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Opinion The Last Word

Where Did My Rose-Breasted Grosbeak Go?

“Wow, that is one honking big sparrow,” my wife said, peering out our bedroom window and into the backyard. The bird in question — a mottled, dun-colored songbird — perched on one of our backyard bird feeders, occasionally munching on safflower seeds, and staring into the middle distance in a way that I’m sorely tempted to describe as “uncanny.” It dwarfed the little song sparrows and fox sparrows hopping amid the fallen seeds and shells beneath the feeder.

The next morning, there were more of the birds. 

It wasn’t until the red-throated, black-and-white males of the species showed up that we realized we weren’t being invaded by massive sparrows, but were dealing with a different kind of creature altogether. So, after consulting our handy, dandy Birds of Tennessee Field Guide (Adventure Publications), we realized that our backyard had become a migratory pitstop for rose-breasted grosbeaks, on their way south and west from East Tennessee in early autumn. 

Photo: Brian Kelly | Unsplash

By this time of year, now that our clocks have fallen back an hour, after the leaves aren’t just turning but falling, the grosbeaks have gone. They’re in Central and South America, far from any, ah, shall we say “North American concerns” that may be troubling the rest of us left behind in Memphis. 

This time of year is truly one of change, when the world feels poised on the brink of something, hesitating before the charge into new seasons. Some of those changes are human-made — the grosbeaks, rose-breasted or otherwise, have no use for clocks and time zones and Daylight Saving Time. Their bodies tell them when to fly and where to stop. Elections, though they have far-reaching consequences on the natural world, won’t keep a blue jay or mourning dove up all night, stress-drinking, doom-scrolling, and refreshing a vote count. The raccoons who steal black-oil sunflower seed from my birdfeeders by the fistful are also blissfully ignorant of politics. 

Lucky them, right? 

There is also the headlong holiday rush from Halloween to New Year’s Eve, and though its onset always leaves me anxiously checking and rechecking my bank balance, it also brings the excitement of friend and family reunions, of kids’ surprised smiles. The Pink Palace Crafts Fair and the Corn Maze give way to the Enchanted Forest and Starry Nights. Zoo Boo precedes Zoo Lights. 

Evening shadows lengthen and come sooner, as autumn sunsets yield to lengthening night earlier with each passing day. Fallen leaves crunch underfoot; squirrels scurry from tree to tree, increasingly frantic as winter’s onset draws near. Everything prepares to hunker down for the cold. 

I thought about the grosbeaks — and our other seasonal visitors, in spring and autumn both — as I walked this week. The reminder of the natural world, with its reassuring certainty of cycles of warmth and cold, has been a source of comfort and inspiration both. Those polite birds have yet to overstay their welcome. I never worry about the peaceful transition of power from autumn to winter. (Though winter to spring often feels anything but certain when mid-February rolls around, but that’s a topic for another day.)

It seems telling to me that I have yet to reopen Facebook since November 5, 2024, but I feel called to walking trails, parks, and other public greenspaces. Some inner voice, quiet but persistent, is pushing me toward interactions that nourish the soul. In this time of uncertainty, change, and mind-numbing existential dread, I’m especially thankful for that inclination to step outside, instead of reaching for the junk food dopamine hit of social media. The smell of decomposing leaf litter on an urban forest trail is far more palatable to me right now. 

If, like me, you have rushed toward natural rhythms as a source of comfort, then I can only say that soon we will have to return the favor for Mother Nature. Even the usually staid AP Times sounds downright alarmist on the impending second term of former President Donald Trump, with a new piece by Jennifer McDermott and Matthew Daly warning that the President-elect’s planned rollbacks could be a serious hurdle to green energy measures. So, to everyone else whose comfort place is Overton Park, I say now is our time to shine. We should look to our local leaders, especially those with environmental experience, like Rep. Justin J. Pearson, recently re-elected to District 86. Memphis Community Against Pollution, Protect Our Aquifer — these folks’ fight is about to get harder, and they need our help. 

In the meantime, I’m going to take a walk, crunch some leaves, and touch some damn grass. 

