Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Crosstown’s Elemento Neapolitan Pizza Closing

Elemento Neapolitan Pizza, the wood-fired pizza restaurant in Crosstown Concourse, announced today via Facebook that it will close its doors on Sunday, February 16th.

The news comes after an announcement on Facebook Monday of new hours of operation: “In order to better serve our customers, our new hours will be Wednesday-Sunday. Closed Monday and Tuesday.”

Crosstown’s Elemento Neapolitan Pizza Closing

The restaurant opened in October 2018 and focused on authentic Neapolitan pizza, with careful attention to ingredients — specific tomatoes, cheese, and dough flour — and cooking times and temperatures.

In regard to future plans for the restaurant space, Crosstown Concourse released the following statement:

“We’re grateful to Elemento Pizza for being an important part of Crosstown Concourse’s remarkable beginning. We hate to see them go. However, we are fortunate to regularly receive interest for food and beverage operations that want to join the unique Concourse mix, and we’re already deep into conversations with a new and exciting restaurant concept. We do not want to share their news, but we do anticipate an opening later this spring. We can tell you this: The state-of-the-art wood-fired pizza ovens will still be in operation.”

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Local Eateries Named Among 100 Most Romantic Restaurants in America

Southern Social / Facebook

OpenTable — an online restaurant-reservation service — announced today its annual list of the 100 Most Romantic Restaurants in America. Among them: Downtown’s Flight Restaurant & Wine Bar and Southern Social in Germantown.

The list, which includes restaurants across 31 states, is based on OpenTable diner reviews, collected between December 1st, 2018, and November 30th, 2019, of more than 30,000 U.S. restaurants.

Establishments with a minimum overall score — including diner rating, user clout, total number of reviews, and regional overall rating — were considered, according to OpenTable. Those that qualified were then “scored and sorted, according to the percentage of reviews for which ‘romantic’ was selected as a special feature.”

In this year’s roundup, which is presented alphabetically rather than in any numerically rated order, Illinois had the highest number of restaurants (12). Flight and Southern Social are the only eateries in the state of Tennessee to receive the distinction.

“We craft this list every year to help diners looking for inspiration for the most popular date night of the year,” Jessica Jensen, senior vice president of marketing at OpenTable, said in a press release. “Whether it’s a special night with your significant other, a girl’s night out, or your first outing with someone new, these restaurants have passed the test of setting the table for exceptional ambience and an incredible meal.”

To see the full list of recognized restaurants, go to opentable.com.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Real Talk: What Should the Grizzlies Do With Andre Iguodala?

NBA.com

Andre Iguodala

As the NBA trade deadline looms ahead, the media conversation around what the Grizzlies should do with Andre Iguodala has started up once again. It has been an interesting conversation, to say the least, and lots of people have had lots to say about it. Including some of the Grizzlies’ young core, via locker room quotes and social media.  

Real Talk: What Should the Grizzlies Do With Andre Iguodala?

Real Talk: What Should the Grizzlies Do With Andre Iguodala? (2)


For those who have been living under a rock this NBA season and haven’t kept up with this whole Iguodala mess, here is a brief rundown:  

  • Golden State sent Iguodala and a 1st round pick to Memphis, so they could make room to sign D’Angelo Russell.
  • Iguodala had been very publicly adamant about his refusal to suit up for the Grizzlies and made it clear he wouldn’t report to training camp. 
  • Rather than stir up drama going into the season, the Grizzlies allowed him to sit out, ostensibly until a trade was found for him.
  • Iguodala made it clear he was not willing to negotiate with the Grizzlies on an equitable buyout, demanding his entire contract value. 
  • Throughout the course of the season, Iguodala has made several public remarks with some not-so-thinly veiled shade towards Memphis.
  • Now the trade deadline is quickly approaching, and it appears Iguodala has made it known through his agent that if he isn’t traded to one of his preferred teams, he is prepared to sit out the rest of the NBA season. 

Which brings us to where we are now.

It has been said that there was a mutual agreement before the season started between the Grizzlies front office and Iguodala, in which the latter doesn’t have to participate in anything team-related while waiting for a trade or a buyout.


