Categories
From My Seat Sports

Memphis: Hoop City, Indeed

Perspective can be challenging when it comes to basketball in Memphis, Tennessee. That talented team at East High School aside, you’d think soul-crushing roundballs were falling from the sky these days, at least from FedExForum to the Larry Finch Center on the University of Memphis campus.

The Memphis Tigers lost six of their last eight games, the last two by 41 and 30 points, to finish the season 19-13 and shut out of postseason play a third straight year. The honeymoon for Hall of Fame-bound coach Tubby Smith ended around Valentine’s Day. Can he recruit? Can he manage a game? Can he fill empty seats at FedExForum?

A recent five-game losing streak had followers of the Memphis Grizzlies questioning everything from rotation dysfunction to Chandler Parsons’ social life. When Parsons’ on-court struggles came to an end with the announcement last week he requires knee surgery, the loss of a starter seemed like a blessing. Related or not, the Grizzlies now find themselves on a four-game winning streak, the latest a takedown of the mighty San Antonio Spurs Saturday night. Exhale.

However trying this winter has been in our fair city, this week should prove palliative, and considerably so. Three other cities may be hosting regional finals in the NCAA tournament, but make no mistake: Memphis will be playing in the center ring.

Larry Kuzniewski

Headed to FedExForum for games this Friday are three of the top eight teams in the country (according to the AP rankings): 8th-ranked UCLA (31-4), 6th-ranked North Carolina (29-7, the region’s top seed), and 5th-ranked Kentucky (31-5, coached by one John Vincent Calipari). The Ringo Starr of the South’s foursome is Butler (25-8), a team that has been to the championship game twice this very decade. With Memphis transfer Avery Woodson a key member of the Bulldogs’ rotation, this is the closest the Tigers have gotten to the Sweet 16 since 2009 (when, yes, Calipari called FedExForum his home arena).

But pull back for the broad perspective of this weekend’s three games. North Carolina is seeking its 20th trip to the Final Four and sixth national championship. UCLA is aiming for a 19th Final Four appearance and 12th crown. Calipari’s Wildcats are clawing their way toward an 18th Final Four slot (fifth under Calipari) and hope to raise their ninth championship banner at Rupp Arena in Lexington. If college basketball teams were Avengers, Memphis will host Iron Man, Captain America, and Thor this weekend.

Phoenix hosts the actual Final Four next weekend and won’t come close to the historical weight under FedExForum’s roof come Friday. A confluence of this magnitude is extraordinarily rare. We saw a similar gathering at the 2008 Final Four (remember that one, Memphis fans?), when UCLA, North Carolina, and Kansas were all there. You have to go back to 2005 to find a regional (hosted that year by Austin, Texas) that approximates what we’ll have in Memphis this week. Duke, Kentucky, and Michigan State played that weekend in Texas. The Spartans have been championship contenders for most of Tom Izzo’s tenure in East Lansing, but they’d be in the Falcon category on our team of Avengers.

On top of all the history, we have Calipari’s return to Memphis. (Has it really been eight years?) Do Memphians celebrate the Kentucky coach for the remarkable heights his Tigers reached under his watch for nine years? Or do Memphis basketball fans curse Calipari for setting a standard that cannot be matched, whatever the expectations or hopes? Even when you subtract his 38 wins from the 2007-08 Final Four season (those vacated for the Derrick Rose test-taking affair), Calipari is one of two Memphis coaches to win 200 games here. He would not be Kentucky’s coach were it not for the success he enjoyed in the Bluff City.

Enjoy this week of basketball, Memphis. Cheer and jeer like it matters (because it does). UCLA’s Lonzo Ball will be a top-three pick in this year’s NBA draft and he may play his final college game at FedExForum (as Blake Griffin did in the 2009 South Regional). Malik Monk (Kentucky) and Justin Jackson (North Carolina) will soon be wearing pro uniforms, too. So relish this chance sighting. And go ahead and let the rest of the country know where Hoop City can be found this Friday.

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

Josh Pastner’s Attitude of Gratitude

Larry Kuzniewski

Josh Pastner

Attention, Miserables. The season of great feasting has begun.

“The Miserables,” of course, was the name former University of Memphis Coach John Calipari gave to a contingent of Tiger fans that was seemingly never happy during his time here. They were always kvetching, always looking for gray clouds, no matter how well the team performed. Calipari always said they didn’t know how good they had it. He was probably right.

