Archive for April 8th, 2008

Dan Wolken

All day yesterday, I fully expected to be covering the 9 a.m. press conference for the national champions. At about 10:25 last night, I would have bet the farm on it. Instead, I’m ready to get home and begin a very long offseason in which we’ll probably be re-living and writing about what happened Monday night countless times. How can we not?

It was a historic collapse, something that won’t ever be forgotten. Any time a team is up 7 or 8 points in a national championship game with the clock winding down, Memphis’ 2008 loss will be talked about.

Was it free throws? Sure, Memphis could have won it once and for all at the line. If Derrick Rose makes 2-of-2 intead of 1-of-2, the Tigers win. If CDR doesn’t tense up with 16.8 left — and he was tense — the Tigers likely cut down the nets. But the play of the game was the inbounds pass Sherron Collins stole from Antonio Anderson. If Anderson gets the ball safely to Rose, he goes to the line with about 1:45 to go up by seven points. Maybe he makes both; maybe he just makes one. Either way, the Tigers probably would have put enough distance between themselves and Kansas right there to clinch it. Instead, a 9-point lead turns to 4 in a matter of 10 seconds. That changed the entire strategy in the final 1:40. Suddenly, every dribble and free throw was huge. If Rose goes to the line with a 7 point lead, he probably makes both simply because the pressure isn’t as great.

Joey Dorsey’s fifth foul with 1:23 to go was also another major mental error. It’s bad on three levels. 1) It stops the clock. 2) It fouls Dorsey out. 3) It allows Kansas to cut it from six to four on free throws.

The third gaffe belongs to John Calipari, and he will forever have to own it. He says he was trying to foul before Mario Chalmers got off the tying shot. But he should have called timeout after Rose made the second free throw. You have to call timeout there. Make sure everybody knows what is going on. Calling timeout is a no-lose situation. You let your defense get set up. You make Kansas inbound the ball. If you want to, you can even foul on the inbounds. If the Tigers foul, they win. Simple as that. Amazing.

Not fun to write about it, but it was a great season. Lots of things will be percolating in the coming weeks. We’ll do our best to have them for you first. Enjoy the offseason, as best you can.

12 Comments | Category: Tiger Basketball
 

Bryan Brasher

Crappie USA held an event on Arkabutla Lake this past weekend that was miserable in almost every way.

The water was mudddy and high, and the fish just weren’t biting.

As evidence of that, Tracy McIntosh of Dyersburg and John Woods of Newbern took first place with seven crappie that weighed 9.16 pounds. Second place went to Tammy and Dennis Waters of Moro, Ill., with just 5.55.

Can you imagine driving all the way from Illinois for that?

In third place was the Iowa team of Ronald Giberson and John Simmons with 3.34. Again, that’s quite the drive for very little reward.

In the amateur division, Dan Scott of Raytown, Mo., and Gary Ficenic of Blue Springs, Mo., took first with 5.79.

What a dismal tournament.

On the other end of the spectrum, Paul Elias won the Bassmaster Elite Series Lone Star Shootout on Falcon Lake with a four-day total of 132-8. That’s an average of almost 7 pounds a fish and a new four-day record for BASS.

Bennett

On Alabama’s Smith Lake, Californian Michael Bennett (pictured) won the FLW Tour event with a final round weight of 27-08. He edged Scott Canterbury of Odenville, Ala., who placed second with 24-5.

On Grenada Lake, Tim Blackley and Jackie Van Cleave won the Crappie Masters event with 15.28. Jim and Barbara Reedy were second with 14.62.

1 Comment | Category: The Great Outdoors
 

Events

Polls

What's your early prediction for the 2008-09 Tiger basketball team?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...