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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.

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Griz Top Sonics for First Win, 105-98

AP — Veterans told Kevin Durant there would be nights like this. And just about everybody told the rookie’s SuperSonics there would be a season like this.

Rudy Gay overcame a cold start to score 25 points and Kyle Lowry hit a clinching 3-pointer as the Memphis Grizzlies overcame a 14-point deficit in the second half to beat the winless Sonics 105-98, sending Seattle to its worst start in 38 years.

Lowry, who missed five of his first six shots, got a rebound off his missed layup and then swished a 3-pointer with 11.3 seconds remaining to clinch the first win of the season for the Grizzlies, in their first road game.

Durant, playing for the third time in four nights in a welcome-to-NBA life stretch, scored a season-low 17 points and was a woeful 3-for-17 from the field for the Sonics (0-5). The second overall draft pick missed his first four shots and then sat 10 minutes before finally scoring midway through the second quarter.

And just a reminder to all you Grizzlies fans: Chris Herrington’s “Beyond the Arc” Grizblog is your best bet for pre-game and post-game analysis and reaction.

And, there’s always the ever-popular Jacob Riis report — today, featuring Sonics ginger-boy center, Robert Swift.

Read it here.

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NBA “Rookies to Watch” Includes One Grizzlies Player

SI.com’s Drew Packham has posted his first NBA rookie power rankings. You won’t find Grizzlies guard Mike Conley among the top 10, but a certain international import to the Grizzlies does make the cut.

The Rookie of the Year trophy may be Kevin Durant’s to lose, but there are some other fresh faces worth watching.

Check out Packham’s complete ranking at SI.com.

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Darius Washington May Return to Memphis to Face Griz Wednesday Night

It appears former Memphis Tiger point guard Darius Washington will be in uniform when the NBA champion San Antonio Spurs open their season Tuesday night. With injuries to a pair of guards already on their roster, the Spurs may well suit up Washington for his NBA debut.

The Spurs come to Memphis Wednesday night for the Grizzlies season opener at FedExForum. Will D-Wash return to the scend of his collegiate glory? Stay tuned.

Read more about Washington here.

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Griz Win in Spain Over Estudiantes, 98-73

MADRID, Spain – Pau Gasol scored 10 points in his return to Madrid as the Memphis Grizzlies rolled over Spanish team Estudiantes 98-73 Thursday in an NBA pre-season game.

Mike Conley led Memphis with 17 points. Gasol finished 4-of-6 from the field, with eight rebounds and three blocks in just under 20 minutes.

“We’re in good shape even if these games are a little different than regular ones. This is pre-season where you’re trying to find your rhythm,” Gasol said. “Now we’ll see how it goes for the rest of the season.”

Spaniards Gasol and Juan Carlos Navarro played at the Palacio de Deportes for the first time since Spain fell to Russia 60-59 in the European championship final last month, when Gasol’s jumper lipped out as time expired.

Emilio Jasen led Estudiantes with 17 points, while centre Larry Lewis — one of 38 Americans playing in the Spanish league — had 14.

Read more here.

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New Game

In one of the new television commercials to promote the upcoming Grizzlies season, forwards Rudy Gay and Hakim Warrick are shown playing a game of one-on-one, trading step-back jumpers and blow-by dunks. You might assume that the activity was choreographed for the camera but apparently not.

Turns out it’s a real game, played to 21 by ones and twos, with the winner getting to choose the team’s entrance music for the first preseason game. (When you hear Jay-Z’s “Show Me What You Got” on October 15th, thank Rudy Gay.)

“They played for 40 minutes, and we just went from different angles and shot them all over the place,” says John Pugliese, the team’s senior director of marketing communications.

The commercial — and the story behind it — signifies fun, which shouldn’t be unusual for a professional sports team but has been sadly lacking for the Grizzlies, on and off the court, over the past couple of seasons.

It also signifies a dramatic tonal shift throughout the organization, one perhaps unlikely in the aftermath of a dismal 2006-2007 season, ownership chaos, and a bitter outcome during the league’s summer draft lottery.

Yet this change is very real and can mostly be credited to two men: new coach Marc Iavaroni and new basketball operations honcho Chris Wallace, who have replaced the dour, standoffish personalities of predecessors Mike Fratello and Jerry West with an openness and (guarded) optimism than feels palpable to anyone who’s spent time around FedExForum lately.

