The Memphis Grizzlies are back in the playoffs for the first time since 2017. Marc Gasol won’t be present, Zach Randolph has officially retired, Tony Allen hasn’t played in a long time, and Mike Conley will be suiting up for Memphis’ first-round opponent, the Utah Jazz. A 21-year old second-year guard is the leader on this team, and he showed up in one of the biggest games of his young career.
That’s right, Ja Morant put on a show and sealed the victory in OT of the NBA’s play-in elimination game against the Golden State Warriors, 117-112.
After defeating the Spurs on Wednesday, Morant said the team planned to pack for a three-game road trip having confidence his team would make the playoffs. Those were bold words and he backed it up in an emphatic way.
Morant showed poise from the start, and the young star isn’t afraid to play against any team. He put on another breakout performance like he did in last season’s play-in tournament elimination game against the Portland Trailblazers. The Murray State alum finished with a team-high 35 points, six rebounds, six assists to go along with four steals in 45 minutes of play. Morant also connected on a career-high 5 of 10 from the three-point line.
Morant and company heard the noise that most thought the team had absolutely no chance to upset the Warriors inside the Chase Center. The team proved the NBA world wrong again by eliminating both the San Antonio Spurs and the Golden State Warriors in the second season of a team rebuild.
Morant spoke to ESPN’s Rachel Nichols after the game.
The real Grizzlies bench showed up and showed out.
Earlier on Friday, I stated in a play-in preview, “Simply put, Memphis cannot and will not win this game if there’s not a good performance from its bench.” And the bench players came up huge after being outworked in the past two games against the Warriors last Sunday and the Spurs on Wednesday.
The second unit had 40 points behind Grayson Allen, Xavier Tillman Sr., and Desmond Bane. With that performance, the Grizzlies bench proved why they were a top-10 bench in the league during the regular season.
In 25 minutes, Allen finished with 12 points, four rebounds, and four steals plus some big three-point shots during the overtime period. Allen went 4 of 5 from beyond the arc.
Tillman played 23 minutes and chipped in 11 points, seven rebounds, and three steals. Tillman was huge for Memphis on both ends of the floor and was one of the reasons for the win. The rookie put on a great performance before a national audience after Jonas Valanciunas fouled out and Jaren Jackson Jr. was on the bench.
Rookie Desmond Bane played the most minutes of the second unit at 29; he added 10 points, four rebounds, and two assists. When most of the bench was struggling, Bane had the trust of the coaching staff to be on the court with the starters.
Analysis
This truly is a remarkable story for the Memphis Grizzlies to make the playoffs in the second year of a rebuild after defying all the odds and overachieving with the deck stacked against them.
Memphis should be proud of this team’s resilience and poise.
Up Next
The Grizzlies will take on Conley and the Utah Jazz in the first round of the Western Conference Quarterfinals in the NBA Playoffs. Here is the schedule:
Note: All times are Central.
Game 1: Sunday, May 23 | Grizzlies at Jazz, 8:30 p.m on TNT
Game 2: Wednesday, May 26 | Grizzlies at Jazz, 9 p.m on TNT
Game 3: Saturday, May 29 | Jazz at Grizzlies, 8:30 p.m. on ESPN
Game 4: Monday, May 31 | Jazz at Grizzlies, 8:30 p.m on TNT
Game 5: Wednesday, June 2 | Grizzlies at Jazz, TBD (if necessary)
Game 6: Friday, June 4 | Jazz at Grizzlies, TBD (if necessary)
Game 7: Sunday, June 6 | Grizzlies at Jazz, TBD (if necessary)
For some 45 years, the Pink Palace was known to locals as that singular museum of nature, science, and history. It picked up other similar missions in the region and evolved into the Pink Palace Family of Museums.
Now, it’s MoSH. That stands for Memphis Museum of Science & History, a name change and rebranding that has been percolating for 16 months.
Kevin Thompson, executive director of MoSH, announced the change today, saying that although many locals were familiar with the attraction, it was still having something of an identity crisis.