Jesse Davis is a former Flyer staffer; he writes a monthly Books feature for Memphis Magazine. His opinions, such as they are, are his own and not the fault of his overworked editor. 

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Amelia Gene’s Offers New Menu Items

Executive chef Nate Henssler is keeping Amelia Gene’s restaurant as fresh and innovative as the dishes on his menu.

Take the Derenburger cheeseburger, which Henssler added about a month ago to the menu at the restaurant at 255 South Front Street, adjacent to the Caption by Hyatt Beale Street Memphis hotel. The burger, named after their pastry chef Jessi Derenburger, is available only at the bar after 9 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays. It fits in perfectly with Henssler’s concept for Amelia Gene’s, which he describes as “a modern American chef-driven restaurant.”

Henssler, who butchers the meat, uses the “chain,” a piece of meat on the side of the tenderloins used for their prime filet mignon. He also uses the trimmings from their short ribs.

Jessica Henssler, Nate’s wife as well as the restaurant’s general manager, suggested they do a bar burger. “Jessica actually had the idea of doing some kind of a secret bar menu item, to try and drive some business toward the end of the night.”

Since by 9 p.m. they “still get a good amount of bar traffic,” they wondered how to get guests “to enjoy some food while they’re here and utilize some product. So, we took the short ribs and this tenderloin and tinkered with it to make a blend.”

They also tinkered with different cheeses on their cheese cart, but decided to use American cheese on the cheeseburger. In addition to caramelized onions, they “dress the bun with a garlic mayonnaise, spicy pickled yellow peppers, and then it’s served with hand-cut fries.”

The fries are made in-house using twice-cooked potatoes.

Derenburger makes the sesame seed brioche hamburger buns for the cheeseburgers, which sell for $25. “It’s a 10-ounce burger, so it’s substantial.”

They’re not on the menu, so it’s up to the server and the bartender — as well as customers who’ve tried them — to spread the word about the hamburgers. “We make 10 on Friday and 10 on Saturday. And we’re selling out.”

Henssler is also changing his Thursday night five-course tasting menu almost weekly. “We started off in the summertime and it was vegetarian. And dishes changed every week. We started adding some proteins to the menu.”

The price for the Thursday night special has gone from $50 to $60, but, Nate says, “It’s still an incredible deal.”

For an additional $30, diners are served wine that pairs with each course.

“Sometimes the last course is a cocktail,” Henssler adds.

This week’s special will include Nate’s 30-layer lasagna, which includes layers of béchamel as well as Bolognese made with scraps from the tenderloins and short ribs. He probably will include monkfish, which recently was added to the menu and has been very popular.

As for the regular menu, Nate says part of it changes monthly. “We change at least one or two items. As you see a new menu go on, another menu item comes off.”

His Rohan duck dish is one item that hasn’t left the menu since Nate added it. “It’s still one of our four top sellers.”

The crispy duck dish, which Henssler calls “a play on duck à l’orange,” takes five days to produce. As he said in a 2023 Memphis Flyer interview, “The legs we cure in a salt and sugar mix with soy spices. And we cure that for a day, cooking it in its own fat. Confit.”

The dish includes butter, garlic, shallots, and Belgian endive. And, he says, “It’s served with the same sauce we make from the duck bones with orange puree and kumquats preserved in honey.”

On a slow night, they might sell four or five Rohan ducks, Nate says. On a Friday and Saturday night, 20. And, he adds, that dish takes about 45 minutes to prepare from when the order comes in until it gets to the table.

Amelia Gene’s closed for two weeks during a traditionally slow period last August to “save labor and give the staff a chance to have some time off. “I’ve been going seven days a week for a year and a half.”

He and his wife spent about two weeks in Chile on a trip that included Santiago and Patagonia. “We visited some wineries and ate some amazing food.”

And “for sure” he added some Chilean items to the Thursday night five-course menu after they returned, Nate says. Since its not king crab season, he’s waiting for his vendor to get some Chilean king crab. “They’re sourcing it for me right now.”

