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Remembering Danton Barto

My memories of Memphis Tiger football in the early 1990s are foggy. (For one thing, it was Memphis State football back then.) But my memories of Danton Barto — both his name and the human being who wore it, along with number 59 for the Tigers — remain distinct. Playing for teams that won games with defense, Barto was the Tiger defense from 1990 to ’93.

I arrived in Memphis in the summer of 1991. I didn’t attend a lot of Tiger football games my first three years in the Mid-South, let alone report on them. But the handful of games I saw at the Liberty Bowl featured a consistent image, that of a hyperactive, if undersized, linebacker making tackles from sideline to sideline in hopes of keeping his team in a position to win. These were not great Memphis teams. The Tigers went 5-6 in ’91 (Barto led the team with 141 tackles), 6-5 in ’92 (Barto led the team with 127 tackles), and 6-5 in ’93 (Barto led the team with 144 tackles). But they beat Southern Cal (!) and Mississippi State Barto’s sophomore year. They beat Arkansas in both ’92 and ’93, and Mississippi State again Barto’s senior year. They brought smiles to this under-appreciated corner of the college football landscape.

And there was Barto’s name. A linebacker’s name. Say it along with Butkus, Nitschke, Bednarik, and Lambert. Danton Barto was born to be a linebacker, one who left an imprint with his tackles. Somehow, Barto never played in an NFL game. When he remained unsigned in the fall of 1994, I hung up my scout’s hat for good. I’ve since seen vastly inferior players line up behind a defensive line on fall Sundays. At the very least, Barto would have been a special-teams killer in the pro ranks.

Danton Barto died Sunday at the still-young age of 50 from complications of Covid-19. He had not been vaccinated, which will haunt those of us who remember him, and particularly those who knew and loved him. Would a pair of injections have protected Barto from the coronavirus? The likelihood is a resounding yes. The most tragic deaths are those that could be avoided, in Barto’s case with what now amounts to a simple medical decision.

The day will come — and it will be soon — when Danton Barto’s name and the stories associated with him bring smiles again. His impact was too positive, his love and devotion to Memphis (especially its flagship university) too large for the circumstances of his death to linger as a shadow. For now-veteran sportswriters and our ilk, we must “defog” our memories, to Saturday nights when number 59 was the best defensive player on the field at the Liberty Bowl. When Danton Barto’s next hit would be even more ferocious than his last. A man of impact then. A man of impact still.

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NIT Championship: Tigers 77, Mississippi State 64

The Memphis Tigers are national champions. Of a sort.

Sparked by 23 points from sophomore guard Boogie Ellis, the Tigers pulled away from Mississippi State after halftime and won the National Invitation Tournament in Frisco, Texas, the second NIT title for the program and first since 2002. Landers Nolley scored 10 points for Memphis and earned Most Outstanding Player honors for the tournament. A third Tiger sophomore, Lester Quinones, scored eight points and pulled down 16 rebounds to join Nolley on the all-tournament team.

The win earns Tiger coach Penny Hardaway a third-straight 20-win season, as Memphis finishes 20-8 for the campaign, one abbreviated by eight games due to Covid-19 cancellations. The Bulldogs finish their season with a record of 18-15.

The Tigers appeared on their way to a breezy win as they scored the game’s first 13 points. But their shooting got sidetracked and DeAndre Williams was forced to the bench midway through the opening half with his second foul. Led by Olive Branch native Cameron Matthews, the Bullies gradually reduced the Memphis lead before tying the game at 33 just before the halftime buzzer. (The Tigers shot a dreadful 27 percent over the game’s first 20 minutes.)

Ellis hit three-pointers on back-to-back possessions early in the second half to give the Tigers a nine-point cushion (46-37). He connected on another to make the lead 11 (55-44) with just over 11 minutes to play. (Ellis hit four of seven shots from beyond the arc for the game.) A D.J. Jeffries trey with 4:15 on the clock put Memphis up 67-51 and essentially clinched a postgame celebration. Jeffries finished the game with 15 points and five rebounds. Williams scored 12 points despite being limited to 25 minutes of action.