Now the Calipari years are long gone, as the Tigers begin their seventh season under Josh Pastner, but the Miserables are back and calling for the coach’s head. Pastner is on every major sports medium’s “Hot seat” list. After the program lost a couple of key players via transfer last summer, Pastner tried to downplay expectations for this year’s squad, forgoing the usual glitzy Midnight Madness with rappers and fireworks in favor of a family-friendly event in the daytime. It did not draw many folks, but the plan all along was to turn down the hype and outperform the lowered expectations. This year’s bunch would have to rely on freshmen and transfers to carry much of the load.

In preseason, Pastner revved up one of his favorite themes: That the team — and indeed, all of us — need to have an “attitude of gratitude.” Which, at its simplest level, is being grateful you’re alive; being thankful you’re playing (or watching) basketball. It could be a lot worse. You could be getting attacked by terrorists or dying of a wasting disease. It’s just basketball. Let’s enjoy the games. (This could also be called the “attitude of platitude,” but I digress.) He also not-so-subtly called out a couple of members of the local sports media for their negative attitudes.

Let’s be honest, being grateful for what you have and putting silly things like basketball games in perspective is a great way to live a happier life. It’s a simple but wise message, one that I’ve heard from ministers and Boy Scout troop leaders and motivational speakers through the years. It’s a great thought to take to heart during this Thanksgiving season. Be grateful for your blessings.

But it’s not a message you’ll hear from Nick Saban or Tom Izzo or Bobby Knight. They don’t like perspective. They hate gratitude. Unless it’s for beating the crap out of their last opponent. They realize that no one’s grateful about anything in big-time college athletics except winning. Is that a sad indictment of our culture? No doubt. Is it what may get Pastner shown the door? Possibly.

Pastner has been an absolute model human being and a near-perfect representative for the University of Memphis. He’s been generous with his time, kind to the infirm and dying, helpful with all kinds of good works and charities. There’s no cussing, no drinking, no hanky-panky. He’s a model father. His players graduate (at least, the ones who don’t transfer), and they stay out of trouble. His teams win 20 games a year, contend for conference titles every other year or so, and often go to the NCAA tournament, though they don’t tend to stick around long.

Is that enough for him to keep his job? I don’t know. It would cost a fortune to buy out his contract. But if there are many more losses like the one this week to the UT-Arlington Mavericks, the university’s gratitude for Pastner’s attitude will be tested like never before.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Fly on the Wall 1364

Verbatim

Memphis experienced a mass knicker twist last week when University of Kentucky basketball coach John Calipari used his Hall of Fame induction speech to take a shot at his former employer. Calipari compared previous coaching gigs, including his infamous stint in Memphis, to eating Thanksgiving dinner “at the little table,” adding a line about how, “You had plastic forks and plates.” But nobody’s knickers twisted harder than those belonging to Fox 13 weather guy Joey Sulipeck, who either called Coach Cal out to a rumble or a picnic. “Say you’re at the kid table with plastic utensils?” the meteorologist taunted, “Give me a plastic utensil and walk by me, Calipari. You don’t demean an entire program and say it’s the kid table and plastic utensils, got history like the Memphis program. Come on.”

Whoa Nelly!

Hip-hop artist Nelly was apparently “riding Hazard like a Duke boy” in Putnam County, Tennessee this week. The “Country Grammar” rapper was arrested on felony drug charges after a state trooper stopped his bus on I-40 and smelled marijuana.

Anchorman 3

One of this past week’s most dubious news reports found WMC anchorman Joe Birch reading lines like a comic-book Geraldo: “A fight! People run over! Crashes! A video so shocking WMC Action News 5’s Jerry Askin searched for some answers.” Askin asked random people what they thought about a YouTube video of something that might have happened in Memphis. The clip in question seemed to show a fight and people being intentionally hit by cars. And then, of course, there’s the headline.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Winners and Losers

Perhaps, more than anyone else I ever met, the late William Otis “Bill” Little understood the parameters entailed in being anointed the title of “coach.” His death last month at the age of 79 brought back memories of his befriending me when I arrived in Memphis 30 years ago as a sports reporter. We periodically met while covering the same stories on the high school athletics scene and the then-Memphis State Tiger basketball squads. A mutual admiration and our comfort level with each other soon developed to the point he’d just refer to me as “Smitty,” and I called him “Still Bill.” But it was mostly through other acquaintances that I learned what an icon in the African-American community Bill really was.

