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Time to Grind: Predictions for the 2022-23 Memphis Grizzlies Season

The Memphis Grizzlies’ surprising run to the Western Conference’s second seed last season caught many NBA observers by surprise. Overnight, the squad went from being the NBA’s ugly duckling to must-see TV. Nonetheless, nobody will be caught off guard this year. The team has an opportunity to demonstrate that they are serious contenders in the West for the foreseeable future.

One can consider that the team won 56 games last year and has one of the best young cores in the league at under 25 years old. The Grizzlies are counting on improvements from their returning players and a group of newcomers. Other teams around the league made significant roster adjustments and have a litany of healthy players who are returning from injury.

Memphis had a season that set a new standard for excellence. By playing stifling defense, the Grizzlies made NBA history by being the first team to finish first in rebounding, steals, and blocks all in the same season. Fast break points, offensive rebounds, points in the paint, and second-chance points were also league-bests for this team.

Ja Morant #12 of the Memphis Grizzlies drives to the basket during a preseason game against the on October 3, 2022 at FedExForum in Memphis, Tennessee. (Photo: Copyright 2022 NBAE • David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images)

Because of his tremendous growth as a player, Ja Morant was selected as a starter for the All-Star Game and became the league’s most-improved player. Morant agreed to a five-year maximum rookie extension, the team announced on July 6th, worth upwards of $231 million. With Jaren Jackson Jr. leading the NBA in blocks and earning first-team All-NBA Defense honors, the team won the Southwest Division for the first time in franchise history.

Sharon Brown and Aimee Stiegemeyer, the Flyer’s special Grizzlies correspondents, analyze here the key questions facing the team as they prepare for the 2022-23 season.

There have been several changes to the roster since last season. Whose absence will have the most impact on the Grizzlies’ success?

Aimee Stiegemeyer: No disrespect to De’Anthony Melton, but Kyle Anderson’s absence is going to have the most noticeable impact. Anderson is one of the most underrated role players in the league and his talent often gets overlooked because his style of play is not the flashiest, and the best basketball that he has ever played was during the 2020-21 season when he filled the starting power forward position in Jaren Jackson Jr.’s absence. Memphis will need a Kyle Anderson this season.

Sharon Brown: It’s possible that Kyle Anderson’s worth can’t always be reduced to a number in the box score. However, the group greatly benefited from his leadership. The Grizzlies were in a jam in the first round of the playoffs last year, Game 5. It seemed like the Minnesota Timberwolves had their number, and Jaren Jackson Jr. was frustrated and in foul trouble, but the veteran leadership of Anderson and Steven Adams helped the young team stay composed.

At one point in the game, the Timberwolves were up and were poised to even the series 2-2, but the Grizzlies were able to recover and win the game, largely in part to the veteran presence on the bench that night.

Anderson was a veteran voice the team needed, in addition to being a great ball handler and above-average defender with length. In Anderson’s absence, Danny Green is ready and able to fill that void with his leadership pedigree.

The Grizzlies’ most recent season set a new standard for excellence. (Photo: Sharon Brown)

Among the returning players, who will have the most impact on the court, in terms of the Grizzlies’ success? Off the court?

AS: On the court? This is Ja Morant’s world, and we are all just living in it. As Morant goes, the team goes. He has really come into his own as the leader of this Grizzlies team, and during games you can find him encouraging and coaching his teammates from the floor.

Off the court, I envision Steven Adams taking on the role as the team’s dad. Big dad energy was on display with Adams last season when he physically picked up and carried Tony Bradley away from Ja Morant, thereby thwarting an altercation between them. We saw it again after the season opener when Adams swiped a towel from John Konchar to give to Morant.

And while he is not a returning player, Danny Green’s veteran leadership and guidance can be of immense value before he ever steps foot on the court. Green has seen the top of the mountain and he has been where the Grizzlies are trying to go — the NBA Finals. The experience and maturity that Green has gathered during his years in the league will be a welcome addition to this squad.

SB: On the floor, I would say a combination of Morant and Jackson Jr. Morant can alter the course of games offensively and Jackson Jr. is the anchor on the defensive side of the ball. Off the court, Danny Green. Green brings that championship experience as a three-time NBA champion. He has been on the big stage and knows what is required. On media day, Green was adamant that the team lacked maturity in a way. “A lot of guys like to do the social media — the TikTok, the tweets,” Green said.

