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Beyond the Arc Sports

Griz-Suns Live Blog

With tonight’s Grizzlies-Suns game not on television, I’m going to live blog this one. Check back here at 7 p.m. to follow along with the action.

This will be the first live blog on the new site. We’ll see how it works.

Alright — I’m courtside now at FedExForum where the Grizzlies and Suns are getting ready to tip. I have to confess that I had totally forgotten that Stromile Swift now plays for the Suns.

I would love to see Stro and Darius Miles square off tonight in a historic battle in honor of the deplorable 2000 rookie draft, in which they went 2nd and 3rd, respectively. But I don’t expect that to happen.

Instead, the game-within-the-game entertainment tonight will come from Marc Gasol and (please!) Hamed Haddadi matching up with Shaq Daddy.

Let’s do this.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Shaq Does Graceland

Apparently the Suns got into town early and Shaq wanted to get some Jungle Room action in. A blow-by-blow from the Big Aristotle’s Twitter feed (thanks to True Hoop for catching this):

# And the winner @kiafbaby , dam that was fast , they got me at the lisa marie , I was lookn at the plane
about 16 hours ago from TwitterBerry

# Whoeva finds me at graceland gets four tickets
about 16 hours ago from TwitterBerry

# Pullin up to grtaceland in about twenty minutes, is this were elvis is really from
about 16 hours ago from TwitterBerry

# Should I go see elvis, I’m in memphis, you aint nuttin but a hound dog, ridin around town Dun nun daa

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Griz Draft Board: The Lottery (Take One)

With the college season over and the NBA season winding down, it’s time again to start focusing on the draft. Like last season, I’m going to do multiple installments of my Grizzlies draft board following each step in the process: the lottery selection, the pre-draft combine, the individual workouts. Unlike last season, I expect some significant changes to the following list.

Last year, the only big difference between my initial draft list and my final one was moving Anthony Randolph off the board after seeing his individual workout (and getting a sense of how much of a project he was going to be). But this is a more difficult draft to get a handle on and I’ve watched less college basketball than I did last season, so I expect to learn a lot more over the next two months that will impact my thinking on the draft.

So, consider this a very preliminary ranking of who the Grizzlies should be looking at in the lottery. I’m going nine deep on the list, because #9 is the lowest the Grizzlies will possibly be picking. I’ll have a follow-up post in the coming days on players to potentially target with the team’s two later picks.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies-Blazers Game Post

Hey! I’m live at FedExForum — courtside in official mode for the first time in a long time.

The Grizzlies will try to go on a little two-game winning streak tonight following their upset win Sunday in Detroit.

Tonight, I’ll be focusing almost exclusively on the four-man “core” of the team — O.J. Mayo, Rudy Gay, Marc Gasol, and Mike Conley. Though there are a few other players who matter, the Grizzlies looming offseason will be driven in large part by what the team feels they have in these four players and how they fit together.

I haven’t written much about the team on the court lately, but will check in later tonight with a post-game that addresses these four players in addition to whatever other game-specific stuff seems necessary.

I’m not live-blogging this but, as always, feel free to pepper the comments section with conjecture, complaint, astute observation, and maybe the occasional haiku. I’ll pop in occasionally if there’s any action.

Let’s do this.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

The Gift: An Open Letter to Michael Heisley About John Calipari’s Departure.

Dear Michael Heisley:

I don’t know if you know it, but you’re having a good day. Your basketball franchise hasn’t had much in the way of good fortune over the years — wayward draft-lottery results, career-ending injuries to players on long-term contracts, Stu Jackson. But today you received a rare gift when John Calipari left his coaching post at the University of Memphis.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

FROM MY SEAT: A Brown Crown

• Mark this down,
sports fans: on June 7th at Belmont Park in New York, Big Brown will become the
12th Triple Crown winner in horse-racing history, and the first in 30 years. If
you watched Saturday’s Preakness Stakes, you saw the same dominance I did. At
the peak of his game was an undefeated colt having his way with a field of 13
horses, and actually gaining ground over the last quarter-mile of a tour de
force in Baltimore. Any concerns about Big Brown handling the longer test that
is the Belmont Stakes — a mile-and-a-half, a quarter-mile longer than the
Kentucky Derby — are now the equivalent of dirt clods in the path of a horse
whose greatness happens to be on display in a year of otherwise
less-than-inspiring thoroughbred three-year-olds. The one concern Big Brown’s
handlers might have is weather. With only five races to his credit, how Big
Brown might handle a muddy track is a variable his fans hope doesn’t come into
play.

Ten horses have
won the Kentucky Derby and Preakness only to lose the Belmont since Affirmed
edged Alydar in all three in 1978. (Four of them — Sunday Silence, Silver Charm,
Real Quiet, and Smarty Jones — finished second at the Belmont.) Big Brown’s
destiny belongs with horse racing’s ultimate pantheon. And for some perspective
on how long this 30-year drought has been, consider the following:

– The longest
previous Triple Crown drought was 25 years, between Citation in 1948 and
Secretariat in 1973.

– In June 1978,
Tiger Woods and Tom Brady were 2 years old, Albert Pujols wasn’t born, and
LeBron James . . . well, his mom wasn’t even dating.

– In 1978, it had
only been 70 years since the Chicago Cubs won the World Series.

• Every baseball
player has a mother. Many have sisters and most have wives or girlfriends. Which
makes Sunday’s Paint the Park Pink the most heartfelt promotion in 11 years of
Redbirds baseball in Memphis. Those pink jerseys may have clashed with the red
hats and helmets, but all for the right cause. If only 10 Mitchell Boggs
strikeouts and a Joe Mather home run could beat breast cancer the way they did
the Oklahoma Redhawks.

• It’s become
clear that Chris Duncan is the odd man out in a three-man battle among former
Memphis Redbirds for two corner outfield positions with the St. Louis Cardinals.
Ryan Ludwick has clubbed a team-leading 11 home runs and forced Cardinal manager
Tony LaRussa to find him a spot in the middle of the batting order. Skip
Schumaker has made himself an asset with his speed, defensive skill, and role as
a leadoff hitter; he delivered his third walk-off game-winning hit of the season
Sunday. All of which leaves Duncan — a natural first-baseman or DH — in a
position where his trade value is a larger consideration for the Cardinals than
his development as a leftfielder. How ironic it would be if Duncan ends up being
packaged with Anthony Reyes in a deal to bring St. Louis a middle-infielder with
pop. (Adam Kennedy’s slugging percentage through Sunday was .315. Cesar Izturis
was slugging .301.) Less than two years ago, Duncan and Reyes were unlikely
rookie heroes for a world-champion Cardinal team.

• Through Sunday,
11 NBA playoff series had been completed and the higher seed had won all 11.
This remains the perennial distinction between pro basketball and the college
game, where in the latter upsets are the norm come the postseason. How ironic
that we Americans who pull for the underdog are left relying on the defending
champion San Antonio Spurs for a “Cinderella story” in the NBA’s big dance. The
Western Conference’s third seed, San Antonio will face second-seeded New Orleans
in a decisive Game 7 Monday night.