Categories
Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Ohio Man Sells Elvis’ Pubic Hair on Craigslist

Craigslist

Eeeeewwwwwwwwwwww!

Your Fly-Team has seen a lot of weird Elvis-related auctions and sales. This one, however, is a special kind of WTAF. So much so that it’s being submitted without comment. 

From the listing:

All you Elvis collectors lookie here. I have a real pubic hair from Elvis Presley plucked by my ex-wife Billie Jean Flurt from Elvis crotch in 1965. I hate to part with it. But it can be yours for Christmas for $5000.00. Comes with letter of authenticity signed by Colonel Parker. I guarantee its real!

Sounds like a great XXX-mas gift for a special hardcore fan, if you smell what we’re stepping in. 

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Next Day Notes: Jazz 97, Grizzlies 91

Larry Kuzniewski

Jon Leuer played quite a bit in Zach Randolph’s absence, but didn’t have a particularly good game.

Note: Holiday duties intervene, so this will be a shorter rant than usual—whether that’s a good thing or a bad thing is entirely up to you.

The Grizzlies lost to the Utah Jazz last night, 97–91. The Grizzlies were without Zach Randolph (out with a sore right knee) and Tony Allen (still out with a corneal abrasion suffered when he took a finger to the eye in the Golden State game a week ago), but that wasn’t why they lost, at least, not in total.

To be sure, Randolph’s absence was felt, especially, as the Jazz have several quality big men in Derrick Favors, Rudy Gobert, and Enes Kanter, and that (along with some effort/positioning issues) led the Griz to get out-rebounded 39–29. It was especially noticeable on the Jazz’s[1] offensive glass, where Utah racked up extra possession after extra possession, allowing them to hang around in the game and eventually take and keep the lead.

It would be naïve to think that fatigue didn’t play a part in last night’s performance—the Griz were finishing up a set of five games in seven nights, and seven games in eleven nights. But more than physical fatigue, it seemed like mental fatigue—the Grizzlies looked like a team that was about to get three days off for Christmas and knew it. With any luck they’ll return to action against Houston on Friday (at home) and be back on the same page and ready to execute.

Three Things from Last Night

➭ Jordan Adams played during the first quarter for the first time ever last night, and ended up playing ten minutes in which he scored 5 points, grabbed 2 rebounds, and blocked 1 shot. Adams played well, matched up against fellow rookie Rodney Hood on both ends of the court, including one really nifty layup. More importantly, he looked like he knew what he was doing. I’m sure he’s nowhere near as ready as Dave Joerger would like for him to be, but if he’s going to be able to contribute in spot minutes, there’s no reason not to play him. The Grizzlies have a lot riding on Adams’ development, and it was encouraging to see him do well last night.

➭ Quincy Pondexter got another DNP-CD, something he’s been doing sporadically as of late. Pondexter played big minutes against Cleveland, Chicago, and San Antonio—presumably because of Tony Allen’s absence—but he’s been struggling to hit open shots and has generally looked out of sorts on offense all season long. If Vince Carter is getting his offensive game going (more on that in a minute) and Jordan Adams can play 10–15 minutes without screwing anything up, Pondexter may find himself on the end of the bench sooner rather than later. It’s worth keeping an eye on as the trade deadline starts to loom large in NBA consciousness.

➭ Speaking of Vince Carter: he’s been hitting a lot more shots recently, and he looks like he can run again. I’m glad I spent so much time working on that piece about how it might be time to start worrying about whether he was going to be better this season. Vince must’ve read it before last night’s game and then been inspired to demolish Rudy Gobert:

I don’t think I need to say anything else. Just watch that a few times.


  1. I am an English major and I still don’t really know what the possessive form of “Jazz” is. Which, really, is one of the weirdest problems that arises when you name teams with singular proper nouns.  ↩

Categories
Calling the Bluff Music

Yo Gotti Holds Christmas Carnival for Underprivileged Kids

The gray clouds, thunder and rain didn’t stop kids from enjoying the train rides, face paintings, reindeer, music, food, and gifts at Yo Gotti‘s Christmas carnival Monday evening.

