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News News Blog

Task Force Meeting Will Address Trauma from Neighborhood Violence

The next Crime Prevention and Intervention Task Force meeting will be held on April 5, in City Hall at 4:00 p.m., in room 501.

The meeting, which will be hosted by Memphis City Councilwoman Jamita E. Swearengen, will feature the American Psychiatric Association’s president-elect and local professor of psychiatry, Altha Stewart.

Stewart is expected to address the task force about the lasting effects of trauma in communities regularly exposed to violent crimes.

The task force was assembled to create preventative measures against violent crime, which disproportionately plagues low-income neighborhoods already suffering from poverty and a lack of employment access.

In past meetings, representatives from Shelby County Schools, Memphis Police Department, and local clergy have shown up to collaborate on crime prevention efforts.

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News News Blog

With a Federal Boost, MATA Will Add Three New Routes in April

Starting Sunday, April 2, the Memphis Area Transit Authority (MATA) will introduce three new fixed bus routes and implement several timing and frequency changes to existing routes.

The new routes to Shelby Farms, IKEA Way, and Memphis International Airport and the multiple existing route tweaks account for an estimated $500,000 worth of service additions.

In the case of the new routes, MATA received a boost from the Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement Program (CMAQ), a federal program that aides local public transit entities in implementing projects that aim to reduce traffic congestion and increase air quality.

According to MATA’s planning and scheduling director, John Lancaster, CMAQ funding can only be allocated to new bus routes. With this stipulation and the recent boost in employment opportunities along the I-40 corridor in East Memphis, Lancaster feels that IKEA Way 44 makes sense.

“The 44 completes the network to an area that has seen a lot of job growth,” said Lancaster, who pointed out that in addition to IKEA, the route also serves as a conduit to densely populated apartment complexes in East Memphis and multiple call centers located on Appling Farms.

Though job growth along I-40 has been significant, the bulk of the CMAQ assistance will go to the new Airport Shuttle 64, which will link the American Way Transit Center, Memphis International Airport, and by extension the FedEx Super Hub.

The 64 was included in MATA’s 2012 Short Range Transit Plan, and like the IKEA Way Route, Lancaster points again to job access.

“That’s the big picture of all the CMAQ routes,” said Lancaster. “The emphasis is connecting jobs and employment to people.”

The Shelby Farms route, 47, stands out as the exception in the CMAQ routes in terms of job access, but Lancaster said the route was in the works for quite some time, as the massive urban park contacted MATA a few years ago to request service with the hope that it would alleviate traffic congestion and the associated air pollution.

“Because of the park’s emphasis on environment and sustainability, they see that as a way to alleviate congestion,” said Lancaster.

The 47 will only run on weekends, when the park sees its highest number of visitors.

April 2 will also see changes to some existing routes, including modified trip times on the Crosstown 42 that will ideally improve arrival and departure times.

The full summary of service changes can be found here.

To promote the new routes, MATA is partnering with Neosoulville to showcase spoken word poetry at the William Hudson Transit Center in Downtown, Memphis.

The poetry slams are free to attend and will take place every afternoon from 2-5:00 p.m. from March 29-31. The Chinese Connection Dub Industry will pair their music with spoken word.

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News News Blog

Gannett Unveils Plan for The Commercial Appeal

Gannett announced a new plan Wednesday that will better align its Tennessee properties into a single news team, but The Commercial Appeal’s editor, Louis Graham, said Memphis coverage decisions will still be made here.
The Commercial Appeal

Graham

Graham announced a raft of changes for city’s biggest daily newspaper in a letter from the editor published on the paper’s website Wednesday afternoon. The announcement came after a “Tennessee Town Hall” meeting Wednesday morning promised Tuesday by Gannett leaders in Nashville.

Beginning what Graham called a “historic transformation” for the paper started Tuesday as 20 newsroom staffers were let go in Memphis. Layoffs also came to Gannett newsrooms in Nashville and Knoxville.

Graham promised a “continued, aggressive” focus on expanding the paper’s digital content. He also promised a renewed focus on the suburbs. Also, the paper will create a new beat focused on diversity issues.