“For too long, visitors to Memphis have not known what the Pink Palace is or associated our properties together. Even many Memphians do not realize the Pink Palace, Lichterman Nature Center, Mallory-Neely House, Magevney House, and Coon Creek Science Center are all managed by one entity,” he said in a statement.
The “umbrella brand will enable us to unite our holdings and expand throughout our region,” he said.
If you’d been watching closely, you might have seen the change coming. The rebranding began in November, 2019, taking it slow and easy. “We were very sensitive to how the public would perceive changing the name, so we took a transitional approach to rebranding using the interim name Museum of Science & History — Pink Palace which has been in place since February 2020,” said Bill Walsh, marketing manager for MoSH.
If you want to insist on using the Pink Palace moniker, they’re OK with that. “There’s nothing wrong with calling us the Pink Palace,” Thompson said. “We plan to keep the name as a locator to direct you to the right place.”
Federal officials seized 42 rare Mexican box turtles recently in the three shipments passing from Central America to Asia through the Memphis Port of Entry.
Since their seizure, the turtles have been cared for at the Memphis Zoo. Two of the turtles died from the strain of shipping and one laid a viable egg, zoo officials said Friday.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents became suspicious of a large cardboard box labeled “gifts” on March 24th. Those agents called in a wildlife inspector from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for physical inspections of the live animals and identified them as Mexican box turtles.
The box contained baby formula cans lined with aluminum foil. Inside the cans were white athletic socks, and inside those were the turtles, each wrapped in duct tape. The first shipment of 20 turtles was bound for Asia, officials said.
On April 2nd, agents seized a box described as “spare parts for hydraulic pumps” in shipping documents. Inside, they found 16 turtles wrapped in socks and duct tape and hidden in four coffee cans. The cans were sealed but had holes poked in the top for ventilation.
On April 20th, another box labeled “spare parts for sewing machines” was seized. Inside, agents found more turtles wrapped in duct tape, stuffed into socks, and shoved inside ventilated baby formula cans.
”When they arrived, they were dehydrated and underweight from the holding and shipping conditions,” said Chris Baker, assistant curator of the Memphis Zoo. “Once they conclude treatment and become stable, they will be distributed to [Association of Zoos and Aquariums] partner zoos with expertise in caring for the species.”
Officials said the smugglers purposely poached breeding male and female turtles. Some of the females were carrying eggs. One female dropped an egg in transit due to the “stressful and inhumane way they were smuggled.” That egg could not be saved. But Memphis Zoo is currently caring for another egg.
Mexican box turtles are found only in eastern Mexico in the states of San Luis Potosí, Tamaulipas, and Veracruz. Roadways there present dangers to the turtles and illegal collection.
Exporting the species is banned and officials said “their presence in the legal pet trade is next to non-existent.” The turtles “are defined as species that may become threatened with extinction without international trade controls,” according to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).
The surviving 40 turtles will remain at Memphis Zoo for now. (Credit: Memphis Zoo)
Officials said they weren’t sure where the smugglers caught the turtles, so they cannot be returned to their original homes. For now, the 40 remaining turtles will stay at the Memphis Zoo.
No prosecutions were made in this case, but officials announced the seizure to send “a message to criminals that their business is not welcome here.”
“Wildlife trafficking is a serious crime that impacts imperiled species across the world,” said Edward Grace, assistant director for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Office of Law Enforcement. “In this case, rare turtles were illegally smuggled into the U.S. The inhumane conditions in which they arrived shines a light on the dark and tragic world of the illegal wildlife trade.”
Michael Graber with daughter Rowan Gratz & grandson Ellery with Graber Gryass (Photo courtesy Michael Graber)
It was a year ago to the day that I first heard the words “Spaceman’s Wonderbox.” I was speaking with songwriter and musician Michael Graber, and he intimated that such a box had been created, using bits of twine, corn stalks and rusty hinges discovered during a barn dance. But mere words couldn’t quite convey what was in the box.
