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| July 2003 |
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| 07/31/03 | Danny Wimprine Named To Davie O'Brien Watch List (Daily Helmsman) | |
| By Daniel Ford July 31, 2003 Danny Wimprine made a name for himself last season in his first full season as starting quarterback at Memphis. Wimprine has set nearly every passing record in his first two seasons, including 50 last season alone, and is garnering some national attention for his work. The Louisiana native has been listed as one of 42 candidates for the Davie O'Brien National Quarterback Award. The 6-foot 1 junior, the most prolific passer in program's history, has stockpiled 4,149 passing yards in his career, just 163 shy of Danny Sparkman's record. Even though Wimprine is a junior, he didn't take over the starting position until midway through his freshman season and after his first season and a half he holds the records for most touchdowns, completions and attempts in a career. He is also most yards passing and touchdowns in a season. However, Wimprine is expecting challenges this season like never before with the absence of his top three receivers from last year. Tavares Gideon was expected to be the go-to-guy but was taken out this summer by a knee injury. Travis Anglin graduated and is in camp with the Detroit Lions, while Antoine Harden was kicked off the team for a violation of team rules. |
| 07/31/03 | Dunn Has Memphis Defense Primed For A Return To The Top (Daily Helmsman) | |
| By Daniel Ford July 31, 2003 Most football experts would likely agree that the reason Joe Lee Dunn, Memphis' newly-hired defensive coordinator, is considered one of the game's best is because of the 'old-school' work-ethic he instills in his players. It is the biggest difference between this year's defense and last year's, which was run over by opposing offenses more than a traffic cone on the highway. Memphis' only All-Conference member, linebacker Derrick Ballard, couldn't be happier with Dunn taking over on defense, but to Ballard 'old-school' translates to 'more work.' "As long as we're out there doing what we're supposed to be doing, then he can be a great guy to get along with," Ballard said. "But, if any of us screw up he can get on you tough." Dunn's arrival has been well received to say the least and head coach Tommy West said Dunn was one of his best recruits this season. In his 31 years of coaching Division I football, Dunn has coached some daunting defenses. When he was at Ole Miss in 1993 Dunn's was the top-ranked defense in the nation. In 1999, his Mississippi State defense repeated the feat. While at Arkansas in 1995, the Razorbacks defense was the best in the South EasternConference. With that track-record and given the year the Tiger defense had last season, Ballard is willing to do anything Dunn asks of him. "He's a great defensive coordinator and he's a great guy to play for," Ballard said. "He's a lot like coach West (in that) he's a player's coach." Blitzing has always been Ballard's specialty and with Dunn's system he'll get to blitz more often. "I just love it, I love everything about (Dunn's system)," Ballard said. "Besides all the blitzing, it's the schemes, it's the variety of things we run and the way we camouflage it." In the off-season Dunn is in the hot sun all day, no socks and all, working his players into shape with the efficiency of a boot camp drill instructor. "He's kind of tough with a lot of running and that stuff," Ballard said. "But, we need that in order to get Memphis defense back to where it was." Getting Memphis defense back to where it was is a common slogan being tossed around this summer. Last year's seems light-years away from the 2000 squad which ranked in the top-5 nationally. "I felt like we were to inconsistent last year," the senior linebacker said. "We let people that shouldn't have been able to run, run right though our defense." Tennessee Tech is the first game on the Tigers' schedule, but most players are eyeing a September 6, meeting with Ole Miss and highly-touted quarterback Eli Manning. The game will be in the Liberty Bowl on national television and Ballard, along with most of the Tigers' defense, thinks it would make a great coming-out party. "Any guy that's saying they're not thinking about the Ole Miss game, I don't believe," Ballard said. "We got Eli Manning coming here. There will be a big crowd, national TV. It's our chance to show them that Memphis defense is back - that Memphis is back." |
| 07/31/03 | Tiger Basketball - 2003 Recruiting Class (Daily Helmsman) | |