“We can try to limit that a bit — focus on staying locked in to the game and treating the game the right way.

“We love to have fun, but the basketball gods will turn on you if you celebrate too early. Acting like you’ve been there and realizing you haven’t done anything yet — regardless of how many games you won in the regular season — if you haven’t won a championship, there’s nothing to really celebrate. My focus is on keeping them with that mentality for the whole season: Job’s not done,” Green added.

The team is about accountability and I believe Green’s presence will help with that.

And Morant is on board also. “I mean we’re young — he’s a vet,” Morant said when told on Grizzlies media day that Green thinks the team can benefit from maturity. “That’s his job … to hold us accountable. He’s going to be a big help for us in that area. It’s what we need.”

Thirteen-year NBA veteran Danny Green brings championship experience to the Grizzlies. (Photo: Aimee Stiegemeyer)

Last year the Grizzlies finished second in the Western Conference. Where do we expect them to rank this year?

AS: Fourth or fifth seed — not because the Grizzlies got worse over the summer but because other teams in the conference got better. The return of Zion Williamson for the Pelicans will be huge, and Minnesota made some offseason moves that will help propel them to a better ranking in the standards. Memphis’ loss of Kyle Anderson is Minnesota’s gain.

SB: I’m going to guess somewhere in the range of 2-7. It’s the Wild West, a place where anything can occur. The Los Angeles Clippers have Kawhi Leonard and Paul George back, the Minnesota Timberwolves have Rudy Gobert, Zion Williamson is healthy for the New Orleans Pelicans, and the Sacramento Kings and Oklahoma City Thunder might make huge strides this season.

Which player will take his game to the next level?

AS: All signs point to Santi Aldama taking a big leap forward this season. His performance in the season opener shows him already playing at a higher level than last season, particularly putting up a double-double in his first career start. Aldama made himself useful on both ends of the floor, adding offensive power with some clutch baskets and snatching defensive rebounds. The Grizzlies and Spanish big men are historically an iconic duo.

SB: For me, I’d say Desmond Bane. Even though Morant was voted as the league’s most-improved player, that honor should have gone to Bane. The Grizzlies’ young sensation shot 43 percent from outside and averaged over 18 points per game last year. Considering Bane more than doubled his scoring average and improved on nearly all counting stats averages last season, he is undoubtedly taking another leap. Bane might be on track for an All-Star appearance.

He was phenomenal and a major reason the Grizzlies made the playoff push last season. Bane averaged 18.8 points and hit 49 percent from deep in the postseason.

The Grizzlies will have 18 nationally televised games, a franchise record. (Photo: Sharon Brown)

With Jaren Jackson Jr. sidelined for an undetermined amount of time, who will step up to fill his role?

AS: There is no one player on this roster who can give you all the things that Jaren does, which means it will take a group effort from multiple players to provide the offensive and defensive value missing. Expect to see this coming from a combination of Santi Aldama, Steven Adams, Brandon Clarke, and Xavier Tillman Sr. This is where losing Kyle Anderson is going to hurt Memphis the most.

SB: The success of the Grizzlies can be attributed to their “next-man-up” mentality. There is no egotism in the locker room, which contributes to the culture. Every single one of them has the same goal in mind, and that’s to win basketball games. That manner of thinking and feeling is unimpeded by anything. Every single thing is geared toward achieving that one goal.

In my opinion, any player on that roster is capable of stepping into that role on any given night.

Predicted season win total?

AS: Fifty-three games. The competition among the Western Conference this season will be cutthroat and relentless. On a micro-level, there is the factor of Jaren Jackson Jr.’s indeterminate timeline for returning to the court.

SB: Barring serious injuries to key players, I have them winning between 50 and 56 games. Memphis has the right vibe and players who are eager to prove themselves. The squad is still as confident as ever and ready to take on any opponent. And then there’s that person at number 12 who can alter the course of games.

The Grizzlies have a franchise record of 18 nationally televised games, and for the first time they will be playing on Christmas Day. Will that adversely affect the team’s performance?

