Categories
Sports Sports Feature

New Wave?

With apologies to Jean-Luc Godard, here’s a series of discrete observations on the Grizzlies after nine regular-season games:

1) They’re better than their record. The Grizzlies may have a new coach and lots of new players, but this is still a franchise with a fan base that’s long past celebrating moral victories. That said, this team has played better basketball than its 2-7 record (heading into Monday night’s game against the Sonics) suggests. Of the seven NBA teams with two or fewer wins, none has played closer games against a tougher schedule than the Grizzlies. Over the course of a 1-3 stretch last week, the Grizzlies’ opponents had a combined 21-9 record, with the Grizzlies beating the then 6-1 Rockets and losing to the Bucks, Hornets, and Mavericks by a total of eight points. Since this Grizzlies team seemed predestined to start slow and improve over the course of the season, the team’s ability to be so competitive against such quality competition is a legitimate reason for optimism.

2) Pau’s not right. Rather than stepping up his production early on to help a young roster get through early-season struggles, Pau Gasol has been less productive than even during his rookie season. If you don’t think the problem is primarily physical — a result of the phalanx of minor injuries (back, ankle, finger) Gasol has been struggling through and the fatigue that comes from another summer of international competition — then take a look at the dramatic reduction in Gasol’s rate of blocked shots. After averaging 1.9 blocks in 35 minutes a game through his career, Gasol is averaging 0.6 blocks in 34 minutes a game so far this season. This indicator of athleticism confirms what the naked eye sees: Gasol is showing less lift and quickness this season.

3) They still need a closer. One reason the Grizzlies have lost so many close games this season is that they’ve struggled to score on half-court possessions at the end of games. Other than a flurry of desperate three-pointers (three in the final 13 seconds) to send their game against New Orleans into overtime, the Grizzlies haven’t been able to convert on crucial possessions late in games, searching fruitlessly for reliable scoring options: Kyle Lowry getting stripped against the Bucks; Gasol getting stripped against the Mavs; Juan Carlos Navarro missing consecutive open threes against the Mavs. Rudy Gay is developing nicely as a scorer, but his off-the-dribble game is still too suspect to be a reliable go-to guy.

4) The future is now or should be. Heading into the season, the conventional wisdom on the Grizzlies’ point-guard situation was that veteran Damon Stoudamire would give the team a better chance to win now than “raw” rookie Michael Conley. Nine games in, I think we can put an end to that assumption. At 34, age and injuries have robbed Stoudamire of the quickness he had in his 20s. His advantage over Conley was supposed to be his superior shooting and ability to lead a team. But, over last week’s four-game stretch, Stoudamire shot 6-21 and left the Grizzlies with a first-quarter deficit in three of four games.

Conley has played only 72 minutes in five games (all on the road) but has outplayed Stoudamire in virtually every way: better shooting percentage, more prolific scoring, a higher assist rate, and a lower turnover rate. He’s not just the point guard of the future; he’s the better player right now. Conley strained his shoulder against the Mavericks, but as soon as he’s back to 100 percent, he deserves to supplant Stoudamire in the rotation.

5) There’s a missing piece. The Grizzlies are still a bad defensive team. There’s plenty of room for internal improvement in this area, but the team could use a physical defender off the bench who can guard both wing positions. Tarence Kinsey is too slight for this role; Casey Jacobsen is too slow. If there’s an in-season trade, look for a player of this type to be the target.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Grizzlies Lose to Toronto, 95-89

The Toronto Raptors pulled away in the final minutes to hand the Memphis Grizzlies a disappointing loss at FedExForum Wednesday night, 95-89.

The Grizzlies shot horribly from 3-pt range and had too many turnovers against a Toronto team playing out the string of a three-game road trip. Chris Bosh had 19 rebounds and 22 points for the Raptors.

For stats, recap, go here. For analysis and chat, see Beyond the Arc, the Flyer‘s GrizBlog.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Pros Scout Derrick Rose at Tigers/ASU Game

From the Seattle Times: ‘On nights like this, you wonder what all of the fuss surrounding Derrick Rose is about.