“It wasn’t easy,” said Hardaway after the trophy presentation. “We had to grind. I never let up. It’s a huge start for where this program really wants to go. I knew we had the talent. We just have to commit to doing it for 40 minutes.”

How did the Tigers pull off this championship? You might look back to February 1st, when Hardaway sent a starting unit of Ellis, Quinones, Nolley, Williams, and freshman Moussa Cisse to the FedExForum floor to start a game against UCF. Starting with that game (a 27-point Memphis win), the Tigers went 11-2 to finish the season, the only two losses coming in the closing seconds to a team — the Houston Cougars — that will compete in the NCAA tournament’s Elite Eight. (Houston plays Oregon State Monday night in the Midwest Region final.) Hardaway’s players discovered — or perhaps determined — their roles and made the third-year coach’s job easier as February turned to March and the postseason arrived.

How much will the championship mean to a program that has not played in the NCAA tournament since 2014? Finishing one season on a high note — and consider this as high as they’ve come since 2002 — can do wonders for the next. A college basketball team would rather lose in the first round of “the Big Dance” than win “that other tournament,” which speaks to the character, each year, of the team that actually competes and wins the NIT. This year, that team is the University of Memphis.

All nine members of the Tigers’ playing rotation are eligible to return for the 2021-22 season. If they do, you can count on a Top-25 ranking come November. Add a pair of four-star recruits to the mix — Josh Minott and Jordan Nesbitt — and it appears Hardaway is close to a talent surplus as he plots the course for his fourth season at the helm. Such are the kind of problems coaches — and fan bases — dream about.

“We have so much talent, sometimes we get in each other’s way,” noted Hardaway. “We’re headed in the right direction. It’s a beautiful thing to see. We want to win championships. The NIT is just a start. If this group wants to stay together, we’ll be really dangerous. They know what the culture is.”

For now, for an entire offseason, there’s a championship to celebrate. In a season we’ll remember for a pandemic’s repercussions, we’ll also remember lots of smiles, whether or not they were hidden by masks. A Memphis Tigers team found the best version of itself and put on the right kind of show deep in the heart of Texas.

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NIT semifinals: Tigers 90, Colorado State 67

The Memphis Tigers will play for a national championship* Sunday in Frisco, Texas. Playing their best basketball of the season, the Tigers ran Colorado State out of the gym Saturday in the semifinals of the NIT. They’ll face the winner of a Bulldog battle — Mississippi State or Louisiana Tech — from the tournament’s other semifinal. (*No, it’s not the national championship, but the NIT predates the NCAA tournament and yes, its field is national. So play along.)

Sophomore guard Landers Nolley — a Virginia Tech Hokie at this time a year ago — scored a career-high 27 points and the Tigers drained a season-high 14 three-pointers to dehorn the Rams, the NIT’s overall top seed. The win improves Memphis to 19-8 on the season while Colorado State finishes with a record of 20-7.

The Tigers fell behind early, 15-5, but reeled off a 22-2 run keyed by three treys from sophomore guard Lester Quinones and led 44-38 at halftime. A 12-0 Memphis run early in the second half put the Rams in a 15-point hole (56-41), and essentially booked the Tigers’ ticket to the NIT final for the first time since 2002. Quinones finished 4-for-7 from three-point range and scored 18 points. DeAndre Williams — like Nolley a transfer during the 2020 offseason — hit nine of 12 field-goal attempts and scored 21 points to go along with nine rebounds and six assists. The Tigers scored 90 points for only the third time this season.

David Roddy led the Rams with 18 points, but his team shot merely 39 percent from the field while Memphis hit on a sparkling 56 percent of its shots. The Tigers dominated in the rebound department (37-25) and even — catch your breath — connected on eight of nine free throws. It was a thoroughly dominant performance by one of 20 teams (counting those in the NCAA tournament’s Sweet 16) still playing college basketball.