This is where the Grizzlies front office may have shot themselves in the foot, as that decision makes it a lot harder for them to do the thing they should have done from the start – order him to report and then fine him for every day that he doesn’t. 

However, it is important to note the order in which these things happened, before declaring that the Grizzlies are the bad guys here. There is a provision in the NBA Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) which seems written for situations such as this.
According to Article XI, Section 3:

“A player who withholds playing services called for by a Player Contract for more than thirty (30) days after the start of the last Season covered by his Player Contract shall be deemed not to have “complet[ed] his Player Contract by rendering the playing services called for thereunder.” Accordingly, such a player shall not be a Veteran Free Agent and shall not be entitled to negotiate or sign a Player Contract with any other professional basketball team unless and until the Team for which the player last played expressly agrees otherwise.”

 

It is unclear if the Grizzlies could pursue this option, since there is nothing in writing excusing Iguodala’s absence. Likely this would cause more drama than the front office wants to deal with, but if I’m part of this front office I would definitely investigate this option further. While we are at it, the league should keep the same energy with Iguodala’s public comments that they had for Dewayne Dedmon after he made public comments about desiring a trade.

Here’s what they should NOT do under any circumstances: give Iguodala any sort of buyout or waive him from the team while he can still go join a playoff contender. Let him sit until this summer, and try his luck on the market as a free agent.

 

The Grizzlies’ former Vice President of Basketball Operations John Hollinger seems to be thinking along these same lines. 

Real Talk: What Should the Grizzlies Do With Andre Iguodala? (3)

With roughly two days to go until the NBA trade deadline, whatever happens will likely happen soon. 

Categories
News News Blog

Mayor Harris: ‘It’s Time to Seal the Deal’ on Transit Funding


The conversation about adequate funding for the Memphis Area Transit Authority (MATA) continued Tuesday — a day deemed Transit Equity Day.

Transit Equity Day 2020, which marks the 106th birth anniversary of Rosa Parks, is a collaborative effort by several organizations and unions across the country to promote public transit as a civil right and strategy to combat climate change.

Here, the Sierra Club Chickasaw Group organized a press conference to speak on the importance of transit and the barriers that are still in place and limiting residents’ — particularly those of color and those living in low-income areas — access transit.

This comes as the Shelby County Commission considers a strategy to invest dedicated funding in MATA. The discussion began in September when Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris proposed a $145 sustainability fee for households with more than three vehicles. Now, the county commission is considering a $20 wheel tax increase.

Marquita Bradshaw, Environmental Justice Chair for the Sierra Club Chickasaw Group spoke of transit and environmental justice Tuesday: “Transit equity has everything to do with environmental justice.”

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“Environmental justice is the fair treatment and meaningful involvement of all people regardless of race, color, national origin, or income with respect to development, implementation, and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations, and policies,” Bradshaw said. “Transit equity is a plan to justly transition away from climate change. The root of climate change is pollution. People with lower incomes not only have problems accessing transit to get to work, but they also deal with the burden of pollution.”

Allison Donald of the Memphis Center for Independent Living, also at Tuesday’s press conference, said Memphis is at a “pivotal point” as it relates to funding transit.

“We must understand on the 106th birthday of Rosa Parks, that transit justice is not a new fight, not only for Memphis but for other underserved communities around the country,” Donald said. “Funding for public transportation is necessary not only for our city to grow, but it brings businesses, better educational opportunities for underserved children in underserved communities, and it gives people an opportunity to do what communities are supposed to do — connect.”

The most recent resolution to fund transit before the commission is sponsored by Commissioner Brandon Morrison. The proposal includes a $20 increase to the vehicle privilege that would generate $12.8 million. Of that $9 million would go to MATA and the remaining $3.8 million would support the hiring of 51 new sheriff deputies in areas soon to be de-annexed from Memphis.

In January, the commission voted to delay voting on the resolution, sending the proposal back to the commission’s general government committee. The commissioners decided at that meeting to send the measure to an ad hoc committee.