The event served as the third installment of Gotti’s annual “Yo Gotti Christmas” initiative. However, this was the first year he incorporated a carnival. 

“To me, it’s all about helping the community, helping the city, and helping families. But I wanted to do something that was more of a celebration,” Gotti said. “And that’s what this event is supposed to be. When you think holidays, you think of getting with the family … you know, some things are bigger than the gifts; it’s the environment.”

The event, which also featured a bouncing house, merry-go-round and free haircuts, took place in both a parking lot and tent near Gotti’s Prive’ Restaurant.

The North Memphis-bred rapper and entrepreneur collaborated with former NBA star Anfernee “Penny” Hardaway (also present at the event) to hold the carnival and give away gifts.

More than 200 members of the Boys and Girls Club of Greater Memphis were invited to the event. And a long line of locals also came out to enjoy the fun.

In addition to the carnival, Gotti collaborated with Hot 107.1 for its “Christmas Wish List” contest, which involved radio listeners writing an essay that explained why their family was in need of assistance this holiday season. Three winners were selected, and all received a Christmas shopping spree courtesy of Gotti.

A successful music career has enabled Gotti to give back to his native city, but he still remembers when his family was among those receiving assistance during the holidays.

“I can’t remember the exact name it was, but I actually got gifts from a program,” Gotti recalled. “I had a lot of good Christmases, but I remember that one. I remember my momma putting us in the car, and we went down to this church. They gave me a bike, a couple games, and different things. I knew way back then if I ever got into position, I was going to do something similar.”

Gotti launched his Yo Gotti Christmas initiative in 2012. In the two previous years, he personally delivered gifts to impoverished families and held bike giveaways.

Check out some images of the Christmas carnival below. 

Check out my website
Follow me on Twitter
Friend me on Facebook

Categories
Calling the Bluff Music

Snootie Wild Talks “Go Mode,” 2015 St. Jude Benefit Concert

A Billboard-charting artist and CMG signee, Memphis rapper Snootie Wild stopped by Sway in the Morning to talk about his Go Mode EP.

During the interview, Snootie broke down the meaning of the project’s title, and he also talked about his upcoming St. Jude benefit concert. Slated to take place spring break 2015, Snootie said the concert would feature performances from artists of various genres, including rap, rock, and gospel.

The North Memphis-bred artist also touched on making the transition from street life to music, the importance of keeping God first, and the joy he receives from being able to support his family. 

Check out the interview below. 

Snootie Wild Talks ‘Go Mode,’ 2015 St. Jude Benefit Concert

Check out my website
Follow me on Twitter
Friend me on Facebook

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

In Re: 2014 In Film

[Flyer Film Editor Chris McCoy and frequent Flyer film contributor Addison Engleking had the following email exchange to discuss the 2014 Year In FIlm article in this week’s paper.]

Chris,
First, congratulations on the new gig. Second, how’s the new job going? Are there any unexpected perks or problems with your new writing/editing workload? More specifically, how does your own experience as a real, honest-to-God filmmaker influence what you see and what you’re looking for in movies now that you have to write about them every single week? Third, we’ve never spoken: what do you think my voice sounds like?
-Addison
 

In Re: 2014 In Film

Addison,
I imagine your voice to be like God from The Ten Commandments.

So far, so good on being the Flyer’s Film/TV Editor. I think I am most surprised by how difficult it’s been to get reviews in the paper in a timely manner. Studios have decided they don’t have anything to gain by previewing big budget movies to critics like us, so I’ve had to pay to see them on opening weekend and then run the reviews the next week. It’s also pretty time consuming: There were more than 600 movies in wide release this year, which would be almost two a day all year long. So it’s very difficult to see everything. like Pauline Kael or Roger Ebert did back in the day.

