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Memphis Tigers Midseason Report

With their win Sunday at Tulane, the Tigers passed the midpoint of their 2016-17 campaign. At 12-4, Memphis is one game better than it was after 16 games a year ago. The aim, of course, is to avoid the 4-9 stretch that destroyed Josh Pastner’s last season as head coach. You remember that six-week free-fall, don’t you? Losses to East Carolina (at home), Tulane, and South Florida, hardly American Athletic Conference title contenders.

Is this year’s team equipped to win more than 19 games? To contend for the AAC championship and an NCAA tournament bid?

Here’s what we’ve learned over the season’s first two months.

Four horses. “Horsemen” would be too apocalyptic, so we’ll stick with the four-legged metaphor. The Tigers — like thoroughbreds in spring – will go as far as Dedric Lawson, K.J. Lawson, Markel Crawford, and Jeremiah Martin take them. Due respect to the rest of Tubby Smith’s roster, and the practice duty of players like Christian Kessee, Keon Clergeot, and Jake McDowell. Supporting casts are important when the cameras are off and the arena’s empty. But come game night, this basketball team may as well be the Beatles. Each of the four horses is averaging at least 30 minutes a game. (Last season, only Dedric Lawson averaged that many and six players averaged at least 20.) In eight games this season (half their schedule), at least three of these four players played 35 minutes. In the overtime win at Oklahoma on December 17th, they all played at least 40. In the four-point loss to SMU on December 27th, all four played all 40 minutes.

This is a dramatically different approach from last season, when Pastner would make as many as 15 substitutions before halftime. There’s risk, of course. A significant injury to any of the four horses would compromise not just the look of the team, but its very playing style. But if they can stay heathy — two games a week, that’s all — the kinship the four feel on the hardwood may go beyond anything the two actual brothers have known as teammates.
Larry Kuzniewski

Tubby Smith

Tubby Smith can “develop” players. I’ll explain the quotation marks. The standard definition of “development” at the college level — in measuring a coach’s impact — is the improvement of a player under a coach’s guidance from one season to the next. Smith was not here last season, so can the astounding improvement of both Crawford and Martin be considered “development” under the first-year coach? If not, Smith should at least be credited with uncovering whatever these two guards had buried within themselves twelve months ago.

After averaging 2.7 points and barely an assist per game as a freshman (in 13.8 minutes per game), Martin is averaging 9.2 points and 4.8 assists. Better yet, he’s protected the ball, committing only 29 turnovers while averaging 33.9 minutes on the floor. And Crawford has been the team’s second-best player, improving his scoring average from 5.3 points per game as a sophomore to 15.4 this season. He’s averaging a healthy (for a guard) 4.9 rebounds per game, while applying the same defensive pressure that kept him on the floor his first two seasons. And call this an intangible, but Crawford seems to be enjoying basketball this season. He’s been healthy and productive, vocal and energetic. Reminds me of Antonio Anderson, the popular “glue guy” during the four-year, 30-wins-a-season period under John Calipari. Whether or not Smith deserves credit for developing Martin and Crawford, there’s  a coach in Atlanta, Georgia, wondering where these two were a year ago.

Number one. Joe Jackson wore this number proudly not that long ago, but sophomore Dedric Lawson is taking it places few Tigers have gone before. In averaging 20.4 points and 11.1 rebounds per game, Lawson has reeled off 13 double-doubles in 16 games and become only the ninth Tiger with 30 such games in his career. (Five Tigers had 40, the last being Kelly Wise.) If he maintains his scoring average, Lawson will join a Tiger Rushmore with 1,100 points in his first two college seasons (Penny Hardaway, Win Wilfong, Larry Finch, and Keith Lee).
Larry Kuzniewski

Dedric Lawson

Draft Express does not have Lawson being selected (first or second round) in its latest mock draft. NBADraft.net has him going in the second round (49th). He’ll have to get stronger to make an impact as a professional that approximates what he’s done as a teenager in college. (Lawson turned 19 last October.) But he is a college star of the first order, worthy of larger crowds than he’s seen at FedExForum to this point. (Fewer than 11,000 fans attended last week’s victory over once-mighty UConn.) The hope must be that Lawson stays healthy and leads this team to postseason play, where more of the country will enjoy his talents, and a few scouts might adjust their mock drafts.