“The 6-foot-3 freshman point guard, considered perhaps the best men’s college basketball player in the country, finished with five assists and four points as the Memphis Tigers strolled to an 84-63 victory against Arkansas State at FedExForum on Tuesday night.

“With a handful of NBA personnel in attendance, including Sonics general manager Sam Presti, Rose didn’t show his amazing athleticism that’s on display in a YouTube highlight clip, which is drawing raves from streetballers and NBA players.

“He didn’t dominate, instead taking a backseat to sophomore guard Willie Kemp, who led the Tigers with 22 points, and junior wing Chris Douglas-Roberts, who added 16.

“If there’s a negative to Rose’s game, it’s his mechanical jump shot and a quiet, low-key demeanor, which can be construed as nonchalance when he’s on the floor …”

Read more about Rose and his NBA prospects.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Tigers Beat UConn, 81-70; Win NYC Tourney

Led by Chris Douglas-Roberts, who scored a career-high 33 points, the Memphis Tigers held off a tough challenge from UConn to win the 2K Sports College Hoops Classic in New York’s Madison Square Garden.

Memphis built an early double-digit lead, only to see UConn make a late first-half charge and take 1 41-40 lead at halftime. Memphis worked back to a 10-point lead in the middle of the second half and held off the Huskies through the final minutes.

Derrick Rose had 24 points, and Joey Dorsey had 6 points, 11 rebounds, and five blocks in the winning effort. UConn’s A.J. Price led the Huskies with 21.

For stats and a recap, check out CBS Sportsline.com.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Griz Lose to New Orleans in Overtime. 118-120

The Grizzlies fell to New Orleans in overtime at FedExForum Friday night, despite 28 points from Juan Carlos Navarro, and two clutch 3-pointers from Rudy Gay that sent the game into an extra period.

David West led New Orleans with 40 points. Chris Paul added 28 and had 13 assists.

For stats, go to CBS Sportsline.com. For analysis and chat, check out Chris Herrington’s Grizblog, Beyond the Arc.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Tigers Top Oklahoma in Madison Square Garden, 63-53

Derrick Rose had 17 points and Joey Dorsey had 9 points, 13 rebounds, and five blocks to lead the Memphis Tigers to a workman-like victory over the Oklahoma Sooners Thursday night in Madison Square Garden.

Memphis did not play particularly well offensively, shooting 37 percent from the field and making only 11 of 21 foul shots, but the Tigers’ defensive intensity and depth held the Sooners at bay nearly the entire game. Every time Oklahoma closed the gap, Memphis responded.

Joey Dorsey, making his season debut, was a dominating force inside, blocking or altering shots, and nabbing 13 rebounds.

The Tigers play UConn Friday night in the title game of the 2K Sports College Hoops Classic.

For stats and a recap of tonight’s game, check out CBS Sportsline.com.

Categories
Cover Feature News

Great Expectations

Here’s a dose of perspective on John Calipari as he opens his eighth season atop the University of Memphis basketball program. When he wins his 13th game, Calipari will have won more games at Memphis (194) than he did at the University of Massachusetts, where he became a national figure. When he wins his 19th game, he’ll join Larry Finch as the only other coach in Tiger history to win 200 games. As Calipari’s club starts a campaign that many fans and prognosticators say will end at the Final Four in San Antonio, the Flyer sat down with the coach to fill in a few blanks.

Flyer: This is your eighth season in Memphis. There were fans who said you’d be here no more than three or four years — that this was a stepping-stone to a better job.

Calipari: I wanted my daughters to graduate [from high school here], both of them. I’ve also said, the entire time, that if the school stays committed to winning a national championship, I’ll stay. I have not changed what I’ve said since day one. The minute that waivers, I’m gone, because I’m not the kind of coach you want for a program winning 18 or 19 games. People will go crazy. I’d go crazy. People look at the way I do business, they’re waiting in the weeds, and they take shots. They go crazy.

