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Beyond the Arc Sports

Postgame Notebook: Grizzlies 105, Wolves 88 — Good Signs, With an Asterisk

Mike Conley helped lead a balanced, share-the-ball attack as the Grizzlies won comfortably against the depleted Timberwolves.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Mike Conley helped lead a balanced, share-the-ball attack as the Grizzlies won comfortably against the depleted Timberwolves.

The Lead: The Grizzlies were facing a Minnesota Timberwolves team in a world of hurt, playing without Kevin Love and Andrei Kirilenko, among many others, and owners of exactly one road win this season without Love in the lineup. So there’s a limit to how much you can learn from this one.

But it did display two hopeful new facts of life for Grizzlies basketball following the Rudy Gay trade: Ball movement and depth.

The Grizzlies assisted on 30 of 41 baskets, with Marc Gasol and Mike Conley sharing the team lead with 8 each and Tony Allen, Jerryd Bayless, and Tony Wroten chipping in three each. The 30 assists was a season high.

The beneficiaries of much of the his passing largess were the team’s two new small forwards, Tayshaun Prince and Austin Daye, who combined to score 34 points on 14-17 shooting. (Prince was a perfect 8-8.) Don’t expect production quite like that ever again, but the contrast between Prince and Daye and the departed Rudy Gay is pretty stark. Some nights the Grizzlies’ will miss Gay’s isolation scoring. But with Prince cutting well off the ball and spotting up in the corner and Daye finding space for a potentially deadly catch-and-shoot game, they can help supply points without stopping the ball. In this one, nine of their 14 buckets were assisted. Two of the other five were tip-ins.

The Grizzlies’ assist rate shot up immediately after the trade. Improved scoring has lagged behind, but we’ve seen that this weekend. Hopefully it’s a trend and not a blip.

“The ball movement is getting contagious,” Lionel Hollins said after the game. “Everybody is moving the ball. It’s nice; giving goals to Zach, guys cutting. The whole team is just looking to make the extra pass and the extra play. When you make shots, the assists do pile up, but I think the willingness to pass is important, and we are doing that.”

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Postgame Notebook: Grizzlies 85, Wizards 76 — Tayshaun Prince in the Grindhouse

The Lead: After playing their first game without Rudy Gay Thursday night in Oklahoma City, the Grizzlies came home to welcome their new players into the lineup for the first time, with better results.

Tayshaun Prince had a nice night in his Grizzlies debut.

Despite never practicing with the team, veteran Tayshaun Prince looked like he’d been with the Grizzlies all season. Prince entered the game midway through the first quarter and knocked down his first shot — a mid-range jumper off a Mike Conley feed — 16 seconds later. About half an hour of court time later, the game ended with the ball in Prince’s hands after a defensive rebound and a nine-point win.

In-between, Prince showcased a versatile two-way game: Scoring on mid-range jumpers and long-limbed drives (14 points on 7-11) shooting. Going into the post when Darrell Arthur was able to space the floor at power forward, drawing attention and setting up Arthur for open jumpers (3 assists). Making nice post-entry feeds (perhaps the most underrated advantage he has over Gay). And closing out on shooters. His back-to-back jumpers in the final three minutes allowed the Grizzlies to finally pull away after playing roughly even with the Wizards most of the night.

“He’s a veteran,” Lionel Hollins said of Prince’s debut. “When you’ve been around, there are not any new plays. There are new calls to plays. Once you recognize what the sets are then you learn the calls and can be in the right spot. He’s a high-IQ player.”

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Road Recap: Grizzlies 93, Celtics 83

Mike Conley broke out of his December slump in a big way against the Celtics.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Mike Conley broke out of his December slump in a big way against the Celtics.

If ever there was a game that backed up my now oft-stated assertion that as Mike Conley goes, so go the Griz, it was last night in Boston, where the Grizzlies got a double-digit road win despite Zach Randolph and Marc Gasol combining for 11 points on 4-15 shooting.

But Conley combined a season-high 23 points (on 8-15 shooting) with nine assists and only one turnover, all while playing 44 minutes due to a first-quarter Jerryd Bayless ankle sprain. The team also got good games from Rudy Gay (19-6-5, though Paul Pierce lit him up early on), Tony Allen (15-5, on 6-8 shooting), and reserve bigs Marreese Speights and Darrell Arthur (a combined 20-9 on 8-13 shooting).

