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Sports Sports Feature

Basketball Tigers To Take On Big Apple Tourneys

Still more than two months till college basketball season tips off? Posh, says SI.com’s Luke Winn. In his latest blog, Winn ranks the upcoming tournaments that help shape the college hoop season. And the Memphis Tigers just happen to be scheduled to play in the top two.

Writes Winn, “New York is not necessarily the best place for a college basketball writer (like myself) to live during January, February, and March. …

“In November and December, however, a wonderful phenomenon occurs: the best of college hoops simply comes to us in Manhattan. I spent this morning — once I finished my last college football preview piece, that is — looking through hoops schedules with the intention of returning to regular blogging. And I’ve come to the pleasant realization that the top three early-season events are all at Madison Square Garden, just a short subway ride away.”

Read more at SI.com.

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Talk About It

How ’bout them Tigers? Will the recruiting class be good next year? And the Liberty Bowl, what to make of that?

Chances are, you probably don’t know the half of it, and that’s where the Sports Marketing Association comes in. The association is part of the University of Memphis’ Sports and Leisure Commerce graduate program, and every spring its members organize a lecture series on issues in college athletics. The five-part series started last month with a discussion on the Liberty Bowl, which drew about 300 people and featured a panel with city councilperson Carol Chumney, the Liberty Bowl’s Steve Ehrhardt, U of M booster Harold Byrd, and other interested parties. The next talk, on Friday, April 6th, is titled “Division I College Recruiting: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.” Coach Jimmy Adams, head boys’ basketball coach at Raleigh-Egypt High School, Coach Jay Bowen, the U of M’s assistant women’s basketball coach, and Dr. Joe Luckey, director of the U of M’s Center of Athletic Academic Services, are among the panelists.

According to association member Ryan Luttrell, while there will be plenty of sports talk, the series is not designed to be a debate. When it looks like the discussion may get heated, as it did a couple times during the Liberty Bowl talk, the association members, who serve as moderators, will put the talk back on track. “We want it to be academic,” Luttrell says. “We want experts to get up there and present different ideas. The audience can decide for themselves.”

Issues in College Sports Lecture Series: “Division I College Recruiting: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.” Ball Hall, Room 124, University of Memphis. Friday, April 6th, 4:30 p.m. Open to the public.

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News The Fly-By

The Cheat Sheet

Just before the U of M plays Ohio State for a trip to the Final Four, one of the Tiger players brags to reporters that this will be a David vs. Goliath matchup, and he is Goliath. Unfortunately, Goliath lost that particular battle, and so did Memphis.

Foul trouble and inconsistent shooting led to a final score of 92-76. And what really stings the most: the Tigers losing to a team named after what Webster calls “a large nutlike seed.” That’s just not right.

Police pull over Greg Cravens

a driver because a house door sticking out of his trunk seems mighty suspicious. And sure enough, they discover that a burglar has broken into a nearby house and has stolen the door to the laundry room. Was that really the only thing in the whole house worth stealing? The door thief is also charged with public intoxication, but you saw that coming, didn’t you?

More senseless crimes: Armed robbers hold up a Hamilton High student walking to school and take the $2 he had in his pockets before conking him on the head with their gun. When will this madness stop?

Four firemen get a shock (literally) while fighting a house fire when it turns out the electricity is still on in the house, even though they switched off the meter. A fire department official later says the building “had an unusual wiring system.” And we’re sure the homeowner will enjoy explaining just how unusual when he meets with MLGW about his bill.

Speaking of MLGW, The Commercial Appeal reports that the utility cut off power to one of its own employees, whose wife was being treated for brain cancer. Meanwhile, a city councilman who owes the utility thousands of dollars in delinquent fees keeps his power on. Stories like these make us feel better and better about our “hometown utility” every day.

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Sports Sports Feature

Sweet, Again

For at least a week, the Tennessee legislature should consider replacing the three stars on the state flag with basketballs. For the first time in the history of the NCAA tournament, all three regions of the Volunteer State will be represented in the Sweet 16, with the University of Tennessee, Vanderbilt, and Memphis each two wins shy of the Final Four. Better yet, with Ridgeway High alum Derrick Byars starring for the Commodores and White Station’s Dane Bradshaw starting for the Vols, Memphis will have a say in this event, dammit, one way or another.