Steady as she goes. I’ve attended countless postgame press conferences over the last decade. Calipari liked to entertain or play the role of grouch. Pastner became predictable, deferring to his players and coaches in good times, leaning on his positive-energy crutch when times got rocky. I’ve been struck this season by Smith’s quite-casual fielding of questions, and honest responses, sometimes to a fault. (“We probably should have used our bench more in the second half,” he said after the UConn game. Imagine Calipari offering genuine self-criticism . . . after a win.) Smith brought a quarter-century of head-coaching experience with him, but has engaged himself with the talents — yes, they’re limited — of this specific team.

“We’ve got some self-motivated kids, who love to play the game,” said Smith after a blowout win over McNeese State in November. “Today, it was about sharing the basketball. There wasn’t a whole lot of strategy we had to change at halftime. Don’t look at the scoreboard. Concentrate on getting better. Sometimes that’s hard to do. I’ve had players try to get outside their comfort zone. When that happens, I recognize it, and the team recognizes it. So play the right way. It’s a team sport. Like anything else, you can accomplish a whole lot if you don’t care who gets the credit.”

This is a down year for the AAC. It’s hard to imagine a team reaching the NCAA tournament without winning 13 or 14 league games (out of 18). Eleven wins in their final 15 games would get the Tigers to 13-5 in the AAC and 23-8 entering the conference tournament in Hartford. That’s a lot to ask from a team with no measurable depth and little size. But with a wise, grounded coach at the helm and a certifiable star on the floor 35 minutes a game, these Memphis Tigers could surprise come March. Just play the right way.

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Sports Tiger Blue

Memphis Tiger Basketball: Midseason Musing

Four thoughts on the Tigers’ season as conference play heats up.

• When Ricky Tarrant Jr. stepped to the foul line last Wednesday against Temple, I thought of Darius Washington Jr. and the very same foul line, not quite 11 years ago. Washington, you may recall, went to the line with his team trailing Louisville by two points in the 2005 Conference USA championship game, time having expired. Having been fouled attempting a three-point shot, Washington had the chance to earn an unlikely NCAA tournament berth for Memphis. With the no players on either side of the lane for the shots, Washington made the first but missed the next two, falling to the FedExForum floor in a heap of misery. If you were there and had a heart, it was painful to witness.

Tarrant made his two shots. And with a mouth full of blood and three loose teeth. The shots beat a tough Temple bunch, many of whom remembered winning a nail-biter in the same building last season. And there really seemed to be little doubt the shots would hit their mark, Tarrant being this team’s best free-throw shooter (86 percent) and, more and more it seems, its metaphorical backbone. A team — and a season — often has moments that flip the script. These Tigers have not beaten many talented teams. But they did last Wednesday, and with a late-game comeback that included their leader’s ability to literally swallow blood and answer the bell. The challenge now, of course, is to make that moment the start of something big.

Larry Kuzniewski

Sam Craft and Josh Pastner

The Sam Craft story is developing momentum. Less than three weeks after playing in the Birmingham Bowl for the Memphis football team, Craft started his first game at point guard for the Tigers (in the win over Temple). Now with two starts and a total of 54 minutes (over four games) under his belt, Craft has exactly zero turnovers. Pastner insists he believes in freshman point guard Jeremiah Martin, who started five games before Craft took over against Temple. But the coach described Craft’s skill at “organizing our team” in making the decision to start the former (and presumably future) tailback. 

And there’s this. “Bigs are hard to get,” said Pastner after last Saturday’s win over USF, “but for perimeter players, I believe in guys who have been around winning. I’ve really shifted toward that. And Sam’s a winner. He won in high school [a 2011 state championship at Craigmont, where he was the state-tournament MVP], and he’s won in football. That matters. He’s a flat-out winner.” In playing terms, Craft is a basketball freshman. In winning terms, he’s a veteran. Consider this an intangible worth watching the remainder of the season.

How will these Tigers handle the road? It’s really impossible to tell, the team having played 14 of 17 games to date at FedExForum. (What other sport includes this kind of home-cooking in drawing up a schedule? In seven years under coach Josh Pastner, the Tigers have played 66 road games, 30 on neutral courts, and a whopping 127 at home.) The Tigers have 14 more regular-season games, eight of them away from home, starting Thursday night in Cincinnati. Pastner’s winning percentage at home is .842. His winning percentage in those 66 games with hostile fans: .576. The U of M went 5-5 on the road in each of its first two seasons in the American Athletic Conference. The Tigers lost their only two true road games this season, but played well at both South Carolina and Connecticut. Starting Thursday night in Ohio, we’ll see if this group is worthy of NCAA tournament consideration. Another 5-5 season away from home won’t do it.