As you said, I am a filmmaker with three features under my belt over the course of ten years. I have also done a lot of screenwriting and consulting over the last few years, and I’m shopping a screenplay in Hollywood right now. So I’ve got skin in the game, as they say. I think it gives me an appreciation for the complexities of filmmaking. If you can get the fundamentals right—good acting, good pacing, looks good, reasonably coherent script—you’re going to get a good review from me.

I see my job as being a consumer advocate. The first and foremost question everyone is asking when they read a review is, “Should I go see this movie?” So somewhere in all of the pontificating about theory and stuff, I have to answer that question. And that’s regardless of genre. I’m not a big fan of Westerns, but if I review a Western, I have to let fans of the genre know if it’s a good Western or not. Likewise, if I’m going to be reviewing a science fiction movie, I can’t let my geekdom get in the way of telling a general audience if they’re going to like it.

My two questions for you are, 1) do you have any advice for me as to how to be a better critic, and 2) Was 2014 a good year for movies? 
-Chris

Alia Shawcat and Sophia Takal in Wild Canaries

Chris,
First, as a sci-fi geek you need to mainline all of Black Mirror ASAP. Second, if you can imagine God sounding like Bob Oedenkirk, then you’ve pretty much nailed the sound of my voice.

Anyway, I’m not surprised that studios aren’t pre-screening films for critics as often as they used to. But in a way I’m glad it’s happening, because it means I’m still useful to The Flyer: I can see a movie when it premieres in my hometown of Minneapolis and then send you a review that remains timely and relevant whenever that movie resurfaces in Memphis.

On the other hand, the notion of “timeliness” w/r/t film reviewing is surprisingly tricky. Take your job description: as much as I respect and appreciate the consumer advocacy element of most film criticism, I’m always struggling against it. For example, you know what I dislike most about my reviews? The second paragraph. That’s where I feel obligated to throw in a couple of vague, coy sentences about the story and/or the actors and/or the cinematic antecedents to whatever I’m writing about. It feels like necessary consumer information, but I always wonder how I could have used those 100 words differently. Let other people sum things up; I want to do something else—expand on the de facto auteurism that you’re rightly suspicious of, maybe, or call attention to those overlooked textures, gestures, lines, images, or moments that are shorthand for the movies at their best. Basically, I want to celebrate what Andrei Tarkovsky called “Time, captured in its factual forms and manifestations.”

You asked me how to become a better film critic. (How sweet of you to think I might know!) Well, it’s imperative to care about every word you write. Persist in the fantasy that you’re being read for posterity. Respect good product by trying to see it as clearly as you can; respect inferior product by being honest and original about its failings. Watch more movies, but read lots of writing that isn’t only about film, too. Keep ideas in your head about other things while dealing with the specifics of the medium. Athough I’m not a huge fan of pop-sociology, “The Hunger Games is a metaphor for class division” criticism because the politics of Hollywood movies are deliberately squishy and stupid, other ideas from other places definitely belong in our work. I didn’t get that Tarkovsky quotation from Rotten Tomatoes; I got it from Lapham’s Quarterly.

The second question you asked is connected to the first one. Timeliness in movie reviewing is also getting more complicated as streaming services and alternate viewing options proliferate. Who has the time? So the question of whether 2014 was a good year starts to get more and more difficult to answer; within that arbitrary 12-month period, are we counting only movies released in Memphis (which includes several high-profile releases from late 2013) or are we counting on everything, from independent stuff like Blue Ruin (which played there briefly) to wacko imported fare like Why Don’t You Play in Hell? (which might not have played there at all)? What does it mean to watch a movie these days anyway?