The Hensslers are currently talking about doing a “pastry cart takeover” of their cheese cart for the holiday season. Also, he says, “We’re getting a lot of requests for whole carrot cake and whole chocolate cakes.”

Since his wife came on as general manager last June, private and semi-private events at Amelia Gene’s are picking up, Nate says. “She is very good at what she does.”

As for a husband and wife working together, Nate says that type of relationship “works best when it’s all about communication. Like a marriage.”

And, he adds, “If something goes wrong, it’s usually my fault.”

Henssler, who grew up in New Hampshire, has worked at top restaurants in Las Vegas and Chicago. He moved to Memphis in 2022. He’s also a managing partner in the Carlisle Restaurant Group. 

Categories
Astrology Fun Stuff

Free Will Astrology: Week of 11/14/24

ARIES (March 21-April 19): You may be on the verge of the breakthrough I prophesied a while back. Remember? I said you would be searching for the solution to a boring problem, and on the way you would discover a more interesting and useful problem. That exact scenario is about to happen. I also predict that the coming weeks will be a time when you tame an out-of-control aspect of your life and infuse more wildness into an overly tame part of you. I will speculate on one further stroke of good fortune: You will attract an influence that motivates you to be more passionately pragmatic about one of your key dreams.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): It’s time for some friendly warnings that will, if heeded, enable you to avoid problematic developments. 1. An overhaul in your self-image is looming; your persona requires tinkering. 2. Old boundaries are shifting and in some places disappearing. Be brave and draw up new boundaries. 3. Familiar allies may be in a state of flux. Help them find their new centers of gravity. 4. Potential future allies will become actual allies if you are bold in engaging them. 5. Be allergic to easy answers and simplistic solutions. Insist on the wisdom of uncertainty.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): To honor and celebrate your melancholy, I’m turning this horoscope over to Gemini author T. H. White and his superb formulation of the redemptive power of sadness. He wrote: “The best thing for being sad is to learn something. That is the only thing that never fails. You may lie awake at night listening to the disorder of your veins, you may miss your only love, you may see the world about you devastated by evil lunatics, or know your honor trampled in the sewers of baser minds. There is only one thing for it then — to learn. Learn why the world wags and what wags it. That is the only thing which the mind can never exhaust, never alienate, never be tortured by, never fear or distrust, and never dream of regretting.”

CANCER (June 21-July 22): A Massachusetts woman named Andrea Martin loves chickens so much she treats them as family. A few years ago, she took pity on one of her favorites, a young bird named Cecily, who had been born with a damaged tendon in one of her legs. Martin arranged to have the limb amputated. Then she made a prosthetic device on a 3D printer and had it surgically grafted onto Cecily’s body. Success! The $2,500 cost was well worth it, she testified. I propose we make Andrea Martin one of your role models for the coming weeks. May she inspire you to take extra good care of and shower bonus blessings on everyone and everything you love. (PS: This will be really good for your own health.)

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Once a year, the city of Seoul in South Korea stages a Space-Out Festival. Participants compete to do absolutely nothing for 90 minutes. They are not allowed to fall asleep, talk, or check their phones. To test how well they are banishing stress, burnout, and worries, their heart rates are monitored. The winner is the person who has the slowest and most stable pulse. If there were an event like this in your part of the world sometime soon, Leo, I’d urge you to join in. I expect the winner would be a member of your astrological tribe, as you Leos now have a high potential for revitalizing relaxation. Even if you don’t compete in a Space-Out Festival, I hope you will fully cash in on this excellent chance to recharge your spiritual batteries.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): My favorite Virgos love to learn. They are eager to add to their knowledge. They have a highly honed curiosity that is always percolating, continually drawing them towards new comprehension. On the other hand, some of my favorite Virgos are inefficient at shedding long-held ideas and information that no longer serve them. As a result, their psyches may get plugged up, interfering with their absorption of fun new input. That’s why I recommend that you Virgos engage in regular purges of your mental debris. Now would be an excellent time for one of these sessions. (PS: The futurist Alvin Toffler said that a key to intelligence is the ability to learn, unlearn, and relearn. I invite you to act on that counsel.)