Come tomorrow night, the box will be opened for all to see. Indeed, the event will be a bit of a barn dance in its own right, although it won’t happen in a barn, but a lodge. Black Lodge, to be exact. The brilliantly curated video rental shop on Cleveland Street will open its doors to live performance for the first time since lockdown went into effect last year, with three bands, culminating in a performance by Graber’s venturesome bluegrass/Americana group, Graber Gryass.
It all begins on May 22 with Ben Abney and the Hurts at 7:15 p.m., followed by the beloved Tennessee Screamers, no strangers to bluegrass and harmony singing themselves. And then, finally, in real time, the box will be opened.
Okay, to be fair, there may be no literal box. Because Spaceman’s Wonderbox is more of a state of mind. More than just the title of Graber Gryass’ new album, released today, it’s also the concept that ties the album together, and helps to distinguish it from the group’s previous album, Late Bloom.
That 2020 release was called “An impressive album … an absolutely entertaining experience … fully fueled grassicana, riveting and robust” by Bluegrass Today, and favored a more traditional approach. But while recording it in the throes of quarantine life, the band went to seed a bit. They “cut gravity’s string,” to quote one lyric from the new album’s lead track, and their imaginations became slightly unmoored.
The result is a box that’s full of surprises and left turns. “We planted ourselves within bluegrass tradition with our first record,” says Graber, “with the intention of branching out and pushing boundaries on our second.” A year ago, he referred to it as “shamanic spoken word and ecstatic love poetry,” and so it is, but there are still plenty of traditional arrangements to ground the proceedings.
The album’s opener, with all its abstract musings about what keeps us earthbound, adheres to a fairly familiar song structure. So does the next cut, “It Was Always You,” a mystical, generational ode sweetly sung by Graber’s adult daughter, Rowan Gratz.
Many tracks hew close to these traditional vines, combining ancient forms with more free-ranging lyrics, much in the style of the Incredible String Band. Other tracks become more unhinged. But let’s let that be a surprise. Venture out as the Spaceman does. Go out to see and hear the box revealed, tomorrow night at the Black Lodge.
The McCoy Theatre (Photo: Courtesy Rhodes College)
On May 17th, Rhodes College announced its plans to phase out its theater major. Katherine Bassard, provost and vice president of academic affairs, wrote in an email to the student body and alumni that “interest in the theater major has dropped significantly over the last several years.” The college has offered to place tenured and tenure-track faculty members in other academic departments or programs, and in the upcoming years, it plans to offer curricular and co-curricular opportunities in the performing arts, in lieu of a theater major.
But many mourn the loss of the department that has earned numerous Ostrander Awards. “The McCoy Theatre is a special place to many,” says Katie Marburger, who graduated in 2014 with a bachelor’s in theater. Marburger heard the news before Rhodes announced its decision to the public, and she started a Facebook group called Save the McCoy Theatre. “I couldn’t stand back,” she says. “If I could do something, I was going to try.” Her plan is to organize a letter-writing campaign to express why the theater department is necessary not only for theater majors and minors, but also for the college as a whole. “The decision doesn’t just affect majors and minors; it affects non-majors. And it’s not just about the Rhodes theater community; it’s about the Memphis community.”
Within a few days, the group has accrued nearly 500 members, including current students, alumni, and friends of the McCoy Theatre, all of whom express a deep sadness about the news. “There are a lot of people who wouldn’t have come to Rhodes if there was no theater department,” Marburger says, “not just people who intended to major in theater like myself, but also people who wanted to major in something else and still participate in theater.”
In fact, rising senior Annalee McConnell intended to major in English and pursue theater as an extracurricular when she came to Rhodes. “Since I did theater in high school, but was not sure if I wanted to major, I loved the fact that the Rhodes theater department was accessible to non-majors,” she says. But after becoming involved in the department her first year, she decided to double major in English and theater. “I felt so supported by the theater professors and staff and knew I wanted to learn as much as I could from them before graduating,” she says.