Thanks to those options, though, the year at the movies I managed to put together was pretty good, maybe even better than last year. But before I share some of my favorites, what were some of yours?
-Addison

Chris Evans and Samuel L. Jackson in Captain America: Winter Soldier

Addison,
I’ll save my list of favorites for the paper, but I think you’ve got a point about the huge amount of movies being made means its easier to piece together a good moviegoing year. I saw a lot more great movies in 2014 than I did in 2013. I think the average quality went up across the board, from big budget Hollywood movies to the microbudget movies we saw at Indie Memphis. The two big Marvel tentpole comic book movies were both good in different ways. Guardians Of The Galaxy was both great space opera and a lot of fun, but in retrospect I preferred Captain America: Winter Soldier for the tighter plotting and some good performances by Chris Evans, Samuel L. Jackson, and Scarlett Johansen. Even stuff like The Lego Movie and Big Hero 6 were better than they had any business being. In doing my year end roundup, I caught up with Edge Of Tomorrow, which was a big budget, high concept Tom Cruise movie that I thought was very well written and executed. That one will be written about for a while because of the horrible way Sony botched the marketing, both at the theatrical and home video level. (Live, Die, Repeat is not a better title than Edge Of Tomorrow).

At indie Memphis, we had much more variety. I think the mumblecore wave has finally broken, or at least people are paying more attention to the script in the indie world. I loved Lawrence Lavine’s Wild Canaries, which was a Brooklynite Rear Window from the guy who did the shapeless but compelling Gaby On The Roof In July a few years ago. Darius Monroe’s autobiographical documentary Evolution Of A Criminal has really stuck with me, too. I think those of us working on the indie level we should take more advantage of the creative freedom we have instead of making movies that look like job applications for Hollywood, and I think I saw more of that this year.

What were some of the movies that didn’t quite make the cut of your year end list?
-Chris

Shawn Ashmore, James McAvoy, and Hugh Jackman in X-Men: Days Of Future Past

Chris,
As far as Hollywood fare goes, a lot of the stuff you mentioned missed the cut for me, with Edge Of Tomorrow and Godzilla being the most agonizing omissions. The latest X-Men movie was probably my favorite installment of that venerable franchise, and though most of the superhero movies fall into a very clear and deeply repetitive story pattern, things like Guardians Of The Galaxy are starting to get weird like the later film noirs of the 1950s or the zombie films of today. So that’s encouraging. Plenty of movies were very good and very enjoyable but just short of great, like Lars Von Trier’s Nymphomaniac Vol. I, which was better than Vol. II. A lot of smaller stuff, like John Turturro’s Fading Gigalo and Mathieu Almaric’s The Blue Room, were compact and skillful, too. Again, it was a good year to spend a lot of time at the theaters.

As always, there were at least a couple of instances where I either bought or resisted the hype. Initially I enjoyed Damien Chazelle’s Whiplash, but after thinking and reading about it more, I’m not so sure what it was or is supposed to do. And although I like Richard Linklater’s work enormously and was lucky enough to write about Boyhood, I wash’t as enamored of it as everyone else. For one thing, I think they picked the wrong kid to focus on; they should have built the movie around Linklater’s daughter.

Whenever you talk about the good stuff from Indie Memphis, I feel a pang for what I missed out on; I only saw a sliver of the smaller film-festival stuff. As it stands, though, I liked Happy Valley and American Cheerleader. But Citizenfour and HBO Films’ Regarding Susan Sontag are probably my two favorite documentaries.

I’d love to hear what you think about Sony’s current PR/marketing/hacking predicament in re: The Interview, which I picked as my “Movie of the Year” for obvious reasons. But that’s a different conversation for a different time. So let’s wrap things up by looking ahead. On Christmas Day I’m going to the local premiere of Mike Leigh’s Mr. Turner, and for much of the next couple of weeks I’ll be playing catch-up on things I missed, like Gone Girl (don’t worry, I read the book) and Enemy and The Double and whatever else sneaks into theaters.
-Addison

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Tigers Take OT Thriller at Miami Beach Bowl

The Memphis Tigers took six years of bowl-free frustration and packed the energy into a football game that needed two overtimes to be decided. Not until sophomore cornerback DaShaughn Terry intercepted BYU quarterback Christian Stewart’s pass on the Cougars’ second possession of overtime did the U of M secure its second 10-win season in program history.