When we met, he was the sports editor for the Tri-State Defender. But his impressive resume included being a player with the Memphis Red Sox in the Negro Baseball League. He led high school baseball and basketball championship teams in 28 years of coaching. He was a respected referee in college football circles, including the SWAC Conference for 30 years. However, he always downplayed the subject of his accomplishments. Instead he opted to discuss his belief in the importance of mentoring young minds and the powerful opportunity coaches have to fill voids in those lives with positive reinforcement of ethics and values. Never once did he refer to the stale sports cliché “winning is everything.”

What my friend Bill did acknowledge — and indoctrinated in me — was the steadfast bond between this community and the fortunes of Tiger basketball. It is as if by some Siamese twins connection we collectively shared the euphoria generated by their victories and the plunge into massive depression when they lost.

Let’s be honest. The Grizzlies could win a string of NBA championships and they would never totally wrest away Memphians’ hearts from those who don the blue and gray. The Tigers are our continuing soap opera, bringing us pain, joy, disgust, elation, and frustration. We never seem to get enough of praising or ridiculing. Though players come and go in our hearts, we tend to focus our most rabid analysis on the man with the title “coach.”

In the three decades I’ve been here, whether on the sports beat or not, I have formulated my own opinions on the men chosen to assume the reins of Tiger basketball leadership. I was not a great fan of the late Dana Kirk. His self-promotion was disturbing, as well as a precursor to the disaster he would eventually leave behind for his successor, Larry Finch, to deal with. The homegrown Finch, like his mentor, Gene Bartow, was a man who truly cared about the players he recruited. No, he wasn’t the best “X’s and O’s” coach when it came to on-court strategy, but he tried to make sure the emphasis was correctly placed on the term “student-athlete.”

Tic Price was a walking disaster. Interim head coach Johnny Jones has since proven elsewhere that he might have been the one that got away. Coach Cal? Let’s just say no other coach in college athletics knows more about manipulating the psyche of the African-American collegiate athlete. Feed their egos and their dreams to get them to win. Throw them under the bus as undisciplined morons when they lose. Bobby Knight had him pegged right all along.

I do not doubt the sincerity of Josh Pastner’s passion for the welfare of his players or his allegiance to the University of Memphis. I don’t doubt he frets into the wee hours of the night about what he can do to make his team a cohesive unit, one as dedicated as he is to the task of making Tiger fans proud. At this point, you’re figuring there’s going to be a “but” placed in here somewhere? No. Instead, listen, Tiger fans:

If the team gets wiped out in the first round of the tournament, the sun will still come up the next day. A single jobless mother of three in Memphis will still wake up and wonder how she’s going to feed her kids. A father will worry about how he’s going to pay for his son’s college tuition. Someone will be murdered. Rape kits will remain untested. Babies will be born.

My mentor, Bill Little, a man who embraced sports his whole life, understood its triviality in the biggest game we all play. “Winning isn’t everything” if it teaches you nothing about the things that truly count in life.

Categories
Sports

Why I’m Glad I’m Not a Sportswriter

teo-cover-resize.jpg

We don’t call journalism the first rough draft of history for nothing.

The Lance Armstrong and Manti Te’o and Chip Kelly stories are being analyzed by some brilliant columnists. See Rick Reilly on his 14-years covering Armstrong, Gail Collins on Armstrong, Rob Moseley on Kelly leaving Oregon for Philadelphia, and Malcolm Gladwell and Chuck Klosterman on Te’o and the online girlfriend hoax. All I can say is, wow. And whew.

One of the toughest assignments in journalism is covering someone you know is not being completely truthful, while they fire back at you with angry denials, accusations, and hired lawyers and flacks. But their biggest weapon is silence. Sports columnists and reporters depend on regular access. I feel for the reporters with daily deadlines who get cut off by athletes and coaches for trying to do their job honestly. They can be placed at a competitive disadvantage when the stars favor other reporters who are more compliant. It’s all about the “gets” — the exclusive interview, the one-on-one, the personal details in a profile. I think of former Memphis Tigers basketball coach John Calipari and the Derrick Rose college admissions test story or former Tiger basketball coach Dana Kirk, who went from toast of the town to convicted felon in the space of three years. Professional careers of journalists as well as basketball players were made and broken by both coaches.