AS: Not even a little bit. This group has shown that they thrive under pressure and embrace the opportunity to prove any naysayers wrong. If anything, the increased national exposure will be a motivating factor for this Grizzlies team, especially given how intense the rivalry between Memphis and Golden State has become.

SB: The opposite is true; it will only encourage them to improve. The Grizzlies don’t have much to worry about other than getting out of their own way and focusing on the task at hand. Morant is a once-in-a-generation talent for Memphis, with the capacity to completely dominate games once he gets into his groove. Memphis has taken a giant step forward with the Christmas Day game. To top it all off, the squad still has more to prove.

Five rookies joined the Grizzlies’ roster this offseason. Who should we be keeping an eye out for?

AS: David Roddy and Jake LaRavia are the likeliest to see game-time minutes early in the season, but I am most looking forward to seeing Kenneth Lofton Jr. develop and how his game progresses. Junior, as he is known, will spend most of the time playing with the Hustle in Southaven, but he has the potential to put up big numbers. If the Grizzlies can get the version of Lofton we saw during Summer League, he can be a substantial weapon in their arsenal for years to come. His basketball IQ and smooth footwork are reminiscent of Grit-and-Grind-era Zach Randolph.

SB: There was no doubt that Kenneth Lofton Jr., better known by his nickname Junior, was a sight to behold in the Summer League and the few games in which he participated in the preseason. People should go to Southaven to watch him play for the Memphis Hustle. With a two-way deal, Lofton may only play in 50 regular season games for the Grizzlies and cannot participate in the postseason. Even in preseason, the crowd was screaming “bring in Kenny” for Junior, indicating that he had a devoted fan base. A #FreeJunior hashtag has also been created for use on social media. Zachary McKenley Randolph, also known as Z-Bo, is a Grizzlies icon who is often compared to Junior. Lofton is a bucket-getter, a traditional post player who makes the most of his size and strength.

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Sports Tiger Blue

Three Thoughts: Recovery Mode

“Remember the Cougars.” Last Friday’s fourth-quarter collapse against Houston could linger as a stench over the Memphis program the rest of this season, perhaps the rest of Ryan Silverfield’s tenure as head coach. Or it could become a rallying cry, of a sort, a reminder of how much can be gained, but the cost of a lapse. The Cougars are clearly better than their record (2-3) suggested at kickoff last week. It takes a very good team to lead the Cougars by 19 points in the final quarter. Memphis is that team. Memphis is also the team that coughed up that lead like a Bengal-sized hairball.

What Silverfield, his staff, and players must avoid is dismissing the collapse as water under the bridge. Because the Tiger fan base won’t. This program is at a crossroads, eager for bigger things (starting with the league in which it plays) but unable to get 30,000 fans into a stadium that seats more than 50,000. Silverfield must sell a better product than the one 28,000 fans saw on October 7th. I’m convinced he has a better product … unless that stench truly settles in.

Gabe’s Game. My stack of Memphis football media guides reveals no previous Tiger to have pulled off a trifecta like that of fifth-year senior Gabriel Rogers against Houston: a rush, pass, and reception of at least 15 yards each. A sad footnote to the fourth-quarter meltdown is that a Tiger victory would have likely been remembered as “the Gabriel Rogers game.” He was that extraordinary, particularly in tossing a 41-yard touchdown pass to Asa Martin (after receiving a lateral from quarterback Seth Henigan) to give the Tigers that 19-point lead (26-7) early in the final quarter.

Rogers leads the Tigers with 302 receiving yards (on 22 catches), and he put up 71 of those yards against the Cougars. He also gained 23 rushing yards on just two carries. He was that fabled “triple threat” of lore, only in a game his team gave away. But halfway through the 2022 campaign, the Tigers have a front-runner for the playmaker tag. Keep your eyes on number 9 when Memphis snaps the ball.

Recognizing a rival. A longtime problem for the Memphis program: No annual “rivalry game.” No, the Tigers and Ole Miss — or Mississippi State — aren’t rivals in the classic college football sense. (A series must be more competitive over a longer period of time.) The Tigers built up some rivalry with UCF and Houston, but both the Knights and Cougars are departing the American Athletic Conference for the Big 12 next year. In searching for a familiar foe that has tested Memphis for a couple of decades (or three), it’s the East Carolina Pirates. Motivation shouldn’t  be a problem this Saturday in Greenville.