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): I endorse Libran tennis star Serena Williams’ approach to self-evaluation — especially for you right now. She testified, “I’m really exciting. I smile a lot, I win a lot, and I’m really sexy.” I’m convinced you have the right to talk like that in the coming weeks — so convinced that I suggest you use it as a mantra and prayer. When you wake up each morning, say what Williams said. When you’re asking life for a sweet breakthrough or big favor, remind life why it should give you what you want. Feel free to add other brags, too, like, “I’m a brilliant thinker, a persuasive negotiator, and a crafty communicator.”

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You are entering a phase when you can acquire more mastery in the arts of self-care and self-sufficiency. I hope you will become more skillful in giving yourself everything that nurtures your emotional and physical health. Have you gathered all you need to know about that subject? Probably not. Most of us haven’t. But the coming weeks will be a favorable time to make this your main research project. By the way, now is also an excellent time to kick your own ass and unbreak your own heart.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): My father was a big fan of the military. As a young man, he served as a lieutenant in the army and for a time considered making that job his career. I’m the opposite of him. I keenly avoided becoming a soldier and have always been passionately anti-war. I bring this subject to your attention because I think now is an excellent time for you to get clearer than ever about how you don’t resemble your parents and don’t want to be like them. Meditate on why your life is better and can get even better by not following their paths and ways. There’s no need to do this with anger and blame. In fact, the healthiest approach is to be lucid, calm, and dispassionate.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): At age 49, James Patterson retired from his job as an advertising writer. Until then, he had produced a few novels in his spare time. But once free of his 9-to-5 gig, he began churning out books at a rapid pace. Now, at age 77, he has published over 305 million copies of 200-plus novels, including 67 that have been #1 New York Times bestsellers. Would you like to make an almost equally memorable transition, Capricorn? The coming weeks and months will be an excellent time to plan it and launch it.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): The Breakfast Club was an iconic 1985 film about teenagers coming of age. Critics liked it. At the box office, it earned 100 times more than it cost to make. Aquarian director John Hughes wrote the screenplay for the 97-minute movie in two days, on July 4th and 5th of 1982. I predict that many of you Aquarians will have a similar level of productivity in the coming weeks. You could create lasting improvements and useful goodies in short bursts of intense effort.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Ben & Jerry’s is a wildly successful ice cream maker that sells its products all over the world. Its founders are two Pisceans who met in seventh grade. Over 45 years since they launched their business, they have become renowned for their wide variety of innovative flavors and their political activism. When they first decided to work together, though, their plans were to start a bagel business. They only abandoned that idea when they discovered how expensive the bagel-making equipment was. I suspect that you are near a comparable pivot in your life, Pisces: a time to switch from one decent project to an even better one. 

Categories
News News Blog News Feature

Demolition of ‘Eyesore’ Underway Soon

A multi-million-dollar glow up is underway at the University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center (UTHSC) campus in a plan that includes the $19.4 million demolition of a much-criticized, abandoned hotel on Madison. 

The plan was laid before the UTHSC board in a meeting Friday by Executive Vice Chancellor and Chief Operating Officer Raaj Kurapati. The slate of projects underway at the Medical District school totals more than $100 million, Kurapati said. 

While not the most expensive project on the list, Kurapati said there is one that “everybody gets excited about every time we speak about it.”

“That is the demolition of the eyesore of a building that comes on when we drive on to campus — that’s the Holiday Inn tower and the adjacent buildings,” he said. “We’ve been able to put together some funds to be able to finally say we’re going to move forward with that.”

The buildings are currently under review for hazardous materials. Demolition work is slated to proceed next month, according to a slide shown during the meeting. That work, however, will likely only include readying the site, including things like erecting a fence around its perimeter. The work is expected to be complete by June 2026 at a cost of about $19.4 million.   

UTHSC bought the buildings from the Memphis Bioworks Foundation in 2015 for just around $1.5 million million. The parcels were eyed for purchase by the school as early as 2013, nearly a decade ago. A UTHSC board committee said at the time they were interested in the buildings for “for the control and future use of the land base as anticipated in the UTHSC” master plan. 

