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Sports Tiger Blue

Tigers 80, Cincinnati 74

The Tigers survived a frenetic, sloppy final minute of play Sunday afternoon to beat a longtime rival and secure their eighth win in nine games. The Cincinnati Bearcats reduced a 10-point Tiger lead to two points (73-71) with twenty seconds to play (thanks to consecutive Memphis turnovers on in-bounds plays), but the Tigers hit seven of eight free throws to escape with a win and improve to 14-6 for the season and 10-3 in the American Athletic Conference. Cincinnati drops to 9-9 (7-6).

The Tigers led start to finish and five players hit double figures in the scoring column. Boogie Ellis drained four three-pointers on his way to 17 points. Landers Nolley and Malcolm Dandridge each scored 14, Moussa Cisse had 11 (to go along with six rebounds), and DeAndre Williams came close to a triple-double with 10 points, 10 assists, and seven rebounds. As a team, Memphis shot 43 percent from the field and dominated the glass, pulling down 45 rebounds (15 offensive) to Cincinnati’s 32.

Mike Saunders Jr. and Keith Williams led Cincinnati with 19 points each.

The game will be the only meeting between the Tigers and Bearcats before the AAC tournament, the game in Memphis (scheduled for February 11th) having been cancelled due to Covid-19 restrictions in the Tiger program. It’s only the Tigers’ third win this season on the floor of an AAC opponent. (They won at Tulane and East Carolina.)

Memphis played without junior guard Alex Lomax, sidelined with a left-ankle injury. Lomax is expected to miss the Tigers’ next game, Tuesday night at USF.

Should the Tigers beat the Bulls Tuesday, they could be playing for an NCAA tournament berth next Sunday in Houston. Their game with the 12th-ranked Cougars was originally scheduled for FedExForum, but has been moved to Texas by the AAC because Houston’s home game was among the postponements during the Covid shutdown.

For Penny Hardaway, the win gives him one more (two) as a coach against Cincinnati than he had in two years as a Tiger player.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies Split Two Game Homestand Against the Clippers


Thanks to the overall weirdness of the NBA regular season schedule, the Grizzlies and the Clippers just played back-to-back games at FedExForum.

The outcome of those two games could not have been more different, despite being played exactly 24 hours apart, on the same court. 


The old Grizzlies/Clippers fan rivalry has for the most part died off since all the involved players are no longer with the team. But in the second game — particularly Kawhi Leonard — gave very distinct vibes like late Grit and Grind era games against the Spurs.


There are a few things that remained constant across both games, such as less than stellar three-point shooting, and struggling to get second chance points.

Grizzlies Split Two Game Homestand Against the Clippers

On the flip side, Kyle Anderson remains the unlikely hero that the Grizzlies need, and keeps doing a little bit of everything. Justise Winslow has been showing promise in the brief amount of time he has spent on the court.  

Grizzlies Split Two Game Homestand Against the Clippers (3)

It was the best of times …

Game one – Grizzlies over Clippers 122-94

The Grizzlies scored 72 points in the paint, extending the team’s streak of scoring 40+ points in the paint to 76 straight games. Per Grizzlies PR it is the longest streak on record since the NBA started tracking such play-by-play data in 1996-97.

All five starters for Memphis finished the night in double figures. Dillon Brooks had 19 points, Kyle Anderson had 13 points, Jonas Valanciunas had 16 points and 15 rebounds, Grayson Allen had 10 points and Ja Morant had 16 points. 

The bench provided 48 points, with 20 of them coming from Tyus Jones.

Grizzlies Split Two Game Homestand Against the Clippers (2)

The Grizzlies 28-point win represents the team’s largest margin of victory ever over the Clippers. Memphis committed just seven turnovers tonight, tying a season low.

Even better – Los Angeles finished with just a single point off the Grizzlies turnovers.   