• With seven double-doubles already, Dedric Lawson is well on his way to becoming just the third Tiger freshman to have ten such games. Keith Lee had 17 in 1981-82, a season that saw Memphis [State] go 24-5 and reach the NCAA tournament’s Sweet 16 a year after missing out on the Big Dance. Lorenzen Wright had 15 in 1994-95, a season that saw Memphis go 24-10 and reach the NCAA tournament’s Sweet 16 a year after missing out on the Big Dance. 

Can Lawson be the swing variable for another Memphis team trying to return to the only college basketball tournament that matters? He’s currently averaging 14.5 points and 8.9 rebounds, not quite the numbers posted by Lee (18.3 and 11.0) and Wright (14.8 and 10.2) as rookies. But with Shaq Goodwin playing like a senior with McDonald’s All-American on his resume (13.8 and 8.3), Tarrant in command of the offense, and role players like Avery Woodson and Trahson Burrell making a difference, Lawson can continue to quietly climb the Tiger freshman-record book. But he needs to register a few double-doubles against the AAC’s best. Against UConn two weeks ago, Lawson had but 10 points and four rebounds in 36 minutes. This week’s tilt in Cincinnati is the kind of game that measures a player’s impact, freshman or otherwise.

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Tigers 77, Tulane 65

Memphis won its American Athletic Conference opener Tuesday afternoon at FedExForum to improve to 9-3 on the season. Starting for the first time this season, senior Trahson Burrell led the Tigers with 21 points and 13 rebounds. Coming off the bench for the first time this season, senior forward Shaq Goodwin added 17 points and eight rebounds.

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Three Tigers who started the team’s first 11 games were not on the floor at tipoff against the Green Wave. Freshman forward Dedric Lawson sat out the game with an abdominal strain, while Goodwin and guard Markel Crawford were held out of the starting lineup presumably for disciplinary reasons. (Crawford scored four points off the bench.) Freshman K.J. Lawson got his first college start and contributed 15 points and seven rebounds. Senior point guard Ricky Tarrant Jr. scored 16 points and led Memphis with six assists.

Malik Morgan led Tulane with 18 points. The Green Wave shot 35 percent in falling to 7-7 for the season.

The Tigers have won seven of eight games and will now hit the road for a big test Saturday at South Carolina. The 24th-ranked Gamecocks will likely be 12-0 entering the game (they face Francis Marion Wednesday).

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Tigers 72, Southern 67

The Tigers finished Tuesday night’s game on a 16-8 run, erasing a three-point deficit with just under seven minutes to play to earn their fifth straight win, matching the team’s season high from the 2014-15 season. Southern center Jared Sam missed a free throw with 26 seconds left that would have tied the game at 68 and K.J. Lawson converted a driving layup from the left side with 17 seconds left to clinch the victory.

The older of the Tigers’ two Lawson brothers scored a game-high 16 points off the bench and Trahson Burrell added 15 points and eight rebounds (also off the bench) to lead the way on a night senior Shaq Goodwin fouled out in only 14 minutes of playing time. Freshman forward Dedric Lawson earned his fourth double-double of the season with 11 points and 10 rebounds. Memphis improved to 7-2 on the season despite committing a season-high 19 turnovers.

Larry Kuzniewski

Dedric Lawson

Senior point guard Ricky Tarrant Jr. struggled from the field (3 for 10) but managed to score 11 points, grab six rebounds, dish out four assists, and earn four steals. He knew it was the Tiger bench, though, that decided this one. “It’s something we expect [the reserves] to do,” said Tarrant. “It’s their mentality, to bring energy. They did a great job, picking up the pace of the game. Not just by scoring, but with defense and rebounding.”

Led by Sam (26 points and 12 rebounds) and guard Adrian Rodgers (18 points), the Jaguars battled the Tigers to a tie at halftime (29-29) and led for more than 14 minutes of the game (there were 10 lead changes). But in addition to dominating bench play (Memphis outscored the Jaguar bench, 32-6), the Tigers got to the free-throw line 42 times and made 28, compared with a total of 16 free-throw attempts (12 made) by Southern.

“In the first half, we weren’t taking our time,” said K.J. Lawson. “We had some jitters. But in the second half, we took it to the goal; they couldn’t stop it.”

“Overall, it was a good win,” said Tarrant. “They’re a hard-nosed team. There are things we have to get better at on both the offensive and defensive end.”

Asked about the Tigers’ next opponent, Ole Miss (Friday night), K.J. Lawson all but shrugged his shoulders. “At the end of the day, it’s just another game,” he said. “We’re gonna prepare for them just like we prepare for everybody else. We played Oklahoma . . . top 10. How did we prepare for them? We know the crowd will be there, and we’ll be prepared to play. We just hope they’re ready to play.”