The Pirates and Tigers went back and forth last season at the Liberty Bowl, ECU prevailing in overtime, but only when Memphis failed on a two-point attempt to win. The Tigers trail the series, 16-8, primarily due to a dominant seven-year winning streak by East Carolina when the Memphis program found itself staggering for leadership (2006-2012). One of two Tiger teams will show up this weekend: One still reeling from the program’s worst collapse in memory, or a group mobilized to prove it’s not that team. East Carolina feels like the right opponent for such a clash.

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Sports Sports Feature

Memphis 901 FC Announces 2022 Schedule

In only a couple of months, AutoZone Park will be filled with screaming fans roaring their team to victory. Memphis 901 FC today announced its schedule for the 2022 regular season.

The organization will host 17 home games between March and October, with the home opener against the Pittsburgh Riverhounds set for Saturday, March 12. In the full 34-match slate, Memphis will have home-and-away bouts against each Eastern Conference rival and also contest exciting matchups against eight Western Conference opponents, with four at home: Oakland Roots (March 19), LA Galaxy II (May 18), Phoenix Rising FC (July 9), and Rio Grande Valley FC Toros (October 5).

At the end of the season, the top seven teams from the Eastern and Western Conferences will qualify for the 2022 USL Championship Playoffs.

Fresh off its first playoff appearance last year, 901 FC has already started constructing its squad for the upcoming season. The team recently announced the re-signing of captain Leston Paul, defender Zach Carroll, and midfielder Laurent Kissiedou. The squad also permanently signed former loanee Niall Logue and acquired Irish midfielder Aaron Molloy.

Most matches will stream on ESPN+ with a select few set to air on ESPN or ESPN2. The broadcast schedule will be announced in the coming weeks.

View the full schedule on 901 FC’s website.

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From My Seat Sports

Redbirds Wrap-Up

Every baseball season leaves memories. At the Triple-A level, those memories come wrapped with a layer of hope for the future. Here are a few impressions from the 2021 Memphis Redbirds season that may prove lasting.

• A quiet phone. A season’s top highlight for a Triple-A player isn’t a game-winning home run or a complete-game shutout, but “The Call,” a first invitation to the big leagues. There weren’t a lot of these in 2021 here in Memphis. Infielder José Rondón was promoted by the St. Louis Cardinals after only 21 games with the Redbirds, but has seen limited action (primarily as a pinch-hitter) with the big club. Outfielder Lars Nootbaar hit .308 in 35 games for Memphis before his promotion and has become somewhat of a cult hero in St. Louis, chants of “Noooooooot!” rising from Busch Stadium with the rookie’s every appearance. Nootbaar made a sensational catch to prevent a home run in New York against the Mets earlier this month and hit two homers in the Cardinals’ 14th consecutive win last Friday night in Chicago. His impact hasn’t been merely a fun surname.

• Twin prospects. The Cardinals’ top two prospects — pitcher Matthew Liberatore and second-baseman Nolan Gorman — made significant strides toward the majors in 2021. Pitching for the first time above Class A, the 21-year-old Liberatore has posted an 8-9 record with a 4.15 ERA (through Sunday). Not impressive numbers. But Liberatore has hurled 121 innings against Triple-A hitters, many of them with experience in the majors. Expect him to compete for a Cardinals rotation spot next spring, St. Louis having gone through cases of duct tape to keep its starters competitive this season. As for Gorman (also 21 and a childhood pal of Liberatore’s from Arizona), a spot on the Cardinals’ roster in 2022 is all but certain after he hit .276 with 14 home runs in 74 games for Memphis, and after slamming 11 homers in 43 games for Double-A Springfield. With power from the left side and versatility on the infield, Gorman could represent what Matt Carpenter once did on the Cardinals roster.

• Streakers! The Redbirds fell to 21-36 when they lost the first game of a doubleheader at Louisville on July 9th. It would be their last loss for two weeks. After taking the final two games of that series with the Bats, Memphis swept six games against the Norfolk Tides at AutoZone Park, then swept seven games back at Louisville to set a new franchise record with 15 wins in row. The streak shattered the previous mark of 11 set by the 2017 Pacific Coast League champions. “We kept winning ballgames,” reflects Gorman, “so we started saying, ‘Let’s see how far we can take this.’ Every game meant something. We had a lot of fun with it. We’d go down 2-0 or 3-0 in the fifth inning, but we never felt like we were out of it. We knew we’d pull it off in the end. It happened quite a few times. There was a lot of confidence in the clubhouse. It was fun to be a part of.”