My second daughter graduates from Briarcrest this year. The university waivered on a commitment — to my staff, not to me — when I almost went to N.C. State [in 2006]. They had other commitments. We came together, though, and it worked out.

What about Memphis — basketball-related or otherwise — has surprised you?

It’s not the basketball town everybody says it is. If it were, all our games would be packed, not just all the tickets sold. It’s a sports town, but it’s not the basketball town everyone portrays it to be.

I hope that the way we’ve elevated the program here has elevated high school programs in the area. Kids here are now looking at winning national championships in college, so the level of play is more well-rounded, and their idea is bigger than just playing for Memphis. They want to compete with any school in the country. We’re on national television more than those other programs are.

But I can’t recruit a player who won’t help me win a national championship. I always said that half of my team would be players from Memphis, and the other half would come from elsewhere. That hasn’t changed.

Do you hear gripes about not suiting up enough Memphis kids?

Sometimes. It bothers me when I see someone make a decision, then there’s an outcry from the public and they waiver. Either what you thought was not thought out enough, or your convictions aren’t what they should be. But if you make a decision, and it’s well thought out and for the right reasons — even if there’s a public outcry — you gotta stick to your guns, or you shouldn’t have made the decision in the first place.

I’m making decisions that affect young people. [When it comes to discipline], I’ve always asked, if it was your son, what would you do? How would you want me to deal with it? Throw him under the bus? Or would you like me to be very firm, fair, show some compassion, and love him like you love him? If he changes, give him another chance. Now, if he doesn’t change, you’re not doing us any favors.

Looking at the season ahead, have you ever gone through training camp with such an abundance of talent?

I’ve had teams like this. But what we’ve done here is, we’ve held them accountable, on and off the court. We had that curfew. They acted like they were 12 years old, so I treated them like they were 12. With abuse comes restrictions.

I was waiting for someone to break curfew. Now, I’m saying if you’re of age, go out but don’t be out after midnight. My job isn’t to police them to the point they can’t make a decision on their own.

How do you incorporate all the Final Four talk — even talk of a number-one ranking — in your daily approach?

First of all, we tell them to think in the moment. If you start thinking about March now, there’s too much anxiety, too many things can happen. What if we have five injuries? Let’s live in this moment, get better today. We’re trying to get individual players better — and they are — and we’re trying to get our team better. And let’s all get closer, have more respect and affection for each other. I want all their emotion and passion to be within, not shown to the crowd.

As the coach, I have to not get too excited — because I easily could, like everyone else. They’re really good. I have to be methodical. I keep looking at areas where we need to get better.

Their feel for defense is not where it should be. All it takes is for one guy to break down on defense. So it has to be five guys together, always, and we’re not close to that yet. Offensively, the pace of the game isn’t where it needs to be. The execution, the screening, the cutting.

But I won’t do tomorrow’s work today. It has to be methodical.

Larry Kuzniewski

There’s considerable irony in a two-time Elite Eight team returning virtually every player, but a freshman is getting the most national attention. Is Derrick Rose that good?

We were 33-4 two years ago, and the team that came back lost three starters and 50 percent of its scoring. We came back and had to have players move from support roles to starring roles. We developed that, along with having a freshman point guard, and we went 33-4 again.

Now, we lost a little of our grit and toughness in Jeremy Hunt. But we’re bringing in three young players who add to our team. This year it’s two freshmen [Rose and Jeff Robinson] and a big man who had to sit out last year [transfer Shawn Taggart]. So how do you incorporate the new players?

Much of it is the kind of kid you bring in. Both [Willie Kemp and Rose] are great as teammates. Both are conscientious and responsible. When I ask for five guys up, Derrick will always defer to Willie. And most of the time Willie will say, no, you go. Willie’s comfortable in his own skin. He knows he’s going to play the same amount of minutes, but he’s going to be so much better. He’s been the biggest surprise for anyone who walks into our gym.