The school’s 2020 master plan said UTHSC’s new College of Medicine building will be “located at the southwest corner of Pauline and Madison on the old hotel site.”

UTHSC officials sought a developer in 2015 to transform the existing 12-story building into a hotel and conference center, according to a story at the time from The Daily News. While the school earned the approval to do so, it was apparently unable to find a develop for the project.

The building has been vacant ever since. This has earned the building criticism for years. 

“UT is forever planning on developing that site but I wouldn’t hold my breath,” wrote u/tristanape on Reddit two years ago in a discussion of the building. “My understanding is the cost to knock it down and clear out the asbestos is just too much.”

That is at least partly true, according to Kurapati’s update on the project Monday.

“The reason it took a while is because there’s a lot of remediation work that needed to be done, clearly because it’s a very old building,” he told committee members. “There’s some asbestos, and other building practices, and materials that were used that call for us to be very diligent about making sure that we bring it down in a very safe and responsible manner.”

The most expensive item on the list of upcoming capital projects at UTHSC is a new Gross Anatomy Lab. Renovation work is now underway for the $30 million project on about 35,000 square feet of the school’s General Education Building. 

Gross anatomy is the study of the human body’s structure visible to the naked eye like bones, muscles, and organs. 

Also, expect a new fencing project to commence around UTHSC soon. That project is set to showcase the school in the community and to provide better security for parking lots that have seen some break-ins recently.  

Categories
News News Blog News Feature

Romance Scammers Sentenced to Federal Prison

Four Nigerians were sentenced here to years in federal prison  recently for their parts in a years-long, international romance scam.

Reagan Fondren, Acting U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Tennessee, announced the sentences Tuesday. The group was indicted with conspiracy to commit fraud and money laundering in June 2023. 

Those indicted were: 

• Patrick Edah, 40, a Nigerian citizen residing in the Toronto, Canada area

• Efe Egbowawa, 41, a Nigerian citizen residing in the Atlanta area

• Igocha Mac-Okor, 40, a Nigerian citizen residing in the Atlanta area

• Kay Ozegbe, 44, a naturalized U.S. citizen residing in Atlanta

The group operated the conspiracy from 2017 to 2021. They assumed false identities on social media, gaming applications, dating websites, and other internet-based platforms to trick victims into entering friendships and romantic relationships. They then played various roles in exploiting those connections to convince individuals to send them money via wire, check, U.S. mail, and package delivery services.

Dozens of victims lost amounts ranging from several thousand dollars to several hundred thousand dollars. One victim in West Tennessee lost more than $400,000 to this scheme over the course of several months.

In the conspiracy, romance scammers or “handlers” posed as potential friends or romantic partners and entered online relationships with unwitting victims. The relationships usually developed quickly through social media contact, text messages, email, and phone calls. 

Once the victim was clearly engaged in the scam, the scammer would begin to ask for emergency financial assistance. If the victim sent money, the scammer would ask for increasingly larger amounts of financial assistance.

Edah, Egbowawa, Mac-Okor, and Ozegbe functioned as “money mules” in the conspiracy. They worked in conjunction with other members of the conspiracy to move the financial proceeds of the scams through several layers of bank accounts and shell companies to hide the sources of the money and made it difficult to trace.

For their roles, Egbowawa was sentenced to 60 months in federal prison, Ozegbe was sentenced to 36 months, Edah and Mac-Okor were sentenced to 30 months and 50 months, respectively.

“These individuals used deception and fraud to prey on the vulnerable causing unmeasurable emotional damage and significant financial losses,” said Special Agent in Charge Joe Carrico of the FBI Nashville Field Office, Memphis Resident Agency.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies Dominate in Portland

The Grizzlies kicked off the start of a three-game West Coast road trip in Portland, where they annihilated the Trailblazers. With a final score of 134-89, Memphis heads to Los Angeles on a three-game winning streak.