| From our sports staff July 31, 2003 Sean Banks - The 6?8?? wing forward from New Jersey is rated in the top-13 in this years class by ESPN. However, two recent run-ins with the law have many pople questioning his attitude and ability to keep your nose clean. Keena Young - The high school teammate of Kendrick Perkins, who was drafted by the Boston Celitics in this year?s draft,is solid and could contribute in a couple years, but has not enrolled yet and questions have been raised as the whether the guard is still coming to Memphis. Ivan Lopez - The 6?9?? native of Puerto Rico has been described to have Chris Massie-like inside game and is an aggressive rebounder. Marc Gasol - Gasol is big. 7?0?? and about 300 pounds of Spaniard to be more accurate. Depending on his conditioning, Gasol could see some time this season. Simplice Njoya - A 6?10?? transfer from Duquesne, Njoya averaged 8 points and 5 rebounds last season. 2004 Recruiting Class Darius Washington - Depending on who you ask one of the top two point guards in next year?s class. A double bonus because he?s a small guard and will likely stay two to four years. Shawne Williams - A local standout from Hamilton High, Williams has made a name for himself this summer. He averaged 20 points and 14 rebounds as a junior. Robert Dozier - Widely unknown until this summer, Dozier has played extremely well in AAU ball and chose Memphis over Indiana, Oklahoma and Michigan State. |
| 07/31/03 | Banks Tries to Fit In -- Newest Tiger on Campus Putting Legal Trouble Aside (Commercial Appeal) | |
| By Gary Parrish parrish@gomemphis.com July 31, 2003 Just like coins, stories and pieces of paper, there are usually two sides to every person. So here are five less-publicized things - probably unknown by most - about Sean Banks, the troubled University of Memphis basketball player whose arrival in this city has generated mixed reviews. 1. He's an accomplished chess player. "I was on the chess team in middle school. We finished like fourth in the nation." 2. He has no tattoos. "But there's like 80 tattoo parlors down here. It's tempting." 3. He's taking two summer classes at Memphis. "I just learned CPR last week in one and I'm learning about Bach and Mozart in the other. I love learning new things." 4. His favorite hobby is playing video games. "I've been playing March Madness 2003 against Jeremy Hunt. I'm always Duke. He's always UConn." 5. He's really, really quiet. "I don't talk that much. I just don't." Pawns and knights. No ink. Classical music. PlayStation 2. And soft-spoken. Does that sound like the same Banks who has been negatively portrayed the past few months? "He's really not like everybody said he would be before he got here," said U of M point guard Clyde Wade. "He's a cool guy. He's easy to get along with. "I just think he needed to get out of town." ------------------------------------------------------------------ Coming with baggage Sean Banks finally arrived in Memphis a couple of weeks ago. But his reputation had been here for months thanks to two arrests this year in New Jersey, where police told local media he's associated with a gang. By the miracle of technology, news of Banks's legal woes made its way south before he did, prompting many Memphians to pass judgment on him via radio, message boards and letters to the editor. Some said give him a chance. Yet others seemed ready to take the kid's scholarship away, basically saying he wasn't worth taking a chance on. The decision of whether to honor the scholarship ultimately fell into the hands of John Calipari. And the Memphis coach never flinched, saying he would welcome Banks because "this is going to be a case where we're going to help this kid more than he's going to help us." "I'm thankful for that; I feel fortunate that Coach Cal believes in me," Banks said. "I don't know what I'd be doing right now if I didn't have a basketball scholarship." And as for those who believe Banks shouldn't have a scholarship and only does because Calipari wants to win games? "Well, why else would Cal want to help me and get to know me if I didn't play basketball?" answered Banks, a 6-8, skilled wing who many ranked as one of the top 25 seniors in the nation. "He doesn't want me because I'm a good chess player. "A lot of people have said things about me and that's OK because that's just the nature of people. We as people are hardly ever willing to give other people the benefit of the doubt. We all think we're perfect. So the person next to us is not allowed to make any mistakes. But that's not how it really is. We all make mistakes. I've made some mistakes. "I mean, this has probably been one of the worst years of my life. But I'm going to be OK." On the court Since arriving in Memphis, Banks has been a regular at nightly pickup games at the Finch Center on campus and showed signs of why some consider him a legitimate NBA prospect, arguably the best on this season's U of M roster. He's long. He's athletic. He's big enough to guard 6-9 Duane Erwin in the paint one possession and bring the ball