In order for the wheel tax proposal to pass, at least nine members, or two-thirds of the Shelby County Commission, must vote in favor of the move at two consecutive meetings.

Harris, who was at Tuesday’s press conference said securing the funding is a “huge challenge,” but he believes the resolution is close to garnering the nine votes it needs to pass.

“I think it’s time to seal the deal,” Harris said. “How do we seal the deal from here? We’ve got to get that ninth vote. We feel like we’re sitting at a soft eight and we need that ninth vote. We’re working real hard to build comfort with the commissioners so that we can get to a place where at least nine commissioners are prepared to vote on dedicated funding for transit.”

Some commissioners maintain that their constituents, mainly those living in the suburbs, don’t support the increase as they don’t use public transit and won’t benefit from increased funding for it.

“There’s a benefit to all of us from transit,” Harris said. “We’re trying everything except for the kitchen sink to try and identify that ninth vote. We think we’re on the way. We have a great case that’s been made and a broad coalition. We trust that the commissioners will see we can’t be about just talking about issues. We have to be about action.”

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Harris said with upwards of $10 million invested in MATA each year, there will be over one million new transit rides generated.

Courtney McNeal with Innovate Memphis, who worked closely with MATA to develop the Transit Vision Plan, said a key focus when creating the plan was job accessibility.

With the implementation of the Transit Vision Plan, McNeal said there would be a 39 percent increase in job accessibility within an hour for all residents, a 45 percent increase for minority residents, and a 49 percent increase for residents living in low-income neighborhoods.

MATA CEO Gary Rosenfeld said his group “stands ready” to implement the Transit Vision Plan, which “goes so far in delivering quality service and opportunity to the community as a whole.”


Last month, the mayor set an informal, 30-day deadline for the passage of a resolution to fund MATA, but it does not look like the commission will make that deadline. 



Now, the the $20 wheel tax and other funding options for MATA are being discussed in a series of six ad hoc committee meetings, co-chaired by Commissioners Tami Sawyer and Mick Wright. The committee has been tasked with returning to the commission with recommendations about how to move forward.

All meetings run from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. and are open to the public. See the dates and locations below.

2/4 – Monumental Baptist Church, 704 S Parkway East

2/11 – Hickory Hill Community Center, 2910 Ridgeway Road

2/18 – Hollywood Community Center, 1560 N Hollywood Street

2/25 – Agricenter International, 105 S. Germantown Parkway

3/10 – Bartlett Senior Center, 5727 Woodlawn Street

3/35 – Golden Gate Cathedral, 3240 James Road

Categories
News News Blog

2020 Census: Workers Needed, Importance of Accurate Count Stressed

U.S. Census Bureau

The U.S. Census, required every 10 years by the U.S. Constitution, will take place, Wednesday, April 1st.

The U.S. Census Bureau opened a local office here last week and is looking to hire local residents to assist with the count.

The Bureau is looking to fill five positions: census takers, census field supervisors, recruiting assistants, clerks, and office operations supervisors. Pay for these roles starts at $20 an hour.

Applicants for the job above must be at least 18 years old, have a valid social security number, and pass a Census Bureau-performed background check and review of criminal record, which includes fingerprinting.

For more information on the available positions and how to apply, visit the U.S. Census job site.

In his weekly newsletter to constituents, Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland stressed the importance of the census: “The importance of making sure we have an accurate count cannot be overstated.”

The data will determine how the federal government allocates $675 in federal funds to each state over the next 10 years. A portion of the city’s budget comes from federal- and state-shared revenue based on Memphis’ population count. The mayor adds that planning for essential city services, such fire and police services, as well as the upkeep of roads and parks, depends on the accuracy of the census count.

Here are a few areas for which the amount of federal funding is determined by Census data:

Children: Census data is used to determine the funding needed for school lunches, the Head Start program, special education grants, and the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children.

Transportation: Census data guides how billions of federal dollars for transportation are distributed, including capital improvement grants for public transit and funds for highway construction and planning. Specifically, in the past funds have been used for State and Community Highway Safety Grant Program, Federal Transit Metropolitan Planning Grants, and Federal Transit Formula Grants.