Mitigating the good vibes: The Celtics are really struggling right now. They’ed gone 2-7 in their previous nine games, with six of those seven losses in double figures. And, offensively, though the Grizzlies’ performance looks good at a glance, there were again problems down the stretch. After scoring 25 points in each of the first three quarters, the Grizzlies managed only 18 in the fourth, with much of that padded by late free-throws. The Grizzlies had more shot-clock violations (2) than made field goals (1) in the game’s final nine minutes. They seemed to be playing tight and too conservatively; running down the clock and getting tough, contested, often forced shots as a result.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Month to Month: The Grizzlies’ December Slide was Offensive.

Mike Conleys trouble finishing at the rim was just one component of his December struggles.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Mike Conley’s trouble finishing at the rim was just one component of his December struggles.

The Grizzlies came out of November with the best record in the league and the best month — 12-1 — in franchise history. December was decidedly less kind, with the team stumbling to a 7-7 record on the month, including losing three of their past four games heading into tonight’s contest in Boston, and now clinging to fourth seed in the West instead of jockeying with the Thunder, Clippers, and Spurs for conference pole position.

What went wrong in December? It’s pretty easy to narrow down. The defense, led by Tony Allen’s shut-down work on the wing and Marc Gasol’s more subtle but perhaps more meaningful anchoring in the paint, has remained elite. After allowing only 96.2 points per 100 possessions in November, the team allowed only 96.6 in December, and currently ranks second in the NBA behind Indiana. (All specific stats per NBA.com. Team rankings per ESPN.com.) The rebounding has actually improved at both ends of the floor, with the team leading in the NBA in offensive rebound rate and tied for fifth overall.

Instead, the slide has been almost entirely the result of a massive regression — some might say correction — on the offensive end.

In November, the Grizzlies scored 105.6 points per 100 possessions and, at one point, were among the league’s top five offenses, drawing media attention across the league for their suddenly elite offense. In December, they’ve nose-dived to 96.3 points per 100 possessions and have now fallen to 20th in overall offensive efficiency, matching last season’s mediocrity.

Pretty much all the good things I wrote about the team’s offense here and here have reversed or declined since November gave way to December, as the offense has gotten slower and grown more stagnant — more reliant on isolation plays from top scorers Rudy Gay and Zach Randolph and on mid-range jumpers from nearly everyone.

The early dynamism — with offensive improvement built on more three-pointers, more free-throws, and a faster pace rather that simply better overall shooting — has mostly disappeared.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Postgame Notebook: Grizzlies 80, Bulls 71 — Both Teams Played Hard (Defense)

The Lead: This one fit the pre-game profile: A hard-fought, low-scoring slugfest between two elite defensive teams with middle-of-the-pack offenses.

Man of the Match: Mike Conley

The Grizzlies haven’t allowed an opponent to top 100 points since their opening-night loss to the Los Angeles Clippers and the 71 they allowed the Bulls tonight is a season low for a Grizzlies opponent.

For the Grizzlies, some of their offensive struggles — 19 turnovers, 38 shooting — were familiar from last week’s losing streak, but when asked how much of that was a continuation of recent problems, Lionel Hollins answered “None of it.”

Hollins instead credited the Bulls defense, and I think I agree. So, while recent offense trends are concerning, I’m giving the team a pass on this one.

“I don’t know what fans think, but for a coach this was a good basketball game,” Hollins said. “A good, hard-fought game from both sides.”

The Grizzlies used a much-needed bench boost to overcome a terrible offensive start and take a small lead into the half. In the second half, Mike Conley’s playmaking (10 points and 4 assists) and Zach Randolph’s rebounding (9 of his game-high 15) helped the Grizzlies maintain control.

Man of the Match: One potentially decisive trend that went the right way for the Grizzlies in this one was the play of Mike Conley, whose turnovers tended to correlate with team success this season. Conley had only 2 turnovers against the Bulls, while scoring a game-high 17 points on 6-12 shooting and quietly dominating his match-up with Bulls point guard Kirk Hinrich.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Post-Weekend Notebook: Griz Split with Pistons and Spurs

Mike Conley: Man of the Weekend

This weekend’s Grizzlies back-to-back got away from me a little bit. I was at Friday’s home game with the Pistons, a 90-78 win, but as a civilian, taking my soon-to-be-three-year-old son to his first game. And I watched Saturday night’s 99-95 overtime road loss to the San Antonio Spurs on DVR delay.