Unfortunately, all good things must come to an end…
 

It was the worst of times …

Game two – Clippers over Grizzlies 119-99

Watching this game was like watching basketball on Opposite Day. The juxtaposition of how well the Grizzlies played in the first game versus their very unfortunate play during the second game was striking enough to be scary. 

If Thursday night’s game made you excited for the future of the franchise, then Friday night’s game was a very humbling reminder of how far this young Grizzlies team still needs to grow. 

Memphis scored just 54 paint points, and continued to struggle from beyond the arc, finishing just 9 of 28 for the night. It would be safe to say that the Grizzlies just plain struggled during this second game. The Grizzlies are the best paint scoring team in the league. Why they don’t drive the basket more is a mystery to me.

Kyle Anderson had 12 points, 9 rebounds, and tied a career-high with five steals. Jonas Valanciunas provided 22 points and 11 rebounds, and Ja Morant finished with 20 points. However, it was not enough to lead the Grizzlies to a second victory in as many days. 

 

Out-rebounded, out-blocked, outshot. 

The Clippers dominated the Grizzlies in several key areas – rebounding (47 to 37), assists (34 to 24) and blocks (8 to 4). And it isn’t as though Memphis did not have ample opportunity to improve their chances of winning. They quite literally threw away their shots. The Clippers shot 44 of 80 in overall field goals, while the Grizzlies shot a ghastly 39 of 97 for the night.


Losing by 20, after having nearly 20 more shot attempts is such a Grizzlies thing to do.  

With this victory over Memphis, the Clippers are now 6-0 in games played on the second night of a consecutive game stretch. These teams will meet again once more on the Clippers home court in the second half of the 2020-21 season.

Who Got Next?

The Grizzlies go back on the road, where they will face off against the Houston Rockets on Sunday night. Tip-off is at 7 pm CST.  

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Amid Re-shuffling of Vaccine Policy, Harris Keeps Stiff Upper Lip

Harris on Zoom call with Commission

“I don’t think there’s a lot of time right now to do a lot of navel-gazing. We need to keep on plowing here and moving forward.” That was Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris’ way, at a Friday afternoon press conference, of summing up what had to have been one of the most harrowing weeks that any public figure has endured of late.

During the past week, 1) a 100-year snow caused a water crisis and immobilized his and other local jurisdictions, which found themselves locked down, not by government mandate, but by Mother Nature; 2) a county vaccine-distribution program, already regarded as problematic, was halted by state edict (not without some subtle shaming by state authorities) and turned over to the city of Memphis and other local agencies, public and private; 3) the director of the county Health Department, Alisa Haushalter, resigned amid a widening scandal related to a state investigation revealing the spoiling locally of 2,500 unused vaccine doses.

Prior to the press conference, Harris had spent a visibly uncomfortable two hours sitting Buddha-like in a special called meeting of the Shelby County Commission, whose members took turns grilling him on the import and details of the vaccine debacle. There was concern among some commissioners about an alleged “power struggle” between city and county. Commissioner Van Turner rejected what he saw as a misleading sub-text here and there questioning the mayor’s performance.

There was little brand-new information adduced in the dialogue with the commission, aside from the revelation of the Haushalter departure, which had leaked out earlier Friday, and references to “suspicious activity” and alleged theft of vaccine from the Pipkin/Fairgrounds vaccine-distribution site that had stirred law enforcement inquiries at the site. Going forward, Pipkin will be operated by the  by the city of Memphis, in tandem with UT Health Sciences.

In the later press conference, Harris revisited some of the content of the commision meeting. In his Zoom talk with reporters, he shouldered the potentially humiliating loss of surrendering responsibility for vaccine storage. He accepted it in the spirit of “it-is-what-it-is” and vowed to seek “a new working relationship and a clean slate” working in harness with the state, the city, and the other agencies charged now with distribution of vaccines and administration of vaccinations.