As far as staff, Graham went only into a few specifics. Here are some of those he mentioned:

Giannotto • Tom Schad and Mark Giannotto will remain on the Tigers beat

• Ron Tillery will remain full time on the Grizzlies.

• Marc Perrusquia remains as investigative report (with a project on Memphis gun violence slated to begin next week).

• Mark Russell has been moved from the managing editor position to manage the opinion pages.

• Columnist David Waters will remain and will expand his coverage of the faith community.

Many worried Tuesday that control of the newspaper would be largely yielded to leaders in Nashville. Graham said that won’t happen.

“Through all of these changes I promise some constants: coverage decisions will be made locally, in our newsroom, and the CA will maintain its strong voice in Memphis, for Memphis,” Graham said.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Bruce Sudano at Minglewood and Stax

You might not know Bruce Sudano by name, but chances are you’ve heard his songs. Having featured as a writer for platinum-selling songs by Jermaine & Michael Jackson, Dolly Parton, Reba McEntire, Snoop Dogg, and several for his late wife, Donna Summer, Sudano will be performing material from his solo albums on Friday Night, March 31st at Minglewood Hall opening for popular folk duo Johnnyswim.

Of particular interest to musicians and songwriters, Mr. Sudano will be leading a songwriting master class the following day, Saturday April 1st at 12 Noon. In this workshop, which is open to the public, Memphians have a rare opportunity to learn technique directly from Mr. Sudano which will allow attendees to delve deeper into the art behind song craft. Saturday’s workshop takes place at the Memphis Slim Collboratory, 115 College Street, directly adjacent to the Stax Museum. The workshop is free to members and $10 for the general public.

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News News Blog

Memphis Pets of the Week (March 30-April 5)

Each week, the Flyer will feature adoptable dogs and cats from Memphis Animal Services. All photos are credited to Memphis Pets Alive. More pictures can be found on the Memphis Pets Alive Facebook page.


[slideshow-1]

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Notes on “Grit and Grind: Burned in a Pale Fire”

Larry Kuzniewski

“Dead is the mandible, alive the song.”
Vladimir Nabokov, Pale Fire


Author’s Note: This is a weird one. It probably won’t make much sense unless you first go read Grit and Grind: Burned in a Pale Fire, a great piece my friend Matt Hrdlicka wrote, and to which this piece is mostly a set of responses and annotations.


Let’s start with the first sentence.

Before the season, I wrote that Grit ‘n Grind was a tired term in need of retirement.

We’ve all said it, and yet it’s still with us. I think Chris Herrington’s recent distinction is a good one to think about here: there are two things we mean when we say “Grit and Grind”; the first describes an era of Grizzlies basketball, and the second describes an overarching ethos, a way in which Memphis as a community expects our basketball team to reflect us, or at least the outlaw part of ourselves that we keep mostly under wraps.

While the latter is just as “Memphis” as Isaac Hayes’ Eldorado, the former is no longer an adequate framework for discussing what’s going on with the team. It is bankrupt. It has been thoroughly strip-mined of new ways to discuss what happens on the court, as you’d expect from any other metaphor about a core team that’s been together since 2009. It’s come to mean more than it should, and to imply an embrace of ugliness, when what it really was, say, when the Grizzlies beat the Clippers in a Game 6 and we poured all of our collective bloodlust—Memphis is a city that loves to see just how close we can come to being totally out of control—it was only ever an exhortation to do what you do, how you do it. To play hard, and fight anybody who tries to swing on you first. It was never about pace or offensive rating. It was a cri de cœur.

[jump]


Hrdlicka writes:

But what I’m tired of, more than the lens of Grit ‘n Grind, is the lens itself. Any lens. Any narrative.

Yes. More on this later. And there’s a great discussion of Pale Fire, which is really a book wrapped around a book wrapped around a couple of unreliable narrators wrapped around a critical volume of a long poem, one that means everything, contains everything, and maybe ultimately prevents itself from meaning anything.


Modern fandom is about narrative, or more exactly, narratives at war. A meticulously crafted “this game was about X” piece inevitably begets a snide “well actually.”