As a means of catching up, I’m re-purposing the Postgame Notebook format to look back on what happened in Griz World this weekend:

The Lead: The Grizzlies went 1-1 on the weekend while playing without Tony Allen, who was nursing a sore groin.

Friday’s home game against the Pistons was a rough repeat of the prior home games against the Cavaliers and Raptors: The Grizzlies played down to competition in the first half and then turned up their defense in the second to secure a double-digit win.

Saturday night, the Grizzlies played a very well rested Spurs team on their own home floor, on the second night of a back to back, and built a 15-point lead in the second half before succumbing to some combination of fatigue, poor execution, and questionable calls.

On the latter: The missed shot-clock violation near the end of overtime was clearly an official’s error, but one that was only harmful to the Grizzlies in retrospect. If Jerryd Bayless and Rudy Gay had connected on the subsequent long lead pass for a transition layup, the Grizzlies would have benefited from not having the violation called. As far Manu Ginobili grabbing Gay’s arm on his attempted catch of that pass, it was definitely a foul, but not all actual fouls are actually called in NBA games. For the Grizzlies, that was an infuriating non-call, but it wasn’t a terribly surprising one.

As it is, after 15 games the Grizzlies stand at 12-3 and still lack a bad loss: Single digits to the Clippers in their home opener. A narrow home loss to a deep, athletic Nuggets team on the final game of a three-in-four-nights set. And nip-and-tuck road overtime loss in San Antonio on the second of a back-to-back. That’s it. The Grizzlies are the last team standing this NBA season that has yet to lose a game by double-digits.

If you want to be concerned about something, you could point to the team’s 0-2 record in games that have come down to execution in the final couple of minutes. But two games — two! — is a pretty small sample size.

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Cover Feature News

How Do We Change Memphis?

If given the opportunity to permanently change some of the things that negatively impact Memphis, what would you do and why?

We asked 10 influential Memphians to share their thoughts with the Flyer on that subject. Each highlighted problems they believed took away from Memphis’ prosperity and prospects for the future and what they would do to help rectify them.

The Memphis City Schools system, Delta flight fares, limited facilities and opportunities for youth, poverty, and the perception that the city is an undesirable place to live were among the issues pinpointed.

Some responses were similar, but all centered on making the city better for current residents and building opportunities for those who will live here in the future.

Memphis mayor A C Wharton Jr.

One thing I would change centers around a subject that essentially influences and impacts the issues of schools, crime, and economic development. This issue is early childhood education. My wish would be that every child receives a quality pre-K education. Over and over again, studies have confirmed how truly invaluable an investment it is in the short term and long term.

I would also add resources that allow us to more fully provide training to citizens for the jobs and career opportunities of today and tomorrow. This training can be as innovative as preparing workers to operate new technology at local businesses or as traditional as giving teachers the tools they need in the classroom. I am definitely of the mindset that if we build it, they will come. By this, I mean if we build a better, more educated, more technologically savvy workforce, then the jobs will come.

Lastly, Memphis is a great city with an amazing legacy. The world has been made brighter through the gifts of our music, our innovation, our compassion, and our soul. I have heard any number of compliments from visitors to our city who are amazed by our world-class attractions and the richness of our story.

What pains me, however, is to hear those who overlook the totality of our history, our progress, and our people and define Memphis solely based on the challenges that we face. We are no less great a city because of our challenges. In fact, part of what makes us great are the legions of individuals and organizations united in the purpose of working to improve the conditions of our community.

Ninth District congressman Steve Cohen

I think consolidation of government would be an important tool for planning and attracting industry — to have one voice. It would also provide simplicity for businesses dealing with local government.

I think making the city more friendly to young African-Americans is very important. There should be some office in the city — maybe a part of the Memphis Convention and Visitors Bureau — that focuses on, improves, and publicizes opportunities for people — particularly African-Americans — to have an outlet for entertainment and culture. I think we’ve done some of that through the Brooks [Museum of Art] and Hattiloo Theatre, but we need more of it, so people will feel good about Memphis, rather than Atlanta [or other areas], as a place to live.

It’s important that the University of Memphis gets its own regency or some self-rule without losing funding from Nashville. Its funding has been tied up in rules and a lot of decision-making by the board of regents statewide. The university should have its own local board in charge of hiring, employment decisions, and planning. This would improve the university’s ability to raise funds.