A week before Rhodes announced its plans to phase out the department, McConnell met with administration to create an individualized plan to ensure that she could complete her major. She says that she appreciates the personal and sympathetic support she’s received from the school, but she is still crushed and surprised by the news.
This most recent semester, McConnell participated in a theater class which culminated in a research project called “Proposals for the Future of Our Theatre.” “To spend so much time researching shows and planning for future seasons at the McCoy just to learn that the program was dissolving not even a week after our presentation left me feeling very discouraged,” she says, “especially since it seemed like the voices of those of us in the department were not being heard.”
Olivia Fox ’21 and Alex Forbes ’23 in Hand of God, directed by Juliet Mace ’20 (photo courtesy Olivia Fox)
Likewise, rising junior Eliana Mabe says that she feels unsupported as a student. “From a student’s perspective,” she says, “it does not feel like they have been clear and direct and willing to help.” Mabe is uncertain whether she will be able to finish her major, since Rhodes will stop offering theater classes after this fall; at this point, she has been told that she will only be able to minor in theater. “Before this decision, I was on the track to be a B.S. in biochemistry and a B.A. in theater, which is the prime example of the beauty of a liberal arts education.”
Upon enrollment at Rhodes, Mabe had planned on pursuing the sciences, but after becoming involved in the theater department, she now plans to attend graduate school for playwriting. In fact, her plays have already been featured in local festivals, and when she’s in those settings, she says, “I feel like I’m an ambassador for Rhodes.” But with Rhodes’ recent decision, she now hesitates to take the same pride in Rhodes at those events as she did before, and she now says, “I feel like I’ve been ill-prepared for graduate school.” She’s reached out to administration about her concerns but has yet to hear back from anyone since her first meeting when she found out about the decision. “I feel very privileged to be able to attend a college like Rhodes, and I want to continue reaping the benefits it has to offer,” Mabe says, “but I need the support of my peers, past alumni, and faculty to continue pursuing my future playwriting career.”
Mabe continues, “This choice [to eliminate the theater department] is perpetuating the stereotype that theater isn’t real work, that it’s just an extracurricular, that it doesn’t deserve to be seen in academic light, which it does.”
“Theater is not just about acting or putting on shows; it’s about fueling empathy, human connection, and creative innovation,” McConnell says. “My time in the Rhodes theater department has shown me all of these nuances and more and in the process has made me a more well-rounded and confident person both socially and professionally.”
Similarly, Marburger points to the theater department as being instrumental in developing her critical-thinking, analytical, and problem-solving skills as well as her ability to have a dialogue with anyone she meets. “[Theater is] about storytelling and exploring humanity, being able to ask questions,” she says.
Mabe agrees, saying that through the theater department, she has learned that storytelling is an everyday experience. “Sometimes to understand a concept in my biochemistry classes, I have to create a story,” she says, “and that’s an innate human thing.”
“As one of my professors Dr. Dave Mason once said in class, everyone is performing every day of their lives,” she continues, “and when he said that, it really changed my perspective on moving forward as a genuine, good person. As you go through different experiences, how you behave and how you go forth to make good in this world all boils down to this idea of performance, and failing to include that [lesson in Rhodes’ curriculum] is not only a wrong-doing to the mission of the college but is also an error and a flaw that future students didn’t ask for.”
Olivia Fox ’21 (photo courtesy Olivia Fox)
Additionally, as recently-graduated theater major Olivia Fox points out, “Rhodes has always been a supplier of vital community members in the Memphis theater scene. Within the past five years that I have witnessed, there have been prominent actors and directors who have graduated from Rhodes and stayed in Memphis because of the connections they made here.” She also says that the McCoy Theatre has participated in multiple outreach programs in collaboration with places like Central High School and Crosstown Arts. “Since there are no more theater classes,” she says, “these programs will [likely] no longer happen.” It’s also unclear what will happen to student workers in the theater department — whether they will be placed in another department or whether they will lose their position as a student worker altogether.
