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LOCATION: Memphis, TN
CONFERENCE: Conference USA (National)
LAST SEASON: 13-15 (.464)
CONFERENCE RECORD: 6-10 (4th)
STARTERS LOST/RETURNING: 2/3
NICKNAME: Tigers
COLORS: Royal Blue & Gray
HOMECOURT: The Pyramid (20,142)
COACH: Johnny Jones (LSU '85)
record at school first year
career record first year
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ASSISTANTS: Fred Rike (West Texas State '89) Bill Pieczynski (Catawba '94)
TEAM WINS: (last 5 years) 24-22-16-17-13
RPI (last 5 years) 27-19-76-68-125
1998-99 FINISH: Lost in conference first round.
ESPN.com Clubhouse
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In a stunning announcement, Memphis coach Tic Price resigned on Nov. 15, one
week before the season began. Athletic director R.C. Johnson acted swiftly, accepting Price's resignation and
appointing former assistant Johnny Jones as the intermim head coach.
Johnson's search for a permanent replacement won't end until after the
season.
The resignation of Price just continues the downward turn the program took
last season after a series of events.
Some of what happened, though, has a bearing on this team:
Price was burned by some players who did not deliver a maximum effort. He
was unable to coax that effort from them.
Price failed to make an effective connection with too many of the players
on his team.
Price made a serious blunder with the positioning of his best player,
power forward Omar Sneed, who never really was the same player after an
abortive attempt to use him as a small forward.
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Blue Ribbon Analysis |
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BACKCOURT B- BENCH/DEPTH C+ FRONTCOURT C INTANGIBLES C What happens to the program now that coach Tic Price has resigned? Johnny
Jones, a career assistant and Price's former top aide, will serve as interim
coach. Jones promises not to change much of Price's philosophy (how could he
after taking over just a week before the season?) but the program is bound
to be rocked by Price's departure.
Memphis fans can only hope the Tigers will rally around Jones. The program
had already taken a downturn last season. Another off year could be
troublesome, particularly if the program continues to let its recruiting
dominance in Memphis slip. |
There were other factors in last year's collapse, notably the me-first
performance of guard Jimmie "Snap" Hunter, who in some ways was everything
he was supposed to be. In other ways, Hunter was everything those who knew
his game feared he would become.
Sneed also never really was the same player after Hunter arrived, because he
did not get the ball nearly as often, and a post scorer has to touch the
ball if he is going to do much. He had a 20-shot game and scored 28 points
in the Tigers' stirring overtime victory against Mississippi, a team that
reached the NCAA Tournament. He had 12 shots and 16 points when the Tigers
ended their season with an overtime loss to South Florida.
So what does all this mean to the Tigers on the eve of the millennium?
Well, Hunter is gone because of an eligibility problem. He had some
ridiculous games while he played for Memphis, including a 29-point effort
against UAB and another for 35 against Saint Louis. He also played
irresponsibly almost the entire time he was in uniform.
We would be
comfortable suggesting this is an automatic addition-by-subtraction
situation, were it not for the fact we thought the same when point guard
Detric Golden became ineligible last season. That didn't work out so well.
This has a better chance to turn out, because there's a player to take Hunter's minutes who not only is extremely talented, but also more committed
to playing the game properly.
Marcus Moody (12.6 ppg, 3.8 rpg, 65 assists,
50 steals, 11 blocked shots, .421 FG, .328 3 PT) is a 6-5, 182-pound
shooting guard with ballhandling and creative skills who was, perhaps, the
only consistent player in the entire Memphis operation last season.
Of his 24 games, he failed to reach double figures in only five. Obviously,
Moody needs to be more consistent with his jumper, but it's possible he will
become more judicious about his selection now that he doesn't have to
compete with Hunter for shots. He also injured his knee last season and
missed several games, and that affected him somewhat.
In the pre-conference games in which he played, Moody tried 4.8 three-point
shots per game and made .390 percent. In the latter part of the season,
after he was hurt in mid-December, he shot 5.6 times per game from
three-point range and hit just .298 percent. He was favoring the knee, doing
what felt comfortable rather than playing his real game.
Alongside Moody at the point will be 5-10 senior Keiron Shine (5.4 ppg, 1.4
rpg), who struggled in his first season after transferring from
Okaloosa-Walton (Fla.) Community College He was expected to deliver speed
and playmaking to the Tigers. Instead, he passed for only 49 assists against
54 turnovers9even with a target like Sneed inside.
Although he has excellent quickness, Shine never really pushed the ball on
the break like Price expected. Shine had trouble holding his job over
freshman Dinno Daniels, but Daniels has left the program to deal with
personal concerns.
