NOW WE DANCE
Whew . . . the hex is lifted! For the first time since the University of Memphis football team dared to beat Peyton Manning and the mighty Tennessee Vols — November 9, 1996, youยll remember — the University of Memphis basketball team is going to the NCAA tournament. Considering the six-year drought is the U of Mยs longest since reaching the 1973 championship game, weยve got to blame someone or something . . . why not an orange hex? Since the Tigersย last jig at the big dance, weยve seen four coaches, a sex scandal, and an NIT (yippee!) title. With the Tigers (23-6) matched up against Arizona State (19-11) for their opening game this Thursday in Oklahoma City, here are some keys to Memphis making this sneaker-hop last a few encores.
Keep Chris Massie out of foul trouble. Big number 4 is stronger in the paint than any Memphian since George Hunt (no, Hunt never lettered at U of M). Massieยs positioning on the post and touch near the basket call to mind Charles Barkley. The first-team all-conference selection has to be on the floor for 30 minutes. Heยs the only player this deep Tiger team canยt replace. (Apologies to Earl Barron and Duane Erwin.)
Run, Antonio, run. Massie is this Tiger teamยs backbone, but point guard Antonio Burks is its heartbeat. You wonยt see a quicker ball handler in the open court than the junior from Booker T. Washington High. A rule of mine has been if Burks converts on two of his swooping, one-handed drives through the lane, the Tigers are on their way.
Connect on long-distance calls. The Tigers have their deepest group of shooters in recent memory. Anthony Rice, Rodney Carney, John Grice, and Jeremy Hunt can all drain three pointers consistently. Theyยll have to for Memphis to reach the tournamentยs second week, to say nothing of a slot in the Final Four. (This is the only way Memphis can keep up with Kansas in a potential second-round battle.)
Make free throws. This is just as important as the home-run balls from beyond the arc. Over the course of their 11-game winning streak to end the regular season, Memphis outscored its opponents by an average of 14 points. (Only once did the Tigers win by less than 7.) With margins like these, the Tigersย pedestrian free throw shooting didnยt hurt. (Memphis shot 65 percent from the line this year, 12th in C-USA.) To advance in the NCAAs, teams must win games by a bucket or two . . . so every free throw counts.
Avoid overconfidence. This can be tricky with a Calipari-coached team. One one hand, to walk beside John Calipari is to strut, Eastwood like, through the swinging doors, into Miss Kittyยs saloon and ask, ยWhoยs first to join me outside?ย On the other hand, Calipari enjoys the role of the overlooked, underappreciated — resented even — stepchild. The coaches ignore us in their rankings, heยll gripe. The RPI is a hoop-nerdยs computerized answer to measuring talent and is impossible to please. The worldยs against us, Coach Cal will preach, so all we have is each other. The Tigers would do well to lean toward that underdog role. With Arizona, Duke, and Kansas fellow members of the West regional, this shouldnยt be a problem.
Sleep with a rabbitยs foot. Not since the days of Wooden has a team won the six-game battle royale that is the NCAA tournament without a little good fortune on its side. From N.C. Stateยs Lorenzo Charles to North Carolinaยs victory over Michigan and Chris ยTimeout!ย Webber, NCAA champions typically achieve that magic recipe of three parts talent, one part Lady Luck. Considering the disappointing seeding (seventh) and regional placement, the view here is that the U of M has a break or two on the horizon.
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