Sunday’s game will tip off at 11 a.m. and be televised by ESPN. Memphis will be seeking its second NIT championship, having beaten South Carolina for the trophy 19 years ago.

Memphis hasn’t played Mississippi State since the second round of the 2008 NCAA tournament, when the Tigers played for the national championship. The Tigers last played Louisiana Tech in December 2015.

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NIT Quarterfinals: Tigers 59, Boise State 56

The Memphis Tigers earned a trip to the NIT semifinals for the fifth time in the program’s rich history with a win over Boise State Thursday night in Denton, Texas. Sophomore guard Lester Quinones grabbed a Boogie Ellis miss and converted the put-back attempt to seize the lead (56-55) for the Tigers with 32 seconds left on the clock. The Broncos’ Devonaire Doutrive missed a floater on the next possession and Memphis forward DeAndre Williams pulled down the rebound. Williams’s pair of free throws with 13 seconds to play provided the margin of victory.

Now 18-8, the Tigers will face another Mountain West team — Colorado State — in a semifinal to be played Saturday in Frisco, Texas. The Rams (20-6) beat North Carolina State in another quarterfinal Thursday. (Mississippi State faces the winner of Louisiana Tech and Western Kentucky in the other semifinal.) Boise State ends its season with a record of 19-9.

The Tigers fell behind early, 15-5, before outscoring the Broncos 18-4 over a seven-minute stretch of the first half. They led 31-26 at halftime and were up by eight points (50-42) with six minutes left in the game. But Boise State rallied, tying the game at 54 on an inside bucket by Mladen Armus. The Broncos took the lead when Doutrive hit one of two free throws with 47 seconds left, setting up what proved to be the game-winning field goal by Quinones.

Ellis and D.J. Jeffries led the Tigers with 11 points each and Quinones added 10 to go with seven rebounds. The Tigers prevailed despite shooting miserably from three-point range (5 for 20) and from the foul line (6 for 15).

Junior guard Alex Lomax remains sidelined with an ankle injury.

The Tigers’ previous trips to the NIT semifinals (all played at Madison Square Garden in New York):

1957 (beat St. Bonaventure in semis; lost to Bradley in final)

2001 (lost to Tulsa in semis)

2002 (beat Temple in semis; beat South Carolina in final)

2005 (lost to St. Joseph’s in semis)

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NIT: Tigers 71, Dayton 60

The Memphis Tigers extended their season Saturday in Denton, Texas, with a win over Dayton in the National Invitation Tournament. The Tigers pulled away with a 10-0 run late in the second half after exchanging the lead 14 times with the Flyers. Back-to-back three-pointers by Boogie Ellis and Lester Quinones put Memphis up 62-58 with just under six minutes to play and the Tigers would not trail again.

The win improves Memphis to 17-8 while Dayton’s season ends at 14-10. The Tigers will play Boise State Thursday in the NIT quarterfinals. A win would put them in the tournament’s semifinals for the first time since 2005. (The NIT’s field was reduced from 32 teams to 16 this season with Covid restrictions in mind.)

Landers Nolley scored 10 points in the game’s first six minutes and led the Tigers with 21 for the game. The sophomore transfer from Virginia Tech drained four three-pointers as the Tigers hit 10 of 26 shots from long distance. (They were 7 for 11 in the second half.) Lester Quinones added 15 points and pulled down 10 rebounds. DeAndre Williams scored 12 points and D.J. Jeffries came off the bench for 10.

Elijah Weaver came off the Dayton bench to lead the Flyers with 16 points. Dayton couldn’t compete with Memphis on the glass, the Tigers pulling down 44 rebounds (16 offensive) to the Flyers’ 26.

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Tiger Hoops: 2020-21 Season Review

Having missed out on a berth in the NCAA tournament, the Memphis Tigers will join 15 other teams for a version of the National Invitation Tournament. All games will be played at a pair of arenas in metro Dallas.