This young Grizzlies team is no stranger to adversity and injuries, and the next-man-up mentality among the players has been on display. Star point guard Ja Morant is the latest addition to the injured list after suffering a right hip subluxation in last Wednesday’s match against the Lakers. Per Grizzlies PR, Morant’s status is listed as week to week.

The Portland Trailblazers have been, by all metrics, not a good team this season. But every win is a good win, and there is value even in beating a bad team. And the Grizzlies didn’t just beat Portland. They destroyed them.

The Blazers did not do themselves any favors with their abysmal three-point shooting and poor ball handling. They shot 9.5% from beyond the arc, making just four out of 42 attempts.

Memphis played a 12-man rotation, and every one of those players scored at least 3 points. Seven of them finished the night with double-digit scores. Fielding such a large rotation meant that no one played more than 29 minutes.

Turnovers continue to be an area of contention for the Grizzlies. That they gave up 18 points off of 23 turnovers and still won by 45 points speaks to how well they played. Memphis is missing many of the same players as last season, but the difference on the court has been like night and day.

One of the more interesting matchups was between rookies Zach Edey and Donovan Clingan. Clingan was one of the players that Memphis was interested in in the draft but was selected by Portland with the seventh overall pick. This led to Memphis picking up Edey instead, a choice that has already paid dividends for the Grizzlies.

Head coach Taylor Jenkins chose to start Brandon Clarke at the center position and bring Edey off the bench. Despite not being in the starting lineup, Edey still had an impressive showing, finishing the night with 12 points, six rebounds, two assists, and four steals while shooting 5 of 7 overall and 1 of 1 from three-point range.

Four starters ended up scoring double-digits:

Jaren Jackson Jr. put up a team-high 20 points, and added seven rebounds, two assists, and three steals.

Scotty Pippen Jr. put up 17 points on 6 of 8 overall shooting and 2 of 3 from beyond the arc. He added four rebounds, and four assists.

Santi Aldama had 16 points, six rebounds, six assists, and two steals.

Jaylen Wells also finished the night with 16 points, along with three rebounds.

From the second unit:

Jake LaRavia led the bench with 18 points, four rebounds, two assists, three steals, and three blocks on 6 of 9 overall shooting and 2 of 3 from three-point range.

Jay Huff closed out with 12 points, two rebounds, and six blocks.

A fan’s homemade sign for Yuki Kawamura. (Credit: NBAE/Getty Images.)

Meanwhile, Yuki Kawamura is apparently a fan favorite in Portland as well as Memphis. The crowd at Moda Center cheered the loudest during his eight-minute stretch in the fourth quarter.

Who Got Next?

The Grizzlies will continue on to Los Angeles, where they will face off against the Lakers on Wednesday. Tip-off will be at 9 PM CST, and I advise everyone watching from Memphis to get a nap in beforehand.

Categories
Hungry Memphis

FOOD NEWS BITES: A Toast to the New Science of Spirits

The upcoming Science of Spirits at Lichterman Nature Center sounds like an exploration into the world of the supernatural.

Well, it’s not. Halloween is over. These “spirits” are the drinkable kind.

The event, which will be held from 6 to 9 p.m. Friday, November 15th, is now part of a trio of events that includes Science of Beer and Science of Wine.

Just like the beer and wine events, guests will travel from station to station sampling bourbon, but, this time, they’ll learn about the science of making American whiskey.

Bourbons include Buffalo Trace Kentucky Straight Bourbon, 1792 Bourbon, Traveller Whiskey, Sazerac Rye, Benchmark Selects Casks  Single Barrel, Benchmark Select Casks Top Floor, Rich & Rare Reserve, and Buffalo Trace Bourbon Cream.

Food from Bain BBQ, Huey’s, and Graz’n will be available.

Mark Edgar Stuart will perform.

Guests must be 21 to attend. All proceeds will benefit the Museums of Science & History (MoSH) programming, summer camps, STEM workshops, and more. MoSH is the umbrella group that includes Lichterman Nature Center, Pink Palace Museum & Mansion, Mallory-Neely Historic Property, and Coon Creek Science Center.