Two palm-sweating plays made the Tigers’ 55-48 win possible. First sophomore quarterback Paxton Lynch scrambled for eight seconds on fourth down from the BYU 5-yard line before tossing a game-tying touchdown pass to Keiwone Malone with 45 seconds to play. Then on the Tigers’ first possession of overtime, sophomore kicker Jake Elliott drilled a 54-yard field goal (that would have been good from 65 yards) to tie the game at 48 and keep Memphis hopes alive.

Lynch found freshman wide receiver Roderick Proctor in the right side of the end zone for an 11-yard score on the Tigers’ second overtime possession, setting up Terry’s game-clinching heroics.

The inaugural Miami Beach Bowl will be a standard hard to match in years to come. The two teams combined for 13 touchdowns, 914 yards, and nine turnovers . . . with a postgame brawl marring what should be remembered as a highlight of the 2014 bowl season. Lynch completed a record-breaking season for the Tigers, accounting for seven touchdowns (three of them rushing) while also losing a fumble and tossing three interceptions (his first picks since the season’s sixth game). In throwing for 306 yards, Lynch finished the season with a total of 3,031, just the third 3,000-yard season in U of M history. His 35 total touchdowns (22 passing, 13 rushing) are a Tiger season record.

The win gives Memphis a final record of 10-3, matching the 1938 team’s record for victories. It’s also the Tigers seventh consecutive win, the program’s longest such streak since 1969.

The teams combined for 31 first-quarter points, with Lynch tossing a touchdown pass to Malone and scoring himself on a bootleg. (Lynch’s fumble on the BYU 8-yard line cost the Tigers at least three points and marked a rare Memphis venture inside the opponent’s red zone without scoring.) Senior linebacker Derek Howard intercepted a Stewart pass to end the first quarter and Lynch ran the ball in again to complete a short scoring drive and give the Tigers a 24-14 lead. But the Cougars scored twice in the last five minutes before halftime, the second touchdown coming after Lynch’s first interception since the October 11th Houston game.

Memphis seemed to take control early in the third quarter, Lynch (again) running the ball in after a 71-yard drive and then finding tight end Alan Cross for a 17-yard touchdown and 38-28 lead. But fourth-quarter turnovers shifted fortune BYU’s way. Manoa Pikula picked off a Lynch pass near midfield, setting up a Cougar field goal. Joe Craig fumbled the ensuing kickoff, which led to a short touchdown run by Paul Lasike that tied the score at 38. Lynch’s third interception was returned 19 yards for a touchdown by the Cougars’ Zac Stout to give BYU a 45-38 lead with 8:18 to play. The score stayed that way until Lynch’s last-minute connection to Malone amid a group of Cougar defenders.

The Tigers won the overtime coin toss and gave the ball to BYU for the first possession. The Memphis defense held strong, allowing only a field goal (from 45 yards) by Trevor Samson.

The win completes the country’s biggest single-season turnaround, the Tigers having finished the 2013 campaign 3-9. The team shattered the program’s scoring record with 471 points, more than doubling the team’s total (234) from a year ago. With 49 rushing yards in his final college game, Tiger tailback Brandon Hayes finishes his career with 2,385, fourth in U of M history.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Guess Where I’m Eating Contest 51

Soup’s on!

The first person to correctly ID the dish and where I’m eating wins a fabulous prize!

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

The answer to GWIE 50 is the pancake at Saigon Le, and the winner is Catherine Hayley!

Categories
From My Seat Sports

Frank Murtaugh’s Favorite Memphis Sports Moments of 2014

This week I present the first half of my annual countdown of the most memorable sporting events I attended in 2014. It was a fun year, and a challenge to pick just ten.

