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News

Philomena

Chris McCoy reviews Philomena, which is likely to garner an Oscar nomination for Judith Dench.

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News

Temple Tramples Memphis, 41-21

The 1-10 (now, 2-10) Temple Owls had their way with hapless Memphis at the Liberty Bowl, Saturday. Frank Murtaugh has the gory details.

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Sports Tiger Blue

Temple 41, Tigers 21

“[Temple] beat us in every facet of the game. They played better than us, every phase, from the opening kickoff.”

Memphis coach Justin Fuente was succinct in his postgame evaluation of Senior Day at the Liberty Bowl, an annual contest for which you’d like to think the home team will play its hardest, grittiest game of a season. As 15 U of M players played their last home game today, though, the Tigers collectively played their worst game of the year. Facing a Temple team at the bottom of the American Athletic Conference standings (1-10 overall record, 0-7 in American play), the Tigers gave up their most points and most yardage (534) of the season. Worse, though, was the Memphis offense. Facing an Owl defense ranked 113th in the country, the Tigers gained but 228 yards and were a woeful 2-of-12 on third down (and 1-of-3 on fourth), one possession after another ending abruptly, often with a Tom Hornsey punt.

Despite running only 18 plays (compared with 52 for Temple) in the first half, the Tigers were very much in the game four minutes into the third quarter after Sam Craft caught a 10-yard touchdown pass from Paxton Lynch, one of three touchdowns Craft scored in the game. (“Sam was the only guy who played really well for us,” said Fuente. “He showed toughness, grit. I was proud of Sam.”) The touchdown closed the Temple lead to 17-14.

But on the next play from scrimmage, Temple quarterback P.J. Walker (like Lynch a freshman) hit tight end Chris Coyer over the middle and Coyer sprinted untouched into the end zone for a 75-yard touchdown. Then just 1:11 of game time later, Sharif Finch broke through the Tiger line and blocked a Hornsey punt into the end zone, where it was recovered by Michael Felton to make the score 31-14. It was the 291st punt of Hornsey’s record-breaking career and only the second the Ray Guy Award finalist has had blocked.

The Tigers responded with a 62-yard touchdown drive, converting on fourth-and-four on a Lynch-to Craft connection, Craft then carrying the ball the final three yards for his third touchdown of the game. But Memphis wouldn’t threaten to score in the fourth quarter, while the Owls added 10 points to pad their first AAC victory.

“They had a crushing defeat last week [to Connecticut],” said Fuente, “and they showed us how to handle adversity. Their offensive line had their way with our defensive line, their running backs and receivers had their way with our secondary, their linebackers had their way with our running backs. They went to work and showed up here ready to play a football game. They’re better than their record. Their quarterback is special.”

Walker completed 20 of 32 passes for 328 yards and four touchdowns (three of them to Robby Anderson). Jamie Gilmore carried the ball 16 times for 92 yards to lead the Owls. Lynch connected on 19 of 29 passes for 162 yards while senior tailback Brandon Hayes was limited to 38 rushing yards on 16 carries.

When asked about his departing seniors, Fuente was again succinct: “I wish they, and everyone else on this squad, had played better today.”

The Tigers (3-8) finish their season next Saturday at Connecticut. After losing their first nine games, the Huskies have won their last two, including a victory over Rutgers today.

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News

Christmas Season Begins in Memphis

Photographer Frank Chin took some shots of the opening of Starry Nights and Christmas at The Peabody.

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News

Memphis Beats LSU, 76-69

Frank Murtaugh has the story of Memphis’ hard-fought win over LSU, Friday.

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Sports Tiger Blue

Tigers 76, LSU 69

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The rematch is on.

Thanks to a second-half comeback against LSU in today’s semifinals of the Old Spice Classic, the Tigers will get the chance Sunday to avenge the ugly loss they suffered on November 19th at Oklahoma State. Freshman forward Austin Nichols played a starring role after Shaq Goodwin took a seat with two fouls early in the game. The Briarcrest alum scored 19 points, including five during a critical 7-0 Memphis run that all but erased a 57-49 LSU lead. When Chris Crawford converted a breakaway layup (off a rebound at the other end) with 9:40 to play, Memphis had a lead for the first time since midway through the first half.

Nichols later hit a jumper from just beyond the free-throw line — on a feed from Joe Jackson — to give the U of M a 70-66 lead and all the points they’d need against their foe from the SEC. Jackson hit all four free throws he took over the game’s final minute to protect the margin.

LSU’s Anthony Hickey (20 points) and Johnny O’Bryant (14 points, 9 rebounds) helped keep the Bayou Bengals in position for the upset, but 24 turnovers and poor long-distant shooting (LSU hit five of 19 from beyond the three point line) did them in. Memphis shot only 45.3 percent from the field and missed seven of their trey attempts.

Crawford added 17 points for Memphis (now 4-1) while Jackson scored 16 and handed out seven assists. The U of M received only nine points off their bench. Michael Dixon made only one of seven field-goal attempts.

Earlier today, the 5th-ranked Cowboys beat Butler to advance to Sunday’s championship game (6:30 pm). In Oklahoma State’s first meeting with Memphis, Marcus Smart poured in 39 points in a 21-point Cowboy win that really wasn’t as close as the final score. Twelve days after a loss that shook the Bluff City, the Memphis Tigers — in the shadow of Disney World — will have the chance to rewrite the fairy tale.

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News

“Kill Your Darlings” and “The Book Thief”

Addison Engelking reviews two coming-of-age films with literary connections.

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Art Exhibit M

Who Buys Art?

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“I just enjoy all of my paintings. When I started assembling the wall grouping, friends said ‘you’re not going to group all of these in one large grouping?’ I did because I just like to be able to sit and look at all the works at one time.” — Mrs. Joe Pless, from a 1970s Commerical Appeal article

I recently ran across this headline while looking through old clippings in the Memphis room of the Central Library. It got me thinking: who collects art in Memphis these days? We have big-time collectors, like retired NBA player Elliot Perry, or businessman John Jerit, whose folk art collection I covered for the Flyer earlier this year. We have out-of-town art enthusiasts who lend parts of their collection to the art museums around the city. But whenever I ask, “What does the Memphis art world need?” I hear a chorus of “more buyers, more buyers, more buyers.”

Memphis does need more buyers, and not just big time collectors, but micro-collectors: those of us who choose to spend any extra cash on a painting rather than a new margarita machine. I am curious about Memphis’ every day art collectors. How do we come by our mini-collections? Galleries? Kickstarters? Friends? How do we display the works? Does anybody still display art in “groupings”, a la 1970s home design?

My guess would be that people buy art because they know the artist, or because they fall in love with a particular work, or because they need some decoration for above their couch. But maybe, with Etsy and Kickstarter and the strange art-purchasing animal that is Saatchi Online, the landscape for art buyers has changed.

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News

Just Quit, Already

Kerry Crawford says sometimes you just have to quit.

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News

Memphis Beats Sienna in Old Spice Classic

Frank Murtaugh reports on Memphis’ easy 87-60 win over Sienna, Thursday.