upcourt and shoot over 6-4 guard Anthony Rice the next. That alone makes him impressive, even if he's been hampered by a pulled groin the past few days. "I don't want to put too much pressure on him but from what I've seen Sean will be starting," said Memphis senior Antonio Burks. "He's just too versatile. He's for real." Questions remain No matter if the criminal charges that followed Banks allegedly burning a gang insignia into the leg of a 15-year-old girl are dropped - he believes they will be - or how many times he denies being in a gang - he emphatically does - there may still be those who remain skeptical throughout his Tiger career. But time will be the only jury. If Banks stays out of trouble and does well in school then he will be considered a success while Calipari's streak of keeping student-athletes clear of the law (it's worth noting no Memphis player under Calipari has been arrested) continues. If not, then both coach and player will be blasted. Either way, Banks seems fine with the options of sink or swim and quite sure his rocky background is firmly in the past. "If people don't want to be on my side right now, that's fine. But I don't want those same people coming back and being a believer when I make something of myself because that's just being fake. I went through that back home too. The same people who were telling me how great I was were nowhere to be found when I got arrested and needed support. That showed me who I can rely on. "But I'll show people that I'm not a bad guy. I'm a cool guy. There's only one road for me. That's the good road. And that's the one I'm going to take." - Gary Parrish: 529-2365 |
| 07/25/03 | Wimprine Named To Davie O'Brien Award Watch List (GoTigersGo.com) | |
| University of Memphis junior quarterback Danny Wimprine has been named to the 2003 Davie O'Brien National Quarterback Award watch list for the fall. Wimprine is one of 42 returning collegiate quarterbacks named to the award watch list. The New Orleans native placed his name in the Tiger football record book 50 times in 2002 and should hold virtually every Memphis passing and total offense record by the end of the 2003 season. He currently holds the marks for most passing attempts, most completions, most passing yards and most touchdown passes in a season, as well as most touchdown passes in a career. Wimprine, who has amasses 4,149 yards passing in his career, needs just 163 passing yards to overtake Danny Sparkman (1983-85) as the all-time leading passer in Memphis history. Sparkman threw for 4,311 yards in his career. |
| 07/25/03 | U of M Notebook (Commercial Appeal) | |
| By Gary Parrish parrish@gomemphis.com July 25, 2003 Rock Oliver is a football guy. His demeanor. His intensity. His attitude. It all oozes of gridiron, so much so that despite Oliver not working with Tommy West's University of Memphis football team, he's a regular at games and spirited enough to give the perception his job depends on touchdowns and interceptions. "I grew up watching the NFL, two games on both channels," said Oliver, the director of performance enhancement for the U of M basketball team. "Football's in my blood. I mean I'm on the sidelines at Tommy's games just going crazy, head-butting guys and everything. They must be thinking, 'This guy's a fool.' But I love it." Which means this morning will be special for Oliver when he leaves for Charlotte, N.C., to begin a minority fellowship with the Carolina Panthers for the second straight year. The NFL-sponsored fellowship is essentially a way to get minorities involved in the league and lasts about four weeks. Oliver will do everything from rehab players to map strategy on a computer before returning to Memphis near the end of August. "I got a call from one of the coaches yesterday and he said some of the players were already asking if I was coming back," Oliver said "So I'm happy about going back. It's a great experience." None of this should be taken as an indication Oliver is looking to advance to the NFL and leave John Calipari without a strength coach sometime soon. He's been there already, serving a two-year stint with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the early 1990s, and knows how cutthroat the business can be. Because of that, Oliver said the annual fellowships might be enough to keep him in college unless, of course, Calipari somehow gets a job in the NFL. "Professional sports are 'What have you done for me lately?,' " he explained. "Plus, I don't know that I could leave John. We've known each other 20 years, and anytime I start entertaining leaving here it becomes very emotional and I start thinking about him and (Calipari's wife) Ellen and (their children) Megan and Erin and Bradley. That makes it tough because John is my family. "I honestly think I'll be with John forever. It would take a