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Pacers to honor late co-owner Mel Simon
By CLIFF BRUNT
AP Sports Writer

INDIANAPOLIS(AP) -- The Indiana Pacers will honor their late
co-owner Mel Simon with a jersey-retirement ceremony before
Friday's game against the Washington Wizards.

The Pacers said Wednesday the banner will bear Mel Simon's name,
but not a number. It will hang alongside the retired jerseys of
former players Reggie Miller, Mel Daniels, Roger Brown and
George McGinnis, and ex-coach Bobby "Slick" Leonard.

Simon, who died in September the age of 82, bought the woebegone
franchise with his brother, Herb, in 1983.

Herb Simon told The Associated Press by telephone from Paris
that he will return to Indianapolis in time for what he said
would be a small, dignified ceremony.

"It's going to be something to respect a guy who helped save the
Pacers for Indianapolis, and who did his job well for 25 years
and who was my partner," Herb Simon said. "We just need to honor
him."

The Pacers struggled at first under the Simons before hitting
their stride. With players like the sharp-shooting Miller,
Jermaine O'Neal and others, Indiana reached the Eastern
Conference finals six times in 11 years and the NBA finals in
2000. The success helped lead to the opening of Conseco
Fieldhouse in 1999.

The Simons also endured the franchise's downhill turn that
followed the brawl between Pacers players and Detroit Pistons
fans in 2004, an event the franchise still is recovering from.
The Pacers have missed the playoffs the past three years.

After the Pacers' fortunes tumbled, Mel Simon's health failed
and CEO Donnie Walsh left the team, Herb Simon took over
day-to-day operations. Herb Simon now is the 100 percent owner
of the team.

Herb Simon said Mel was a great partner and friend who would rib
him at times.

"He was a great businessman," Herb Simon said. "If you would
talk to him, he would say all the good seasons were his doing,
and all the bad seasons were my doing."

The ceremony will be held in conjunction with activities for the
10-year anniversary of the opening of Conseco Fieldhouse. The
Pacers played Boston in the first game in the building on Nov.
6, 1999, after the Simons cut the ribbon earlier that day.
Miller scored 29 points, and the Pacers won 115-108.