Jobs: Companies use census data to determine where to identify areas to open new factories, offices, or stores. The data is also used to distribute community block grants, which are used in part to create jobs through retaining and expanding businesses.

Housing: Census data influences how much money is allocated to housing-related programs, such as the Section 8 Housing Assistance Payments, Public Housing Capital Fund, and Low-Income Home Energy Assistance programs. The data also helps private developers and public officials to determine where to invest in new housing developments.

Representation: Numbers collected from the census are also used to make sure political power is fairly distributed among states and within states. The data is used to redraw district lines to determine representation in Congress, state legislatures, school boards, and other electoral bodies whose membership is based on population and geography.

After receiving an invitation to participate in the 2020 Census, households can respond either by mail, phone, or online. It is required by law to respond to the census.

The census asks basic questions about each person in a household, and all answers are anonymous, used only for the purpose of generating data.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Shelby County contains many of the hardest to count (HTC) census tracts in the country based on results from the 2010 Census.

Nearly half of the census tracts in Shelby County had a mail return rate of less than 73 percent and fell in the bottom 20 percent for return rates nationwide.

Tracts with the lowest return rates here are located primarily in the 38115, 38118, and 38104 zip codes.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies Win Battle of Big Men, Beat Pistons, 96-82

Sharon Brown

Jonas Valanciunas

On throwback jersey night, it was the return of the NBA big men.

Jonas Valanciunas seems to enjoy it when he goes to battle against a true opposing big man. On Monday night he went up against Detroit’s Andre Drummond. Valanciunas led the Grizzlies with a team-high 26 points (13-of-19), 17 rebounds, four blocks, and two assists. His counterpart Drummond was equally impressive with 25 points, 18 rebounds, and four assists. 

Grizzlies Win Battle of Big Men, Beat Pistons, 96-82

Pistons head coach Dwane Casey spoke about centers in the NBA before the matchup and talked about Valanciunas, whom he coached in Toronto. “In the new NBA, that’s what it is,” Casey said. “That’s why I’ve seen a kid like [Jonas] Valanciunas grow. I remember the first few years, he wanted post-ups, he wanted touches and all this. I said, ‘Hey, that’s not the way it is.’” 

Casey continued with praise of Valanciunas, “Every year he got better and better at understanding that those mundane things are just as important as hollow points you might put up, the verticality, the screening, the rolling, the catching and making good decisions. It’s not flashy, your name doesn’t get in the paper, but those teams win when those guys accept those roles and do that job. It’s not fun, but it’s a very valuable position to develop and to be in.”

The Grizzlies defeated the Pistons 96–82, to give rookie coach Taylor Jenkins his 25th win of the season. Memphis is now 25–25 on the season while the Pistons fell to 18–34. 

NBA.com

Taylor Jenkins

On Monday afternoon, Jenkins was named Western Conference Coach of the Month by the NBA for January. This is his first career coach of the month honor. The first-year coach led his team to an 11–4 record in January which tied for the highest winning percentage (.733) in the Western Conference. The last time a Grizzlies coach was named coach of the month was Dave Joerger in November 2014. At age 35, Jenkins is the youngest person to earn Coach of the Month honors since Lawrence Frank in April 2005.

Before the game, Jenkins spoke about the honor: “It is an honor for sure and very humbling. It is something that I am excited about because I am excited for the entire organization  —  from our players to the coaching staff, our entire staff, the performance staff, the front office, everyone that goes into what we did in the month of January.”

He went on to say, “It is a great reflection of all of the hard work and everyone growing every single day. Obviously, it is translating to some success on the court. Just very excited for everyone involved. It was great to get the congratulations from everyone but we are now focused on a great month of February.”

Rookie guard Ja Morant praised Jenkins after the win: “He’s almost the same as me, giving credit to a lot of us, but he deserves it. He has us ready each and every game and pushes us in practice. [Tonight] was just one of those games where he knew what type of game it was, and he knew exactly how to make us come out with a win.”