I’ve compared Derrick to Marvin Williams, the kid who went to North Carolina a few years ago [as a freshman star] and became their sixth man. [Derrick] thought that would be great. When someone else on the team does something fabulous, Derrick is ecstatic, and so is Willie.

What kind of player is Rose?

First of all, he’s a great teammate. The guys love him. He’s physicaly and athletically off the charts. Skillwise, he’s one of the best layup shooters I’ve seen in all my time in basketball. In this offense, that’s paramount: making tough layups with big people flying at you. His other skills are improving. He gets really frustrated when he doesn’t know something. He’s very quiet, very reserved. His family hasn’t let anyone into his circle, except his teammates or his teachers from high school.

I said to his mom, “Your son is the nicest star player I’ve ever seen. What did you do?”

She said, “I told him you’re no different from anyone else, and treat people like you want to be treated.”

I talked to Derrick Rose twice by phone [in recruiting him]. That’s all. His mom told me, “My son doesn’t speak. When he came back from your campus, he talked for an hour and wouldn’t stop.”

It came down to who’s going to prepare him best? Who’s gonna help prepare him to be an NBA player and, truthfully, the quickest?

What does Joey Dorsey need to do this season to finish his career the right way?

Act right. Mature. Grow up. He’s two semesters and summer school away from graduating, which is another great story.

Larry Kuzniewski

I tell these kids, when you have children, you want them to grow up and not have to depend on anybody. You don’t want them looking at you when you tell them to get their education and saying, “Well, you don’t have yours.” But if you have your degree, you can tell them where you came from and how you did it.

A lot of these kids are first-generation college-educated, like I was. My grandparents came through Ellis Island. My parents are high-school educated. So I have some compassion for how hard it is for those children to get to the point where they’re thinking about education. It’s easy if your parents are doctors or lawyers.

Our mission is to get people the opportunity to be educated. A few of my players may be a doctor or lawyer, not many. But my hope is that their children all have the ability to be lawyers or doctors or whatever they choose. That’s my hope for a guy like Joey, for Antonio Burks, Andre Allen, Jeremy Hunt.

When you stir your mind, you’re going to be a better basketball player. If you’re lazy and you don’t want to read to stir your mind, how are you going to play the way we do?

Chris Douglas-Roberts is probably the least flashy Tiger star in 20 years. What separates him in your eyes?

When I recruit, I don’t care about polls, stats, or numbers. We flew to Augusta, Georgia, to watch a player from Detroit (he’s now at an SEC school, good player). But as I watched the game, I saw Chris. I liked him better. He played herky-jerky, really didn’t guard anybody. But he showed signs of being unbelievable. His [Amateur Athletic Union] coach said, “You’re picking the right one.”

I just needed to get him to play hard and compete. Obviously, we picked the right kid. Same thing happened with Robert Dozier. At the time I first saw him, he was being recruited by Georgia State. That’s it. He didn’t start as a junior in high school.

Is anything short of a Final Four appearance going to be a disappointment for this team?

I can’t say, because I don’t know what’s going to happen throughout the year.

Here’s an example: We have an injury or two, and we go on the road to Marshall, or Rice, and we get beat — just one game. And there’s a reason behind it. But we’re not going to be a number-one seed now. One game. Now we’re going to be a four or five seed. The most important thing for advancing in the NCAA tournament is getting a high seed. If you get a seventh seed, you’re lucky to win one game.

It’s like golfing. You win or lose on the first tee. How many strokes did you give that guy? What did you give him? You lost before you teed off!

Where are we seeded and why? Now, if we’re a one-seed, it’ll be a disappointment if we don’t get to the Final Four. I say that, and then we end up playing UCLA in California in front of 17,000 fans. Then they’ll say, “Well, Cal, that was a tough one.”

But the last three years, are we up at bat, playing for a Final Four? Yeah. And that’s what we want.

What do you enjoy most about your job today?