• Hidden gem. It’s not all about the prospects. First baseman Juan Yepez was not among the Cardinals’ top 20 prospects at the beginning of the season, but the case could be made he was the 2021 Memphis Redbirds MVP. After a strong start (five homers in 19 games) at Springfield, the Cardinals promoted Yepez to Memphis and he will finish the season as the team’s leader in home runs (currently 21), slugging percentage (.575), and OPS (.790). With Paul Goldschmidt entrenched at first in St. Louis, Yepez may not have a long future with the Cardinals. But the way he’s hit in 2021, the 23-year-old appears to have a future somewhere in the big leagues.

• A bobble and bombs. Now and then, the connection between AutoZone Park and Busch Stadium can feel surreal. Such was the case on September 18th, a Friday night. The Redbirds distributed Dylan Carlson bobbleheads to the first 2,000 fans at the game, one in which Memphis came from behind to beat Louisville. Up the river in St. Louis, Dylan Carlson — the Cardinals’ rookie rightfielder — hit a home run from both sides of the plate, the second one a grand slam, in a victory over the San Diego Padres. Coincidence? Probably. A reminder of the happy baseball marriage between Memphis and St. Louis? Absolutely.

The Redbirds (58-67) host the Charlotte Knights (Triple-A affiliate of the Chicago White Sox) Wednesday through Sunday at AutoZone Park to conclude their 2021 season.

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Sports Tiger Blue

Remembering Danton Barto

My memories of Memphis Tiger football in the early 1990s are foggy. (For one thing, it was Memphis State football back then.) But my memories of Danton Barto — both his name and the human being who wore it, along with number 59 for the Tigers — remain distinct. Playing for teams that won games with defense, Barto was the Tiger defense from 1990 to ’93.

I arrived in Memphis in the summer of 1991. I didn’t attend a lot of Tiger football games my first three years in the Mid-South, let alone report on them. But the handful of games I saw at the Liberty Bowl featured a consistent image, that of a hyperactive, if undersized, linebacker making tackles from sideline to sideline in hopes of keeping his team in a position to win. These were not great Memphis teams. The Tigers went 5-6 in ’91 (Barto led the team with 141 tackles), 6-5 in ’92 (Barto led the team with 127 tackles), and 6-5 in ’93 (Barto led the team with 144 tackles). But they beat Southern Cal (!) and Mississippi State Barto’s sophomore year. They beat Arkansas in both ’92 and ’93, and Mississippi State again Barto’s senior year. They brought smiles to this under-appreciated corner of the college football landscape.

And there was Barto’s name. A linebacker’s name. Say it along with Butkus, Nitschke, Bednarik, and Lambert. Danton Barto was born to be a linebacker, one who left an imprint with his tackles. Somehow, Barto never played in an NFL game. When he remained unsigned in the fall of 1994, I hung up my scout’s hat for good. I’ve since seen vastly inferior players line up behind a defensive line on fall Sundays. At the very least, Barto would have been a special-teams killer in the pro ranks.

Danton Barto died Sunday at the still-young age of 50 from complications of Covid-19. He had not been vaccinated, which will haunt those of us who remember him, and particularly those who knew and loved him. Would a pair of injections have protected Barto from the coronavirus? The likelihood is a resounding yes. The most tragic deaths are those that could be avoided, in Barto’s case with what now amounts to a simple medical decision.

The day will come — and it will be soon — when Danton Barto’s name and the stories associated with him bring smiles again. His impact was too positive, his love and devotion to Memphis (especially its flagship university) too large for the circumstances of his death to linger as a shadow. For now-veteran sportswriters and our ilk, we must “defog” our memories, to Saturday nights when number 59 was the best defensive player on the field at the Liberty Bowl. When Danton Barto’s next hit would be even more ferocious than his last. A man of impact then. A man of impact still.