As for the Tigers’ second-round win over Nevada Sunday, it was as gutsy as any 16-point victory you’ll ever see. When the Tigers’ top scorer, Chris Douglas-Roberts, went down with an ankle injury with eight minutes to play, Tiger apologists had their excuse should the U of M wilt against the Western Athletic Conference champions. Instead, Memphis outscored the Wolf Pack by nine the rest of the way.

Guts, you say? With the Tiger lead down to two points, sophomore Antonio Anderson took the plank, er, free-throw line and dropped a pair through the twine, lifting the chin of every foul-shot-fearing fan between New Orleans and Memphis. When Joey Dorsey — he of the sub-50-percent ratio for the season — made his first free throw to extend the lead to five, one got the feeling the U of M had a vice grip on this one. When Anderson saved the ensuing miss from going out of bounds — retaining a valuable clock-killing possession for Memphis — the Tigers seized enough momentum to carry them to the final buzzer.

Guts? Find the smallest Tiger on the floor Thursday night and you’ll see the term personified. Dorsey and Douglas-Roberts (missing free throws, injured, or otherwise) are the most valuable Tigers. Anderson and Jeremy Hunt are clutch at both ends of the floor. But this is fast becoming Andre Allen’s team.

It takes some doing to join the club of elite Memphis point guards. Recent history has seen Andre Turner, Elliot Perry, Chris Garner, and Antonio Burks provide the electric pulse for NCAA tournament teams. (Some would include Penny Hardaway on this list, though Hardaway’s greatness shouldn’t be confined by any positional boundary.) Despite being, technically, Willie Kemp’s backup, Allen made an imprint on the Tiger wins in New Orleans that was second to no one. A steal and driving layup by Allen were key to a 10-2 run early in the second half of the first-round win over North Texas, a game in which the backup point guard played 36 minutes, compared with the starter’s nine. Allen’s hyperactive defensive presence in the backcourt establishes the standard for his teammates and serves as the pressure point through which Memphis opponents must begin their half-court offense.

“Andre’s motor is going 100 miles per hour,” said Coach John Calipari after the Tigers won the Conference USA tournament March 10th. “The greatest thing ever to happen to Willie Kemp is Andre Allen. Willie can’t cost us a game. He won’t cost us a game, because I won’t leave him in long enough. I’ll bring in Andre.”

Energy — and guts — will be a prerequisite to winning the South regional. Thursday night in San Antonio, the best player on the court will be Texas A & M guard Acie Law. The Aggies will be playing in their home state and in the Sweet 16 for the first time since Michael Jordan was a junior in high school (1980). With enough defensive help from Anderson — and a reasonably healthy CDR — the Tigers might escape the long arm of Law, and you couldn’t ask for a juicier foe in the regional final, regardless of who wins the Ohio State-Tennessee contest. If the favored Buckeyes are victorious, Memphis fans will be booing the very man-child they hope to cheer (as a Grizzly) next season: Ohio State’s freshman center, Greg Oden. And if UT wins? Merely a chance to avenge the 18-point drubbing Memphis suffered in Knoxville in December.

Here are the Memphis Tigers, with 24 consecutive wins and — for the first time since 1985 — a second straight dance card in the NCAA’s Sweet Sixteen. Seems they deserve better than a four-word cliché for their performance to date … and their chances ahead. But it’s a great cliché: no guts, no glory.

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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.

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News The Fly-By

The Cheat Sheet

A bird’s nest in a Memphis Light, Gas & Water substation somehow causes a short circuit that not only cuts power to several thousand homes in Midtown but turns off traffic signals, too. Any day now, we expect to hear that our power has been cut off because the hamsters stopped running around in their little wheels.

We suppose this could only happen Greg Cravens

in Memphis. A man arrested for armed robbery is allowed to attend his trial while wearing an Eddie Bauer shopping bag over his head. His attorney, as we understand it, thought this would give his client a better chance in court, since the victim of the crime could not identify him. Look, we know all about that “innocent until proven guilty” thing, but if the guy were truly innocent, why would he put a bag over his head? And how do the folks at Eddie Bauer feel about the whole thing? Flattered?

Someone slings paint across a billboard on Madison for Black Snake Moan. It seems everybody is a critic these days. But what kind of vandal uses beige paint? Did they just have some left over after painting their den? The billboard, by the way, was quickly replaced.

The University of Memphis Tigers win the Conference USA tournament with convincing victories over their opponents. Congratulations to Coach Cal and his team. Now, maybe some of that luck will rub off on that other basketball team in town. Maybe.