When you see that you’re creating hope, not only for these kids but for their families, and when you see they’re responding and they trust what you’re saying to them, it’s heavy, because it’s on you. To see a kid who, a year after I meet him, he looks you in the eye and he’s got a smile on his face. The respect has turned into some affection. To create that hope and see it on the basketball court year after year, that’s what I enjoy most about this. The games are a chess match to me, but I enjoy practices most.

Larry Kuzniewski

Tell us about your relationship with Chinese coaches.

This is a significant moment in my basketball life. Where it’s going to go and what we’re trying to do with it, I don’t think anyone in college basketball has seen. When you’re a top-five program, and you’re not Duke, North Carolina, Kentucky, Kansas, UCLA … when we’re ranked higher than those guys for two straight years, how do we stay there? And what has separated us?

First of all, we’re getting good players, and those players are getting better. But it comes back to the offense. If we’re getting these players because of our offense, what are you going to do if you’re another coach? You’re gonna copy the offense. And there are schools in [Bowl Championship Series] conferences who are going to copy us, because [our offense] recruits. It’s where the game is going.

We’re left with a non-BCS program, a good school — but not an elite school — in a good city, but not an elite city. What do we do? Well, I read an article in The New York Times about basketball in China. That was it … we’ve got to do this. But how do I do this? It’s a communist government. Who do I call?

I spoke with [Dallas Mavericks assistant coach] Del Harris. He told me the Chinese national team was going to be in Dallas in five days. I got on the next plane, went down there, met all the right people, and we put it together.

Can you envision a Chinese student-athlete playing for you here at Memphis?

Yes. I don’t know when, but that would be a dream. But first, we’d like to have a sister-city in China, so the communities are connected. We’d like to get a large contingent of Chinese undergraduate students. This would build an Asian base and draw Asian-Americans to this university. The educational capital from that group would take this university to another level.

Now, if we had a Chinese player, our team would be huge in L.A., San Francisco, Chicago, New York. And then there’s TV. If we’re on national TV here, there may be 1.5 million people watching, and we’re ecstatic. Over there, if we’re on TV: 400 million. We can’t fathom that.

This is your 19th year as a head basketball coach. How does the dynamic change between coaching as a 29-year-old and now as a 48-year-old?

It’s less about you and more about them the older you get. When you’re trying to establish yourself, it’ll come above the team. But as you get older, there’s only one thing that matters: a national championship. It’s about us.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Griz-Rockets Wrap-Up

The Griz got a desperately needed, quite impressive, and terribly exciting win tonight against a terrific Houston Rockets team. Pathetic but true: This was probably one of the better wins in franchise history.

1. The Ivory Towers

There’s been a lot of talk early on about the Grizzlies implementing an uptempo attack under new coach Marc Iavaroni, and the team did indeed have a nice stretch in the first half with an optimum speed lineup of Kyle Lowry/Juan Carlos Navarro/Mike Miller/Rudy Gay/Pau Gasol (giving way to Darko Milicic during the stretch). But with Gasol and Milicic both playing well, the Grizzlies showed that they can be a very effective power team on the offensive end as well …

Read Chris Herrington’s GrizBlog, Beyond the Arc, for more on Tuesday night’s big win.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

The Grizzlies’ Early-Season Woes Analyzed

The Griz fell to 1-4 after horrid second halves at Portland and Utah. Five games into the season, let’s take a look at what the primary problems for this Griz squad have been.

What’s Gone Wrong:

1. Cohesion: Or lack thereof. The lack of on-court chemistry and sideline certainty is the problem that underlies much of the team’s early struggles. To a degree, this is to be expected. The Griz did come into the season with a first-time head coach, a completely new coaching staff, a new philosophy/system to implement, and essentially six new players, three of them essentially rookies. (With Kyle Lowry prompting the “essentially” modifier on both counts.)