tremendous, tremendous, tremendous opportunity for me to leave him." Where's Keena? Having been selected in the first round of the NBA Draft, Kendrick Perkins isn't coming to Memphis as planned. But will his high school teammate, the less-heralded Keena Young, still be a Tiger? The question arises because Young is not in town despite the fact Calipari likes his recruits to move early and enroll in summer school before their freshman seasons. For example, last year's incoming freshmen - Jeremy Hunt, Clyde Wade, Almamy Thiero and Rodney Carney - each took summer classes at Memphis. This time around Sean Banks is already here and Ivan Lopez would be if not for a commitment to play for the Puerto Rican Junior National Team. Young, on the other hand, remains at home with no commitment to speak of. And on Thursday his coach at Ozen High in Beaumont, Texas, wouldn't confirm he's still coming to Memphis at all. "You'll have to ask Cal about that," said Andre Boutte. "You'll have to talk to Cal." Attempts to reach Calipari for comment were unsuccessful. Getting stronger Lifting weights during the offseason falls under the guideline of "voluntary but encouraged" for the Tiger basketball team. That basically translates into "you'd better be there every day." So it's no surprise the weight room at the Finch Center has been busy this summer with players frequently showing up to get a workout in. According to Oliver, Duane Erwin, Anthony Rice, Carney and Hunt have all been impressive. "Across the board we're probably about 10 pounds of added muscle-mass per guy," Oliver said. "And then we've had to hold (Antonio) Burks back because he'll be 225 pounds if we let him. He has the genetics for it. But he just can't carry it unless he's going to play for Tommy. "Burks is a freak of nature." - Gary Parrish: 529-2365 |
| 07/24/03 | Frogs On Top, Memphis In The Middle Of The Pack In Conference USA Football Projections (Daily Helmsman) | |
| By Daniel Ford July 24, 2003 It didn't take long for the question to come up. It was the first thing on everyone's mind and Conference USA's newly named Commissioner, Britton Banowsky, approached the issue of conference realignment with caution. "It's an issue that is probably more prevalent on our radar screens in the last 60 days -- that is conference realignment," Banowsky said. "We watched with interest as the Atlantic Coast Conference situation unfolded and the potential trickle down that could impact C-USA." Banowsky is secure that C-USA will not be destroyed by member schools leaving and stressed how much care with which these situations should be handled. "I'm confident on the back-end that we will be in a position to prosper," Banowsky said. "When we look back we can say we did it right, we did it respectfully and we did it in a way that reflects the values of our institutions." Given the recent undertakings between the Big East and the ACC Banowsky is not naïve about the worst-case scenarios facing his young conference. "I recognize the fact that we may change as a conference from a member standpoint," he said. "But, we talked about it and we asked, 'do we want (this process) to move quickly or do we want it to move in a more stable way?' and each one of them strongly came out on the side of (having) some stability here and doing things carefully and thoughtfully." Memphis coach Tommy West learned from the Big East-ACC ordeal that it is impossible to predict he outcome of realignments. "Everybody asks me, 'where are we going to be in two years?' and I don't know the answer to that, but I do think there are going to be drastic changes," West said. "I've thought this for five or six years. I think there will be major realignments throughout college football." West also said he thinks C-USA should make a play for Notre Dame, who is an independent in football and a Big East basketball school. When asked about the possibility of major schools from the Big East and C-USA combining into a new conference West saw plenty of benefits. "You certainly would have a very good conference if you did that," the third-year coach said. "I'm not one of the powers that be, but I would think that be in the thought process somewhere." West said other conferences seem to be waiting for C-USA to crumble or have a member snatched out. "I've heard that the WAC (Western Athletic Conference) is pulling at some of them and the WAC doesn't have a chance to me of pulling anybody out of this league," West said. "If we decided we wanted to take some of the WAC people right now, I'm sure we'd have a whole bunch of them would want to pile in there with us. That kind of hacks me off to see where the WAC is acting like they're going to take some teams out of our league." |
| 07/24/03 | Harriman Named Assistant Coach At Lamar (GoTigersGo.com) | |