Despite their disappointment, McConnell and Mabe, as president and vice-president of the Rhodes Theatre Guild, have hope that their student-run organization can “[uphold] the legacy of performing arts that the McCoy Theatre has expertly built over the years,” McConnell says. Since 2016, the group has provided supplementary theatrical opportunities, often student-written and student-directed, without the financial support of the academic department, but members could still go to professors for advice and guidance and utilize the departmental supplies and workers for building sets and making costumes. However, now that the organization will be providing the only theatrical opportunities without the support of an academic department, the productions will likely face limitations in the creative process and execution, especially in student-led shows since, as McConnell says, “none of us have the same experience or training of professionals.”
Bassard, in her email, wrote that Rhodes is “working to create an environment where our students have access to rich theater and performing arts experiences on campus and in the Memphis community,” but at the moment, it is reimagining and identifying what this may look like going forward. Even with this statement, many students, alumni, and supporters of the McCoy are worried about the future of the performing arts at the college.
“It’s kind of an open-ended promise at this point,” Mabe says. “However, the responsibility of trying to find other mentors, of reaching out to the community, of reaching out to alumni — that burden should not be placed on the students.”
Fox, who preceded McConnell as president of the Rhodes Theatre Guild, adds, “On top of this, putting all of the burden on students to now do all of the work themselves with no credits is a lot of pressure. Not to mention without classes, it is expected of the students to teach skills of acting and designing to one another.”
McConnell and Mabe have reached out to the Save the McCoy Theatre group, asking for mentors, directors, designers, or producers to help with future productions. So far, the two have received a plethora of texts and emails from alumni inside and outside of the Memphis area who are willing to offer their support. “These are people who, according to what we’ve been promised, will be paid through Rhodes for their work,” Mabe says.
“With the help of the institution to fund us and provide professional mentors from the community who can supplement the educational loss from not having an academic department,” McConnell adds, “I have high hopes that we will provide a space of education and creative growth for everyone on campus who loves theater.”
Dillon Brooks rises for a dunk against the Spurs. - via Grizzlies Twitter
Growl towels up! Postseason basketball has returned to Memphis for the first time since 2017, and true to form, the Grizzlies kept it interesting against the San Antonio Spurs Wednesday night.
Leading by as many as 21 points in the first quarter, the Grizzlies let off the gas and allowed the Spurs to catch up and keep the score close until the final possession. But ultimately the effort from San Antonio would not be enough to get past this Memphis team. Not even with 20 points put up by one of the ghosts of Grizzlies past, Rudy Gay.
Let’s get into it.
In the battle between the big men, Jakob Poeltl was clearly no match for Jonas Valanciunas. JV spent the night dominating in the post and feasting on the boards. In the battle between the coaches, Taylor Jenkins leading this team to a victory over a team coached by Gregg Popovich speaks volumes.
Another fun fact — the 40 percent capacity for FedExForum made for the most fans to have been in the Grindhouse all season. Nature is healing.
Dillon Brooks led all scorers with 24 points, 7 rebounds, and 3 assists. Brooks has been a tremendous asset to this team all season, and he is quickly shaping up to be one of the best wing defenders in the league. He’s also the kind of player who absolutely does not quit, which has paid off for the Grizzlies.
Jonas Valanciunas had himself a big night, with 23 points and 23 rebounds. Yes, you did read that right. TWENTY-THREE REBOUNDS. JV might be the most underrated player in the league, and it isn’t close. Wherever you are ranking Valanciunas, it is almost certainly too low.
.@JValanciunas is the first player in @memgrizz history to post 20+ points and 20+ rebounds through three quarters in a regular season or postseason game.
Ja Morant had a solid night as well, finishing with 20 points, 6 rebounds, and 6 assists. Morant struggled a bit from the free-throw line, but his drive to improve is obvious. Cue Morant getting shots up from the charity stripe after the game. We see you, 12!