Harris vowed to “put forth the best practices” and said he was having “departments engaged in remediation planning” and ”moving their focus away from vaccine administration.” He said he was having daily conversations with Lisa Piercey, director of the state Health Department of Health, who on Monday publicly terminated the county Health Department’s responsibility for storage and allocation of vaccine supplies.

Harris was diplomatic about how it came to pass that Haushalter resigned. “We had been in conversation about the path forward and the appropriate path forward at this juncture, based on what had happened and based on what Director Haushalter wants to do. … I agreed with her decision to resign. So I prefer to, you know, try to treat all our employees with respect and dignity, and particularly because all of our employees devoted their careers to service or community helping. So the decision was ultimately made, that she was resigning, and I accepted that resignation.”

Haushalter, who did not attend either the commission meeting or the press conference, will cease her duties as of March 15th, but will evidently remain on the county’s human resources roster until March 31st. Haushalter had been appointed to her directorship by former county Mayor Mark Luttrell and was inherited by Harris when he began his mayoralty in 2018.

Said Harris: “All of us are learning about the wasted dosage, that there were doses expiring in the pharmacy, and so forth. And so we’re gonna have to work hard to rebuild trust. … I’ve talked about making sure that we change out some of those personnel that have responsibility for management.” As for replacing Haushalter, “We’ll go through a process of trying to identify a really incredible candidate for this time. I mean, this is a very unique time that I don’t think any of us have seen in our lifetime. Our public health employees are burning the candle at both ends. … They’ve been working extremely hard. And I think we have an opportunity here to get someone who is poised for this moment.”

Asked about his ability to interface positively with others, Harris said, “I have a good relationship with at least the executive branch of the city. And with respect to … other folks in town, with respect to the commission, a great working relationship with them. I think this is just a challenging period for everyone, particularly, you know, all of us on the Joint Task Force. You know, we’re all exhausted, because of the pandemic. We’re all frustrated. We all want things faster. We all want more quickly, we all want to be better. But I think on the whole, given where we are on such a tough road ahead. I’m pretty blessed.”

Harris’ determination to discover silver linings extended to one of the revelations from the state investigation that resulted in this week’s reordering of responsibilities — the fact of 50,000 unused vaccine doses in Shelby County. This extra inventory, he noted, happened to be the solution to the mounting determination in various quarters to reopen the schools and simultaneously to vaccinate Shelby County’s teachers.

“That was always the plan.” And, Harris said, it began to seem like it was a possibility during the snowstorm, around February, when we started saying, ‘Okay, we’re going to reopen!’”

Harris concluded his press availability with a promise to be forthcoming with the public henceforward. “So please,bear with me, okay?”

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News News Blog

Health Department: Police Said Not Enough Evidence to Report Vaccine Theft

Tero Vesalainen | Dreamstime

The Shelby County Health Department (SCHD) said a law enforcement official said there was insufficient information to report theft in the incident allegedly involving stolen COVID-19 vaccines earlier this month.

Tennessee Department of Health (TDH) officials said Friday morning that a volunteer at the Pipkin Building vaccine site stole syringes filled with the COVID-19 drug. That announcement comes in the wake of broader accusations by the state that the health department is mishandling the vaccine rollout.

The SCHD released this statement about the theft Friday afternoon:    

“Our understanding is that in the beginning of February, a site supervisor received information that a volunteer might have engaged in suspicious behavior. Although there were no witnesses to a theft, other staff were suspicious of the volunteer, who is a medical professional.

“The Shelby County Health Department removed the volunteer from the premises and the site supervisor contacted law enforcement regarding the incident. Law enforcement concluded that there was insufficient information to file a report of any theft or unlawful conduct.”

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Memphis Lawyers Hit GOP Effort to Oust Judge Who Expanded Mail-in Voting

Chancellor Lyle

One of the more significant acts of jurisprudence in Tennessee in 2020 was a decision by Nashville chancellor Ellen Hobbs Lyle to strike down barriers in state law to mail-in voting.