I started this blog a year ago to write primarily about racquet sports and other minor sports from a fan’s perspective. Among other things, I thought it would be a relief from the saturation coverage of football and basketball. I tried to develop a regular panel of insiders and former pros. But when I broached the subject of appearance fees or use of performance-enhancing drugs, my sources mostly took a pass. Not, I believe, because they had anything personally to hide but because those subjects are fraught with so much uncertainty, misinformation, wink-and-nod, and potential reprisals. No sport is pure. Better to not go there. Just focus on the events and scores.

But money, cheating, and melodrama keep shouldering their way into the sports report, and last week’s Armstrong-Te’o-Kelly trifecta was a perfect example. I am fascinated by it as a fan and a reporter and columnist. It must be hard enough to cover grumpy Memphis Grizzlies when they’re on a losing streak. But covering cover-ups, when you know they’re staring you in the face, is harder. I’m glad I don’t have to do it. For my money, Rick Reilly is still the greatest. My hat is off to Deadspin, too, but the job of the beat reporter is a lot different from that of the analyst.

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

Calipari, U of M, China Exchange in The New York Times

The New York Times weighs in with a story on Memphis Coach John Calipari’s innovative China-Memphis basketball exchange:

In a move that may someday help expand the exposure of college basketball in China, the University of Memphis signed an agreement with the Chinese Basketball Association.
Skip to next paragraph

Memphis Coach John Calipari traveled to Beijing with university and city officials for the announcement of the deal, which will include Calipari’s running a series of coaching clinics and camps throughout China in the next five years.

Also, 15 men’s and women’s coaches chosen by the Chinese Basketball Association will go to Memphis for 10 days in October to learn from Calipari and his coaching staff. They will evaluate how Memphis, which could be ranked No. 1 entering this season, runs its program. One of the Chinese coaches will stay with the Tigers for the season.

Read the rest of the Times story.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Garcia Commits to Basketball Tigers

Another highly regarded prep star has committed to John Calipari’s U of M Tigers. The news comes on the heels of an embarrassing brush with the law by several Tigers at the downtown Plush Club.

From the Chicago Sun-Times: In recent weeks, coaches from Kentucky, Arizona and Ohio State had called Angel Garcia, trying to get involved with the East Chicago Central star. Garcia, tired of the phone calls and the recruiting process, decided he had had enough over the weekend. So he called Memphis coach John Calipari and put and end to his recruitment. He’s going to wear blue next year and play for the Tigers.

“He just wanted to put all this behind him and concentrate on his academics and basketball,” Eric Cole, who coaches CAPS All-Stars, Garcia’s AAU team.

No team had recruited Garcia harder than Memphis. Calipari saw him in an open gym last October and offered him a scholarship immediately.

Read the Sun-Times story.

Categories
Cover Feature News

Shall We Dance?

They are the two most confounding words in any sports debate: “Yeah, but … ” The 1972 Miami Dolphins are the greatest Super Bowl champion ever. Yeah, but they played a soft schedule. The 1995-96 Chicago Bulls are the best NBA team ever assembled. Yeah, but they didn’t have a center. Babe Ruth was the greatest slugger baseball will ever know. Yeah, but he played before the game was integrated.

The 2006-07 University of Memphis basketball team has some legitimate reasons to harbor dreams of the school’s first national championship. For every one of these factors, however, that ugly qualifier tarnishes the luster of hope Tiger fans have held throughout the winter. Can the expectations and potential of a special team — the South Region’s second seed — be realized during the only month that really matters in college basketball? Or will reality consume a team still a few variables short of championship caliber? Questions like these are why they play the games.

Here’s a look at the reasons to believe:

• The U of M ran roughshod over Conference USA, and, to a degree, the nation has to accept the Tigers as legitimate. If you look at the much-ballyhooed RPI rankings, C-USA isn’t even among the country’s 10 best conferences. As weak as the league appeared when the likes of Louisville, Cincinnati, Marquette, and DePaul jumped ship, it was that much weaker in 2006-07. C-USA will have but one representative in the NCAA tournament.

But what a torch-bearer.