That said, the extent to which this team is still searching for an identity — trying to figure out both how to play and who to play — might be a little surprising …

Read the rest of Chris Herrington’s take on the Grizzlies’ early-season woes at Beyond the Arc, the Flyer‘s Grizblog.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

FROM MY SEAT: Backcourt Abundance

If
basketball championships are won with guard play, the Memphis Tigers’ abundance
of talent in the backcourt should have trophies already being engraved. The
mercurial Jeremy Hunt has graduated, but returning are senior Andre Allen (the
surprising spark plug of the Tigers’ NCAA tournament run in 2006), junior
Antonio Anderson (the free-throw-draining hero of last season’s Sweet 16 victory
over Texas A & M), and sophomores Willie Kemp (the incumbent starter at point
guard) and Doneal Mack (with Hunt gone, probably the Tigers’ top shooting threat
from three-point range). And, oh yeah, one Derrick Rose — late of Simeon Career
Academy in Chicago and likely a few months shy of being a top-10 NBA draft pick
— will squeeze his multiple talents into the mix.

Among
the reasons to be excited about Rose’s arrival is how seamlessly he seems to fit
into the backcourt rotation, even with the reputation for greatness he brings.
Unlike Dajuan Wagner — a similar high school phenom who arrived in 2001 with
expectations of a “one-and-done” college career — Rose doesn’t need to score to
impact a basketball game. As a senior last season at Simeon, Rose led his team
to a 23-point victory in the Illinois Class AA state championship game . . . and
scored exactly two points. The thought of a team with as many scorers as the
Tigers appear to have adding a distributor will have a few C-USA coaches
wrestling with their pillows. (Do yourself a favor this season when you watch a
Tiger game: instead of following the ball, keep your eyes on Rose. His instincts
for where the ball will be — and where it needs to go — are superhuman. And
don’t worry, the ball will find him. You won’t miss a thing.)

Anderson, for one, seems to have adapted to Rose’s game with ease, and actually
emphasizes the inverse. “He’s doing pretty good,” says Anderson. “He just has to
learn the offense.”

Among
the most compelling of coach John Calipari’s lineup variables will be the way he
manages minutes for Allen and Kemp, pure point guards who are going to have to
support and supplement Rose’s time on the floor. Allen has been invaluable the
last two seasons, averaging 18 minutes off the bench and dishing out almost
twice as many assists (220) as turnovers (118). And Kemp faces the possibility
of playing a reserve role after starting as a freshman (he averaged 21 minutes
per game) and being fully expected to start as a junior (when Rose will likely
be in the NBA).

Add Mack
and even Chris Douglas-Roberts (who can play shooting guard or small forward) to
this group, and the Tigers have an embarrassment of riches when it comes to
ball-handling and perimeter defense. Count on the leadership of Anderson and CDR
to defuse any internal conflict over playing time.

“Coach
came to me and Chris,” explains Anderson, “and told us, for us to be successful,
we have to cut back on our minutes a little bit. Not major minutes, but five or
six minutes a game to get the young guys in there. So when tournament time
comes, if one of us gets in foul trouble, they won’t be scared to get in the
game. We don’t mind that at all, because whatever it takes for us to win, that’s
what we’re gonna do.”

Calipari
recognizes — and celebrates — Anderson’s role in this backcourt troupe.
“Antonio’s the glue,” says Calipari. “To be the glue, you have to be
multidimensional. He leads us in minutes, he’s our best perimeter defender and
rebounder. He truly is a glue guy. Sometimes he’s making shots, but when he’s
not, you can leave him on the floor.”

Douglas-Roberts happens to be C-USA’s preseason selection for Player of the
Year, an honor bestowed upon two Tigers during the Calipari era (Antonio Burks
in 2004 and Rodney Carney in ’06). Standing 6’6″, CDR’s future as a pro may be
on the wing, but he’s proven to be a gifted inside scorer and led the Tigers in
free-throw attempts last season. Look for him to man the small-forward position
primarily, alleviating some of that logjam in the backcourt.

Before
the tip-off that opened the Tigers’ season November 5th at FedExForum, Rose and
Kemp each took a gum ball from a package offered by one of the statisticians at
the courtside scorer’s table. You have to believe that point guards who can
share a package of gum will be able to share the responsibility of running a
basketball team. Something to chew on, at the very least.