It would be great if we could have another domestic carrier come in and give some lower airfares to Memphis, so local residents wouldn’t have to go to Little Rock or Nashville to get cheaper fares. Delta’s fares are outrageously high. [Through doing this], businesses and conventions would more likely be attracted to the city.

Superintendent of Memphis City Schools Kriner Cash

Although Memphis consistently ranks as one of the most generous cities in the United States, thousands of people in Memphis seem unconcerned that we have neighbors living in poverty, without educational opportunities, or really much hope for a future that is different from their current situation. One of my actionable leadership mantras is that “Teamwork makes the dream work.” The only way a dream of justice in our community can work is for all of us to work as a team to provide all children the very best educational opportunities.

Reversing the path to corrections: Like many jurisdictions, Memphis is quick to condemn juvenile offenders to a life of criminal behavior with a hair-trigger approach toward what I call “arrest and suppress.” Working together with Judge [Curtis] Person, we have made great strides to change the corrections culture, but much more work remains to be done before jail cells are rejected as an appropriate place for young people, especially young African-American males.

A permanent change that would totally transform Memphis into a city of choice would be to instill the love of reading into every member of the community. It simultaneously broke and warmed my heart to see juvenile offenders locked up as a direct result of their illiteracy, imploring me to do more to help them learn how to read. Literacy excellence breaks down barriers and opens unlimited worlds of opportunities.

Finally, I would permanently change our community’s approach to health and wellness. The health-care claims we see in Memphis City Schools for employees dealing with the resulting impacts of diabetes and high blood pressure boggle the mind and strain our budgets. Memphis food is delicious, but it is a recipe for the health problems that choke our hospitals and clinics. For each minute we spend on the cell phone each day, we should commit equal time to walking, riding bicycles, exercising, and spending quality face time with our children, family, and friends.

University of Memphis president Shirley Raines

First, I would permanently change the opportunities for Memphis students to attend college. College and other educational opportunities exist when there are resources from families, communities, or employers providing sufficient scholarships for every capable person desiring to go to college, whether beginning freshmen, transfers from Southwest Tennessee Community College, nontraditional or mid-career individuals. In addition, the students would have the educational backgrounds, motivation, and persistence to achieve a college degree. [By doing this], we could change the future of thousands of families, our economy, and our society. 

Second, I would permanently change people’s perceptions of the abilities of Memphis students, including those at the University of Memphis. While we have the largest honors program in the state of Tennessee, the city and the university are not perceived as having this caliber of student, yet the perceptions of us from outside of Memphis, and even globally, are very strong. 

Third, I would permanently change people’s knowledge and attitudes about Memphis as a place to live and enjoy life. From the wide variety of music to the athletics, from the best barbecue to the finest dining, from the local theaters to the next touring troupe of Broadway plays, from the local artists’ festivals to the world-class art exhibits in our museums, there is much to enjoy about Memphis.

Tom Jones of Smart City Consulting, a firm that focuses on public policy and communications

Pay now rather than pay later. There’s always the political will to pay more for jails and cells. There is no resistance to spending $24,000 a year to keep an inmate in prison, but there’s never been the political coalition willing to spend one-fourth of that for the interventions that give at-risk children fair starts in life and better options for their futures.

Balanced budgets: It’s not about balancing revenues and expenditures but about taking a balanced approach to Memphis services. Collecting every dollar of property taxes and sales taxes still leaves the city about $8 million short when it comes to funding the budgets of police and fire. The same attention given to public safety is needed when it comes to the conditions and quality of libraries, community centers, and parks and to quality-of-life investments that create neighborhoods of choice.

If I could, I would wage an all-out war on Memphis’ most malignant problem: poverty. Memphis has more people living in poverty than the population of Knoxville, and 65,000 of them are children. Poverty erodes our competitiveness, takes money out of our cash registers, and reduces the most important capital a city can have in today’s economy — human capital.

I would also fix the crisis at Memphis International Airport. At a time when cities’ success comes from easy connectivity to the global economy, our businesses have to clear the hurdle of the nation’s highest airfares, draining about $1 billion a year out of our community, when compared to our peer cities.

Memphis city councilman Lee Harris

If I had omnipotent powers, I would transport every Memphian to another big city, where they can witness the potholes, persistent crime, high fees, bad traffic, and political bickering. They would come back changed, and we might put an end to some of the bad-mouthing that goes on. They would know that Memphis is a great city, our streets are fine, taxes are coming down, and our politicians are (in most cases) good folks trying to move the city forward.