It wasn’t supposed to go like this. When Penny Hardaway met a throng of boosters and media at the brand-new Laurie-Walton Center on March 20, 2018, he did not mention a four-year plan. There was no three-year runway toward contention for championships, be they conference or, ahem, national. “People are telling me to be patient,” said Hardaway three years ago. “But I’m not built that way. I’m not wired that way. I’ll go for it all or none at all.”

These are wacky times, and that goes well beyond the world of college basketball. But the history books will note that Hardaway — a certifiable hardwood legend in these parts — is the first Tiger coach to end three consecutive seasons without an NCAA tournament appearance since Wayne Yates, way back in the late 1970s (1977-79 to be exact). Sure, a pandemic is in the mix. There was no NCAA tournament in 2020. (Hardaway’s second team would not have made the Big Dance, not without winning the American Athletic Conference tournament, which was also cancelled.) But three years without March Madness in Memphis, Tennessee? On top of the four Madness-free years that preceded Hardaway’s arrival? It’s the longest drought for this proud program since a ten-year dry spell that ended with the Final Four run of 1973. Ouch.
U of M Athletics / Joe Murphy

All-conference swingman Landers Nolley II.

The Tigers played the Houston Cougars — the number-two seed in the NCAA tournament’s Midwest quadrant — to the buzzer twice in the span of six days this month. The notion that a tournament bracket can be filled with 68 better teams is ludicrous. But it’s never about what your team did when your “bubble” status bursts. It’s what your team didn’t do.

The Tigers didn’t beat a “Quad 1” team this season, a team from the upper tier of overall rankings as determined by strength of schedule and location of games. This is problematic for a team that doesn’t play in a “Power 5” league in a season the AAC didn’t exactly stuff the Top-25 rankings. Memphis only had two Power-5 opponents on its schedule. The Ole Miss game was cancelled due to positive COVID results in the Rebel program, and the Tigers lost to Auburn.

The Tigers didn’t get to play eight games — eight games — because of the pandemic. Four were cancelled because of positive tests in their opponent’s camp and four were cancelled because of positive tests in the Memphis program (including games against both AAC tournament finalists, home games with Cincinnati and Houston). Five or six more wins would have added some shine to the Tigers’ 16-8 record. Based on what we saw in Texas (twice), a win over the Cougars at FedExForum would not be a stretch. A second win over Wichita State (Memphis beat the AAC regular-season champs by 20 points in January) would have captured the right kind of attention.

Consider Boogie Ellis the personification of the Tigers’ near-miss this season. The sophomore guard tied the first Houston game with a three-pointer inside the game’s final 10 seconds, only to watch the Cougars’ Tramon Mark heave in a bank shot from 30 feet as time expired. Last Saturday, Ellis scored 27 points, his long-distance marksmanship fueling the Tigers’ second-half comeback from 12 points down. But Ellis missed six of ten free throws, vanishing points that could have made the difference in another game decided in the final minute of play.

“It’s hard to accept,” said a disconsolate Hardaway after the AAC semifinal loss. “Having the game won, knowing what’s at stake, and not being able to pull it through. We had a chance to knock them out a few times, and just couldn’t.” Hardaway acknowledged an uneven start to his team’s season, one that didn’t include transfer DeAndre Williams for the first seven games (the Tigers went 4-3 without him). “We started off very slow,” he said. “Just couldn’t get our footing. And it took us a long time to come together as a team. When we got our rhythm, we had the COVID pause, but we came out of that playing really well. We were locked and loaded for this tournament. It’s heartbreaking.”

Heartbreak inevitably turns to hope over the course of a long offseason. And there’s reason for optimism in the Tiger program. The team’s entire nine-man rotation could return for the 2021-22 campaign. As you’re sketching lineups, though, keep in mind that the transfer portal has brought an element of free agency to college basketball. Remember Tyler Harris? Lance Thomas? Where would this year’s team have been without Williams (the team’s most impactful player, from Evansville) or Landers Nolley (an all-conference honoree, from Virginia Tech)? Subtraction and addition are larger equations now, particularly in a sport where merely one or two solutions (at the right positions) can transform a team.

