Brother Powell
Minister trying to make Mavs
Powell is undrafted free agent from Illinois
02:26 AM CDT on Monday, July 11, 2005
By EDDIE SEFKO / The Dallas Morning News
Roger Powell might not be the best player on the Mavericks' summer league roster.
He might not even be the best Powell on the team. That honor could go to Josh Powell, who is no relation and had 19 points and 12 rebounds in the Vegas Summer League opener on Wednesday.
But nobody one-ups Roger Powell when it comes to having the respect of his teammates. And his coach.
Powell is a licensed minister at his home church, Mount Zion Gospel in Joliet, Ill. His teammates already call him "The Rev."
Powell isn't ordained, yet, though he hopes to be in the near future. Avery Johnson, of course, was ordained by his church in New Orleans, and Powell shares a common ground with Johnson in one important respect.
"Just because I'm a preacher doesn't mean you have to be soft," Powell said before the Mavericks went to Las Vegas for their first stop of the summer league.
"I'm going to be assertive and tough. I'm the minister – on and off the court."
Powell was part of Illinois' NCAA Tournament runner-up team last season. He went undrafted and is hoping to find a spot with the Mavericks at least through training camp in October.
Powell had two points in 11 minutes in the summer-league opener. But at 6-6 and 235 pounds, he plays the sort of defense that is bound to catch Johnson's eye. Powell has had a strong string of workouts under Paul Mokeski and Charlie Parker.
"If you can play defense," Mokeski said, "you have a chance to play for Avery."
Powell has a realistic outlook on his chances, but he figures all things happen for a reason.
"I wasn't drafted, but I was lucky because the Mavericks called me right away and I ended up here," he said. "I look at it as a blessing."
Powell originally was scheduled to be on the B-team that is playing in Long Beach, Calif. But his play earned him a spot alongside the stronger players in Las Vegas.
And if things don't work out with the Mavericks?
"I'm taking seminary classes and preaching at the church so that I can eventually get ordained," he said. "But right now, basketball is my focus."
Especially if he can become the Mavericks' minister of defense.
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