The University of Memphis men’s basketball team had a tendency to build big leads in games early, but lose the large advantage before the end of the game. The Tigers built double digits leads in many games early in the season, but had to hold on for dear life to pull out a win. That has not been the case the past few weeks. The last two Tigers’ home games have been blowouts by Tigers’ standards. The Tigers are in the middle of a 16 game winning streak. The last loss was to the hated Louisville Cardinals on December 16.

Joe Jackson has led the Tigers to one the best defensive teams in the conference. Photo by Justin Ford.
The Tigers did not play bad in that game and if a few questionable calls had not gone against the Tigers maybe they would have won that game. The Tigers’ black eye of the season came during the three games played in the Bahamas. Despite having one of the most talented teams in the field, Memphis only won one game on that trip. The Tigers learned a lot from that trip and the lessons learned has led to the current streak. The Tigers have returned to the Associated Press and USA Today polls and are slowing rising in the power rankings.
Here are a few reasons why the Tigers are on such a roll:
Respecting the opponents. The Tigers have had a history of playing down to the level of their opponent. Head coach Josh Pastner has been stressing the quality of every opponent the Tigers are playing this year. To the Tigers’ opponents, every game is their Super Bowl. This will be the last chance some members of Conference USA will get to beat the Tigers, because of the move to the Big East next season.
Adonis Thomas consistency has improved. Before the season, it was a given that Thomas would be showcasing his talent for pro scouts on a nightly basis, but then Thomas was invisible for the first half of the season. Recently Thomas has been more aggressive. Against Marshall, Thomas had one of his best games of the season scoring a career high 23 points and he grabbed 10 rebounds. The points and rebounds came within the flow of the game and he didn’t take away from anyone’s game.
The big three play well together. An unlikely trio has formed in the combination of Chris Crawford, Joe Jackson and Geron Johnson. When those three are on the court at the same time a special kind of explosive occurs. The normally fast Tigers appear even faster and are able to push the tempo to an even higher pace and they tend to force opponents turnovers. It hasn’t hurt that Crawford has emerged from his early season slump. The key with these three players is they head up the dangerous Tigers’ defense.
Offense excites, but defense wins games. The explosive dunks of DJ Stephens, the penetrating layups of Jackson and the outside shots of Crawford always seem to get the crowds at FedExForum on their feet. However the Tigers lead Conference USA in blocked shots, are second in steals and have three players ranked in the top ten in steals per game 9-Crawford (1.56), 7-Jackson (1.68) and 3-Johnson (1.8). DJ Stephens is hands down the best shot blocker in the conference with 57 blocked shots on the season and is averaging (2.28 bpg).
Terry Davis covers the Memphis Tigers for MemphiSport. To reach Johnson, email him at terry@memphisport.com. Follow him @Terryd515.
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Win this one and we will have a game at home to finally take this series. We are tough to beat at home. It is almost inevitable that if we take game 6, then we will take game 7. In a parallel universe, it happened, but Oklahoma City still made the finals. In a parallel universe, Blake Griffin doesn’t cry. In a parallel universe, flopping is a technical. In a parallel universe, you don’t lose a 27-point lead at home. In a parallel universe, Brian Davis is the owner of the team, and Christian Laettner is still leading the Grizzlies on the court, helping the team to the number one pick in the draft year in and year out. In any universe, game 6 was a heckuva lot of fun to witness.
The University of Memphis’
Our TAM teams celebrated Halloween early this past weekend, and I do not know what is scarier, this grotesque razorback or the grotesque first halves Arkansas has been dealing with the past two weeks. Like Arkansas, Southern Miss also faced a first half scare before rebounding in the second half to win their game against UTEP. Nightmare seasons for Ole Miss and Tennesse continued as they reamin two of the three teams in the SEC without a conference win. Speaking of nightmares, Arkansas State is keeping every offensive coordinator in the Sun Belt up at night as not a team in the conference has been able to score more than 24 points on the terrifying Red Wolves’ defense. Equally as scary has been the play of the bottom dwellers MTSU and Memphis who both followed up wins with blow out losses. Mississippi State struck fear into yet another SEC East foe on Saturday to improve Coach Mullin’s record against SEC East opponents to 6-3 in his tenure at Mississippi State. Too bad the Bulldogs are in the SEC West where the only team they strike fear in is Ole Miss. This week’s most disappointing team is Vanderbilt who controlled most of the game Saturday against Arkansas, but lost anyways thanks to a truly greusome finish for Commodore fans, with a fumble inside the Razorbacks’ five yard line that was returned for a touchdown and a missed field goal to force overtime. Without further ado, the TAMs Rankings for the week of November 2, 2011…
What Elvis Presley song best describes the current state of Tiger football? All Shook Up.
What do you have to say about Jerry “The King” Lawler speaking out against you and Coach Porter? I’m taking my complaints straight to Vince McMahon. [Laughs] I’m a WWE guy. I saw Jerry Lawler the other night on TV. He was in the ring with Triple H.











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