Starting this week, fans will get a chance to see the new-look Grizzlies in preseason action, but for now the changes happening off the court may be more important.

Wallace and Iavaroni have been repairing breaches across the Grizzlies landscape this offseason. They’re being remarkably open with fans. They’ve been more open with the media. They’ve reached out to the local minority owners, including an appearance at Fred Jones’ Southern Heritage Classic. And, perhaps most importantly, they’ve developed a better, closer working relationship with the team’s business staff, a change best symbolized by this: When Jerry West ran the team, he was generally referred to as “Mr. West.” In short order, Wallace has become known as simply “Chris” to many Grizzlies employees.

This improved working relationship seems to be embodied in the team’s current marketing campaign, driven by the simple slogan “New Game.”

“The advertising and marketing has to be an extension of what’s happening on the floor,” Pugliese says. “And who knows that better than Iavaroni and Wallace? Whatever our message is, it’s hollow without their support.”

Pugliese credits Wallace and Iavaroni with bringing “a broader vision of the business side of basketball” than the team has had from basketball personnel in the past and, as a result, having “changed the entire culture” of the franchise, comments that echo similar words from other employees throughout the Grizzlies organization.

The team’s business and marketing staff hopes the “New Game” campaign, which uses the players and coaches as personalities in a way reminiscent of the team’s effective “Round Town” campaign from a few seasons ago, can communicate the positive changes they’ve experienced internally. But they also know that rebuilding the team’s ticket-buying fan base won’t be a quick or easy fix.

“We know we’re not going to be able to advertise or market our way out of this,” Pugliese admits. “If we spent another $200,000 and put up more billboards, is that going to translate to butts in seats right now? No. But can we set the tone? Right now, there’s a general groundswell of optimism, I think we can all agree, about the team. Can we set the table for when that optimism, combined with some team performance, can push the sales numbers?”

That journey back — in terms of winning games and winning back fans — begins this week, but credit Iavaroni and Wallace for getting the Grizzlies off to an unexpectedly good start.

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Grizzlies Fall to Unicaja Malaga, 103-99

A full house of almost 10,000 fans at Martin Carpena Arena in Malaga, Spain, got what they came for on Tuesday — drama and entertainment in equal doses — as host Unicaja defeated the Memphis Grizzlies 102-99 in the third of four NBA Europe Live games involving Euroeague teams.

It was a thriller full of shift changes from start to finish. Unicaja shook off an early double-digit deficit to take over with defense in the second quarter. Unicaja led by a high of 15 points, 69-54, midway through the third quarter, but Memphis erased all of that deficit before the start of the last one. By the time its 8-29 run was over, Memphis was up 73-82, but not even that lead was safe as Unicaja roared back thanks to back-to-back triples from Davor Kus and 6 points in crunch time by Boniface Ndong to hold on for the victory.

Kus, who was a perfect 4-for-4 at the foul-line in the last 13 seconds, led Unicaja with 20 points. Marcus Haislip had a double-double of 18 points and 11 rebounds, while Ndong had one of 16 and 12. Daniel Santiago followed with 14 points, while Berni Rodriguez and German Gabriel had 13 each.

Players trained in the Euroleague led the way for Memphis, too, as Juan Carlos Navarro debuted with 21 points on 5-for-8 three-point shooting, while Pau Gasol had 18 points and 8 rebounds. Mike Miller followes with 17, while Rudy Gay added 14 and Hakeem Warick 11. Unicaja’s domination of the boards, where it took 59 rebounds to 37 for Memphis, proved crucial.

Read more at the Euroleague website.

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Griz Game in Spain to be Broadcast Today

From Beyond the Arc, the Flyer‘s GrizBlog: The Grizzlies preseason kicks off Tuesday with a game against Unicaja Malaga, which will be broadcast on NBA TV at 1 p.m. This year, preseason seems more important than ever in terms of getting a feel for how the team will play and how the starting lineup and rotation will shake out.

Here’s an early guide on the roles that seem to be up for grabs …

Go to Beyond the Arc.

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FROM MY SEAT: Just Thinking…

A few
not-so-random thoughts from the world of sports:

• I
admire coach Tommy West and the University of Memphis football program for the
strength they showed in playing last week’s game against Marshall, as
scheduled, in the aftermath of Taylor Bradford’s murder. The marching band’s
rendition of “Amazing Grace” at halftime may have been the most poignant
moment I’ve experienced at the Liberty Bowl.