Larry Kuzniewski

There is a reason for this—a reason that Hrdlicka almost brushes up against but never quite arrives at: there is a Sports-Content-Industrial Complex at work. Every moment of every season is analyzed, is compressed, is expanded. There are probably ten different people who wrote recaps of last night’s Grizzlies game who did not get paid to stay up past midnight and watch the thing, and who are not going to get paid any of the display ad revenue that the sites running their unpaid work will make. These companies make money because they drive enough traffic to generate massive numbers of pageviews, which is why they conglomerate into huge networks like SB Nation and Fansided: they create more web traffic if they can corral every fan of every team into the conversation.

These writers, some of whom are very good, and better than most if not all of the people actually getting paid to do this stuff, certainly including me, are all doing free work hoping they can build enough of a reputation that eventually someone will pay them for it. How do you do that? You come up with a well-considered take on what’s happening that is wholly your own. How do you do that? By responding to each and every minute detail of a season with a 750-word thinkpiece about What It All Means. What happens if some other site beats you to your take? Write 750 more words about why they’re right or wrong. Tweet the link to that. Post it to Facebook. Use the right Harry Potter GIF. Make sure you tweet during games so that you establish your Personal Brand. All of it while merely hoping that someday you might make it. Some do—I did, mostly through dumb luck and being devastatingly handsome—but most won’t.

Everything is a referendum on everything else because all of these people need something to write about. The Grizzlies are back on track. The Grizzlies are done forever. Chandler Parsons will be fine, stop being so mean. Chandler Parsons is an idiot bro whose legs will never work again. The front office is catastrophically stupid. The front office is staffed with unsung geniuses. Every take is available, has been written about, and has been argued against by someone’s Personal Brand. All of it. There is no end to the takes because without the takes there is no traffic and without the traffic Google can’t show you ads for the three items you just deleted from your Amazon cart.

Both “the game was about X” piece and the “well actually” might be worlds apart and both true.

I would argue that both of them usually are true, and that mostly we’re just arguing for the sake of argument, because “I’m gonna sit this one out” isn’t an option anymore.


Larry Kuzniewski

Back away from the publishing industry’s ad/surveillance vortex for a minute with me and come back to the court:

We’ve all become unmoored because the identity of the team has been GnG for years but GnG doesn’t win every night. It’s tired; I’m tired; and part of the reason we’re tired is because nothing makes sense.

Here’s a thing I just talked about in my roundup of the Grizzlies’ miserable 0-4 road trip: GnG hasn’t ever actually won every night. The effort level required to win 60 games playing that style of basketball (unable to score outside of ten feet and flailing like madmen on defense to hold the other team under 100 just to have a chance at a win) is why they haven’t ever done it. They always fall off, or play down to bad teams, or get so behind against teams that can shoot that they just give up and wait for the end of the game so they can fly home. They physically can’t do it 60 times a year, much less 82. And when they don’t have it, they usually know it right at the beginning of the game—remember, this is a squad that has been together for the better part of a decade—and they just flat out quit. Sometimes they don’t, and they come back in daring fashion, but what determines when they do and when they fold like a broken lawn chair?

[pullquote-3]

I have no idea. Neither do you, but you have to write 700 words on a deadline and so do I. The complex has its hooks in us, even as we watch.

We need to give up the lens and just watch basketball.

Yes, but what does that mean? How do we do it? We, who talk about this stuff, write about it, think about it, argue about it on the internet… how do we just watch the game, without carrying a storyline into it? Isn’t everything a story, and isn’t that what this is: just another story about stories? I’ll return to this thread.


There’s an extended riff on Moonlight, which I have not seen, because I barely participate in current culture for a lot of reasons, most of which are time constraints (another of which is Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy, but sure). And a revealing observance about the Oscar snafu that everyone is talking about instead of talking about Moonlight:

Mockery of {insert literally anything here} is the parlance of our time because it allows us to place the {insert the mocked thing again here} beneath us.

I’m going to put that in another block quote, and in bold, because you need to read it again.

Mockery of {insert literally anything here} is the parlance of our time because it allows us to place the {insert the mocked thing again here} beneath us.