Jaren Jackson Jr. finished the night with 10 points, 4 rebounds, and 4 assists.
Kyle Anderson closed out with 9 points, 6 rebounds, and 4 blocks, including 2 of 2 from beyond the arc. Let’s all take a minute to enjoy this stare-down by Anderson after chasing down and blocking a shot.
The Grizzlies will be heading back to Chase Center Friday, May 21st, to face off against the Golden State Warriors to determine who gets the 8th seed in the West. Tip-off is at 8 p.m.
A day after the Memphis City Council voted with near unanimity to ask a gubernatorial veto of legislation banning the teaching of critical race theory in Tennessee schools, the Shelby County Commission climaxed a spirited committee session on the matter with a similar vote.
The Commission mustered 10 votes with one abstention to seek a veto from Governor Bill Lee of the controversial measure, SB623/HB50, which was passed on the last day of the late legislative session. The Council’s vote on Tuesday had been 11-0 with a single abstention, that of Councilman Worth Morgan.
The Commission’s committee vote was technically a recommendation, and the matter will be voted on again by the body at its regularly scheduled public meeting on Monday.
The Commission is composed of seven black members and six white members, but its members, unlike the Council’s, are elected by partisan vote. The import of that is that, with the exception of Republican member Brandon Morrison, who abstained, the Democrats on the Commission were joined in their opposition to the measure by the Republicans present, members of Lee’s party. Two Republicans, however, Amber Mills and David Bradford, were absent.
A source in Nashville confirmed that the bill has been forwarded to the Governor for his signature but, as of Thursday morning, had not been acted upon.
There was a bit of a see-saw effect in the Commission’s discussion of the measure, with some members, notably Republicans Mark Billingsley and Mick Wright, initially seeking more time to review the legislation but ultimately acquiescing in an immediate vote after Democratic members Van Turner and Tami Sawyer strongly insisted on one.
Faced with a motion to postpone voting, pending such a review, until later in Wednesday’s committee sessions, Sawyer called proposals for a delayed vote “B.S.” and said she would respond by seeking similar delays on routine matters. “If this passes, I’m also going to send for us to delay the vote on the resolution approving notary publics. Every week, when we vote on property, then we’ll need a full copy printed with all of the detail of the properties. … So let’s prepare for a long day. If this objection holds, we’ll be objecting on that. Because right is right. You’ve heard our testimony. [The bill] has been in the news for weeks.”
The most controversial aspect of the bill is in an amendment that prohibits schools’ focusing on “impartial” facts of America’s racial history. As state Senator Brian Kelsey (R-Germantown) had said in enunciating the central point of the amendment, “‘Critical race theory’ holds that the rule of law does not exist but instead is a struggle of power relationships between races and groups.” Similarly, Kelsey had condemned the postulate that American history should be dated from 1619, when slaves were first imported into the continent.
The consensus of Wednesday’s discussion by Commission members was that ignoble facts of racial history in America should be openly and honestly treated, not covered up.
Republican Wright said, toward the close of discussion, “This resolution before us has caused me to take a closer look at the bill. And to the question. And, you know, I think this is probably something that on the face of it, my my constituents would not be happy by joining you today. But I’m going to, because I’ve listened to you. Thank you.”
The American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee (ACLU-TN), which last month successfully sued to obtain a federal court order requiring that the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department provide COVID protective measures to inmates at the county jail, filed a motion late Wednesday asking Judge Sheryl Halle Lipman to compel enforcement of her earlier order.
Announcing its action, ACLU-TN said, “the April 9th agreement was meant to ensure that medically vulnerable people living in the jail are sufficiently protected as long as COVID-19 threatens their health and safety. However, less than a week after the court approved the consent decree, the Sheriff’s Office informed the plaintiffs that they believed the protections negotiated under the settlement had terminated, without demonstrating that people living in the Shelby County Jail are adequately protected from COVID-19.”