| Beaumont, Texas - April Harriman, a 2000 graduate of the University of Memphis, has been named assistant volleyball coach at Lamar University, announced Monday by head coach Fiona Bolten-Simmons. Bolten-Simmons was an assistant coach under current Tiger Head Coach Carrie Yerty from 1999-2001. In her first year at Lamar, Bolten guided the Cardinals to a 26-7 mark and an appearance in the finals of the Southland Conference Tournament. "I'm excited about April joining our staff," Bolten-Simmons said of the hire. "She brings Division I experience to the program, both as a coach and as a player. Her competitive attitude and devoted work ethic will help us to continue to recruit top student-athletes and develop them as players." Harriman joins the Lady Cardinals staff after spending the past two seasons at Ohio University. She spent the first year as a volunteer assistant before joining the staff in a full-time capacity during the 2002 season. Prior to her time at Ohio, Harriman coached numerous club teams and served as an instructor at several university camps. As a student-athlete Harriman garnered countless all-tournament team honors as an outside hitter at the University of Memphis. As a senior, she led the team in kills and ranked seventh in Conference USA with 4.05 kills per game. Harriman was an academic standout while at Memphis, receiving the Elma Roane Award as the Tigers' top female athlete in addition to the Female Student-Athlete of The Year award. She hauled in Second Team Academic All-American honors and was an eight-time member of the Dean's List. "I'm excited to take on a new challenge and help the program continue to grow and succeed," Harriman said. Harriman's duties will include assisting with recruiting, practice preparation and day-to-day operations of the volleyball program. "We're fortunate to have April here at Lamar," Bolten-Simmons said. "She will be a great asset to Lady Cardinal Volleyball." Harriman's 494 kills her senior season still ranks as the sixth-best single season kill mark in Tiger history, and her 1,317 attempts is the third-highest single season mark. Harriman was just the third Tiger student-athlete to earn Verizon Academic All-America honors with her second team honors in 2000. |
| 07/24/03 | Tiger Football Caravan's Saturday Stop In Memphis Cancelled (GoTigersGo.com) | |
| Due to the wide-spread recovery work around Memphis from the Tuesday morning storm, the Tiger Football Caravan will not stop in Memphis this Saturday. The next opportunity to meet your favorite Tiger football players will be the Tiger Football Fan Fest which is slated to take place Aug. 22nd on South Campus at the University of Memphis. The Tigers will have an open practice session from 4-6 p.m., and fans are invited to meet the coaching staff and team from 6-8 p.m. For information on Tiger Football season tickets, please contact the Tiger Ticket Office at 901-678-2331. Ticket brochures are also available off the Tiger website at www.gotigersgo.com and can be faxed back to 901-678-2331. |
| 07/23/03 | Men's Soccer Hires Robert Nicholson As Assistant Coach (GoTigersGo.com) | |
| MEMPHIS, Tenn. - University of Memphis men's soccer coach Richie Grant announced that he has hired Robert Nicholson to fill the assistant coaching vacancy on his staff. Nicholson will join Memphis after both Tiger assistants, Paul Conway and Ryan Shea each took head coaching positions with Lambuth University and Austin College (TX), respectively, earlier this summer. Nicholson, who hails from Waishaw, Scotland, comes to the program after two years of service as assistant and strength and conditioning coach at crosstown Christian Brothers University. At CBU Nicholson worked with the men and women's teams and helped lead the women's squad to the 2002 Division II National Championship. Prior to his stint at CBU, the Scotland native served as the assistant coach at Tyler (TX) Junior College. As a player, Nicholson played two seasons (1995-1997) at Tyler JC, where he was the team captain for both seasons and led the team to a pair of Junior College National Tournament semifinal appearances. He then moved on to Northeastern State University (OK), from 1997-1999, where he also captained the Redmen for two seasons. Nicholson is a 1999 graduate of Northeastern State, where he earned his degree in Health and Kinesiology with a teaching background. He then completed his Strength and Conditioning Specialist certification through the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA) in the summer of 2000. Nicholson received his National Coaching License from the National Soccer Coaches of America (NSCAA). The 31-year old Nicholson also spent six years in the British Royal Marine Commanders. |
| 07/23/03 | West Hoping For Balance (Commercial Appeal) | |