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From My Seat Sports

Crowded Comforts

The pandemic began, for me, on March 10, 2020, when Harvard University announced it was shutting down its spring semester due to the coronavirus outbreak. Those folks in the Ivy League are (1) smart and (2) don’t cancel classes for the average flu scare. When we learned that baseball and softball seasons were not to be, that graduation ceremonies would be “virtual”. … the novel coronavirus became quite real. Mankind would adjust to accommodate this new contagion or die trying.

Fast-forward to May 26, 2021 — around and past the longest collective slog of our lifetimes — and I found myself sitting among hundreds of other people(!) on the grounds of Wesleyan University for an actual graduation ceremony. My daughter Sofia is among 700 members of a group Wesleyan president Michael Roth aptly described as “the mighty Class of 2021.” Roth opened his remarks with the following: “It’s so nice to see you all here, in person. Together.” Such a simple expression, a sentiment as easily understood by a child in her kindergarten class as a young adult capped and gowned for one of life’s turning points. (Already emotional having marched in as professors and administrators stood and clapped, Sofia had to catch her breath after the remark.)

The week before the ceremony, Wesleyan announced that graduates could double their invited guests, from two people to four. And again with thoughts of that Harvard shutdown in mind, I felt like this was a dramatic step out of the pandemic ooze. Not only would this fine New England university allow a crowd to attend its commencement. … it would double that crowd. Both of Sofia’s grandmothers made the drive to Middletown, Connecticut, from central Vermont. If the return to “normal” has a symbolic image, it’s a hug between a grandparent and grandchild. I witnessed lots of those on May 26th.

The pandemic isn’t over, friends. Particularly in states (like Tennessee) where vaccination rates have plateaued too soon, cases of infection continue to emerge. People continue to die. If you want to boost your anxiety level a notch or two, read about the “Delta” variant of the virus. It seems our enemy in this battle didn’t exactly throw in the towel upon the mass distribution of a vaccine. But — and this is a significant but — as vaccination rates do increase, so do comfort levels in and around gatherings of a few hundred people, even a few thousand if you glance at the current state of things in NBA and NHL arenas or MLB stadiums.

On the subject of baseball stadiums, Wesleyan’s quad happens to be the university’s baseball field. (Yes, this is a perfect model.) I literally sat in centerfield as my favorite Wesleyan Cardinal marched to a platform in front of the school’s library to receive her bachelor’s degree. This obviously made me think of my home away from home here in Memphis: AutoZone Park. Upon returning from New England, my first outing was a Sunday matinee between the Redbirds and Toledo Mud Hens. The crowd at downtown’s diamond was around the same size — 3,000, give or take — as the one at Sofia’s graduation. Like at Wesleyan, people were maskless when outside, mankind’s current honor code firmly in place: no need to wear a mask anymore if you’ve been vaccinated. The atmosphere felt right, the cheering a boon for spirits rather than a threat to our health and well being. The Redbirds lost, but I left the ballpark knowing oxygen had reached deeper into my lungs than it had in several months.

Between Sofia’s graduation and the Redbirds game, I did some serious reuniting with family and friends in Vermont. So many hugs. Each one seemed a bit tighter than the previous, and some lasted longer than good-to-see-you-again hugs should. But those hugs now have curative powers, a reminder that “the human touch” is often better in actual form than virtual. I hugged Sofia tightly after her graduation ceremony, knowing that moment — and all those people that shared it with us — is for a lifetime. But I hugged her even tighter a few days later, before returning to Memphis. Because there is life, indeed, ahead for both of us. For all of us. Together again.

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Sports Sports Feature

901 FC Signs Attacking Midfielder Laurent Kissiedou

Memphis 901 FC added yet another attacking weapon to its roster.

The latest newcomer is Laurent Kissiedou, a native of Divo, Ivory Coast, who plays as an attacking midfielder. And the 22-year-old brings plenty of experience to the squad.

After joining the Atlanta United academy in 2016, he made his first professional appearance during a spell at the USL’s Charleston Battery in 2017. But the bulk of his work has been with Atlanta United 2 since 2018. Over the last two seasons, he made 46 appearances (33 starts) and scored four goals.