From Hardaway’s heralded 2019 recruiting class, Boogie Ellis and Lester Quinones have established themselves as 30-minute guards on game nights. D.J. Jeffries didn’t take the same strides forward as a sophomore, but could be a game-changer if he can score consistently. Malcolm Dandridge improved both his body and game in his second year at the college level, and Damion Baugh is a capable ball-handler off the bench if Hardaway chooses to attack with a smaller unit. With Moussa Cisse manning the middle — the AAC’s Freshman of the Year — the Tigers have a defensive eraser and, at times, an offensive threat to feed the ball. Assuming Alex Lomax fully recovers from the ankle injury that sidelined him this month, next year’s Tigers will have senior leadership in the form of a player Hardaway has groomed since middle school.
U of M Athletics / Joe Murphy

Moussa Cisse, the AAC’s Freshman of the Year.

To all the veterans, you can add the country’s 6th-ranked recruiting class (according to 247 Sports), led by a pair of four-star prospects: Jordan Nesbitt (a scoring wing from St. Louis, already with the program) and Josh Minott (a small forward from Boca Raton, Florida, who will push Jeffries for playing time). Among Hardaway’s concerns as he enters his fourth year at the helm, depth of talent isn’t one. Can as many as 11 strong players mesh as a unit, though, and sacrifice (minutes played) enough to get this program back where so many feel it belongs?

Should you have concerns about the Tiger program — seven years — don’t let the coach’s motivation be one. Shortly after he was hired in 2018, Hardaway shared some perspective on how very much he, personally, wants to win a championship — the national kind — with his alma mater. This is a man, remember, who did not win a title as a player at the high school, college, or pro level. He does, though, own an Olympic gold medal (won in 1996). “That gold medal was something we were supposed to do,” said Hardaway in 2018. “We had the best players in the world playing for one team. We’ve [now] got to do what’s not expected. They’re not expecting us to win a national championship here.”

The best advice from parents far and wide: No one should challenge you more than you challenge yourself. Every member of the Memphis Tigers’ roster and coaching staff is coming to grips with that philosophy by one measure or another. Go ahead and win the NIT. It wouldn’t hurt. Then count the days ’til November and another chance for a proud program to fully regain its footing on the national stage.

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AAC Semifinals: #7 Houston 76, Tigers 74

Losses are seldom remembered, but make no mistake: The second half of the Tigers’ defeat Saturday in the American Athletic Conference semifinals was the most memorable 20 minutes of Penny Hardaway’s three-year coaching career. Trailing the 7th-ranked Houston Cougars by 12 points (41-29) at halftime — and looking like a team down 20 — the Tigers played as though lit on fire after the break. Memphis took the lead (51-50) with just over nine minutes to play, the first of ten lead changes over the game’s final nine minutes. But three-point attempts by, first, Landers Nolley and then Boogie Ellis rattled off the rim with the Tigers down three (74-71) inside the game’s final 30 seconds. Houston’s Justin Gorham connected on a pair of free throws to clinch the Cougars’ trip to the tournament championship game, where they’ll play Cincinnati Sunday.

Barring an unlikely bid to the NCAA tournament, the Tigers’ season will end with a record of 16-8, while Houston improves to 23-3. If Memphis misses “the Big Dance,” it will be the first seven-year drought for the program since the Tigers’ tournament debut in 1955. Hardaway would become the first Memphis coach to end three straight seasons without a tournament appearance since Wayne Yates (1977-79). (No tournament was held in 2020 because of the coronavirus outbreak.)

The two-point loss left a trail of “what if” scenarios? What if all-conference swingman Landers Nolley had taken more than one shot in the first half? What if the Tigers hadn’t missed 12 of their 27 free throws? What if DeAndre Williams hadn’t been hampered by foul trouble (committing his fifth with 2:34 to play and Memphis up 68-67)? What if the injured Alex Lomax — one of the Tigers’ top defensive players — had been available to pester the likes of Quentin Grimes (21 points and a huge three-pointer just under the two-minute mark) or Marcus Sasser (14 points)?

