Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Tigers 70, Connecticut 63

A season of adversity for the Tigers took another twist, quite literally, Thursday when starting forward D.J. Jeffries — the team’s second-leading scorer — partially tore a ligament in his left knee, sidelining him for at least a month. When Jayden Hardaway started in Jeffries’s place Saturday afternoon against UConn, you got the sense coach Penny Hardaway was doing the closest thing he could to taking the floor himself.
Larry Kuzniewski

Lester Quinones

The younger Hardaway only played seven minutes, and didn’t take a shot, but the Tigers won a sloppy affair, hitting 10 straight free throws in the game’s final two minutes to pull away for a victory despite committing 24 turnovers. The Huskies attempted 20 more shots from the field than did the Tigers (65-45), but committed 20 turnovers of their own. Perhaps the home court — “an incredibly tough place to play” as described by UConn coach Danny Hurley — was enough to make the difference as the Tigers improved to 16-5 for the season and 5-3 in he American Athletic Conference.

“We can still compete,” emphasized sophomore guard Alex Lomax, who scored 13 points and hit six of those late free throws. “We’re missing some key pieces, but Coach did a great job of putting this team together. If we stay locked in, we can do anything.”

“Crazy game,” said an exasperated Hardaway after the game. “Glad to get a win. These turnovers are really disappointing. You gotta keep motivating. The boys are rallying together. The mindset right now is every game is a big game. It’s getting close to seeding for the NCAA [tournament]. You gotta win out, do everything possible to get a win.”

The game featured 14 lead changes, the final one coming on a Lester Quinones three-pointer from the right corner with 2:30 left to play that put Memphis up 59-56. Having missed five games earlier this season with a broken hand, Quinones led Memphis with 36 minutes of action and scored 14 points. He acknowledged the loss of Jeffries as a setback, but didn’t consider it a deathblow for his team’s season.

“He’s a huge part of this puzzle, this team,” said Quinones of Jeffries. “When I was out, the team came together. It’s another way for us to come together.”

Lance Thomas started his second-straight game and scored 14 points while blocking five shots on the defensive end. Precious Achiuwa scored 16 points and pulled down eight rebounds, but was also responsible for a third of the Tigers’ turnovers (8). The sloppy play was offset by the Tigers making 21 of 27 from the foul line and seven of 14 shots from three-point range.

“We’ve been through everything you can go through,” noted Hardaway. “We’re fighting. These guys are scrapping. I’m proud of the effort.” The coach explained how energy needs to be turned up at times and harnessed at others, that tempo is a must for this team . . . until slower play is necessary to protect possessions. The Tigers’ chemistry is volatile at best, with 10 regular-season games left to play.

“If you’re at a major Division-I program right now and you don’t understand the magnitude of what’s going on, then this level’s too high,” said Hardaway. “They came to a major D-I program to take it over the hump. The pressure’s not on them; it’s on the coaches. They’re young. It’s our job to get them prepared, to get them ready.”

The Tigers return to FedExForum Wednesday when they host Temple. Tip-off is scheduled for 7 p.m.

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Tigers 78, UConn 71

The time will come, surely, when Memphis-UConn on a Sunday in mid-February is one of college basketball’s spotlight games. Here in 2019, though, the clash at FedExForum was merely a pair of proud programs taking strides toward re-establishing national credentials under first-year coaches. Penny Hardaway’s Tigers led from start to finish, with senior Kyvon Davenport scoring 26 points to thrill a crowd of 17,162. Husky coach Dan Hurley — among the most animated sideline maestros in the sport — was left to envision a future encounter.
Larry Kuzniewski

Kyvon Davenport

“I told Penny in the handshake line that I don’t expect to come into this matchup [both] 13-10 very frequently in the future,” said Hurley after the game. “It stings, it hurts, it’s not something we’re used to at Connecticut. “

The Tigers led from start to finish, by as many as 16 points and by no fewer than four points in the second half to end a three-game losing streak, the first such skid for Hardaway as a college coach. Memphis started five seniors for the second straight game, and Hurley recognized an edge.