Ruling last June on suits brought by a group of Memphis petitioners and the ACLU, Lyle declared she was suspending, for the duration of the pandemic, restrictions on absentee-voting for all eligible Tennessee voters.

In so doing, she rejected arguments from Tennessee Secretary of State officials that expanding mail-in voting on that scale would overwhelm state election offices and that fear of COVID-19 was not sufficient grounds for avoiding in-person voting.

The state dragged its heels on complying and appealed, resulting in new orders from Lyle, followed by a hearing by the state Supreme Court, which by a one-vote margin vacated part of Lyle’s ruling but allowed a right to vote absentee due to “underlying medical conditions” that could be affected by COVID.

Now Republican members of the state House of Representatives are trying to get Judge Lyle removed for her efforts. A House ouster resolution, sponsored by 64 Republican members, maintains that Lyle “committed serious ethical violations and abused her authority by pursuing a personal and partisan agenda” in substituting her judgment for the restrictions on eligibility to vote absentee embedded in state law.

The resolution would create a 10-member committee, composed of five members each from the House and Senate, to make recommendations regarding Lyle’s status. Should the group recommend removal, a two-thirds vote in both chambers to do so would result in Lyle’s ouster from the bench.

Reaction came Friday from University of Memphis law professor Steve Mulroy, who argued the case for mail-in expansion last year before both Lyle and the state Supreme Court on behalf of the Memphis petitioners, members of Up the Vote 901. Said Mulroy: “Judge Lyle’s rulings were thoroughly based on the law and the factual record. The election relief she ordered was consistent with how almost every state reacted to the pandemic.

“The Tennessee Supreme Court ended up directing the state to do the bulk of that relief. Nothing she did was remotely ‘unethical,’ or approached the legal ‘for cause’ standard of misconduct required under the law for removal.

“If the legislature can remove a judge every time they don’t like a single decision, you can kiss judicial independence goodbye.”

Memphis lawyer Jake Brown, who also represented Up the Vote 901, added: “Chancellor Lyle is a dispassionate, serious-minded jurist. An attack on her is an attack on competence and the very notion of an independent judiciary. The language of this resolution is sophomoric in tone and plainly partisan in purpose.

“The Chancellor’s opinions in the absentee-ballot case were reserved and closely reasoned. Therefore, the only persons guilty of ethical violations here would be any members of the state bar who are also legislators that sign on to this frivolous pronouncement. “

No Tennessee state judge has been removed from office by the General Assembly since Chancellor David Lanier of Dyersburg was ousted after his conviction on seven federal charges of sexual assault in 1993.

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News News Blog

Local CodeCrew Students Win National Awards

CodeCrew, a local nonprofit that works to empower children and adults to be tech innovators and leaders, announced that several of their students were accepted into the TED-Ed Student Talks Program and placed first in Tennessee’s Congressional App Challenge.

Johnathan Sherrill and Jayda Murray were accepted into the TED-Ed Student Talks Program as well as the Raising Good Gamer program. TED-Ed and Raising Good Gamers recently partnered to gain insights from young people on video game culture and how the medium can be used for change.

Johnathan and Jayda are two of only 30 high school students worldwide to be selected for the TED-Ed student talks program. The program will culminate with the opportunity for five of the 30 students to receive support from TED-Ed coaches for a speaking engagement at the 2021 Games for Change Festival, which will take place July 12th-14th.

Jayda Murray

Johnathan, Jayda, and her sister, Anaya, also placed first in Tennessee’s Congressional App Challenge. The Congressional App Challenge is for middle school and high school students, encouraging them to learn to code and inspiring them to pursue careers in computer science.

Johnathan Sherrill

Johnathan, Jayda, and Anaya won with their app. Walk In My Shoes: Raising Awareness and Change, was created as a way to allow others to go through a day in the life of a middle-class Black man and show the impact of micro-aggressions and racism from a first-person view. Their app and the other winners’ apps will be displayed in the Capitol building and be featured on the House of Representatives’ website. The winning students are also invited to the House of Code Capitol Hill Reception in Washington, D.C.

