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He Stole the Show in Supporting Role

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Actor Harold Sylvester’s 40th birthday was last Friday, but it was his 20th that was his most memorable.

On Feb. 10, 1969, it was his responsibility, as a member of the Tulane basketball team, to guard Louisiana State’s Pete Maravich.

Sylvester held Maravich to 66 points as Tulane won, 110-94. But Friday’s Morning Briefing, mentioning the game as a 20-years-ago-today item, had LSU winning.

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Said Sylvester, with a laugh: “It was bad enough to wake up on my birthday and be reminded of that game. What made it worse was to see that it said we lost.

“What I remember most about that game is that Associated Press sent out a picture across the country of Maravich driving around me for two of the 66 points.

“Friends were calling me from all over, saying, ‘Hey, Harold, I thought you used to be a good player.’ ”

Sylvester, whose movie credits include “Officer and a Gentleman,” “Uncommon Valor,” and “Innerspace,” said he guarded Maravich six times during his career, never with much success.

However, when Tulane beat LSU, 101-99, in two overtimes earlier in 1969, Sylvester had 32 points and 22 rebounds.

Before last weekend’s National Basketball Assn. long-distance shooting competition, the Boston Celtics’ Danny Ainge said his biggest incentive was to shut up teammate Larry Bird, a three-time winner.

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Ainge finished eighth in a field of nine, making 11 of 25 shots.

Asked if he expected to get a phone call from Bird, Ainge said: “Any abuse I get, I deserve. I stunk.”

Trivia time: Who leads the NBA in three-point shooting percentage?

Ben Johnson, stripped of his Olympic gold medal after testing positive for a steroid, lost a number of endorsement contracts because of it.

But a Swedish beverage producer reportedly paid Johnson $50,000 to do a 30-second commercial in which he drinks fruit juice in a locker room after a workout.

Swedish Olympic speed skating champion Tomas Gustafson said: “I was shocked. Something is wrong when a Swedish company lets him do a commercial when we are intensifying the fight against drugs in sports. It’s a lot of money and I think it could have been used much better.”

Sigvard Hallstedt, a spokesman for the juice company, has a different view. “This is an excellent thing,” he said. “The idea is to show him drinking the real stuff without any strange additives.”

Trivia answer: Miami Heat guard Jon Sundvold, who is 32 of 55 (58.2%).

Quotebook

USC basketball Coach George Raveling, scanning the newspaper Monday with an eye on future schedules: “I’m one of the few coaches in the country who reads the standings from the bottom up.”

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