Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Tayshaun Prince: A Lamentation

Are the Grizzlies using Tayshaun Prince in the most effective way?

  • Larry Kuzniewski
  • Are the Grizzlies using Tayshaun Prince in the most effective way?

Last night, the Grizzlies beat the Wizards 110-104 in a game that saw the Grizzlies use their advantages to dominate most of the first three quarters… and then give up 40 in the fourth as Washington made a furious attempt at a comeback. In case anyone had any doubts that these aren’t Your Father’s Washington Wizards (or, more accurately, your slightly older sibling’s Wizards, since your father’s Wizards were probably the title-winning Bullets), the fact that without Nene the Wiz were still able to play the Grizzlies as tough as they did should put that to rest. The Wizards are a pretty good team this year.

There are a lot of interesting things about last night’s game—not least of which is the fact that in James Johnson’s absence, Tayshaun Prince somehow turned back the clock and racked up 21 points on 8-11 shooting, including 2-3 from beyond the arc. I think I speak for a lot of Griz fans when I say I wasn’t sure Tayshaun still had that kind of a performance in him, especially not against a team that actually has a good defense (9th out of 30 in defensive rating according to B-Ref). That I doubted that Prince could still score 20 points in a game even though he averaged 14 a game as recently as the 2010-2011 season says something about his struggles this year.

I come not to bury Tayshaun Prince, but to praise him.

He’s always been one of my favorite players. I can say that honestly. I remember those title-winning Pistons, and I remember thinking Prince was awesome. The Grizzlies were swept out of the first round, taking a lot of the excitement of that first playoff appearance with it, and so I watched the Pistons, and I watched Tayshaun Prince.

This Tayshaun Prince is still that Tayshaun Prince, in some sense. In others, he’s not. I’m not going to argue that he shouldn’t be playing. The guy is an absolute warrior: before the season even started, he was so sick he lost a ton of weight and couldn’t travel with the team. He played through it. He’s been fighting who knows how many nagging injuries this year. He’s played through all of those. When he finally got healthy around late December, his production picked up. He’s not afraid to get taken out at the rim, like he did last night, when he hit the floor so hard it sounded sickening through crappy TV speakers.

[jump]

His toughness is undeniable. His decision-making is usually flawless. His leadership is unquestionable—watch the Grizzlies during a timeout next time you’re at a home game, and watch Prince functioning as player-coach, telling guys what to watch for, talking about positioning, pinpointing the guy that needs the most encouragement and talking to him.

But. (And there’s always a but with this, right?)

I don’t even know anymore, man. When I see the guy on the court, I feel like the Grizzlies aren’t in the best position to win. And I hate that—I feel guilty for even thinking that, honestly, because I like Tayshaun so much, first as a player, and then as a dude, from talking to him occasionally. It makes me tremendously sad to think that this player I like so much isn’t helping the team.

I don’t think Tayshaun Prince should be playing this many minutes. I don’t think he should be playing in the situations he’s playing in. I don’t think he’s being used effectively—and just like the Mike Miller situation, where he was playing far too many minutes and accomplishing far too little, I think part of the problem is Dave Joerger’s deference to veteran players—which deference I completely understand from a first-year coach. I get it. But I just don’t think there’s any way this Grizzlies team is going to maximize what potential it can still wring from this calamitous grind of a basketball season if Prince continues to be used in the manner he’s been used thus far.

There’s clearly an advantage gained by this team when Tony Allen and James Johnson are on the floor together. The problem there is that Johnson is so foul-prone that you can’t count on him being able to stay on the floor long enough to take Prince’s spot. Tony Allen and Courtney Lee make a great pair of wings, too (especially when Lee isn’t hobbling around on one and a half legs like he seems to be doing as of late). Even Tayshaun has his place—seriously, I think he does.

But I think that place is as a guy who starts games and plays 15 minutes. And I don’t think I’m the only one who feels that way—I think I’m just tired of skirting the issue. And really, that’s the issue, right? I like the guy. I like him as a player. I don’t want to say anything bad about him because of the tremendous amount of respect I have for him. That’s the problem with being a basketball writer with access to the team: you get a sense of who these guys are, and you lose the ability to objectively judge what’s happening on a game-to-game basis.

I’m grateful for the access I’ve been granted, and I feel like that access has made me better able to discern what’s happening with the team. But there are issues, like this one, where it makes me prone to self-censorship because I don’t want to say what I really want to say. And that’s where I’m at with Tayshaun Prince and this season. I don’t know how this plays out. Honestly, I think the status quo is probably going to hold until the summer, because I don’t see Joerger making that kind of a move late in the season. So really I—we—just get to sit and stew about this whole thing for 20-odd more games. But the truth is still the truth: the small forward rotation needs to be altered to maximize the advantages offered by this Griz roster, and if it were, the Grizzlies would be in a better position to win.

And I hate saying that, because I was genuinely excited that the Grizzlies landed Tayshaun Prince last season. And I love watching him play basketball when he’s doing it to the best of his ability. And I think he’s a really good guy. And last night was, if anything, a painful reminder of how not-normal that performance is these days. But look: basketball is ruthless, and time doesn’t care what I think.

Categories
Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Nancy Apple Celebrates 14 Years at Kudzu’s

Singer-songwriter and Memphis music emmisary Nancy Apple has held down the fort at her Pickin’ Party at Kudzu’s for 14 years. This milestone will be celebrated on Thursday at — you guessed it — Kudzu’s. Go pick. Go party. It’s on. 