This sentence is the entire basis of our online world in 2017, but it feels more true on Twitter than anywhere else. Every possible opinion is expressed, and then immediately shouted down by a hundred Literal Actual Nazis and other assorted Kobe Bryant fans who haven’t even read the original article or even heard of the author. By pointing out that someone else is stupid, we frame the conversation in terms of our own obvious superiority. You hate-retweet the stupid take (which is almost always stupid) because you’re virtue signaling, not because you’ve read the article. (Don’t read the article, though.) Look how smart I am, and look at this fool! Look, I’m not a fool! Look!


Larry Kuzniewski

How do we give up the lens? Can it be done?

I recently read a book by Mark Fisher called Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative?. Highly recommended reading in general, but all of this talk of Grizzlies Narrative Exhaustion and the Sports Content Industrial Complex has me thinking of this particular passage, right there on page 2 (emphasis mine):

…we are inevitably reminded of the phrase attributed to Fredric Jameson and Slavoj Žižek, that it is easier to imagine the end of the world than it is to imagine the end of capitalism. That slogan captures precisely what I mean by ‘capitalist realism’: the widespread sense that not only is capitalism the only viable political and economic system, but also that it is now impossible even to imagine a coherent alternative to it.

We, those of us who live in this stuff, can no longer think of another way to approach it. We have to generate a narrative around this stuff because in the explosion of sports writing in the last 10-15 years, we can no longer imagine a world in which there doesn’t need to be an aggrieved thinkpiece every time the team slumps. As we enter an era in which everything is fed through the Facebook News Feed, totally driven by clicks and engagement, the only way we know how to even talk about sports anymore is in this call-and-response of Hot Take and Counter Hot Take, peppered with the offense I commit most often and most egregiously, “You Are Dumb For Having A Hot Take.”

There is no end to Grit and Grind as a narrative because we don’t know how else to talk about this team anymore, and even going forward into the next five or ten years, the only way the Grizzlies will be talked about is through this framework. There is no other possibility; they’ve all been sealed off.

[pullquote-2]

Think about it this way: the team just started its own media arm, seven years into the Grit and Grind era, and called it Grind City media. It’s literally the brand of the entire city of Memphis now. An entire generation of young Memphians has now grown up who associate the word “grind” with the Grizzlies and with this city. When does a generation change its mind about where they’re from? How long does that take?

Not to mention that the impossibility of escaping The Narrative means none of this is even fun anymore. You guys ever read the Communist Manifesto? Here:

[Capital] has drowned the most heavenly ecstasies of religious fervor, of chivalrous enthusiasm, of philistine sentimentalism, in the icy water of egotistical calculation.

Replace “Capital” with “Smart sports takes” and don’t you start to see what I mean? How it’s impossible to just be a fan anymore, once you’ve stepped onto the Sports Content treadmill, and once it starts nagging at you that yelling for the guys in the blue shirts to beat the other guys—what might easily be described as “chivalrous enthusiasm” and/or “philistine sentimentalism”—becomes impossible because you’re worried about the standings, about Zach Randolph’s usage rate, or because you know Lance Stephenson threw a woman down the stairs, of because you’re thinking about the new defensive scheme, or you just read 1,000 words about now Rudy Gay is like Lindsay Buckingham, which is a real thing I actually wrote in 2013 when I was trying to prove how smart I was?

Where do we go from here? What follows Grit and Grind, from this vantage point, is and can only be Grit and Grind. There’s no “there” to which we’re headed.


A brief sidebar:

But a game or a text, possessions and sentences stacked on top of each other, defy reduction.

Except… sometimes they don’t. Sometimes the answer is “they got good looks but they shot 35% and the other team shot 45% on the same shots.” Even when that’s patently the case, there’s a narrative to tend to.


Larry Kuzniewski

I’m going to wind this up, I think. Let’s look at Hrdlicka’s last section and pick at it a little, because it’s so good it begs to be quoted, and it gets at something I’ve been thinking about since September.

Can we not enjoy this team in their twilight? Joe Mullinax wrote about the Dying of the Light– can’t we let them rage while understanding they will stumble in the act? …The team’s identity has shifted but the players are still in the room. They simply don’t have it every night.