By the Numbers
After scoring 53 points in the first half, the Pistons were held to just 29 points in the second half. The Pistons only scored 10 points in the third period, while going 3-of-25 from the field. Both numbers are season-lows from Grizzlies opponents this season.   

The Grizzlies won the points in the paint battle 68–50 (+18).

Memphis had a season-high 12 blocks; Detroit had 5 (+7)

The Grizzlies have won 12 of their last 14 games in Memphis after starting the season 3–11 at home. 


Player stats

Grizzlies

Valanciunus also secured his 24th double-double of the season, and it’s the third game this season in which he finished with at least 25 points and 15 rebounds. The big man finished with a +28.

Grizzlies Win Battle of Big Men, Beat Pistons, 96-82 (4)

Dillon Brooks tallied 15 points, four rebounds, and five assists while shooting 7-of-15 from the field. Jaren Jackson Jr. had a bad shooting night (3-of-10) but he ended with 14 points by going 8-of-9 from the charity stripe along with five rebounds, three blocked shots, and two assists. 

Grizzlies Win Battle of Big Men, Beat Pistons, 96-82 (3)

In 21 minutes, Tyus Jones led the bench squad with 13 points and five assists with zero turnovers. Morant finished with 12 points and a team-high seven assists.

The Other Guys

Drummond tallied his 41st double-double of the season, which ties Milwaukee Bucks’ Giannis Antetokounmpo for the most double-doubles of the season. Lang Galloway and Christian Wood finished with 17 points apiece off the bench. 

Up Next

Grizzlies will start a three-game road trip with a stop in Dallas on Wednesday night. The Mavericks will be without Luka Doncic, who is out due to an ankle injury. Tip-off is at 7:30 p.m. at the American Airlines Center.

Categories
Opinion The Last Word

We Can’t Go Back: Tennessee’s Latest Anti-Abortion Bill isn’t “Pro-Life”

Republican Tennessee lawmakers are at it again. Oh, right, they’re always at it. More specifically, they’ve returned to their pursuit to deny women of a basic right: the option to safely access abortions.

Last week, Governor Bill Lee announced that he would be submitting a “comprehensive pro-life” bill this legislative session that will put the state “at the forefront of protecting life.” The bill would ban abortion when there is a heartbeat. It also would specifically ban abortions based on sex, race, or disablilties. Additionally, it would require women to undergo an ultrasound and view the photo before having an abortion.

Maya Smith

Stop the Ban rally in May 2019

These provisions suggest that women are just popping into abortion clinics having abortions for flippant reasons. That’s not the case; women are having abortions because of their health or their financial situation or for a number of other serious reasons that one couldn’t understand unless they have been in their shoes.

As the governor made his announcement, he was surrounded by — what else? —a group of men. Men, who have never and will never walk a step in these women’s shoes, attempting to dictate what women do with their bodies. What a concept.

They say the bill is “stronger” than the “heartbeat bill” that passed in the House but failed in the Senate last year.

If the bill does pass, it will surely be challenged in court. That means thousands of dollars of taxpayers’ money will fund fruitless litigation for a cause that most Tennesseans likely don’t support. In fact, a study done by Vanderbilt University in the fall found that 54 percent of respondents believe Roe v. Wade should be upheld.

If abortions are banned in Tennessee, as many experts have said, women will not stop seeking abortions. But abortions will be become more difficult and dangerous for them.

The governor made the announcement of the near-total abortion ban just one day after the 47th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision. Nearly half a century ago, the country’s highest court ruled that the Constitution gives women the liberty to choose to have an abortion. Why would we now, 50 years later, attempt to rip that liberty away and regress back to the time when women didn’t have autonomy over their own bodies?

We cannot go back. Only forward.

Laws like these are utterly intrusive and grossly overreach into women’s personal lives. No government entity or any entity, quite frankly, should interfere with a woman’s decision about what to do with her body. The government cannot coerce women into bearing a child they don’t have the capacity to raise or choose not to have for medical or other reasons. It’s a very personal choice that should remain that way.