 I’d like to see city government get serious about Memphians. We need to figure out a way to spend our tax dollars and our time on things that make a difference in the lives of Memphians. Our community centers, senior centers, parks, and pools should be open and ready for business. These are things that people will notice, but sometimes these issues barely rate in the government and media.

Finally, the in-fighting between Memphis and its sister cities is short-sighted. Right now, we’re trying to out-maneuver some of the suburban municipalities on the sales tax, and we’re suing them to try to stop the inevitable formation of suburban school districts. The litigation between the Memphis City Council (a body that, mind you, has no formal role in schools whatsoever), the Shelby County Commission, and the suburban municipalities involves more than 20 lawyers and will easily cost more than $2 million. If I had my druthers, I’d put a stop to that.

Richard Thompson, founder of the online media publication Mediaverse.com

If I could change anything, I would change our worldview on poverty. It is a significant and sizable issue here, considering that 25.7 percent [of residents] live at or below the poverty level. However, we tend to forget that we enabled the degradation of some communities when we didn’t fill the gaps left by businesses and other institutions that abandoned these markets over time. We wrongly assume that the impoverished are inherent criminals and have no morals. We tend to argue that the impoverished exist because of their own desire to live on government entitlements and so forth. We also tend to assign blame to them when we inanely refer to ourselves as the “poorest city in America.” In many instances, the poor work. They just don’t earn enough. They fall prey to the criminal justice system and don’t have the resources to break its cycle.

The dominant media narratives are crime, government, sports, and education. Yes, each is important, but their dominance skews what’s real about Memphis. If I could change anything, it would be allocation of resources to provide more in-depth and nuanced coverage of the daily lives of Memphians. 

Lastly, there are a number of programs that exist to incorporate youths into the lifeblood of the city. If I could change anything, I would give these groups more exposure so we can take a greater communal responsibility in the development of [our] future generation of leaders.

Mike Conley, starting point guard for the Memphis Grizzlies

One thing I would like to change is crime, because I know it’s heavy in this city.

I also think trying to get better education throughout the city of Memphis and all of the schools and ensuring everyone has an equal opportunity [is important].

Homelessness would be the third thing I would change. People not having jobs, people not having the opportunity to support their families and support themselves, however we can do that, I would like to see that changed.

Skewby, a Memphis-based hip-hop artist and producer

One thing I would like to see change in Memphis is the amount of segregation. Growing up as a mixed kid, it was very clear to me that invisible lines were drawn in the city. No matter your race, you can still walk into sections of Memphis and feel uncomfortable based on the color of your skin. You can walk into churches, schools, malls, and events and literally see the divide.

I want to see more things for young people to do in Memphis. Places like Liberty Land, Celebration Station, and Discovery Zone are long gone. Guns, gangs, sex, and violence are already a reality for most kids. Throw mass boredom into the equation and it definitely doesn’t help.

The school system: I served my 12 years in the prison also known as Memphis City Schools. Okay, maybe I’m going overboard, but it was definitely not a pleasant experience. I mention prisons because of the amount of security, the fear that the administration had of us, and the lack of care that was shown. I can count on one hand every teacher that cared about my future, had patience with me, and were sincerely concerned about my education. I know that the school system’s troubles are deeper than bad teachers, financial woes, and bad programs. I’m just speaking from a student’s standpoint and also as a person who wants to raise a child in Memphis.

When someone hears the word “Memphis,” they automatically think of good food and good music. I would love to see more of a music industry in Memphis. There aren’t many record labels, blogs, or magazines covering what’s happening in our music scene. There’s so much talent here, and it amazes me that there still isn’t anything that connects it all. You have people who play instruments, singers, rappers, engineers, promoters, and it’s all just scattered around. People have always complained about the amount of talent that leaves. It’s up to us to keep it here.

Brad Watkins, organizing director for the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center

I would really like to see some serious reforms of our local criminal justice system. This would start with ending our morally dubious practice of allowing bank-hired process servers to perform home evictions due to foreclosure. Currently, the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department only performs about one-third of the home evictions in our community. Bank-hired security agents arrive at people’s homes, dressed in garb that can be confused for law enforcement uniforms, and remove people and their property from their homes with little accountability or community oversight for their behavior or conduct during these proceedings.

We also need to establish local minimum standards of staff training, professional ethics, and living conditions, including a timetable for compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act in our homeless shelters, and stricter standards of professional conduct of the many private nonprofit residential detention centers for juvenile offenders. Neither of these industries has anything in the way of real community oversight or accountability in instances of abuse and sexual harassment of residents.