Upcoming events include Science of Beer, which will be held January 17, 2025, at Pink Palace Museum & Mansion, and Science of Wine, which will be held in spring 2025 at Pink Palace.

For more information, go to moshmemphis.com.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Spinning Plates” by Jeff Hulett

Jeff Hulett’s new album Little Windows hits the streets this Friday, November 15. The singer/songwriter will celebrate with a record release party at The Cove, beginning at 8 p.m. MVM previously featured Hulett’s first video from the record, “Let Go Of The Let Down.” The second video is “Spinning Plates,” directed by Memphis ex-pat Chris Weary.

“It is about the rat race, and spinning your wheels to get ahead,” says Hulett. “Where does it end? When is enough, enough? ‘Spinning Plates’ is something we all do, but boy do I have many irons in the fire — many of which I need to and should shed. Many of my songs are notes to myself. Usually, advice I don’t follow.”

If you would like to see your music video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Three Thoughts on Memphis Tiger Football: 11/11/24

The Memphis Tigers desperately need a rivalry game. With no regional SEC foe (Ole Miss, Mississippi State, Arkansas, Tennessee) on this year’s schedule, the closest we’ll see are UAB and Tulane, a pair of teams in green to wrap up the regular season. The Tigers host the Blazers Saturday night, then travel to New Orleans to face the Green Wave on Thanksgiving.

How can you identify a “rivalry game”? There’s buzz in the stadium before kickoff. Something no one saw, heard, or felt at Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium with the likes of North Texas, Charlotte, or Rice on the other sideline. Consider that Memphis has the chance to go undefeated (7-0) at home without seeing a crowd as large as 26,000. Can “The Battle for the Bones” fill the stadium? UAB is still a young program, so this will be just the 17th meeting between the teams (Memphis owns an 11-5 advantage). But that massive bronze rack of ribs is one of the coolest rivalry trophies in the sport. It would be memorable to see the likes of Seth Henigan or Chandler Martin try and lift it. Hey, Tennessee beat Alabama this season. It’s a chance for the Volunteer State to seize some bragging rights with emphasis.

The Tigers’ next win will make Ryan Silverfield only the fifth head coach to win 40 games with the program. That’s a small number of men for a relatively small number of career wins. What does it say about Silverfield’s place in Memphis football history and, more importantly, the current state of the Tiger program? It feels like that proverbial glass is both half-empty and half-full. Memphis is bowl-eligible for an 11th consecutive season. Write that sentence as recently as 2010 and you’d be laughed out of the room. Silverfield is the only coach in Tiger history to win three bowl games. On the other hand, it’s been five years now since Memphis appeared in the American Athletic Conference championship game. All the yearning to be part of a “power conference,” and the Tigers can’t win their own second-tier league. And when you can’t sell out a 33,000-seat stadium in a city the size of Memphis, relevance is an issue.

I’ve been watching the program long enough to remember six consecutive losing seasons under the same coach (Rip Scherer). The Tigers’ current streak of 37 consecutive games with at least 20 points? Not that long ago (1994-96), Memphis went three seasons with only seven such games. There has been some truly bad football played in these parts even if we subtract two seasons of pure misery under coach Larry Porter. So I find it hard to tear down an 8-2 campaign (so far), a team with a chance for another 10-win season, and a coach who seems to care about his program’s place in Memphis (the city) as much as its place in the AAC standings. If you’re not among an elite dozen programs — you know them — it’s hard to win championships in college football. Staying competitive (game-to-game and year-to-year) should matter. 

With merely 30 passing yards this Saturday, Memphis quarterback Seth Henigan will move into 20th in FBS career passing yardage. (He’ll pass longtime San Diego Charger Philip Rivers.) And with 545 yards over his last three games, Henigan would become only the 15th quarterback to top 14,000 yards. For a dose of perspective, Peyton Manning passed for 11,201 yards in his four seasons at UT. Among those 15 signal-callers in the 14,000 club, only eight of them played just four seasons of college football (Hawaii’s Colt Brennan played only three). It’s a reminder of Henigan’s singular career in blue and gray. Oh, and with four more touchdown passes, he’ll be the first Tiger to reach 100. 

