months at Santa Anita in Southern California. Those deaths triggered calls for reform – many of them beginning to occur.
SIMON: Some changes had been made, right?
GOLDMAN: Yeah. Well, Santa Anita has replied, placing numerous adjustments related to medicating racehorses into the area. This week, it announced the tune to begin using experimental eras to examine horses and diagnose accidents before they become catastrophic. That’s considered a huge deal. On a larger level, an organization known as the Coalition For Horse Racing Integrity – is starting a nationwide marketing campaign to help a cutting-edge invoice in Congress that might regulate racing and unify an extremely balkanized industry.
SIMON: Yeah.
GOLDMAN: Thirty-eight states have raced. And there are 38 units of rules. And it is tough to get any measure passed, especially safety measures that might guard the horses.
SIMON: Something I’ve puzzled about in recent weeks – Tom, does horse racing have trouble the manner soccer has a problem with concussions, that there’s damage in the game itself?
GOLDMAN: That’s a surely excellent query. Some folks say it truly is, without a doubt, the case and that horse racing has to be abolished because it’s inherently cruel to the animals. But there are, undoubtedly, others, many within the enterprise, who say racing can cross on appropriately without mistreating horses. But it would be much better if the enterprise wanted to take advantage of several human beings and was humane toward the animals. There must be reform because if the general public loses a hobby, reform efforts stall. As one animal rights activist advised me, complacency is the enemy of the horses. And that would doom a whole industry.
SIMON: Yeah. NPR’s Tom Goldman, thank you a lot.
GOLDMAN: You’re welcome.