Home › Men's Basketball
Calipari says UT proved point
Memphis might have learned lesson, now
STORY TOOLS
More Men's Basketball
- Prince admits he played most of season with dislocated shoulder
- Craft ready to go 'all-out' for Pearl, Tennessee
- Next Bradshaw? UT gets commitment from combo guard Craft
Share and Enjoy [?]
The University of Memphis took a team picture before Monday's practice, but when the photographer encouraged players to smile, nobody's expression changed.
"I'm not over it," junior guard Chris Douglas-Roberts said. "It's obvious I'm not over it at all, but somehow I have to put it in the back and move forward."
The "it," of course, is Saturday's 66-62 loss to the Tennessee Volunteers, who snatched the Tigers' No. 1 national ranking and ruined their undefeated season.
Though the fallout wasn't particularly damaging - Memphis, after all, was still ranked No. 2 in Monday's Associated Press poll and No. 3 in the ESPN/USA Today poll - the atmosphere at the Finch Center was unlike anything the Tigers have experienced in quite a while.
After losing a regular-season game for the first time since Dec. 20, 2006, the Tigers were noticeably quiet but certainly businesslike in their approach. Afterward, head coach John Calipari said he was pleased with their effort under the circumstances and hopeful they would be in a more positive frame of mind heading into tonight's Conference USA game at FedExForum against always-pesky Tulsa.
"This is a hard game coming up," Calipari said. "I'm surprised I got what I got out of these guys (Monday) because you could tell, they're still (hurting). Hopefully this practice got them by some of that feeling. We haven't lost in so long, we don't even know how to react to losing. What are you supposed to do?"
Though the Tigers didn't want to learn how it felt to lose this season, especially to an in-state rival on such a public stage, Tennessee may have ultimately done them a favor. At least, that's what several colleagues told Calipari, including former UNLV coach Jerry Tarkanian, whose 1991 team lost in the national semifinals after entering the NCAA Tournament undefeated.
Only through the prism of a loss could the Tigers truly grasp what happens when they don't scrap for rebounds, when they don't run their offense and when they don't make intelligent decisions down the stretch.
In other words, if the Tigers had pulled another Houdini escape - and really, they were one Robert Dozier putback away from a likely victory - it would have been difficult for Calipari to convince his team that they did not play at a championship level.
"If Robert makes that shot and the fadeaway that one he (Tyler Smith) shoots doesn't go in and we win the game, I couldn't have talked to these guys," Calipari said. "The issues we're having with rebounding, the issues with intensity of play and scrappiness, the issues with execution, they wouldn't have listened to me. No way."
Where Calipari expects his players to use the loss as a learning experience was how they reacted to the pressure and hype of a game that was unlike anything they had been through before. The buildup, he said, was even more extreme than a Sweet 16 or Elite Eight game, where the national focus isn't quite as intense on one game as it was for a week leading up to the No. 1 vs. No. 2 matchup.
Calipari said the hype may have "paralyzed" some players, and he saw the trouble right from the start. Just 10 seconds into the game, in fact, Smith got a step on Dozier and drew a foul. When his second free throw clanked off the back of the rim, the 6-9 Dozier failed to box out 6-foot-2 guard JaJuan Smith. Then, after Dozier blocked a follow-up shot, three Memphis players missed on securing the loose rebound. Eventually, the ball was kicked out to the corner, where JaJuan Smith buried a 3-pointer and forced Calipari to use a quick timeout.
Still, the Vols got the majority of loose balls after that and had 19 offensive rebounds, indicating they were the more desperate team. Meanwhile, on offense, Memphis never got into second, third and fourth drives within its offense. Taking 20 shots from 3-point range in the first half was not part of the game plan, but the Tigers had no motion away from the ball, and it became a one-pass-and-shoot offense.
"We know we got out-scrapped a little bit," junior guard Antonio Anderson said. "We got out-worked a little bit, out-hustled to balls, and coach told us it was going to come down to who scraps more, and they did it."
- Pennington: It is what it is
- Mattingly: UT football a happening that unifies
- Chavis' goal for defense: Learn to finish
- Craft ready to go 'all-out' for Pearl, Tennessee
- Vanderbilt ambushes South Carolina, 24-17
- Drops not whole story for Foster
- McMahan told to make knee top priority
- Adams: The Craft show might last awhile
- Next Bradshaw? UT gets commitment from combo guard Craft
- Prince admits he played most of season with dislocated shoulder
Please download the latest version of Adobe Flash Player, or enable JavaScript for your browser to view the video player.


Posted by Colliervol on February 27, 2008 at 8:49 p.m. (Suggest removal)
"This is a hard game coming up"
W
Posted by EDis4UT on February 29, 2008 at 1:55 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Oh, Pleaseeee! Calamari your BS is really starting to bore us.
(Requires free registration.)
Comments are the sole responsibility of the person posting them. You agree not to post comments that are off topic, defamatory, obscene, abusive, threatening or an invasion of privacy. Violators may be banned. Click here for our full user agreement.