There’s an arms race to write the best, and earliest, eulogy for the Grit and Grind era. In hindsight, I probably wrote my own entry without even realizing it. But we’re all in this for glory, and to turn a good phrase, and who doesn’t want to be the orator at the end of it all, giving the Shakespearean monologue that ties a beautiful bow on the still-warm corpse of a fallen civic hero?

But that’s a fool’s errand these days, anyway. Everything we feed into the Sports Content Vortex is lost in a week, and in a month, you can only ever find it with Google anyway. It’s Dory from Finding Nemo, only able to respond to thoughts and ideas from the last two weeks, because there’s just so much of it that it scrubs its past as it pushes forward. When the narrative is all you’ve ever known, the “stumbling in the act” becomes a deviation from Grit and Grind, not a natural product of the age of the guys out there. Key to the whole sports media complex right now is a sort of denial that bodies get old and break down and then can’t play anymore, and that really, retired NBA players are so young they (hopefully) have the bulk of their adult lives left to live. The Chandler Parsons injury this year, speaking of bodies breaking down, puts 31 and 35 year old men right back in the same roles they filled when they were 26, 27, and 31, and anyone old enough to know can tell you that’s just not going to work for long.

Which means: as an era of basketball, Grit and Grind is probably already dead even as it perpetuates itself into the future forever. It already died. We missed our chance at The Great Grizzlies Thinkpiece because we couldn’t see past the season in front of us because we were too busy writing recaps for you to read at your desk at work the next morning.

[pullquote-1]

Hrdlicka and I were going to write a book about the 2015-16 season, and I’m glad we didn’t because of the injury slog, but in hindsight, even that would’ve been too late to really capture it. The wave crests and then recedes, and in that moment when it hangs there, you don’t realize it, but underneath it’s already pulling back, already stripping back the sand below, down with the shells.

…what comes next may not be as good. Then again, maybe that’s our fate as fans. Maybe letting go is too hard, the present too close to the future for comfort.

This is what happens when it becomes impossible to reason outside of the narratives: there is no present. What we think is the present is the top of the wave, hanging there for that split second. The “future” we’re all afraid of is next year’s salary cap, and underneath, the scouring has already started. And when it happens, we only have the tools we’re given to talk about it, and the little bits of abalone that scatter where our castles used to be.

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News News Blog

NEW UPDATE (More Names Added): More Layoffs Hit The Commercial Appeal

NEW UPDATE:
New names of those laid off at The Commercial Appeal have surfaced. Here they are:

  The Commercial Appeal

The Commercial Appeal

The Commercial Appeal

The Commercial Appeal

Also included were (no photo of these existed on the CA’s website):

Andrew Smith – digital producer
Kyra Cross – digital producer
Scott Armand – digital producer

UPDATE:
Names of some of the CA staffers laid off Tuesday are slowly emerging. So, this is in no way a complete list but it’s accurate, according to our sources.
   The Commercial Appeal

The Commercial Appeal

The Commercial Appeal

The Commercial Appeal

The Commercial Appeal

The Commercial Appeal

The Commercial Appeal

ORIGINAL POST:

A new wave of layoffs has come for The Commercial Appeal (CA).

Different sources are reporting that between 12 to 16 staffers were let go Tuesday. No firm details are yet available on how many were laid off, who was laid off, or what positions were vacated. We’ll post those details as we get them.

Gannett Co., Inc., the Virginia-based owner of USA Today, purchased the CA and other Journal Media Group papers in $280 million deal that closed last April. As a part of that deal, Gannett said it would not layoff anyone in the CA newsroom for one year after the deal closed.

A clause in a merger document said “for a period of not less than 12 months” after the deal is done, Gannett is to “maintain the editorial staffing levels existing” just before the deal was done “in all newsrooms” of Journal Media Group and its subsidiaries.

However, some CA staffers weren’t sure Gannett would adhere to the clause and didn’t feel the company was in any way legally bound to the promise. But Tuesday’s layoffs came almost exactly one year after the purchase was closed.

Two CA staffers were let go in October, though details of that event were scant. In January, the paper cut all of its freelancers. Some writers were called back to work on a more limited basis.

Layoffs were not new to the Memphis newspaper before the Gannett purchase, however. Major and minor changes to the paper here have come in recent years (with big layoffs in 2010 and 2014) as the news industry as a whole has shrunk.