“The number of seniors they play made the difference,” said Hurley. “Davenport was the key to the game. To see our future out there, playing against some men, is a good thing.”

Senior guard Jeremiah Martin scored 12 points, handed out six assists and hit a pair of clutch free throws in the game’s final minute that gave the Tigers a six-point advantage (76-70), enough to clinch the victory. Raynere Thornton added 11 points and eight rebounds.
Larry Kuzniewski

Penny Hardaway

Freshman Tyler Harris came off the bench and scored 12 points for Memphis. He found Davenport on a pair of no-look feeds in the second half that sparked the Tiger attack. “I love to get him good passes,” said the former Cordova High School star. “He dunks and gets the crowd fired up.”

The win improves Memphis to 14-10 and 6-5 in the American Athletic Conference while UConn drops to 13-11 (5-6).

Four Huskies scored in double figures, led by sophomore forward Tyler Polley with 20 points.

“We have to be desperate,” said Hardaway. “We’ll have some lulls, but for the most part, we have to play as hard as we can. We knew we had to get this win; it was a must-win.”

The Tigers shot well across the board, hitting 48 percent from the floor, 38 percent (8 for 21) from three-point range, and 89 percent (14 for 16) from the free throw line. Defensively, they held UConn to 40 percent shooting and forced 18 turnovers.

Hardaway and Hurley first met as teenage players in a camp more than two decades ago. The Memphis coach sees their new career stage as one that can be memorable for both programs. “There are going to be some competitive games between us, moving forward, and today was one of those,” said Hardaway.

With seven regular-season games remaining on the Memphis schedule, Hardaway suggested his seniors will make the difference, one way or the other, just as Hurley felt they did Sunday afternoon. “This is a veteran’s league,” said Hardaway. “The older guys are getting it done. Younger guys chip in where they can, but if we’re going to win, we need those five seniors to show up, every time.”

The Tigers travel to East Carolina for their next game, where they’ll play the Pirates Wednesday night.

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Tigers 73, UConn 49

No team in the vast land of college basketball has won more championships over the last 20 years than the Connecticut Huskies. With four titles (1999, 2004, 2011, and 2014), UConn’s recent trophy case is the envy of North Carolina, Kentucky, Duke, Kansas, and all the rest of the name-brand programs we tend to follow into late March. Any game the Memphis Tigers play against UConn is a big game.

On a frigid Tuesday night in the Mid-South, the Tigers remained red hot — in a big game — with a 24-point beat-down of UConn. Jeremiah Martin and Mike Parks Jr. each had 21 points and 11 rebounds (both season highs for Parks) to lead Memphis in its fourth straight win and help the Tigers secure sole possession of fourth place in the American Athletic Conference. It’s the first four-game winning streak in league play for the Tigers since they joined the AAC for the 2013-14 season.

The Tigers took the lead early and gained separation in the first half by holding the Huskies without a point for nearly six minutes. Memphis led 22-11 after 12 minutes of play and 32-18 at halftime. Jamal Johnson hit a three-pointer to open the second half, and the Tiger lead swelled to 20 points less than seven minutes after the break.

UConn played without its second-leading scorer, Terry Larrier (15.3 points per game), and were led by guard Jalen Adams with merely 11 points (almost eight under his season average). The Huskies dropped to 10-8 for the season (3-3 in the AAC) while the Tigers improved to 13-6 (4-2).

With his fourth straight 20-point game, Martin has emerged as a dark-horse AAC Player of the Year candidate. Martin hit eight of 16 field-goal attempts, including three of seven from three-point range. He also contributed four assists and three steals.

Kareem Brewton scored 10 points off the Tiger bench, helping Memphis shoot 50 percent for the game (28 for 56). UConn shot 38 percent from the field and a miserable 24 percent (4 for 17) from long distance.

The Tigers travel to Tulsa for their next game Saturday night. Memphis beat the Golden Hurricane, 76-67, on January 6th. Tipoff is scheduled for 7 p.m. They’ll return to FedExForum on January 27th when 12th-ranked Cincinnati comes to town.