Memphis went 16-0 in conference play this season, winning by an average margin of 18.5 points. They reeled off three more victories to win the league tournament and extend their nation-leading (and school-record) winning streak to 22 games. And their only three losses came against teams you’ll see in the Big Dance.

Does the relative weakness of C-USA competition diminish the talents of Coach John Calipari’s Tigers? It’s sort of a tree-falling-in-the-forest question, isn’t it? You can’t fault a coaching staff for recruiting the best players it can, league rivals be damned. How exactly this group would fare in the ACC, SEC, or Big East is a hypothetical weight no team should have to bear. Until March, when the big boys become the competition.

Larry Kuzniewski

Yeah, but … No team wins a national championship having nourished itself on B-league prey. Over the last quarter-century, only two teams have won titles outside the major conferences (UNLV in 1990 and Louisville in 1986). The fact is, if Memphis advances to the second round of the NCAA tournament, the Tigers will likely face a better team than any of their C-USA brethren. This means Memphis must win five consecutive games against competition superior to anything they’ve seen in order to be crowned champion.

• As talented as last season’s team was, this year’s squad is deeper and better. The 2005-06 Memphis team was one to remember, with a pair of first-round NBA draft picks (Rodney Carney and Shawne Williams) and a third player who made the all-conference team (Darius Washington). They won 33 games, reached the Elite Eight, and finished the season ranked among the country’s top 10.

Three supporting players for that team — Chris Douglas-Roberts, Antonio Anderson, and Robert Dozier — are now sophomores and form the leadership of the current squad. A fourth sophomore — Kareem Cooper — would have been the starting center for most C-USA teams but served as Joey Dorsey’s backup for the Tigers. With junior Andre Allen helping freshman Willie Kemp cut his playmaking teeth and Jeremy Hunt returning to the program and starring in a sixth-man role, Memphis has a multi-pronged unit that is perfect for Calipari’s quick hook and, when needed, message-delivering mass substitution.

During the 2006 C-USA tournament, Calipari smirked as he mentioned a common reply that comes when he delivers an admonishment to a player: “I’m trying.”

Larry Kuzniewski

Joey Dorsey

“Then I’ve got to find someone who can try a little harder,” said the coach. Depth is about options for a coach, and Calipari is dealing with more options than he’s had in his seven years at the Memphis helm. From freshman sharpshooter Doneal Mack to the massive Pierre Niles (who lost considerable minutes upon Cooper’s return in mid-December), Calipari doesn’t tolerate sloppy or lazy play, because he doesn’t have to.

• Yeah, but … When March Madness arrives, the value of depth is an inflated factor. We need only look at the two Tiger squads that reached the Final Four to pull the wool off the mythic importance of depth. The 1973 Tigers had but two players who made any impact off the bench (Bill Cook and Wes Westfall). As for the 1985 team, it was so dominated by its magnificent starting five that Willie Becton and Dwight Boyd would not so much as break a sweat in some games. It’s not the number of players. It’s the players, stupid.

• It’s time for Joey Dorsey to become a household name. Other than the man-child that is Ohio State’s Greg Oden (a potential Tiger opponent in the South Region finals), it’ll be hard to find a big man with the ability to impose himself on another team like the Tigers’ muscle-bound junior center from Baltimore. From his climb up the U of M shot-blocking charts to his increased value on the offensive end, C-USA’s 2007 Defensive Player of the Year brings a fury to his game that is a direct reflection of his coach’s impassioned style on the sideline. He’s a living, breathing double-double.

A recent trend in college basketball has seen a rebirth of the big man as the (literal) centerpiece for championship teams. While it wasn’t that long ago we saw guards like Arizona’s Mike Bibby and Michigan State’s Mateen Cleaves lead the way for their teams’ one shining moment, the last three years have been big man’s parties: Emeka Okafor with Connecticut in 2004, Sean May with North Carolina in 2005, then Joakim Noah with Florida last year. Guards remain integral to the tournament mix, and the six in Calipari’s rotation will have much to say about how many games the Tigers get to play in the dance. But Dorsey is the difference-maker, the one player opposing teams will sweat over in their matchup plans.

Yeah, but … Dorsey gets in foul trouble, and he can’t shoot free throws. If the Tigers are fortunate enough to have their big man on the floor for the last five minutes of a tight game, they better keep the ball away from him. It’s in the hands of 46 percent free-throw shooters where title dreams go to die.