| By Phil Stukenborg stukenborg@gomemphis.com July 23, 2003 For two seasons, University of Memphis football coach Tommy West's plans for the Tiger offense have been up in the air. He has spent his first two years as U of M coach developing a strong passing attack, an element missing from most Tiger offenses in the late 1990s. Numbers confirm the plan's success. West took a passing offense that ranked ninth in a 10-team Conference USA in 2001 and boosted it to No. 2 last fall behind record-setting quarterback Danny Wimprine. This fall, West said he's seeking a balance that all top-rated offenses possess and one that would allow the Tigers to snap an eight-year losing streak. And Memphis, which opens its third season under West Aug. 30 against Tennessee Tech, could have the personnel to achieve it. The Tigers finished eighth in rushing offense, only nine yards from the C-USA cellar, but returning sophomore DeAngelo Williams and LSU transfer Derron Parquet give the U of M a potentially effective backfield. "I think the running game could very well be the key to our season," West said. "We have to develop a running game to take the pressure off our passing game." Williams gives the running game a foundation. Named to the C-USA All-Freshman Team, he led the Tigers with 684 rushing yards, including 129 yards in his debut. Parquet sat out last year under NCAA transfer guidelines, but battled through ankle problems in the spring to rush for 71 yards on 20 carries. "Parquet hasn't been out there and done it (in a Memphis uniform), but he is capable," West said. Parquet played in six games for LSU in 2001 and transferred to Memphis after the season. Williams was considered the top prep back in Arkansas in 2001. "It's a tough job being a quarterback and not having a running game," Wimprine said. "Defenses can key on the pass and when you start to run you can't be very successful. "But I think if we can come out and be more successful in the running game, it'll help. But it doesn't matter to me which way we go or how we win games as long as we win games." Wimprine is confident that Williams and Parquet will give the running game a 1-2 punch that will rival several of the conference's best. "DeAngelo is a great running back, Derron Parquet comes in and he's probably the best athlete on the team," Wimprine said. "And we have a lot of experience at wide receiver." For the offense to display the balance West covets, it will have to rely on a young, inexperienced offensive line and overcome the loss of top receiver Tavares Gideon, who suffered a season-ending knee injury during the summer. "We've got a group of guys that have to step up, guys like Tavarious Davis, Von Webb, Darren Garcia and Darron White," West said. "It's time for them to be really good players because they've been around here. "What we lost with Gideon was a player who was dangerous from the 20-yard line on in. We lost that player that you can just flip the ball up to and he'll go up and get it." West said former Trezevant standout Mario Pratcher, who, like Gideon, is listed at 6-4, could be the key. Pratcher, a sophomore, is eligible this year after being academically ineligible last season. "I've challenged him," West said. "I've said you're not going to be able to come in here and learn this year behind Gideon, which would have been beautiful. I don't know if he can do it, but we'll see . . . I'd be surprised if Pratcher doesn't have a pretty good year." West said the offensive line, which must replace four starters, should be effective as long as they are fundamentally sound. "If we can get a hat on a hat and hand it to DeAngelo," West said. "He'll get us some yards." - Phil Stukenborg: 529-2543 |
| 07/21/03 | Life Goes On Amid All This Speculation (Commercial Appeal) | |
| By Geoff Calkins calkins@gomemphis.com July 21, 2003 Shirley Raines and Britton Banowsky stepped outside the banquet hall at the downtown Marriott, away from the music and the tumult and the collection of college administrators and football coaches. The University of Memphis president and the Conference USA commissioner talked for a solid 10 minutes. About what? You can bet it wasn't the smoked chicken chimichangas. "This issue is bedrock, it's the core issue," said Banowsky, and it's good to see he recognizes it, anyway. "Until there is stability in the membership of the conference, there are going to be questions." And questions. And questions. And questions. And . . . Did we neglect to say welcome to the Conference USA football media days? Where the intrigue this year is less about which teams are going to be good than which teams are going to be gone? Louisville could be gone. Cincinnati could be gone. A recent report in the Birmingham Post-Herald said both programs would be extended invitations to join the suddenly depleted Big East "within three weeks." In the face of which, Conference