However, the Gannett-generated layoffs here now may be different as the company’s “Newsroom of the Future” plan has purged numerous newsroom jobs across its properties. When the plan was instituted at Nashville’s The Tennessean in 2014, the entire news staff was released and allowed to re-apply to the paper for new jobs with new titles.

Sources also say that seven staffers were let go at the Knoxville News Sentinel Tuesday and three were laid off at The Tennesseean.

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News News Blog

New Plan for Commercial Appeal To Be Unveiled Wednesday

The Tennessean

Hollingsworth

Gannett Co., Inc. will unveil a new plan for its Tennessee newsrooms Wednesday in a town hall meeting with employees one day after several newsroom employees were let go at papers in Memphis, Nashville, and Knoxville.

More than 12 employees were laid off at The Commercial Appeal Tuesday. Daniel Connolly, president of the Memphis Newspaper Guild, said 12 Guild-covered, newsroom employees were laid off Tuesday. Some managers were also let go but Connolly said he did not have details on those as they’re not cover by the union.

“I’ve sat in on several of the termination meetings today as a Guild (representative) and I’ve been impressed with these employees’ calm and their resolve to make the best of it,” Connolly said. “We’ll aim to help them in the days ahead. Hopefully, I can provide more details soon.”

Laura Hollingsworth, president of The Tennessean and of the USA Today Network – Tennessee, said in a Tuesday email to employees that reductions in the company’s newsrooms across Tennessee “was the first step as we re-secure and level-set our economic vitality to support our journalism.”

“We recognize that this has been a tough day, and we respect and appreciate the work of all our colleagues, especially those who have been impacted by these actions — through no fault of their own,” Hollingsworth said, calling the move a part of a “transformative strategy for the USA Today Network —Tennessee.”

[pullquote-1]Hollingsworth said company leaders will unveil “the complete details of our plans” Wednesday morning at a “Tennessee Town Hall.”

“We look forward to our time together, tomorrow, as we now look ahead to our very powerful future and opportunity in Tennessee,” Hollingsworth said in the email.

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Tubby Smith: “Learning Experience”

University of Memphis basketball coach Tubby Smith met with local media Tuesday afternoon to tie a bow on the 2016-17 season. Some highlights.

“We’re excited about the future. Please that we won 19 games this year. We had our ups and downs, and certainly didn’t finish the season the way we wanted to. Through it all, I thought our players gave it all they had. We had great support from fans. It’s always a process; it takes time to instill certain things we need to have done in the program, to sustain the type of success we expect and this program deserves.

Larry Kuzniewski

Tubby Smith

“A team that we beat [South Carolina] is playing in the Final Four. We’d like to be that team next year. We’re positioned, with so many players returning . . . we need to add players to that [group] in the late signing period. We have to continue to improve and sell our program to our fan base.

“There are a lot things we have question marks about. We expect everybody to be back unless we hear something different; so far we haven’t. I know many people are interested in what Dedric Lawson is going to do. We’ve talked briefly, and nothing has been decided. Whatever he and his parents decide, I’m going to support them. He’s been a major part of this program. He had an excellent season; I’m really proud of what he’s accomplished.

“We need to shore up our bench play. We didn’t have the kind of players coming off the bench who would give us the energy we need. We have three scholarships available in this late signing period, and maybe more.

“In interviewing our players at the end, they really felt they hit a wall. And that’s my fault. Guys played a lot of minutes. Starters averaged over 35 minutes a game. I knew that would be an issue, a concern. I think the people we’ve already signed will be a big help.

“This season has been a learning experience. It’s always difficult for players to adjust to a new staff. Look at a guy like Jimario Rivers, with three coaches in three years. There was going to be a learning curve, and not just for the players.”

Are you surprised that Craig Randall chose to transfer?
“I’m never surprised at anything young men decide to do. It was concerns about playing time. You have to earn every minute you get. I wish him the best. He averaged the sixth-most minutes on the team. We’ll miss him; he had some big games for us.”