Views on abortion are just that — views. Whether or not one supports abortion, it’s a personal conviction. And personal and/or religious convictions should not be mandated through laws. These lawmakers shouldn’t force their faux moral-high-ground beliefs on others.

Why does it matter so much to these old white men what women in Tennessee do with their bodies? Why do they talk so much about the life of the unborn child and how important it is to defend it and so little about the women who bear the pregnancy?

Perhaps the most cringeworthy quote from Lee’s announcement was this: “My passion for developing this legislation stems from my commitment to defending the intrinsic dignity of all people.”

It’s the “intrinsic dignity of all people” bit that got me. The intrinsic dignity of many is abused every day in this state, and he doesn’t seem to be doing anything about it. Here in Shelby County, the state’s largest county, 45 percent of children are living in poverty. What about their dignity? I wonder if the governor cares just as much about them and their limited access to fresh food or quality health care or decent education. Do lawmakers care just as much about the pregnant workers in Tennessee who receive bare-minimum accommodations in the workplace?

The governor and lawmakers pushing the legislation refer to it as “pro-life,” but does their pro-life view extend beyond women’s vaginas and apply to all people? No one can truly claim to be pro-life if they don’t defend the basic rights of all people and fight to uplift the poor, welcome immigrants, and engage the disenfranchised.

Maya Smith is a Flyer staff writer.

Categories
From My Seat Sports

Kobe Mattered

Like much of the world, I was shaken by Kobe Bryant’s death on January 26th. I was on the road to Atlanta to help my daughter catch a flight for a semester abroad when I learned the basketball legend — can legends be so young? — perished in that helicopter crash with eight others, including his own 13-year-old daughter. In the days since, I’ve found some lessons Kobe left us. I’ll share eight of them (in respect to one of his Los Angeles Laker uniform numbers) as I continue to process the tragedy.
NBAE/Getty Images


• Ego can be good.
Bryant was outspoken about his desire to have a better NBA career than Michael Jordan’s when he was 18 years old. (Jordan still had two championships to win with the Chicago Bulls.) In a sport flooded with ego, Bryant’s was outsized, but it became his fuel. He gave himself a nickname (Black Mamba) and it may be the best in basketball history, this side of Doctor J. And by the time his NBA career was complete, Bryant’s combination of supreme talent and competitive fire was of a kind that can be compared with only one other player: Jordan.

• Your number is you (not the other way around). I initially found it absurd that the Lakers retired two jersey numbers in honor of Bryant. Then I looked closer. The points Bryant scored wearing numbers 8 and 24 would rank fifth and sixth, respectively, on the Lakers’ career scoring chart. (Behind jerseys worn by Jerry West, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Elgin Baylor, and Magic Johnson.) Bryant decided to make a mid-career statement with his number change and added two championships to the three he’d won wearing the first number. Two numbers, one heart.

• It’s the recovery that counts. Whatever happened in that Colorado lodge in the summer of 2003, it wasn’t good for the Bryant brand. Rape charges were eventually dropped, and a civil suit settled. The superstar lost a lot of fans that summer, and it’s up to an individual to decide if sexual assault can be forgiven. The fact that Bryant’s wife, Vanessa, stuck with him, that they had three more children, that Bryant was clearly active in his four daughters’ lives . . . these are indications of a man’s growth. The ugliest of mistakes can be overcome.

• Daughters make a man. Kobe Bryant was a different man the day he died from the man who first became a father — to a baby girl — in 2003. I have two daughters myself, and I know this transformation. Bryant discovered a form of beauty, grace, and most importantly, strength, he didn’t know before his daughters arrived. May the hashtag #girldad live on.

• Stay curious. Already fluent in Italian and Spanish, Bryant learned just enough Slovenian to properly trash talk young Dallas star Luka Doncic from a front-row seat at a recent Lakers-Mavericks game. That competitive fire again. Doncic speaks English. Conventional barbs would have sufficed. But Bryant wanted to be distinctive. He wanted to be heard. He wanted to be understood.

