Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

On Target

target_groceries.JPG

Personally, I hate mixing my food with my housewares, so I’ve been avoiding the renovation of Target in East Memphis all summer. But on Friday I gave in, only to be greeted by this announcement:

“Fresh Groceries Coming October 17th.”

Since the entire store has been redesigned, I passed the still unfinished grocery section several times while looking for an alarm clock. On the third circle, I grabbed a half gallon of milk from the cooler.

I’m still not convinced that I will ever like the mash up of bed sheets and butter, but at least the clerk bagged my milk in a separate bag.

Categories
News

How To Fix the Cardinals

Frank Murtaugh on five issues the St. Louis Cardinals need to address before next season.

Categories
From My Seat Sports

How To Fix the Cardinals

This Sunday at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, the Cardinals will complete the most disappointing season in 15 years under manager Tony LaRussa. Somehow, a team centered on two Cy Young candidates (Adam Wainwright and Chris Carpenter), a Rookie of the Year candidate (Jaime Garcia), and the finest player of the last decade (Albert Pujols) will have to scratch and claw to finish the season with a .500 record, well behind the Cincinnati Reds in the National League Central. (Making matters worse, the Cardinals carried a team payroll this season of $93 million, while the Reds spent merely $72 million to win the division.) What can be done over the winter to get the Cardinals back in flight? Five issues stand out.

• Should Tony LaRussa return as manager?

Hall of Fame basketball coach Chuck Daly famously quipped, “At some point, they just stop listening to you.” Hall of Fame manager Whitey Herzog left the Cardinals halfway through the 1990 season precisely because he felt the team — a band of veterans led by Ozzie Smith, Willie McGee, and Terry Pendleton — no longer responded to his leadership. Has LaRussa’s time come?

The last four seasons aren’t exactly an endorsement for a 16th year at the helm for the manager who now ranks third alltime in victories. Even in the championship season of 2006, the Cardinals faded down the stretch (they actually played sub-.500 baseball over the season’s final five months). LaRussa brings a culture of intensity to the clubhouse he oversees, and to the decisions he makes before, during, and after games. It’s rubbed some prominent players (like Scott Rolen) the wrong way, and made it difficult for young players to crack the lineup and develop the kind of trust LaRussa requires before giving a player a significant role. (A clash with Colby Rasmus this season grew far too public before being resolved.)

It’s hard to imagine Cardinal management forcing LaRussa out. The likely scenario is a “mutual” parting of ways. Less likely is LaRussa agreeing — at age 66 — to adjust the culture he’s created in respect to four years of baseball he’d admit haven’t achieved expected heights. A possible successor: longtime third-base coach Jose Oquendo, who managed Puerto Rico in the last World Baseball Classic. Oquendo, it should be noted, gets along quite well with Pujols.

• Extend Albert Pujols’ contract . . . whatever it takes.

The Cardinals will certainly pick up their 2011 option on Pujols’ contract. The question, though, is will they extend the deal for the game’s greatest player before he can become a free agent after the ’11 season? (Imagine finding your dream home, just on the market. The last thing you’d want to see is an open house. The Cardinals have essentially 12 months to prevent an open house on their greatest player since Stan Musial.)

Pujols will earn $16 million in 2011. The Phillies’ Ryan Howard will make $20 million next season. So the conversation begins at the higher figure. In measuring Pujols’ impact on the franchise, the number of fans who flock to Busch Stadium from far and wide to get a glimpse of Pujols alone . . . you have to figure his impact is worth $25 million a year. The only variable may become the length of the contract. Letting LaRussa walk would be somewhat uncomfortable. Allowing Pujols to leave would be catastrophe, both on the field and at the box office.

Find speed . . . and get it on the field.

Whiteyball may be dead these 20 years, but the Cardinals have been a plodding, station-to-station baseball team for six years now. Since the 2005 season, St. Louis has had exactly one player steal as many as 20 bases (Cesar Izturis stole 24 in 2008). The great Pujols leads this year’s team with all of 13, and he steals bases less with speed than guile. Three-run homers are great, but they are lightning in a bottle. A team with speed at the top of the batting order — to say nothing of in the field — can generate rallies with as little as a base on balls. The solution to this area could be tied in with the next item on the checklist.