In recruiting, are you looking to fill positions or best player available?
“We’re involved with a lot of junior college players at this point. We need some experience, guys who are physically ready. We’re looking for guys who fit our system, our style of play. We need to fill a guard spot with Craig leaving. We need some size, interior play. A lot depends on what Dedric decides.”

Is there a time you need to know Dedric’s decision so it won’t put you in a recruiting bind?
“He’s got until April 23rd, I think, for early entry. It’s not the best scenario for coaches. But we want to give our student-athletes a chance to test the waters, find out where they are.”

Do you advise players, one way or the other?
“When they ask me. I’d love to have [Dedric] back.”

Has Dedric asked for your thoughts?
“To some degree. It’s still early. He can call the NBA office. You put in that entry form and they’ll give you feedback. The NBA has a committee for players and possibilities with NBA teams.”

In watching the teams at the South Regional last weekend, there appears to be a gap with the Memphis program. How far away is the Tiger program?
“Look at South Carolina. If you get a group that buys into what you’re doing. It’s a process, and you’ve got to have patience. How far are we away? You’ve got to have players. That’s why we’re looking at junior college players. You’re probably not going to find a high school player who can [impact immediately].”

What kind of NBA player do you think Dedric Lawson will be?
“I think he’s a long-term NBA player. There are things he need to get better at: footwork, outside shooting.”

You mentioned some distractions at the end of the season. What can be done to eliminate them?
“We have a multifaceted media. And with so many local players on your team . . . . I need to do a better job of engaging all the entities involved in our student-athletes’ lives. Relatives, coaches, everybody. There are a lot of people pulling and talking. You have to embrace it, and get all those people on board. I didn’t do a good job with that. It takes about two or three years; to really get to know the community. We’re reaching out, doing what we can within the rules. This is a hotbed of talent. We expect to be playing this time of year in the future.”

What more can you do personally to promote this team?
“It always helps to go to postseason play. We have to let people know how energized we are. That’s why I was away last week, flying around the country. In order to be competitive. And we need to upgrade our schedule, find ways to excite the fans. We play Louisville and Alabama next season, but on neutral sites. We need to get some home-and-home series on the schedule. I was at [the South Regional] last Friday. We want that kind of excitement for every game.”

Categories
News News Blog

City Wants Input on Road Projects, Bike Lanes

The City of Memphis Division of Engineering has plans to repave ten city roads, including Riverside Drive, once again adding bike lanes.

City officials and Bike/Ped Memphis invited the public to the central library yesterday, March 27, to give feedback on the proposals in order to determine how they will proceed with each of the ten projects below.

Riverside Dr. – Jefferson Ave. to Beale St.

Cooper St. – Washington Ave. to Central Ave

N. Highland St. – Summer Ave. to Walnut Grove Rd.

N. Perkins St. – Summer Ave. to Walnut Grove

Hickory Hill Rd. – Mt. Moriah Rd. to Winchester Rd.

Knight Arnold Rd. – Hickory Hill Rd. to Ridgeway Rd.

Riverdale Rd. – Winchester Rd. to Shelby Dr.

Getwell Rd. – Park Ave. to I-240

Airways Blvd. – Shelby Dr. to TN/MS State Line

Mendenhall Rd.– Knight Arnold Rd. to Mt. Moriah Rd.

Nicholas Oyler, Bikeway and Pedestrian Program Manager for the City of Memphis believes that the new design for Riverside Drive is much improved from the pilot proposal (2014-2015), and expects to receive the most feedback on this road as well as Cooper Street.

“We expect people to be much happier because after hearing many valid complaints, we considered them when conceiving the new design,” Oyler said.

According to city officials, the new design for Riverside Drive mitigates most of the concerns from the pilot construction, by providing a turning lane near the Tom Lee Park entrance and additional room on the sides of the road for vehicles to pull over in case of emergency.


The key improvement of the design though is placing the median in the middle of the road with a bike lane, car lane, and pedestrian lane on each side instead of having the bike lanes pushed to one side of the road and the cars to the other. 

Overall, the priority of the projects is the safety of everyone who uses the street, whether by foot, bike, or car.


For those who were unable to make it to the meeting yesterday, a survey for each project will be available online for the next 21 days.

Given that the proposals receive positive feedback, construction will begin as early as fall of this year.