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Sports Tiger Blue

Who Are These Memphis Tigers?

Ten games into a bizarre, rhythm-free basketball season, the Memphis Tigers have raised as many questions as they’ve answered. Here are four, with attempts at defogging the view.

Who is the Tigers’ Alpha?
In Penny Hardaway’s first year as head coach, Jeremiah Martin became only the fifth Tiger to score 700 points in a single season. (Hardaway himself was the second.) Last season, freshman Precious Achiuwa filled the void left by James Wiseman and earned American Athletic Conference Player of the Year honors. But this year? Who is the man? A basketball team with four or five go-to players is a team without a go-to player.
Joe Murphy

Five players have led the Tigers in scoring in at least one game, with sophomores D.J. Jeffries and Landers Nolley each leading in three. Another sophomore, Boogie Ellis, scored 24 points in the Tigers’ opening game — the team’s second highest total of the season — but doesn’t even start. Jeffries may be the most talented player on the roster, and Nolley has ACC credentials (from his season at Virginia Tech). But based on a tiny sample size of three games, DeAndre Williams may end up the face of this team. (The Evansville transfer missed the first seven games awaiting NCAA clearance.) An Alpha must want the ball not just in a game’s closing seconds, but every minute he’s on the floor. Williams appears to have a fire in his belly this program desperately needs.

What does Tiger Nation think of this team?
Related question: Would a FedExForum crowd ever boo a Hardaway-coached team? We won’t find out this winter, not with the Tigers’ home barn virtually empty for pandemic reasons. But looking back at the team’s collapse over the final four minutes against Tulsa on December 21st, it’s not hard to imagine that being an uncomfortable walk off the court for Hardaway and his players if 15,000 fans had paid for a seat to watch. It’s one thing to lose two out of three games in South Dakota. Quite another to cough up a win against a team that utterly embarrassed you (by 40 points) last February.

Judging by social media, Memphis fans are getting restless. The choppy, low-scoring games, the myriad lineups Hardaway incorporates (as he must, still searching for a rotation that won’t cough up games like the one against Tulsa), the feeling a Top-25 ranking is becoming a pipe dream under the watch of a man who has been vocal about top-five aspirations. None of these worries will survive a nice, lengthy winning streak. Five games, maybe six or seven. The day will come when FedExForum is again packed on game night. If Hardaway’s team is going to suffer growing pains, this may be the season for it.

Is there a must-see game remaining on the Tigers’ schedule?
Circle February 14th and March 6th (or 7th) on your calendar. An upset of Houston — currently the AAC’s gold standard — would be a significant notch on Hardaway’s belt. The teams meet in Texas on Valentine’s Day, then in Memphis for the season finale. (The date hasn’t been finalized yet.)

What should expectations be for this team?
This question is related to the structure of the 2021 NCAA tournament, presuming there is one. (If you think you know the format — in the time of coronavirus — take a breath. March is a long way from now.) Will the field be expanded? Will the field be contracted for “bubble play” in a single location? Will conference tournaments be a factor?

It would seem a top-three finish in the AAC would be a reasonable bar for this team to reach. They were picked by the coaches to finish second (behind only Houston) after back-to-back fifth-place finishes in Hardaway’s first two seasons on the bench. The Cougars have separated themselves, rising to fifth in the national rankings, though Tulsa also proved to be thorny for the league favorites. SMU won its first six games before falling to Houston Sunday night. Wichita State? Memphis needs to be better than two or three of these programs, and in year three of the Hardaway era, that’s not a big ask. With a new year upon us, perhaps the Tigers can turn that proverbial corner and make hopes for madness in March a little less questionable.

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News News Blog

Downtown’s Most Lyfted Spot of 2019

Paula & Raiford’s Disco/Facebook

Memphis mostly Lyfts Downtown.

Lyft, the ride-sharing technology company, announced the winners of its fifth-annual Lyftie awards Tuesday. They included the top city for tipping (New York City), the top city for donations (San Francisco), and the top city for sharing rides (Los Angeles).

Memphis did not rank in the top 10 of any of those categories. But three destinations in Memphis won Lyfties as the most popular destinations here of 2019.