Those free throws. The Tigers lost despite making more field goals (26-26) than Houston and holding the Cougars to 32 percent from three-point range. Ellis led the Tigers with 27 points and hit five three pointers (on eight attempts), but the sophomore guard missed six of his ten free throws.

Williams scored 16 points for Memphis and D.J. Jeffries added 10 off the bench. Nolley scored only four points after leading the Tigers with an average of 13.0 for the season.

The NCAA tournament field will be announced late Sunday afternoon after the last of the tournament championships are played. Most prognosticators have Memphis among the last four or five teams to be excluded from the event. They failed to secure a win this season over a “Quad 1” opponent (teams in the upper tier of rankings based on schedule and location of wins). The Tigers last appeared in what’s come to be known as March Madness at the end of the 2013-14 season, their first as members of the AAC.

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AAC Quarterfinals: Tigers 70, UCF 62

The Tigers earned a rematch with the 7th-ranked Houston Cougars by beating UCF Friday night in the quarterfinals of the American Athletic Conference tournament in Fort Worth. Now 16-7, Memphis will likely need to upset the Cougars (22-3) Saturday afternoon to earn a long-sought NCAA tournament berth. Top-seeded Wichita State will face Cincinnati in the other semifinal.

The Tigers outscored UCF 16-8 over the game’s final five minutes after falling behind briefly (52-51) on a three-pointer by the Knights’ Darius Perry. Inside baskets by Landers Nolley and Boogie Ellis put Memphis up 62-56 with two minutes left and UCF wasn’t able to get closer than five points the remainder of the game.

D.J. Jeffries came off the bench and led the Tigers with 17 points, connecting on seven of 11 attempts from the field. DeAndre Williams added 16 points and Ellis scored 12. Nolley scored nine and pulled down 12 rebounds while Lester Quinones contributed seven points and a career-high 15 rebounds.

Memphis shot 39 percent from the field but hit 16 of 21 free throws.

The Tigers raced out to an 18-4 lead against the Knights — a team Memphis beat by a combined 41 points over two games in three nights last month — but UCF closed the deficit to four points (32-28) thanks largely to a 9-0 run shortly before halftime. The teams traded baskets for much of the second half before Perry’s trey gave UCF the lead. Perry finished with 15 points as UCF’s season ended with a record of 11-12.

Memphis guard Alex Lomax missed his fourth straight game with an ankle injury and is unlikely to see action in this weekend’s tournament.

The Tigers and Houston tip-off Saturday at 4:30 p.m. and the game will be televised on ESPN2. The game will be played six days after the Cougars beat Memphis on a buzzer-beating heave from nearly 30 feet. It will be the biggest game — with the biggest stakes — since Penny Hardaway took over as Memphis coach before the 2018-19 season.

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Tigers’ Tourney Trial

The Memphis Tigers might as well win their first American Athletic Conference tournament. Why not? Why leave an NCAA tournament berth up to a selection committee ready and able to point out what the Tigers haven’t done this season? That committee is unlikely to reward the Tigers’ recent run of nine wins in 11 games, a run that could well be 10 of 11 had 9th-ranked Houston not escaped with a desperation buzzer-beating heave on its home floor last Sunday. The committee won’t pay attention (at least not enough attention) to the kind of team Memphis puts on the floor with DeAndre Williams in the lineup. (That team is 11-4 since Williams gained eligibility in December, and all but surely beats Houston had Williams not been seated with foul trouble most of Sunday’s game.)
U of M Athletics / Joe Murphy

DeAndre Williams

So the Tigers’ NCAA tournament actually begins Friday night, when they face the winner of East Carolina-UCF in the AAC quarterfinals. Three wins in three nights would give the 2020-21 Tigers a chance to win six more games in three weeks for the program’s first national championship. If you can’t dream at this time of year, college basketball isn’t your sport.