• Find production in the middle infield.

The two-year Skip Schumaker experiment at second base has had some ups, but Schumaker can build a long career as a utility player, spending time in the outfield and supporting an everyday second-baseman. As for Brendan Ryan, he plays a great shortstop, but a .220 batting average cannot be carried . . . unless some pop can be found at second base.

The Cardinals are forced to hope third-baseman David Freese fully recovers from his ankle surgery. If he does, the team will have marked improvement at the hot corner, where Felipe Lopez and Pedro Feliz played all too often this season. In addition, St. Louis must find a middle-infielder who might approach a .400 slugging percentage. In the National League, two holes in the batting order (counting the pitcher), can be hidden, but not three.

• Revamp the bullpen . . . entirely.

On July 6th at Colorado, the Cardinals entered the bottom of the 9th inning with a 9-3 lead. Nine runs later — six of them allowed by closer Ryan Franklin — the Cardinals left the field losers. The current St. Louis bullpen — led by Franklin, Kyle McClellan, and Jason Motte — strikes fear in the heart of no batter. Only Motte averages a strikeout per inning pitched.

Three members of this year’s Memphis Redbirds have earned consideration for a bullpen job in St. Louis next season: Fernando Salas, Adam Reifer, and Eduardo Sanchez. Franklin has had eight games this season in which he’s given up at least two earned runs. Not the kind of line you see on a closer’s resume. The next time St. Louis wins a postseason series, it won’t be Ryan Franklin recording the final out.

Categories
Daily Photo Special Sections

Mid-South Corn Maze

Mid-South Maze at the Agricenter through October 31st.

Categories
Special Sections

The Japanese Gardens in Overton Park – I Think

JapaneseGardens1.jpg

My pal Robert Ferguson, a former police officer turned history buff, recently purchased a set of old black-and-white negatives at a Memphis estate sale. He went to the time and trouble (and expense) to get some of them turned into prints, and made an interesting discovery — what he thinks may be really fine old photographs of the Japanese Garden in Overton Park.

Robert Galloway, who was head of the Memphis Park Commission, was fond of all things Oriental, and in the early 1900s he had city crews scoop out a nice pond and build an island in the middle with a “snow-covered” Mt. Fujiyama. They installed a graceful arched wooden bridge, and added Japanese lanterns and other ornaments. It was a wonderful addition to the park — until December 7, 1941, when anti-Japanese sentiment boiled over and the entire thing was demolished. The Memphis College of Art stands on the site today.

I think Robert (Ferguson) is right. Some of the pictures show Japanese lanterns and other ornaments, and the photo of the man in the hat, who seems to be sitting on an invisible chair, shows the fake “mountain” in the background. But I don’t know what to make of the woman sitting on the ground, since she seems to be perched on rocks piled on an old iron gate.

Robert wrote me: “I’m guessing the photos are from the Japanese Gardens that were destroyed in Overton Park. I’m 90% sure these are Memphis locations, because the old Midtown home where I bought them also shows up in some of the negatives [not shown here].”

Judging from the clothes, these were taken in the late 1920s or early 1930s, and one photo [not shown here; just take my word for it] shows an automobile with a 1935 license plate.

I think these do indeed show the long-gone Japanese Gardens, though I don’t know what to make of the weird bare trees that seem to have wires dangling from the sawed-off branches. And does anybody recognize the family?

Other pictures are on the next page. Thanks, Robert, for sharing them.

Categories
News

Cooper-Young’s Beer Festival

Hannah Sayle reports on the Cooper-Young Regional Beerfest and a series of Belgian beer-tastings at Cafe Society in this week’s Food News.

Categories
Daily Photo Special Sections

A Delicate Balance

A Delicate Balance at Theatre Memphis through October 10th

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

UTEP 16, Tigers 13

UTEP kicker Dakota Warren converted an 18-yard field goal as time expired in El Paso tonight, giving the Miners a 16-13, come-from-behind win over the Tigers. Memphis didn’t trail until that final play, leading the game with less than six minutes to play before Warren tied it with a 27-yard field goal.

The loss drops Memphis to 1-3, 0-2 in Conference USA play. UTEP improves to 3-1 (1-1).