The winners for the 2019 Lyftie awards in Memphis are:

Most Celebrated Venue: FedExForum

Late Night Neighborhood: Beale Street Entertainment District

Beale Street remains Tennessee’s No.1 tourist destination.

Most Celebrated Restaurant/Bar: Paula & Raiford’s Disco

Paula & Raiford’s Disco/Facebook

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Music Music Blog

Elton John: The Rocket Man’s Final Launch Lifts Fans Into Stratosphere

Jamie Harmon

Elton John

The atmosphere on Beale Street was more carnivalesque than usual last night, as Elton John fans filed into the FedExForum to catch Memphis’ last glimpse of the storied entertainer. That the show happened the night before Halloween was entirely fitting, with many fans paying homage to the glam-master’s wardrobes of yore. But along with the glittery trappings and finery, it was a powerful measure of just how dearly Memphis fans hold his music to their hearts.

Looking stout but far more spry than most 72-year-olds in his rhinestone-bedecked tux, John commanded the proceedings from a grand piano, stage right, as the band, featuring players dating back to his 70s tours, spread out on a multi-level stage set below a gigantic Jumbotron screen. All was framed by a gold-bricked, medallion-festooned proscenium topped with the tour’s motto: “Farewell Yellow Brick Road.” This is John’s final series of performances.

Later in the show, after a rousing performance of “Sad Songs (Say So Much),” John addressed the bittersweet context of the show directly. “This is my 50th year of touring. I couldn’t have imagined a farewell tour even 10 years ago, but 10 years ago, I didn’t have a family. Now I do.

“The greatest thing is to get a reaction from another human being,” he went on. “Thank you, Memphis, Tennessee. You’re in my soul, you’re in my heart.”

Judging from the ecstatic reaction from the crowd, John was clearly in their hearts as well. They also responded to a very personal moment between songs, when he frankly described his battles with addiction. “Ask for help!” was his advice to substance abusers. “Don’t sit on the pity pot.” After he himself asked for help, he noted, “I got sober.” At that, the crowd went wild with cheers and applause. It was a remarkable moment.

With a Jumbotron screen displaying either close-ups of the band, or pre-edited montages of images, videos, and animations, one sometimes forgot to look at the actual humans on stage. Then, a thumping sub-woofer boom from the kick drum or synthesizer would snap you back to reality. But percussionist Ray Cooper, who first toured with John in 1974, gave the Jumbotron a run for its money with his theatrical skins- and gong-pounding. This was most entertaining when the rest of the band left the stage, leaving only Cooper and John to perform the epic “Indian Sunset.”

Introducing the tune, John described writing songs with longtime collaborator Bernie Taupin. Upon first seeing some freshly-written lyrics, John noted, “a little movie appears in my mind. Then I put my hands on the piano.” Taupin’s lyrics for “Indian Sunset,” he said, “were five and a half pages long.” The grandiose, three-part suite was the result.

The power and proficiency of the band shone on a parade of both hits and, like the aforementioned tune, deep cuts. Some of the greatest rave-ups came in the extended outro jams to “Rocket Man” and “Levon.” On the latter, John revealed how powerful and precise his voice still is, even if his classic falsetto had to be carried by other singers in the band. And, with a nod to his stage histrionics of yore, he rose out of his seat to pound the keys at the climax of “Philadelphia Freedom.” 

After the encore concluded with “Goodbye Yellow Brick Road,” which John performed in a silk dressing robe decorated with cats, he tossed off his outer garment to reveal a track suit beneath. Climbing onto an automated ski-lift-like platform, he waved to adoring fans as he was lifted up into an opening in the video screen, seeming to retreat into his own fantasy and the fantasies of the Memphians who have marked their lives with his music.

See the slideshow by Jamie Harmon, below. [slideshow-1]

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Music Music Blog

Garth Brooks Announces Show at FedEx Forum

Garth Brooks.