• Respect goes both ways. Bryant’s Lakers lost to the Memphis Grizzlies in the last game Kobe played at FedExForum (on February 24, 2016). With the outcome decided and less than five minutes to play, Bryant entered the game . . . strictly to salute a fan base that didn’t even exist when his career began in 1996. The man who holds the single-game scoring record in that arena (60 points in 2007) made thousands of friends for life that night.

• Don’t be satisfied. Bryant won an Oscar, for crying out loud. He was the first African American to take home the prize for Animated Short Film (Dear Basketball in 2018). Kobe Inc. may well impact the world after the passing of its founder and namesake. Perhaps the saddest part of Bryant’s death is the fact that it came not at the end of a life stage, but at the very beginning of one.

• Today matters. This is the most obvious and important lesson, of course. Gianna Bryant should be making plans for high school, helping her younger sisters find their own distinctive paths. Spend every day with someone you love. If you can’t be in the same room with them, connect. You won’t even need to say, “I love you.” They’ll know. And that’s enough.

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Tigers 70, Connecticut 63

A season of adversity for the Tigers took another twist, quite literally, Thursday when starting forward D.J. Jeffries — the team’s second-leading scorer — partially tore a ligament in his left knee, sidelining him for at least a month. When Jayden Hardaway started in Jeffries’s place Saturday afternoon against UConn, you got the sense coach Penny Hardaway was doing the closest thing he could to taking the floor himself.
Larry Kuzniewski

Lester Quinones

The younger Hardaway only played seven minutes, and didn’t take a shot, but the Tigers won a sloppy affair, hitting 10 straight free throws in the game’s final two minutes to pull away for a victory despite committing 24 turnovers. The Huskies attempted 20 more shots from the field than did the Tigers (65-45), but committed 20 turnovers of their own. Perhaps the home court — “an incredibly tough place to play” as described by UConn coach Danny Hurley — was enough to make the difference as the Tigers improved to 16-5 for the season and 5-3 in he American Athletic Conference.

“We can still compete,” emphasized sophomore guard Alex Lomax, who scored 13 points and hit six of those late free throws. “We’re missing some key pieces, but Coach did a great job of putting this team together. If we stay locked in, we can do anything.”

“Crazy game,” said an exasperated Hardaway after the game. “Glad to get a win. These turnovers are really disappointing. You gotta keep motivating. The boys are rallying together. The mindset right now is every game is a big game. It’s getting close to seeding for the NCAA [tournament]. You gotta win out, do everything possible to get a win.”

The game featured 14 lead changes, the final one coming on a Lester Quinones three-pointer from the right corner with 2:30 left to play that put Memphis up 59-56. Having missed five games earlier this season with a broken hand, Quinones led Memphis with 36 minutes of action and scored 14 points. He acknowledged the loss of Jeffries as a setback, but didn’t consider it a deathblow for his team’s season.

“He’s a huge part of this puzzle, this team,” said Quinones of Jeffries. “When I was out, the team came together. It’s another way for us to come together.”

Lance Thomas started his second-straight game and scored 14 points while blocking five shots on the defensive end. Precious Achiuwa scored 16 points and pulled down eight rebounds, but was also responsible for a third of the Tigers’ turnovers (8). The sloppy play was offset by the Tigers making 21 of 27 from the foul line and seven of 14 shots from three-point range.

“We’ve been through everything you can go through,” noted Hardaway. “We’re fighting. These guys are scrapping. I’m proud of the effort.” The coach explained how energy needs to be turned up at times and harnessed at others, that tempo is a must for this team . . . until slower play is necessary to protect possessions. The Tigers’ chemistry is volatile at best, with 10 regular-season games left to play.

“If you’re at a major Division-I program right now and you don’t understand the magnitude of what’s going on, then this level’s too high,” said Hardaway. “They came to a major D-I program to take it over the hump. The pressure’s not on them; it’s on the coaches. They’re young. It’s our job to get them prepared, to get them ready.”

The Tigers return to FedExForum Wednesday when they host Temple. Tip-off is scheduled for 7 p.m.