10) Oklahoma State 73, Tigers 55 (December 13) — Forget the score and outcome of the game. For that matter, forget the sport that was being played. Basketball was incidental, it turned out, on this late Saturday afternoon at FedExForum. At halftime, the 2014 American Athletic Conference champions — the U of M football team — was introduced to the crowd of 14,000 (an audience smaller than those at the Liberty Bowl last season, not a given in this town). Coach Justin Fuente spoke to the crowd through a microphone and included the words “our first” when introducing his champs. Fuente’s brief address left you with the feeling there are more good times ahead — perhaps great — for U of M football.

9) Florida 62, Dayton 52 (March 29) — Anytime FedExForum hosts a regional final in the NCAA tournament, my blood pumps a little quicker. But with a chance to see a team that calls itself the Flyers reach the Final Four? (There were shirts in the arena that said “Flyer Nation.” Honest.) Scottie Wilbekin (23 points) and the top-seeded Gators proved to be too much for Dayton (the South region’s 11th seed), ending a three-year losing streak in the Elite Eight for Florida. The Gators went on to lose in the national semifinals. And Dayton? They returned to Ohio, still owners of the best nickname in college sports.

8) Redbirds 4, New Orleans 3 (August 7) — Defense wins championships. We hear this (whether or not we believe it) every football season, every basketball season. It’s not such a catch phrase for baseball. (Substitute the word “pitching” for defense.) On this night, the Redbirds flashed leather of the big-league variety. The bases loaded with Zephyrs in the top of the seventh inning (and Memphis leading 4-2), New Orleans catcher Rob Brantly drilled a ball deep into the right-centerfield gap. But Redbird rightfielder Stephen Piscotty ran it down, catching the ball across his body in full extension to save at least one run. (The catch ultimately secured Redbird pitcher Tim Cooney’s 11th win of the season.) Pete Kozma put on a clinic at shortstop, throwing out eight Zephyrs, even after bobbling one ground ball. And the game ended when Memphis first baseman Xavier Scruggs dove to snag a ball down the line. You’d see none of these highlights in the box score. Which is among the reasons baseball is the best sport on the planet.

7) Grizzlies 106, Dallas 105 (April 16) — You won’t see two NBA teams play a better 82nd game. With a 50th win and seventh seed in the Western Conference playoffs on the line for both teams, the Grizzlies won their fifth straight game, and 14th straight at FedExForum. It didn’t come easily. Dallas led at halftime. There were 15 lead changes. Dirk Nowitzki, having recently entered the NBA’s all-time scoring top 10, scored 30 points, the last three coming in overtime to give the Mavs a three-point lead with just over a minute to play. But after a Tony Allen putback and a defensive stop, Grizzly point guard Mike Conley drew a foul with 1.1 seconds left on the clock. He buried both charity shots to give Memphis a one-point lead. The game wasn’t decided, though, until the final shot of the regular season’s final game. As the buzzer sounded in overtime, Monta Ellis missed a 20-foot jumper and streamers fell to the FedExForum floor.

6) Tigers 36, Middle Tennessee 17 (September 20) — There should have been a linebacker named Tank on Vince Lombardi’s Packers. Or maybe with Dick Butkus and the Monsters of the Midway. No, Tank Jakes is merely a University of Memphis linebacker who played like Butkus on this night in front of 46,000 fans at the Liberty Bowl. Midway through the first quarter, he sacked Blue Raider quarterback Austin Grammer in the end zone for a safety (the first of two sacks for Jakes). Early in the fourth quarter, he drilled a Middle ball carrier and forced a fumble that was returned 59 yards for a touchdown by Tiger cornerback Bobby McCain. Not done yet, Jakes intercepted a Grammer pass on the Raiders’ next possession. This was the best game — at least statistically — by a Memphis defensive player in at least a generation or two. Let’s call the stat line (forced fumble, safety, interception) what we should: The Tank Trifecta.

Check back next Monday for my top five. And happy holidays.