Larry Kuzniewski

Chris Douglas-Roberts

• Jeremy Hunt is the storybook hero we’ve all been waiting for. He missed 10 games his freshman season due to a foot injury and infection. He tore the ACL in his left knee to end his sophomore season prematurely. He tore his right ACL during the NIT to end his junior season and endured months of rehab. He was permanently suspended before his senior season after his involvement in a domestic assault and a Beale Street brawl.

But back he came. Having earned his bachelor’s degree despite all the distractions, Hunt returned for a fifth year in the U of M program and has been among the two or three best sixth men in the country. In a narrow victory over Southern Miss at FedExForum on January 27th, there was a five-minute stretch in the second half when Hunt took over the contest. A steal, a blocked shot, a three-pointer, and a charge taken for an offensive foul. Hunt did everything that afternoon and willed his team to victory in a game they shouldn’t have won. It’s the kind of grit his coach preaches, his fans adore, and teams require to win six straight games in March.

• Yeah, but … This is Jeremy Hunt. Keep rooting for him, but it’s hard to see a happy ending based on his track record.

• John Calipari is a championship coach, just minus the hardware. He’s aiming to take his fourth team to the Elite Eight (he did it twice with UMass). He’s won at least 20 games seven straight seasons in Memphis. He’s made 10-game winning streaks a habit in a sport where they’re terribly hard to come by. He’s recruited stars from well beyond the Mid-South, making the U of M a national destination for players and media. He’s weathered personnel storms, from the lost (Sean Banks) to the found (Hunt). And he’s made an NBA arena feel like a natural fit for a college basketball program. The only thing John Calipari is missing seems to be a national-championship ring. Why not this year?

After clinching the C-USA regular-season championship on February 22nd, Calipari brought up a subtle — for Calipari — adjustment he’s made in coaching this year’s squad.

“This is going to be one of those years when I’m not putting my head in the sand,” he said. “Normally, you go on a run of games and you don’t want to screw it up, so you put your head in the sand; just get to the next game. But the problem with that is you’re a train wreck waiting to happen. If you want to get things you’ve never [gotten], you’ve got to do things you’ve never done. For me, that means I’m not sticking my head in the sand. There’s too much at stake for everyone.”

Yeah, but … Calipari will never make the Hall of Fame based on his credentials with X’s and O’s. It’s hardly noticeable when you’re winning one blowout after another, but what happens when there are two minutes to play on a neutral court, Tigers down by three, and no one in a blue-and-white uniform can make a free throw? The Tigers survived at Gonzaga when Calipari put Hunt back on the floor for overtime and his senior shooter got hot. An offensive rebound — after a missed free throw, folks — saved the day at SMU. How the Tiger players will respond to the crucible of a late-round nail-biter in the NCAAs is a roll of the dice.

• It’s good to be the hunted. There has been exactly one game this season when the Tigers took the floor as the underdog: December 20th at Arizona. (Minus one of their two top scorers and not ranked in the Top 20, Gonzaga — even playing at home — didn’t qualify as a favorite in its narrow loss to Memphis on February 17th.) Being the team everyone else circles on their schedule is a prime motivator, and it’s kept the Tigers sharp when they might otherwise have taken a night off. Tight, hostile environments such as East Carolina, Southern Miss, Central Florida, and UAB can be deadly to winning streaks, and the Tigers won handily in each of those venues. Memphis may play in a weak conference, but no team in the country wears a target on its back like the U of M.

“[Coach Cal] is real big on intensity,” says Douglas-Roberts. “His favorite saying is, ‘Carry a swagger, not an arrogance.'”

• Yeah, but … It’s better to be the hunter. This is the one qualifier Calipari himself would embrace. If the Tigers can get through the first weekend of the NCAA tournament — and overlook Nevada at your own risk — they’ll be the underdog. Once in the Sweet Sixteen, every expert from Billy Packer to Dick Vitale will question the integrity of the Tigers’ record and whether or not they truly belong among the sport’s elite. As this happens, you’ll be able to see (and hear) the chip on Calipari’s shoulder. And it will be the topic of every pre- and post-practice speech the Memphis coach delivers — until the Tigers lose or are crowned national champions.