“Laurent is a skilled and industrious midfielder with nearly 50 USL Championship appearances at only 22 years of age,” said 901 FC assistant sporting director James Roeling. “He is a fighter on the field, a great human being off it, and will be a valuable addition to the roster and the Memphis 901 FC family.”

Kissiedou will play alongside midfield colleagues Kadeem Dacres, Mitch Guitar, Roland Lamah, and Leston Paul.

In the meantime, check out an example of Kissiedou’s finishing ability here.

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Sports Sports Feature

901 FC Signs Former Loanee Rashawn Dally

A familiar face returns to AutoZone Park this season, and he’s got a little bit of 901 FC history in his boots.

The team announced the signing of Rashawn Dally, a forward who played for Memphis on loan from parent club FC Cincinnati during the 2019 season. After linking up with his Memphis teammates, he wrote himself into 901 FC lore by securing the organization’s first-ever win in the USL. During a trip to Chester, Pennsylvania, Dally pounced on a defensive mistake by the Bethlehem Steel to score his first professional goal.

Rashawn Dally’s goal against Bethlehem Steel secured 901 FC’s first USL win

After briefly returning to Cincinnati, he spent another USL season with Las Vegas Lights FC, scoring three goals in 14 appearances.

“We are thrilled to add Rashawn to the attacking corps of our club,” said 901 FC head coach Ben Pirmann. “We were fortunate enough to work with Rashawn in the 2019 season and his development over the past two years has turned him into a very threatening striker in the USL Championship. He is a phenomenal young man, and we can’t wait for him to improve an already daunting front line.”

Memphis now has plenty of attacking riches at its disposal, with Dally just the latest addition to a forward line featuring Roland Lamah, Kadeem Dacres, Kyle Murphy, Michael Salazar, and Francis Atuahene.

Memphis 901 FC opens the 2021 season away at Birmingham Legion on Saturday, May 15th.

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Sports Sports Feature

Memphis 901 FC Signs Francis Atuahene

It’s another name in the books for the Memphis 901 FC squad, with attacker Francis Atuahene joining up with the team ahead of the 2021 USL season.

The Ghanaian attacker comes with pedigree. Three successful years of collegiate soccer at University of Michigan (with two selections for the All-Big Ten First Team) prompted a declaration for the 2018 MLS SuperDraft, where he was selected fourth overall by FC Dallas.

And 42 seconds into his debut, he scored. Watch that goal. Most players are nervous making their first professional appearance, but the strike just oozes confidence and skill. There shouldn’t be any sort of opening to shoot from that position, but Atuahene’s outside of the boot flick catches everyone off guard. That’s just the kind of unpredictability teams need in tight matches.

Following his first MLS appearance, Atuahene spent several loan spells with USL sides, including Oklahoma City Energy, Austin Bold FC, and San Diego Loyal SC.

“Francis is a talented, dynamic attacker who likes to drive at defenders,” says 901 FC assistant sporting director James Roeling. “His explosiveness with the ball and understanding of the league will make him a valuable addition to our roster this year.”

Atuahene will link up with fellow attackers Kyle Murphy, Michael Salazar, and Roland Lamah. 901 FC opens its season against rivals Birmingham Legion on Saturday, May 15, at 6:30 p.m.

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Sports Sports Feature

Memphis 901 FC Announces Full Schedule

At last, fans of Memphis soccer can finally plan ahead when it comes to supporting their team.

901 FC unveiled its complete regular-season schedule for the upcoming United Soccer League season, in which the team will play in the Eastern Conference’s Central Division.

Opening day kicks off on Saturday, May 15th, against rivals Birmingham Legion FC. Memphis’ first five matches are all away games, before the home opener against Atlanta United 2 on June 16th. Between then and October 30th, Memphis will play its 16 allotted home matches, half of the team’s 32-match slate for the 2021 season.

Most of Memphis’ matches will come against Central Division opponents Louisville City FC, Indy Eleven, Atlanta United 2, Birmingham Legion FC, FC Tulsa, OKC Energy FC, and Sporting Kansas City II. Games against non-division opponents include matchups with Colorado Springs Switchback FC, Miami FC, and San Antonio FC.

Tickets for home matches are not yet available. Expect to see limited capacity seating at AutoZone Park due to COVID-19 restrictions, although the number of available tickets has not yet been determined.

The full schedule can be read here.