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Tigers 78, Oral Roberts 63

The Memphis Tigers have their point guard. In a span of three games (and six days), sophomore Pookie Powell has managed to flip the script for a basketball team that two weeks ago found itself desperately in need of a backcourt stabilizer. This afternoon at FedExForum, Powell scored 14 points, dished out seven assists, grabbed six rebounds, two steals and even blocked a pair of Oral Roberts shots — one into the third row — to lead the Tigers to their third straight victory. After the Tigers played their first seven games without a player picking up as many as five assists, Powell has done so in three straight games, totaling 20 (against 10 turnovers).

Pookie Powell

“I cannot speak enough of my internal feelings toward Pookie,” said Tiger coach Josh Pastner after the game. “His 50-50 plays, his effort, his toughness, his ability to stick his nose in and rebound. When Pookie got here, he would never stick his nose in or make 50-50 plays. His progression . . . I’m so darn proud of the young man. It’s not about the offense. It’s about him battling. Making a [defensive] play on the two-on-one fast break. He’s got to keep it going.”

“I’m just going out there, ready to play,” said Powell. “I’m in a different mode when I’m out there. Coach emphasizes playing harder, making plays on the defensive end.”

Sophomore guard Avery Woodson has had the closest view of Powell’s transformation, starting alongside him in the Tiger backcourt. “He’s been a talented player, and a point guard all his life,” said Woodson. “I don’t know why anyone ever doubted him. It just took him some time to get comfortable.”

Sophomore forward Austin Nichols shared Powell’s spotlight against the Golden Eagles, blocking eight shots — one shy of the Memphis record — and scoring 15 points with nine rebounds. His outing was in sharp contrast to that of junior Shaq Goodwin, who was a nonfactor after picking up two first-half fouls. “It’s on Shaq to get the job done,” said Pastner, after the preseason all-conference pick played but nine minutes and didn’t score. “He’s a huge piece. He’s hit a bit of a wall, and he has to break through it.”

The Tigers led by ten points (19-9) before the ten-minute mark of the first half, but allowed the Golden Eagles to make a 12-2 run over a four-minute stretch. Powell took an inbounds pass and drove the length of the floor for a layup to beat the halftime buzzer and give the U of M a 35-28 lead at the break.

Back-to-back layups by Korey Billbury drew ORU within five points (56-51) with 8:31 to play, but the Tigers responded and stretched the lead back to 13 points after a strip and breakaway dunk by Trahson Burrell with just over four minutes to play. Billbury scored a game-high 21 points for the Golden Eagles while Burrell had 12 to go along with seven rebounds for Memphis.

The Tigers’ supporting cast played a big role, with 27 points coming off the bench. Nick King scored eight points and grabbed six rebounds while Chris Hawkins added six and seven, respectively, in just 18 minutes.

The Tigers held ORU to 34 percent shooting from the field and just 20 percent (3 for 15) from three-point territory. The U of M made 21 of 25 from the free-throw line.

Now 6-4, the Tigers will aim to extend their winning streak to four Tuesday night when Western Illinois visits FedExForum. It will be the last game before American Athletic Conference play begins (Houston here, December 31st).

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Next Day Notes: Bulls 103, Grizzlies 97

Larry Kuzniewski

Last night Memphis suffered a marked increase in Gasol-on-Gasol violence.

The Grizzlies had played 5 games in 8 nights, including six overtime periods spread across three games, and it finally caught up to them last night at home against the Chicago Bulls. In Tony Allen’s absence, the perimeter defense struggled to keep Jimmy Butler from essentially scoring at will, and Marc Gasol, Zach Randolph, and Mike Conley all had rough shooting nights. Nobody played with much energy, and guys were getting good looks that didn’t fall because there were dead legs and tired arms behind them.

Given that the last three games the Grizzlies played were against the Warriors, Spurs, and Bulls, and that they’d already won the two against the other best teams in the Western Conference, last night’s loss against the Eastern Conference Bulls doesn’t sting quite so badly. It doesn’t have as much of an effect on the playoff standings, and even on such a bad night, the Griz were still competitive. I don’t think there’s too much on the team level to be upset about from last night’s loss—that’s just the way the NBA schedule works sometimes.