There was a time, not that long ago, when a conference tournament trophy was just another part of the Memphis schedule. The Tigers won the Conference USA tourney seven times in eight years from 2006 to 2013. As automatic as the 2009 championship felt (the last under coach John Calipari), the 2011 title felt just as unlikely (the first under coach Josh Pastner). Those Memphis Tigers made the C-USA tournament their runway for one NCAA tournament after another.

And these tourney championships matter. FedExForum has a glaring absence among the Tiger banners dangling from its rafters: one that salutes teams good enough to win these single-weekend brawls, often with NCAA tournament implications. Remember Memphis and Louisville taking turns bludgeoning one another in the Metro Conference tournament? If you’re too young, here’s a refresher: The Tigers and Cardinals squared off for the Metro championship four times from 1982 to 1988, each team winning a pair. Having been banned from the 1987 NCAA tournament, the Tigers went out and beat the defending-national champion Cardinals by 23 points to end their season with a trophy. There needs to be a banner acknowledging this Memphis moment, and several others.

The Tigers lost all three Great Midwest tournament championships in which they played (1992-94), each time to Cincinnati, twice with a kid named Hardaway their go-to player. An upset in ’94 would have gained an undermanned Tiger team an NCAA tournament berth. These championships matter.

Primary among Penny Hardaway’s tasks upon taking the Tiger coaching gig three years ago was establishing Memphis as the team to beat in the AAC. All the talk of “competing for national championships” is just that until the program can win a league title or two. Or seven. Memphis has played in exactly one AAC tournament championship (the Tigers lost to UConn in 2016). They need to get back to regular appearances in tourney finals.

To reach the final of this week’s tournament, Memphis will likely have to beat Houston in a semifinal Saturday. And won’t that be juicy? It won’t be Houston’s home court, but it will be the Cougars’ home state. Kelvin Sampson’s squad has already punched its ticket to the Big Dance. The Cougars want to win the AAC championship. The Memphis Tigers need to win the AAC championship. Buckle up, Tiger Nation. An intense weekend nears.

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#9 Houston 67, Tigers 64

Tramon Mark’s desperation heave from nearly 30 feet banked in at the buzzer Sunday afternoon to give 9th-ranked Houston a win over the Tigers. The shot came less than two seconds after Memphis guard Boogie Ellis tied things at 64 with a three-pointer from the right wing. The Cougars earned their 25th consecutive win at the Fertitta Center on a day the teams were originally scheduled to play at FedExForum in Memphis. (The venue was changed because their meeting in Houston was postponed due to positive Covid tests in the Memphis program.) Houston will enter next week’s American Athletic Conference as the second seed (behind Wichita State) with an overall record of 21-3 (14-3 in the AAC). Memphis will be the third seed with a record of 15-7 (11-4).

The game featured nine lead changes, and the Tigers were up by seven points in the first half. But three particular areas killed the Tigers’ chances for their first win over a top-10 team in seven years. Junior forward DeAndre Williams picked up his second foul less than six minutes into the game. After sitting on the bench for the final 14 minutes of the first half, Williams made an immediate impact after halftime, helping Memphis seize the lead (42-39) with a 7-0 run. But he picked up two more fouls and was limited to 19 minutes of action (in which he scored 11 points and handed out four assists).

The Tigers missed half of their 20 free throws. A few more makes and they wouldn’t have needed the late Ellis trey to stay in the game. Making matters worse, the Tigers surrendered 14 offensive rebounds to the active, attacking Cougars. Thus a team that shot 37 percent for the game beat a team that shot 46 percent from the field.

DeJon Jarreau led Houston with 19 points and Quentin Grimes added 17. Landers Nolley led Memphis with 14 points and Lester Quinones scored 11. (Quinones missed the front end of a critical one-and-one opportunity at the foul line in the game’s final minute. Memphis trailed by three points at the time.)

The loss is a significant blow to the Tigers’ chances for an at-large NCAA tournament bid. They’ll likely need to at least reach the final of the AAC tournament to make the field of 68 for the first time since 2014. The tournament opens Thursday in Fort Worth, Texas. If seeding holds, Memphis would face Houston in the semifinals on Saturday.