The Tigers held the ball almost 10 minutes more than UTEP, though the teams each gained a total of 288 yards. (The Miners’ game-winning drive began on their own four-yard-line with 3:13 to play.) The U of M offense was evenly split, with 144 yards coming on the ground, 144 through the air.

Freshman quarterback Ryan Williams completed 20 of 30 passes and connected with Jermaine McKenzie on a 15-yard touchdown pass late in the second quarter that gave Memphis a 10-3 lead at the half. Jerrell Rhodes led the Tiger ground attack with 90 yards on 23 carries.

UTEP quarterback Trevor Vittatoe came into the game averaging 271 passing yards per game and was held to exactly 100 yards under that figure.
The victory is UTEP’s first in four games against Memphis.

The Tigers return home next Saturday to host Tulsa at the Liberty Bowl. Kickoff is 6 p.m.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Season Preview: The Starters/Bench Divide

With the Grizzlies opening training camp Monday, now’s the time to begin our season-preview coverage. Like last year, in addition to preseason game coverage, links, and league-wide predictions, I’ll be doing a series of more in-depth blog posts on team-related topics leading up to my season-preview piece in the print edition of the Flyer.

I’m starting with what I think is the fundamental issue for last year’s team and the biggest looming question for the coming season — the gulf between the team’s returning starting lineup and its bench.

These five guys are playoff-ready, but they need a whole lot more help.

  • These five guys are playoff-ready, but they need a whole lot more help.

This post is rooted in a comparison of starting (or primary) lineups across the league and how teams fared with and without those lineups on the floor. I’m going to post a spreadsheet (of sorts) comparing relevant stats for all 30 NBA teams — numbers derived from the unit stats found at BasketballValue.com — and a key explaining what each of the columns of numbers is. But if you don’t want to wade that deep into the numbers, you can skip over this part and just read the comments afterward based on these stats.

Key:

PL+/-: This is the plus/minus rating for each team’s primary (most-used) lineup last season, per 48 minutes.

PLM: This is the total number of minutes played by each team’s primary lineup.

NPL+/-: This is the per 48 minute plus/minus for each team when not using its primary lineup.

TEAM PL+/- PLM NPL+/-

Dallas +18.6 342.35 +1.2
Orlando +15.6 773.15 +5.5
Portland +13.7 372.45 +2.5
Boston +12.4 1154.45 even
L.A. Lakers +12.3 649.78 +3.3
Milwaukee +11.2 257.90 +0.7
L.A. Clippers +10.5 406.77 -8.3
San Antonio +10.0 230.88 +4.8
Phoenix +8.9 828.95 +3.8
Miami +8.0 286.73 +1.8
Memphis +7.3 1474.80 -6.7
Denver +6.4 520.47 +3.4
Atlanta +5.0 1169.08 +4.5
Utah +4.1 327.92 +5.6
Indiana +3.3 426.38 -3.0
Detroit +2.8 304.77 -5.7
New Orleans +2.7 486.68 -3.2
Oklahoma City +2.6 1291.28 +4.5
Washington +2.4 163.07 -5.0
New York +0.9 447.23 -4.4
Chicago +0.6 451.82 -1.9
Houston -0.8 823.65 -0.2
Charlotte -1.5 454.07 +1.6
New Jersey -3.7 301.55 -9.4
Philadelphia -4.5 253.72 -3.9
Cleveland -5.2 384.82 +7.8
Sacramento -9.4 116.88 -4.3
Toronto -12.8 369.83 -0.6
Golden State -17.0 124.37 -3.2
Minnesota -21.0 295.52 -8.7

Statistical Noise: The total minutes played by each team’s primary lineup ranges widely, from 1474.80 (your Memphis Grizzlies) to a laughably small 124.37 (Don Nelson’s Golden State Warriors, whose most-used lineup last season included Mikki Moore; no joke), and the reliability of the insights to be gleaned becomes wobblier as the chunk of time gets smaller. Which makes looking at these numbers pretty meaningful for the Grizzlies, whose most-used lineup took the floor considerably more than any other team’s.

Categories
News

Grab a Seat

Chris Davis outlines a promising weekend full of shows at Intermission Impossible.