Game Notes

➭ Not strictly Grizzlies related, but Jimmy Butler was really good last night, and I wouldn’t be the least bit surprised if he gets a max deal from somebody. In the absence of the ill Derrick Rose, Butler stepped in and scored 31 points on 11 of 21 shooting, he had 10 rebounds, and also had two steals. He’s a really good young player, who has developed into something special under Tom Thibodeau, and last night he carved the Grizzlies up six ways to Sunday. I’m not sure whether having Tony Allen in the game would’ve mattered that much, to be honest. Butler was just on last night.

[jump]

➭ While we’re talking about Bulls players, Nikola Mirotic played a huge role in the Bulls’ victory last night. He’s basically the worst possible player for Zach Randolph to have to guard: very mobile, unconscious from three, forcing Randolph to sprint out to challenge shots. As Randolph ages, this has probably been the main area in which he has noticeably, irrefutably declined. He was never a great defensive player, but he was good enough. As he gets older, “stretchy” players have given him more and more fits on defense, and last night Mirotic was basically Kryptonite.

Larry Kuzniewski

Beno Udrih suffered a finger injury late in last night’s game, but x-rays were negative.

➭ Beno Udrih hurt his finger diving for a loose ball that had all of Joakim Noah’s weight behind it. He immediately checked himself out of the game and sat on the bench wincing and holding his finger, and went to the locker room for x-rays. The official prognosis is that he jammed it (which, as anyone who has ever played more than one game of basketball knows, does not feel good), which is good news, because a Beno with a broken finger would be less effective.

That said, Udrih’s play has been so good as of late that Nick Calathes has been a non-factor. Calathes came into the game last night and reminded Griz fans that he’s still a good player and a dynamic passer. His length was immediately useful on defense, and his drive-and-kick game (and his telepathic connection with Kosta Koufos when Koufos rolls to the rim) was better that it was right after he returned from suspension, when he reverted to his old bad habit of running straight into the corners with the ball and getting trapped.

Calathes is still a valuable member of this Grizzlies team, even though Udrih is unquestionably The Backup Point Guard right now. I’d like to see Calathes deployed off the ball more, even in sets with Udrih. The Grizzlies have gotten a lot of mileage out of two-point-guard sets so far this season, so why not use all three point guards on the roster?

➭ Quincy Pondexter has really been struggling to find any kind of rhythm on offense as of late—he got a DNP-CD in the Warriors game and then started against the Spurs in Tony Allen’s absence—and it’s probably no coincidence that as Pondexter continues to try to find his shot, Tayshaun Prince has established himself back in the wing rotation. Prince was the odd man out for a large part of the early going this year, but his length, his ability to defend, and his effectiveness (yes, really!) in and against smallball lineups have proven to be valuable tools that the Grizzlies can actually use. It’s easy to forget that Prince’s viability as a rotation player at any level was a genuine question coming into the season. I don’t know what’s going to happen to Pondexter’s role when Allen returns from injury, but if Prince continues his solid play, I would expect Pondexter’s minutes to feel the squeeze while he struggles to find a place in the offense.

Tweet of the Night

The Gasol vs. Gasol battle last night was greatly overshadowed by Jimmy Butler and Nikola Mirotic carving up the Grizzlies piece by piece, but it wasn’t without its fireworks. Still, Pau ended up with 6 points and Marc had 13, so this feels true:

Larry Kuzniewski

I feel like these two have been doing this sort of thing since early childhood.

Up Next

The Grizzlies go to Cleveland to play the Cavaliers at 3pm Memphis time on Sunday. Cleveland is good, but they’re still gelling, and they especially lack a rim protector (hence their supposed interest in trading for Kosta Koufos). The next time these two teams play is in Memphis in March—well after the trade deadline—so maybe they’ll get their wish. Who knows.