The CodeCrew team received both local and regional praise for their accomplishments. Meka Egwuekwe, executive director for CodeCrew, said, “We are so proud of all Johnathan, Jayda, and Anaya have accomplished and learned while with CodeCrew.” U.S. Representative Steve Cohen also extended words of congratulations, writing “I admire your efforts to help others understand the experiences and struggles of their fellow Americans in a time when compassion and understanding is critically important … I look forward to seeing where the future takes you.”

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News News Blog

Bills Filed in State Legislature in Response to Byhalia Pipeline

Center for Applied Earth Science and Engineering Research (CAESER), University of Memphis

Two bills have been filed in the Tennessee General Assembly in response to the Byhalia Connection pipeline project on water protection and eminent domain.

Both bills were filed by state Sen. Raumesh Akbari (D-Memphis). One, she said, will protect the health of the Memphis Sand Aquifer. The bill will “empower local leaders to conserve the underground water supply by requiring more comprehensive environmental studies prior to approving large utility projects. It would also enhance monitoring for the health of the aquifer and water usage,” Akbari said.

As it is written now, the bill would require a report to government leaders from a person who withdraws 10,000 or more gallons of water per day in an emergency situation.

“No matter where you live, we want our families to have clean drinking water and, right now, Memphis has one of the best public water supplies in the nation thanks to the Memphis Sand Aquifer,” Akbari said in a statement. “But even though this is one of the most valuable natural resources on the planet, there are almost no ironclad protections that ensure that the aquifer will be healthy for generations to come.”

Akbari filed another bill that would “reform the eminent domain laws that private corporations sometimes utilize to acquire private property.”

Center for Applied Earth Science and Engineering Research (CAESER), University of Memphis

As that bill now reads, it would require “property taken by eminent domain be valued at 130 percent of the fair market value and require compensation for depreciation of property on which an easement is taken by eminent domain.”

“Homeowners don’t have the resources to fight a court battle with a giant company so the law should give small property owners stronger legal footing to protect their investments,” Akbari said.

Akbari said she will also urge the Biden Adminstration to reform the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ permit process used by Byhalia Connection for the pipeline. A statement from Tennessee Senate Democrats Friday said while the company followed all laws and got the right permits, ”some families still think the process has unfolded too fast and that an unforeseen event could cause crude oil to seep into the aquifer and taint Memphis’ supply of fresh drinking water.”

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News News Blog

Weekly Virus Average Rises For First Time In Six Weeks

COVID-19 Memphis
Infogram

Weekly Virus Average Rises For First Time In Six Weeks

New virus case numbers rose by 199 over the last 24 hours. The new cases put the total of all positive cases in Shelby County since March 2020 at 87,648.

Total current active cases of the virus — the number of people known to have COVID-19 in the county — fell to 1,296, the lowest the figure has been since September. The number reached a record high of more than 8,000 in late December and only rose above 2,000 in October. The new active case count represents 1.5 percent of all cases of the virus reported here since March.

As of Monday in Shelby County, 119,838 COVID-19 vaccine doses had been given. As of Thursday morning, 36,581 people had been given two doses for full vaccination, and 83,257 had been given a single dose.

The Shelby County Health Department reported that 3,614 tests were given in the last 24 hours. Since March, 2020, 1,016,232 tests have been given. This figure includes multiple tests given to some people.

The latest weekly positivity rate rose for the first time six weeks. The average number of positive cases for the week of February 14th was 7 percent. That’s up slightly from the 6.4 percent of average cases recorded the week before. It’s all down from the record-high 17.5 percent in late December.

Five new deaths were reported over the last 24 hours. The total death toll now stands at 1,484.

The average age of those who have died in Shelby County is 74, according to the health department. The age of the youngest COVID-19 death was 13. The oldest person to die from the virus was 103.