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Memphis Tiger Hoops at the Quarter Pole

With seven games in the books, a quarter of the Tigers’ 2015-16 regular season is almost behind them. They’ll play four games in 11 days starting this Saturday, then open American Athletic Conference play against Tulane on December 29th at FedExForum. A few quick observations on Josh Pastner’s seventh team as it continues to coalesce.

Dedric Lawson has filled a void, and then some. The precocious power forward could be playing his senior season in high school, remember. Instead, he scored 22 points and pulled down 15 rebounds in his second college game, against the 8th-ranked team in the country. (Those numbers were never achieved by one Austin Nichols.) Last Saturday against SEMO, with the Tiger bench shortened by injuries, Lawson scored 28 points and grabbed 14 rebounds in 38 minutes on the floor. His current averages of 15.9 points and 9.0 rebounds haven’t been put up by a Memphis player since Chris Massie averaged 16.7 and 10.8 in 2002-03. Lots of season to play, and the competition gets stronger in January. But Dedric Lawson, as Pastner has said, “is a stud.”

• As good as Lawson has been, the case could be made that Ricky Tarrant Jr. has been the Tigers’ early-season MVP. This time last season, no one knew who the Tiger point guard was (or would be). Pookie Powell wanted the job. So did a desperately out-of-shape Kedren Johnson. Markel Crawford took some turns. There is no debate this season. Tarrant has met every standard Pastner and the Tiger staff could have envisioned for the Alabama graduate transfer. With Johnson nursing an injured shoulder and freshman Jeremiah Martin finding his sea legs, Tarrant has set the pace for a team that must push the ball offensively to win. He leads the team with 31.3 minutes per game and has dished out 28 assists with only eight turnovers (10 and 1 against SEMO last weekend). Tarrant is aggressive to the rim and makes his free throws (87 percent on 56 shots). Tiger fans will wish they had more than one season with him.

Larry Kuzniewski

Ricky Tarrant Jr.


Shaq Goodwin is playing with urgency. Pastner likes to endorse Goodwin’s “high motor.” During his first three college seasons, that motor sputtered regularly. But the senior seems to know this will be the season his impact will make the most difference, on young teammates like the Lawson brothers, on the Tigers’ standing in the AAC, and on any chances this team has of reaching the NCAA tournament. Goodwin’s last three games (points and rebounds): 23 and 3, 18 and 12, 20 and 6. His averages (14.1 and 8.6) are significantly up from his career numbers entering the season (9.5 and 6.0). Not incidentally, Goodwin has seemed to be especially happy on the court (he smiles as easily as any Tiger in memory). “I need to make sure I enjoy [the season],” said Goodwin after the Louisiana Tech win on December 1st. “If I’m not, it’s a cancer to the team, and it shows.”

The Tiger bench is thin . . . but capable. Let’s start with the positive: Trahson Burrell can be one of the finest sixth men in the country. His sheer athleticism and active play at either end give the Tigers a boost five or six minutes into a game. In six games (all off the bench), Burrell has averaged 23.3 minutes and scored or rebounded in double figures in five of the six games. Martin has shown signs of manning the point full time, perhaps as early as next season. And K.J. Lawson brings the energy you’d expect from someone known by too many as “the other Lawson.” After those three, though, the Tiger rotation is lacking. The biggest man on the team, Nick Marshall, hasn’t earned Pastner’s confidence. Based on the coach’s first six seasons, if a player isn’t an established part of the rotation by the time conference play begins, he’s unlikely to gain such status. Dedric Lawson and Goodwin are going to get into foul trouble. How will the reserves keep Memphis competitive in such scenarios? We don’t have a complete answer, at least not yet.

There are too many empty seats at FedExForum. Over six home games, the Tigers have announced attendance (ticket sales) above 12,000 only once (the Oklahoma game). This after attendance dropped precipitously last season (average of 13,915 after 16,121 in 2013-14). It’s an ugly contrast with the U of M football program, the latter having set attendance records at the Liberty Bowl this fall. Have basketball fans simply shifted their time, attention, and money to football? I don’t think it’s that simple. The Tigers need big wins, and they need a star. Dedric Lawson may fill the latter. As for big wins, would beating Ole Miss on December 18th count? What about South Carolina on January 2nd? The Tigers have six more home games before they travel to UConn to face the Huskies on January 9th, then just eight more games at FEF the rest of the season. For those of us who’ve been around the program for some time, the vacant sections of the home arena are uncomfortable statements on the condition of the program. Sponsors and boosters see these sections. When will they be filled again?