Accordingly, the ACLU-TN asked the court to order that the sheriff:
• offer adequate educational materials and non-punitive incentives to increase the vaccination rate in the jail;
• provide sufficient socially-distanced out-of-cell time;
• prioritize and expedite release plans for detainees who can be released, and to increase the availability of pretrial release options
• make an effort to adopt the recommendations of the ventilation expert from this lawsuit
Lindsay Kee, director of strategic communications for ACLU-TN, added, “We also asked the court to clarify that its April 9th order does not terminate until a sufficient vaccine education effort has been made, sufficient and regular opportunities to receive the vaccine have been offered, and vaccines have been fully administered in accordance with CDC guidelines, including all doses and aftercare.”
With live music events popping up all over the place lately, it’s a good time to sit back and see one good thing that emerged from the pandemic: a significant ramping-up of live music online. Not only did clubs like B-Side or Hernando’s Hide-a-way outfit their stages with improved audio and video technology – all the better to stream performances – but the magical media of Goner TV was born. No other online event is as gonzo or madcap as the virtual episodes generated by one of the city’s most beloved stores and labels, Goner Records. They don’t always feature live music, but this week they’re bringing an in-store show from the great Aquarian Blood, who drop a new album in a week’s time. Check them and these other great artists out, and be sure to tip handsomely.
ALL TIMES CDT
Thursday, May 20 8 p.m. Max Kaplan & the Magics — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way Website
(Photo courtesy of Noah Magaro-George of SB Nation)
The Grizzlies finished the regular season 38–34 as the ninth seed in the West and will battle the 10th-seeded San Antonio Spurs – who finished the season at 33-39 – in Game 1 of the Western Conference NBA Play-in Tournament.
Memphis went 2-1 against San Antonio in the 2020-21 season series with the road team winning each game.
In the regular season finale, Memphis fell in a heartbreaker on the road against the Golden State Warriors, 113-101 on Sunday afternoon.
The Grizzlies had won five consecutive games including four at home. However, the Spurs are on a four-game losing streak to end the regular season and have won just two of their last 12 games.
The winner of this matchup will take on the loser of Game 2 of the Western Conference NBA Play-in Tournament later tonight between the Los Angeles Lakers and Golden State Warriors.
So Memphis or San Antonio will have a chance to battle for the final spot in the Western Conference playoffs by taking on the Lakers or the Warriors.
Keys to move forward in the play-in tournament
Ja Morant simply has to play better
The Grizzlies can’t win many games when Morant goes 7-for-21 from the field. After the loss against the Warriors, he called his performance unacceptable.
Morant must be aggressive from the start by attacking the basket and finishing at the rim. He must pick the Spurs defense apart.
This season, teams have found ways to limit him, but he must fight his way through it and be the best version of himself. The team can only go as far as he’s willing to take them. That’s a lot on his young shoulders, but I believe he will be up for the challenge in this do-or-die game.
Feed 17
Use Jonas Valanciunas as an advantage when the threes are not falling.
Valanciunas has been one of the Grizzlies best players this season, averaging career-highs of 17.1 points and 12.5 rebounds. His presence has allowed Memphis to lead the league in points in the paint at 55.8 per game.
In the season finale, Valanciunas finished with 29 points and 16 rebounds. He has to be the catalyst on offense, especially when shots aren’t falling.
The real Grizzlies bench has to show up
The bench has to play better, without question. The second unit performance against the Warriors probably was one of the worst of the season.
The secondaries scored a combined 14 points and couldn’t take advantage while Stephen Curry was on the bench. The Warriors’ Jordan Poole alone outscored the Grizzlies bench with 15 points. The Grizzlies bench averages 39.1 points for the season.
Tyus Jones and company must show up in this elimination game or the Grizzlies will be going fishing with a disappointing end to the season.
The game is set for tip-off inside the FedExForum at 6:30 pm CT and can be viewed exclusively on ESPN.