Creating a jobs-growth fund and mandating that a set percentage of all publicly funded construction and demolition contracts have set-aside jobs for those experiencing homelessness, graduates of the Shelby County Drug Court, and ex-offenders. This would be paired with counseling and life-skill training to help these individuals set up bank accounts, find housing, and reconnect them with their families to handle contentious child-support issues in a process of mediation.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Game 7 Preview: Grizzlies at Thunder

thunder-grizzlies-logos.jpg

The Grizzlies make their national television debut tonight with a 7 p.m. road game against the defending Western Conference champion Oklahoma City Thunder.

With Sunday’s decisive victory over the defending NBA champion Miami Heat in the rear-view and a home national TV match-up with the undefeated New York Knicks looming next, this is shaping up to be one of the most compelling regular-season weeks in franchise history.

Both the Grizzlies and Thunder are among the current Top 10 in offense, defense, and rebounding and each sits one game behind the San Antonio Spurs in the Western Conference standings. But look a little deeper into their respective resumes and the Grizzlies’ start looks a little more impressive.

The Thunder are 6-2, but those six wins have come against teams with a combined 11-28 (they’ve played 0-8 Detroit twice). The Grizzlies are 5-1, with those five wins coming against teams with a combined 20-16 record.

Yet, despite playing a tougher schedule (the Grizzlies lost to the 5-2 Clippers, the Thunder to the 6-1 Spurs and 3-3 Hawks), the Grizzlies not only have a slightly better record but also a slightly higher point differential (+9.0 to OKC’s +7.1).

So that means the Grizzlies are winning this one, right? Probably not. A little shine might be off the Thunder since the Harden deal, but they’re still an elite team and are still playing at home.

Three thoughts in advance of tonight’s game:

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Early Offense — A more diversified attack has the Grizzlies looking like a contender.

Mike Conley has been the engine driving the Grizzlies offensive improvement.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Mike Conley has been the engine driving the Grizzlies’ offensive improvement.

Even before Sunday night’s spectacular blowout of the defending NBA champion Miami Heat moved the Grizzlies to 5-1 and cemented the best start in franchise history, the boys in Beale Street Blue were already showing signs of being a potentially elite team.

What was true before the opening tip on Sunday remained true when the final buzzer sounded: The Grizzlies were one of only two NBA teams — along with defending Western Conference champs and follow-up opponents the Oklahoma City Thunder — to rank among the league’s 10 best in offense, defense, and rebounding.

The rebounding is not a mystery. The return of Zach Randolph, who currently leads the league at 14.5 boards a game, has pretty well taken care of that. Neither is the defense, which has been a constant since the Grizzlies put Tony Allen and Marc Gasol on the floor together two seasons ago.

But the offensive improvement — way up, from 20th to 9th, per possession — is a little more surprising, especially with each of the team’s frontcourt stars — Randolph, Gasol, and leading scorer Rudy Gay — starting the season shooting below their career averages, and with last season’s top bench scorer, O.J. Mayo, enjoying a bit of a rebirth with the Dallas Mavericks. Rather than individual dominance, a lot of small team factors have conspired to make this year’s Griz squad deeper, more dynamic, and more efficient on the offensive end of the floor.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Clippers 101, Grizzlies 92 — Something We’ve Seen Before

The Grizzlies fell to the Los Angeles Clippers last night in a regular-season debut that felt frustratingly familiar.

For starters, it was the Grizzlies 12th consecutive opening-night loss, the longest current streak in any of the four major team sports, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

Secondly, the game felt very much like a continuation of this spring’s playoff series between the two teams: It was an intense, physical, closely fought game decided by a big disparity in bench production and fourth-quarter execution.

The Grizzlies four-man bench unit was outscored 49-17, with the Clippers getting a game-high 29 points from new addition Jamal Crawford and bruising, efficient play from Eric Bledsoe (13-4-4 in 17 minutes). Meanwhile, the Grizzlies perimeter reserves Jerryd Bayless, Wayne Ellington, and Quincy Pondexter combined to shoot 3-17. As a team, the Grizzlies shot only 2-14 from three-point range.

Bench production and team-wide three-point shooting are big questions facing the Grizzlies this season, and the team will have to get more in both areas than they got in Game 1 to have a successful season. But, those issues aside, there wasn’t much here to get too worked up about yet.