Garth Brooks will return to Memphis for the first time in 19 years when he plays the FedEx Forum this February with Trisha Yearwood. The country music superstar’s world tour will stop in Memphis on Saturday, February 4th, and tickets to the event go on sale on Friday, December 2nd at 10 a.m..

Tickets are available through ticketmaster and the FedEx Forum website, but it is important to note that NO tickets will be on sale at the FedEx Forum box office the day the tickets are available.

Tickets are estimated to be around $75.00, check out videos from Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood below.  

Garth Brooks Announces Show at FedEx Forum

Garth Brooks Announces Show at FedEx Forum (2)

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Music Music Blog

Bruno Mars Announces Show at FedEx Forum

Bruno Mars’ world tour stops in Memphis on September 17th.

Grammy award winner Bruno Mars has announced a show at Fed Ex Forum. The show will take place on Saturday, September 17th, and will be the first Memphis gig for Bruno Mars since 2014.

Bruno Mars has a new album out on Friday, but Memphian’s will remember when Mars cut “Uptown Funk” at Royal Studios with Mark Ronson, bringing Memphis it’s first number one record in over 40 years.

Tickets for the show go on sale this Monday through Ticketmaster. Check out the video for “Uptown Funk” below.

Bruno Mars Announces Show at FedEx Forum

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Music Music Blog

FedEx Forum Announces Billy Joel Concert

FedEx Forum and Live Nation will bring Billy Joel to Memphis next March.

FedEx Forum just announced that Billy Joel will be performing live on Friday, March 25 next year. Tickets will go on sale next Friday, November 20th at 10 a.m. Tickets will be available at 10am through Ticketmaster.com and on site at the FedEx Forum. The performance will be Billy Joel’s only Tennessee concert in 2016, and his first time in Memphis in over a decade, according to Live Nation Tennessee President Brian Traeger. 

FedEx Forum Announces Billy Joel Concert

FedEx Forum Announces Billy Joel Concert (2)

FedEx Forum Announces Billy Joel Concert (3)

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Opinion

Million-Dollar Weekend for Downtown Memphis

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Author Shelby Foote wrote in his novel “September September” that the three hardest dates in show business were “Christmas, Easter, and Memphis.”

Good line, but Foote’s novel was set in Memphis in the 1950s, and Memphis has earned a different reputation. Last weekend, the Memphis Grizzlies played at FedEx Forum Friday night and Saturday night, sandwiched around a Memphis Tigers basketball game Saturday afternoon. All of the games reported ticket sales of over 15,000, and Flyer writers who covered the games said the arena looked nearly full.

And on Sunday, “Million Dollar Quartet” played two shows at the Orpheum, closing out a six-day run of sellouts. Pat Halloran said total attendance was around 17,000.

The recession may not be over but Memphians and visitors are coming downtown and spending money. At the Majestic Grille on South Main Sunday night, people were waiting for tables or walking away when they saw the crowd, so I assume it was a good night in general for restaurants and bars.

I thought “Million Dollar Quartet” took off after the midway point when the blow-up of the famous black-and-white photo dropped down from the ceiling and the actors recreated the pose around the piano and the audience collectively thought, “Hey, it all happened about a mile away at Sun Studio.”

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Opinion

The “Get Motivated” Lollapalooza

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Went to the “Get Motivated” lollapalooza at FedEx Forum Monday. Sat through eight hours of speeches. These guys are good. Full house, close to 18,000. Touches of wrestlemania, church, infomercials, Republican national conventions, and a Michael Jackson concert. Cost $1.95 and was worth every penny.

All the big guns advertised on billboards and newspaper ads showed up: Laura Bush, Colin Powell, Lou Holtz, Terry Bradshaw, and Rudy Giuliani plus Leigh Anne Touhy of “The Blind Side,” John Walsh of “America’s Most Wanted,” a ranting religious financial adviser named James Smith, former presidential candidate Steve Forbes, and a linguistic gymnast named Krish Dhanam who may have been the best of the lot.

They spoke from a platform the size of a boxing ring in the center of the floor. Each one talked for a half an hour or so and was greeted with a burst of smoke and sparks at the corners of the stage. At the end of the day, the overall effect was like eating too much at a buffet.