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News News Blog

Chalkbeat Shows How Many Children Returning to Memphis Schools

Laura Faith Kebede / Chalkbeat

Amy Reckard teaches online in her classroom at Brewster Elementary in early January. Elementary students are more likely to return to classrooms starting next week, according to district data.

Following national trends, Memphis elementary students are more likely to return to classrooms than middle and high schoolers, according to data the district recently released.

The school-by-school breakdown provides parents and others insight into how many students will be returning to school buildings.

About 38 percent of elementary school students in Shelby County Schools are expected to head back when the district’s buildings start reopening Monday. About 29 percent of middle schoolers and 24 percent of high schoolers are expected to return March 8th.

Ten of the district’s 140 schools have more than half of students returning to buildings, according to the new details from a parent survey first released in December. All but one serve elementary students.

Shelby County Schools officials did not provide racial demographic data of students based on the type of instruction their parents chose.

Superintendent Joris Ray said that all students will continue learning through live video conferencing so parents feel their children are being instructed equally. Overall, 32 percent of students are expected to attend online classes from a classroom, while the remaining students will take online classes from remote locations, based on the district’s parent survey.

Although younger students have had a harder time keeping up with online classes from home, some parents don’t believe it’s worth their time to send their children to classrooms if they’ll still be learning through a laptop or tablet. Other parents say they don’t trust the district will keep buildings clean or that students will have enough soap, hot water, and paper towels to keep their hands clean based on past experiences. District officials said soap and paper towels will be restocked every day, rather than when they run empty.

Charter schools in the district can make their own reopening plans and most networks are offering in-person instruction or plan to soon.

The school-by-school breakdown below is current as of mid-December when district officials released the parent survey results. Though parents can change their choice ahead of reopenings March 1st and 8th, the totals have not changed drastically, a district spokeswoman said.

Chalkbeat Shows How Many Children Returning to Memphis Schools

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News News Blog

Cockfighting Bust Brings Space “Crisis” to Memphis Animal Services

Memphis Animal Services/Facebook

A Memphis Animal Services Facebook video shows dozens of chicken cages seized in a cockfighting arrest.

A Memphis cockfighting arrest has brought “a crisis of space and resources” to Memphis Animal Services (MAS).

In a Friday Facebook post, MAS officials said one of its officers recognized signs of a cockfighting operation recently. MAS brought in the Memphis Police Department (MPD) to investigate.

According to Fox 13 News, MPD arrested Hector Espino Martinez on Elliston Road Thursday night. Police charged him with aggravated cruelty to animals, cockfighting, and cruelty to animals.

MAS said the bust brought in 174 birds, 11 dogs, and a cat — a total of 185 animals — through its doors. MAS could not offer any further details of the incident as its an ongoing police investigation.

Cockfighting Bust Brings Space ‘Crisis’ to Memphis Animal Services

The animal shelter could not speculate on what will happen with the chickens, noting the determination will made by veterinarians and courts. But it has reached out to state and national agencies for placement assistance.

The main thing we need you to know is that this large, unusual intake has created a crisis of space and resources at the shelter,” reads the post. “The chickens are currently being housed in both cat and dog areas that have been emptied for them. The best way people can help us offset the demands of this intake is to foster and adopt large adult dogs.”

Click here for more information on fostering dogs from MAS.

The cockfighting bust comes as a state legislator is pushing legislation in the Tennessee General Assembly this year to make cockfighting a felony in Tennessee. That bill is supported by the nonprofit Animal Wellness Action (AWA).

“We applaud the Memphis police for their seizure of 100 gamecocks and arrest of Hector Espino Martinez and hope this sends a strong signal to cockfighters that this cruelty will not be tolerated in the Volunteer State,” AWA executive director Marty Irby said. “Cockfighting activities breed diseases such as avian influenza and New Castle Disease that have cost the American taxpayer billions of dollars and could be the next COVID-19-type pandemic if they jump the species barrier.”