Categories
Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Mardi Gras Mix

Mardi Gras Mix

Mardi Gras Mix (2)

  

Mardi Gras Mix (3)

Mardi Gras Mix (4)

Mardi Gras Mix (5)

Mardi Gras Mix (6)

Mardi Gras Mix (7)

Categories
Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Hold Steady on Late Night

Hold Steady on Late Night

You don’t need no stinkin television set. Flyer music blasts important news straight at your computer.

Categories
News

Two New Restaurants

Christopher Smith writes about two new Memphis restaurant options.

Categories
Blurb Books

Amy Greene at Crosstown Arts

Between Whitesburg and Bulls Gap, there’s a 48-acre farm in the foothills of the Smoky Mountains in East Tennessee. The farm once belonged to Amy Greene’s grandfather, and it’s where Greene grew up — a few miles from Cherokee Lake and its silos, which you can see, at low water, rising up out of it.

That lake is man-made — the results of a dam built by the TVA — and that dam brought electricity and jobs to the area. It also saved lives, because the dam helped to control the flooding that endangered farms and farm families — farms such as the fictional one Annie Clyde Dodson still lives on in the summer of ’36. A social worker hired by the power company has been trying to reason with Annie Clyde to relocate, as her neighbors have done. But Annie Clyde will have none of it. She means to stand her ground near the Long Man River. And once her daughter goes missing, she means to find her.

[jump]

0e7379989a9aafd6-AMYGREENEemail.jpg

That’s the tale — rich in local color, custom, and characterization — told in Amy Greene’s fine new novel, Long Man (Knopf). It’s a tale she’ll be reading from and discussing when Greene is in Memphis on Tuesday, March 4th. But her local visit should be unlike the tour that accompanied Greene’s critically acclaimed debut novel a couple years ago. Back then, the author was willing to admit to Derrick Hill, who interviewed her for the Tennessee Literary Project: “I was terrified before I went on the book tour. Why does this have to be part of the experience? Why can’t I just write and live in a hole and just be in my cave all the time?”

Well, not exactly a cave. Greene was referring to her home in Russellville, Tennessee, and for this daughter of the foothills, it’s been a remarkable career so far.

She grew up in a storytelling household, then started writing her own stories. After marrying and having children of her own, she turned, age 27, to the low-residency undergraduate program at Vermont College. A writing conference at Duke convinced Greene to start work on the manuscript for a novel, and the Sewanee Writers’ Conference introduced her to writer Jill McCorkle, who introduced Greene’s manuscript to McCorkle’s agent. But when that agent, impressed with Greene’s work, called to accept Greene as a client, the author wasn’t in Russellville. She was celebrating her birthday according to tradition: a trip to Dollywood. Greene signed a contract with Knopf a couple months later. The debut book was Bloodroot (2010).

And what of touring now? As Greene also told Derrick Hill: “You always think about what the writer is giving the reader, but since Bloodroot was published and I started talking to readers, I think also about what the reader gives the writer when you have those conversations. … It’s just great to see what they are getting out of it.”

Memphis readers have the chance to give back to Greene when she stops by Crosstown Arts on March 2nd, from 6 to 8 p.m. For more on the event, go to crosstownarts.org. And for more on the writer, visit amygreeneauthor.com. •

Categories
News

Condominium Couture

Photographer Frank Chin took some shots of the couture at Condominium last weekend, a fund-raiser for the Memphis Center for Reproductive Choices. Enjoy the couture.

Categories
Calling the Bluff Music

Knowledge Nick Reissues The Enlightment, Talks New EP

knowledge_nick.jpg

  • Dustin Taylor/Sideways Media

When local emcee Knowledge Nick released his debut album, The Enlightenment, in 2009 he sought to help restore the essence of hip-hop. Five years since the 10-track effort dropped, Nick has decided to re-release the album, which played a significant role in bringing more attention to what the city’s underground hip-hop scene has to offer.

“I think that it’s an extreme blessing that people still remember this album, considering we live in a time frame now where after six months, you’re pretty much done or people don’t remember,” Nick said. “I think people hear the authenticity in [the album]. They hear the sincerity in it. The genuineness in it.”

Nick re-released The Enlightenment on Artists Tree Entertainment, a distribution label ran by rapper/producer MaxPtah. A digital copy of the album can be purchased on Amazon.com.

Nick is also prepping the release of his latest EP, The New Memphis, this June. Over the course of seven songs, Nick seeks to change people’s perception of Memphis with the project. He said the EP would boast a “progressive sound” that he assures won’t disappoint listeners.

“The EP looks at Memphis in a lighter way as opposed to, ‘South Memphis! North Memphis! The home of the First 48,’” Nick said. “It’s another sound of Memphis that people need to be exposed to. It’s a balance out here.'”

The New Memphis will feature appearances from the Iron Mic Coalition’s Mighty Quinn, C’Beyohn, and Bartholomew Jones. MaxPtah, Paragon, Genesis 7, and EMPEE are among the cats providing production to the project. There will be an official release party for the EP at Newby’s on June 14th. The EP’s scheduled release date is June 17th.

Follow me on Twitter: @Lou4President
Friend me on Facebook: Louis Goggans
Check out my website: ahumblesoul.com

Categories
News

Guess Where Susan Ate

View the aftermath of some dessert carnage and guess where Susan and her friends ate.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Guess Where I’m Eating Contest 20

What you see here is the aftermath of straight-up dessert murder. The occasion was a going-away/birthday lunch.

Screen_shot_2014-03-03_at_8.01.30_AM.jpg

The first person to correctly identify two of the dishes and where I’m eating wins his or her choice of a $50 gift certificate for Gould’s or a $50 gift certificate for Jim’s Place.

To enter, submit you answer to me via email at ellis@memphisflyer.com.

The answer to last week’s contest is the Project Green Fork roll at Sekisui, and the winner is … Sarah Pate!