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Jackson Jr.’s Dominant Display Downs Wizards

Jaren Jackson Jr. scored a season-high 39 points on 14-for-28 shooting, leading the Memphis Grizzlies to a convincing 128-104 victory over the Washington Wizards on Friday night.

The Michigan State alum is having a phenomenal season, boasting averages of 22 points per game, 56% shooting from the field, 40% from three-point range, and a 65% true-shooting percentage.

Last season, team injuries thrust Jackson Jr. into the spotlight, sparking a remarkable growth that prepared him for this season.

“I think last year and this summer for sure,” Jackson Jr. said, on what prepared him for his performance to help the Grizzlies improve to 6-4 on the season. “Being able to read defenses better — make better decisions for the ball with higher usage, and figuring out what defenses are doing against you and kind of making the adjustment.”

“Like Tuomas (Iisalo, Grizzlies assistant coach) says, ‘Whatever the defense does, they’re wrong.’ It just means that adjustment.”

The 25-year-old says his versatility on the court comes from understanding matchups and starting strategies, but also from being adaptable. He avoids relying solely on three-pointers early on and capitalizes on open shots from his team’s offense. He Friday night, he showed his ability to read defenses and make lightning-fast decisions based on defenders’ movements, positioning, and help-side rotations.

And he really wanted that 40 piece, but the game was already out of hand.  

“For sure I definitely wanted to get it (40 points) the right way. If it ain’t meant (to be), it ain’t meant (to be).  (I) didn’t do enough. I missed a free throw. So there you go.” His career-high is 44 points. 

“Heck of a game from Trip [Jaren Jackson Jr.],” said Grizzlies head coach Taylor Jenkins on Jackson Jr. “Obviously, just the opportunity to be a primary playmaker, diversify his game, there were a couple pick-and-rolls stuck in there by his teammates, but just playing on the perimeter, playing out of the post, just getting that gravitational pull and still being able to finish.”

“Obviously, it was motivating going into the season, because he had had a career year on the offensive side,” Jenkins continued. “So regardless of what our lineups are, I want him to still carry that mentality of being a primary attack guy for us.”

Jenkins concluded: “And, that’s on me to make sure that he’s feeling involved and just playing within our pace and our principles. It’s great to see him have that opportunity tonight and take full advantage of it.”

Scotty Pippen Jr. made history on Friday by earning his first career triple-double, with 11 points (4-8 FG, 3-4 FT), a career-high 10 rebounds, and 11 assists. This milestone places him alongside his father, Scottie Pippen, as the first father-son duo in NBA history to record triple-doubles during their careers.

Pippen Jr. didn’t even know he had made history.  “No, I’ve never even heard of that. I would just say crazy,” he said. “I don’t know if I have any words to describe how that feels. Just making history will always be a great thing, but to be the father-son duo to do it is definitely a great thing.”

The 23-year-old wasn’t aware he was close to a triple-double until his injured teammate Ja Morant alerted him. He said, “Ja [Morant] had said something to me — he said I was two away. I don’t know if he meant rebounds, assists or what it was. I was trying to feed Jaren [Jackson Jr.] to get the last two assists, and he started missing. I knew I was going to be coming out of the game soon because he was up, so I was just trying to get my teammates together.”

Jaren Jackson Jr. was happy with Pippen Jr.’s history-making performance.

Grizzlies rookie Yuki Kawamura showed why he’s a fan favorite. When games get out of hand, the crowd in the FedExForum always chants, “We want Yuki.” When he entered the game, they were in for a treat. 

The crowd went absolutely nuts when Kawamura got his first bucket.

Kawamura breathed a sigh of relief after sinking his first 3-pointer, yet he couldn’t shake the feeling that he had more to offer

“I was feeling so great,” he said about his first bucket. “But, I’m not satisfied yet. I could have done more, better.”

Up Next

The Grizzlies kick off a three-game West Coast road trip against the Portland Trail Blazers on Sunday, November 10, with an 8 p.m. tipoff.