The safety net again is a freshman, 6-3 Courtney Trask of Parkview Baptist
High in Baton Rouge, La.
Trask is a legitimate alternative if Shine doesn't get it done again.
His Parkview team was one of the best in the nation his junior season. He
was all-state as a senior, averaging 26.0 points, 12.0 assists and 8.0
rebounds to be voted the state's 3-A Player of the Year.
He is an excellent shooter and has a significant size advantage over Shine.
The job could be his before long.
As the Memphis squad thins out, 6-4 junior Shryone Chatman (3.8 ppg, 1.6
rpg) becomes more valuable in reserve. Chatman can play three positions and
is a good player to have around as long as no one is pretending he is a
first-line guy.
Memphis tried that some in his first two seasons. He started seven games
last year, partly because of Moody's injury, but he shot only .294 from the
field and .232 from three-point range.
Chatman has to get his minutes in smaller doses, which is what happened once
Hunter arrived last year. And when he does play, he has to be more careful
about shooting. He has to be content to defend and make smart plays or his
value disappears.
Senior shooting guard Aaron Mulvagh's recruitment remains a mystery to all.
He was a virtual unknown when the Tigers signed him out of junior college,
and he was used pretty much like a walk-on in his first season. Mulvagh,
6-6, played only six games and shot only three times to average 0.7 ppg and
0.8 rpg. It's unlikely his role will grow much.
The Tigers could have a wonderfully athletic and deep frontcourt, but nearly
every player involved has much to prove as a Division I player.
The closest thing to an established commodity is 6-9, 242-pound junior
center James Harris, who was a reasonably effective -- surprisingly so -- backup
big man last season.
He is not someone who could replace a starter for an extended period, but he
rarely attempts to do something that is outside his range of skills and he
is willing to use his body to accomplish what he can. He averaged only 1.2
ppg and 1.5 rpg, but the Tigers would be happy again to get a half-dozen
minutes per game from him.
They need much more from the starter in the middle, 6-10, 213-pound
sophomore Kelly Wise (6.2 ppg, 5.0 rpg, 48 blocked shots). Every coach in
the league is intrigued by his potential.
He is long, quick and agile and is only beginning to learn what he can do
offensively on the block.
As a freshman, Wise was all over the block (figuratively), in part because
his minutes were so inconsistent. He would go stretches where he would play
17, 19, 29 and 14 minutes, then a stretch of four more games in which he
would get only 16 minutes combined. Given how then-senior Jermaine Ousley
failed to compete in his final year, Price probably should have dumped
Ousley and tolerated whatever mistakes Wise made in order that he could gain
some experience.
He ended up averaging an impressive 1.8 blocks per game, but there is
concern about whether he will make the progress Memphis needs from him. Wise
reportedly did not have the same dedication to conditioning work over the
summer as some of his teammates.
Of course. Paris London. If you haven't heard that name, well, where have
you been? If you haven't seen him play, all the better. Because if you've
seen him, you've most likely seen him at less than his best, which has been
most of the time.
In his first year with the Tigers, the 6-8, 255-pound sophomore power
forward averaged 5.0 ppg and 2.6 rpg, which is almost tragic, given his
physical ability. At the close of last season, he still had no idea of how
to play the game. He made some fundamental mistakes in the final
regular-season game that would not have been tolerable for a high school
sophomore.
Part of the problem is that he spent too much of his time as a younger
player trying to prove he could be a small forward, which he never really
did. He is not a shooter (at least he only tried two three-point shots as a
freshman), but he can be an amazing scorer inside. He's got quickness and
the innate ability to finish.
A challenger for playing time at both inside positions is 6-9, 220-pound
junior Shamel Jones (5.6 ppg, 3.8 rpg, 24 steals, 22 blocked shots), who
played 18 minutes a game in his first season after transferring from
Georgetown. He started 15 times, but there never was any certainty what he'd
produce.
Part of the problem is that he played too many positions. Jones is adept
enough as a shooter and ballhandler to play small forward, but that kept him
from being effective in any one spot. He will play more often inside this
year and could beat out London if the latter fails to improve.
Memphis' other freshman recruit was 6-11, 205-pound center Earl Barron of
Clarksdale (Miss.) High, who averaged 20 points and 11 rebounds in his
senior year, but is considered to be at least a year from making a
contribution.
The player who could make Memphis better than expected is 6-6, 215-pound
junior forward Shannon Forman. He signed with the Tigers out of high school,
but did not qualify. Forman spent two years at Northwest Mississippi
Community College, where he averaged 16.1 points and 9.0 rebounds and shot
.511 from the floor as a sophomore.
He will work the baseline relentlessly and does not have the same thirst for
glamour as so many at his position.
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