I
strongly disagree with the decision to play less than 48 hours after a member
of the team was shot and killed, but if three hours in helmets and pads in
front of 25,000 friends helped ease the pain, even briefly, the effort was
worthwhile.

It’s
now the responsibility of the U of M administration, of course, to be
proactive in raising awareness about gun violence in Memphis. Our flagship
educational enterprise simply must focus attention on this city’s single most
damning weakness. However isolated or “targeted” the administration considers
Bradford’s murder, guns taking the lives of young Memphians is epidemic. The
university owes this larger battle (and far more than a football game) to the
memory of Taylor Bradford.


Having caught my first glimpse of the 2007-08 Memphis Grizzlies at last week’s
public “Lunch Time” scrimmage, I’ve got a name for you: Casey Jacobsen. Mike
Conley and Darko Milicic will be popular new faces at FedExForum and will play
large roles in determining how close this team is to playoff contention. But
the sharp shooting Jacobsen — a college star at Stanford who cut his pro teeth
in Europe — is going to be among the most popular Grizzlies in the season
ahead.

• Can
SEC football get any better? The 12th-ranked Georgia Bulldogs go to Tennessee,
ready to put a beat-down on the sagging Vols, having won their last three
games in Knoxville. Instead, UT discovers it can run the ball and whips the
Dawgs by 21 in a game that wasn’t that close.

Then a
few hours later, top-ranked LSU finds itself on the ropes against the
defending national champions, only to rally with one fourth-down conversion
after another, scoring the winning touchdown with less than two minutes to
play. Don’t bet against these Tigers the rest of the season. (And how many
Mid-South football fans were shedding tears over Florida being eliminated from
the national-title hunt the first week in October?)


Tradition will take a beating in the National League Championship Series later
this week. The senior circuit’s two historical whipping boys — the Cubs and
Phillies — both went down in three-game sweeps, and at the hands of two clubs
(the Diamondbacks and Rockies, respectively) that weren’t playing baseball as
recently as 1992.

Consider these “historical” factoids. The greatest player in Arizona history —
the currently hobbled Randy Johnson — has pitched in more games as a Mariner
than he has as a Diamondback. In 10 years of baseball, Arizona has changed its
uniform design more often than the St. Louis Cardinals have in 116 years. As
for the Rockies, they aim to reach their first World Series having still never
finished atop their division. Bless the wild card.

Even
with tradition out the window, the NLCS will be a healthy introduction for
many fans to some of the best young players never seen east of the Rocky
Mountains. Colorado’s Matt Holliday (.340 batting average, 36 homers, 137
RBIs) is — with Philadelphia’s Jimmy Rollins — one of two viable NL MVP
candidates. Rockies shortstop Troy Tulowitzki (.291, 24, 99) is a likely
Rookie of the Year winner. And rightfielder Brad Hawpe (.291, 29, 116) could
stand — in full uniform — at Times Square and not be recognized.

As for
Arizona, reigning Cy Young winner Brandon Webb (18 wins, 3.01 ERA) would be
making commercials if he played in New York, and centerfielder Chris Young (32
homers at age 23) will be a perennial All-Star by 2010.

So
forget the uniforms, the swimming pool in one ballpark and a humidor in the
other. (Mark this down: If Colorado wins the pennant, we’ll see the first snow
delay in World Series history.) Sit back and enjoy some great baseball.

• How
does a King lose his kingdom? He starts by wearing the opponent’s baseball cap
to a playoff game in Cleveland. How tone-deaf must LeBron James be to show up
at Jacobs Field in a Yankees lid? Here’s a thought for the next time the
Bombers come to Ohio for a game, LeBron: Yankee boxers.

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Sports Sports Feature

Grizzlies Open Scrimmage Today

The Memphis Grizzlies will open the doors of FedExForum today for a free public scrimmage, giving most fans the first chance to see newcomers such as Mike Conley, Jr. and Juan Carlos Navarro in Beale Street Blue.

Dubbed the Blue and White Scrimmage, the intramural game is scheduled to run from noon to 1 p.m. on the main court at FedExForum. Doors open at 11 a.m. with free admission and open concessions.

For notes from Grizzlies training camp so far and, later, a reaction to today’s scrimmage, check out our Grizzlies blog, Beyond the Arc.