Categories
Sports Sports Feature

City Sports

The Tigers are looking to end a 30-year postseason drought; The business of college basketball marches on.

Ready To Go Bowling?

The Tigers are looking to end a 30-year postseason drought.

by James P. Hill

The last time the University of Memphis Tigers played in a bowl game was 1971. The

president was Richard Nixon and the U of M was Memphis

State. As Missouri Valley champions, the Tigers rolled over

the San Jose State Spartans in the Pasadena Bowl by a

final score of 28 to 9. A paltry 15,000 fans filed into the

Rose Bowl to see the game.

During that 1971 season the Tigers didn’t exactly

set the world on fire. Their regular season record was

four wins and six losses. After manhandling SJS, Memphis

finished the season at 5-6.

Fast-forward 30 years to the 2001 Tigers season,

when the final record was also 5-6. But there were some

big differences. The Tigers had a new coach, several new

players, and a new system. It was, for want of a better

cliche, a rebuilding season.

According to Coach Tommy West, the 2002

Tigers are ready to compete with Conference USA’s elite

and secure a bowl berth for the first time in 31 seasons.

“Yeah, I expect this team to be in a bowl game,” says West.

“That’s not a goal. It’s more than that. It’s an

expectation. We expect to play in a bowl game this season.”

If hard work, high hopes, and passion can bring

about bowl games, the Tigers are in good shape. For Wade

Smith, a senior offensive tackle who played several games

last season with a broken thumb in a cast, it’s all about

staying healthy and playing consistently. “Last season,

there was a point where we were 4 and 2, and we went to

East Carolina and basically didn’t show up,” says Smith.

“That’s the kind of thing we can’t have happen this year.

We shouldn’t have to come down to the last game of the

season to decide if we’re going to a bowl game or not.”

Smith is enthusiastic about potential bowl

possibilities but remains focused on taking the season one

game at a time. “Right now, I’m focusing on Murray State,”

he says. “We have to come out and play up to our potential.”

Every season, the Tigers assign team goals and

objectives in their quest for a Conference USA championship. In

the past, the team often hasn’t had enough depth to sustain

those goals in the face of injuries, ineligibility, etc. But, this

year, the team and the coaching staff feel they have enough

talent to fill in for players who fall by the wayside. That list

already includes acclaimed Trezevant High School

phenom Albert Means, who will miss the entire season due to

academic ineligibility.

“There’s not a void, because what it creates is a

window of opportunity for another player,” says West. “I

expect Kenyun Glover to be the guy to step up.”

Another enthusiastic Tiger is Tony Brown, a senior

defensive end who has bought into the Tommy West

philosophy. He also feels the U of M is a better football

team this season. “We will accomplish more than what we

did last year,” says Brown. “We’re a better team, more

experienced, with more leadership, more character, and

better work ethics.”

When asked what kind of team the Tigers would

field this season, West responds with confidence: “We’re

going to be capable of going 80 yards in one play, because

we’ve got a quality quarterback [Danny Wimprine] and we

have some skill-level players who can do things with the ball

after they get it. We’re going to be a team that throws the

ball first and runs the ball second.”

And hopefully makes it to the Liberty Bowl. After

the regular season.

Profit-taking

The business of college basketball marches on.

by Ron Martin

Collegiate recruiting peaked over the past week as teenagers verbally committed their

allegiance to schools hoping to increase their stock in the

business known as NCAA basketball. The University of

Memphis 2002 Initial Public Offerings appear to be better

than most, led by Kendrick Perkins of Texas, who some

predict could lead the Tigers into a profit margin his

freshman year. The balance sheets of collegiate basketball

are affected by the decisions of teenagers whose verbal

commitment is worthless until November 13th, the first

day recruits can sign a binding agreement.

During a four-day period, Memphis landed

commitments from three players, each of whom had

summer-league coaches proclaiming their on-court

brilliance. Meanwhile, arm chair coaches discussed the positive

and negative attributes of their game. Of course, analysts

have their own agenda. The summer-league coaches are

well aware that the more stars they produce, the more

money and respect they will be able to demand from the

shoe companies supporting their programs. The armchair

analysts base their opinions on whether or not the

athlete has committed to their favorite school.

Players who show promise early in their high

school career are flown coast-to-coast during summer

school breaks to participate in cattle-calls also known as

summer leagues to showcase their talents. Shoe

companies such as Nike and Adidas sponsor these events,

supposedly with the purpose of enhancing the high school

players’ abilities. The majority of the butts in the seats

belong to college coaches and NBA agents looking for the next

Kobe Bryant. It’s a dangerous mix and sends a bad message to

the players who quite reasonably begin to think basketball

is the only route their life should travel.

Attendance at these camps is a necessary evil for

college coaching staffs. If they don’t participate, they won’t

keep their jobs very long. Players vie for the attention of

coaches such as the U of M’s John Calipari. Individuals and

companies profit off the backs of these teenagers. It is as close to

a modern-day plantation as you will ever see. Shoe

companies and recruiting gurus create Web sites and offer

their voices for talk shows to promote their “I’m the only

one who really knows” opinions.

All of this leads to incredible pressure on the athlete.

As recruiting services tout the players and declare with

“inside” knowledge where a kid is going to play, boosters of

schools not mentioned start applying the screws. A great example

is U of M football freshman DeAngelo Williams of

Wynne, Arkansas, whose family was besieged by University of

Arkansas fans. When he began leaning toward the Tigers,

one would have thought Williams had renounced his

American citizenship. As Williams declared his intentions to

attend Memphis, he noted the pressure, saying it was hard to

study because of everything said about him and his family. It’s

a sad statement from a youngster who just wants to play

football. Unfortunately, it’s a statement which is repeated on

a daily basis throughout the country.

Unless controls are placed upon the summer leagues

and the companies supporting them, NCAA sports could

soon face charges of corruption rivaling Enron and WorldCom.

Flyers Six-time Olympic medalist Jackie

Joyner-Kersee is in Memphis to speak at Mitchell High School

regarding her fight with asthma while becoming one of

the world’s greatest athletes. Joined by former U of M

great Andre Turner, she will hold her awareness seminar

Thursday, August 15th … Casey Wittenberg won the

Tennessee State Amateur Golf Championship last week

at Ridgeway Country Club. The 17-year-old is one of

the youngest to capture the title in the tourney’s 87-year

history … As the Elvis celebration winds down, look for

U of M athletic director R.C. Johnson in a prime seat

at the concert Friday night at The Pyramid. If there were

a top-10 list of Elvis fans, Johnson would hold the

three top spots.

Ramblings I’m still wondering why we seldom

hear Lorenzen Wright’s name when the Grizzlies talk about

their future … Do you enjoy going to AutoZone Park as

much this year as you did last year? … It’s strange hearing U of

M football coach Tommy West say he’s concerned about

defense … Considering the legal rap sheets belonging to

Arkansas football players, shouldn’t they change their

fight song to “Jailhouse Rock”? … Congrats to former U of

M basketballer Shyrone Chapman. He accepted his

diploma last Saturday, proving you can be a student and an

athlete at the same time.