USA muckety-mucks are nevertheless gathering in Memphis this week to eat, drink, play golf and mingle with the media. Sunday's shindig was the start of it. Think of the last supper, with spanakopita. "Obviously I pay attention to it," said Memphis coach Tommy West. "But they don't tell me what's going to happen. "I'm a peon in this game." The chief non-peon in attendance was Banowsky, the conference commissioner, who must be wondering about this new job of his. Congrats, you're commissioner of Conference USA! Turn the lights out after everyone leaves, won't you? Banowsky has taken a lot of hits for his performance during this time of trial, some of which may be unfair. He's been ripped because he hasn't yet moved from Dallas to the conference office in Chicago. What, like they don't have working telephones in Dallas? But Banowsky didn't inspire a whole lot of confidence with his performance Sunday, either. Asked whether the departure of Louisville and Cincinnati would be devastating to the conference, Banowsky shook his head. "I've heard that said, that it would be devastating," he said. "But I do not believe that. I'm not going to speculate that that would happen, but I don't think the loss of two members of Conference USA would be devastating." No? "We have a lot of members." A lot of stinko members, that is. The other thing Conference USA types keep saying is that they're thrilled Big East officials aren't going to ambush them, that they're going to tell them before they take any of their members. So instead of stabbing them in the back, they're going to offer them a final cigarette. And this is supposed to be the good news? The one issue Banowsky is absolutely right about is that it's impossible to know what will happen, at least until Big East commissioner Mike Tranghese decides what he's going to do. Will he add two football teams to get back to eight? Will he add four teams to get to 10? Will he listen to his basketball coaches, which could mean Memphis is in? Will he want a big Florida presence, which could mean Memphis is out? "It's a waste of energy," Banowsky said. Then he shrugged and wandered back to the party. Inside, the band was offering up a Jimmy Buffett song to fit the uncertain times. "I don't know where I'm a gonna go," they sang, "when the volcano blows." Contact columnist Geoff Calkins at 529-2364; E-mail: calkins@gomemphis.com |
| 07/21/03 | Banowsky Remains Upbeat -- Changes Won't Be Unfamiliar To C-USA (Commercial Appeal) | |
| By Gary Parrish parrish@gomemphis.com July 21, 2003 Britton Banowsky arrived in Memphis Sunday afternoon for a reception kicking off Conference USA's Football Media Days. He shook hands. He had a bite to eat. And, most notably, he sounded like a man resigned to the notion that his league is on the verge of change. "We're talking about a conference that is six years old that has gone through change every other year," Banowsky, the league commissioner, said. "I appreciate the sensitivity to change, but there needs to be some recognition that this conference is one that is regularly experiencing a degree of change." If the question is whether C-USA has ever experienced change, the answer is an obvious yes. But if the question is whether C-USA has ever seen the possibility of change like this, the answer is a resounding not-even-close. There is nothing regular about what is presumably going to happen to Banowsky's league, whatever that might be. "I don't have any idea," said University of Memphis football coach Tommy West. "I really don't." The theories floating around are endless. Everybody has one. Some make sense. Others don't. These days only a small percentage of the scenarios mentioned seem like positives for C-USA in its quest to become a major player in college athletics. The Birmingham Post-Herald reported recently that Louisville and Cincinnati will be extended invitations to join a depleted Big East that is shopping for schools because it lost Miami and Virginia Tech to the ACC. Most think a blow like that would be devastating to C-USA. Banowsky, however, doesn't fall into that group. Though he declined to speculate on the legitimacy of the report - ''Speculation,'' he said, ''is a lot of wasted energy'' - the licensed attorney who has only been on the job for seven months did make it clear that he doesn't suspect the losses of Louisville and Cincinnati would be curtains for C-USA. "I've heard that said, that it would be devastating," Banowsky acknowledged. "But I do not believe that. I'm not going to speculate that (Louisville and Cincinnati) will leave. But I don't think the loss of two members of Conference USA would be devastating. "We have a lot of members." But how much longer C-USA has "a lot of members" is open for debate. Army has already announced its intentions to leave after the 2004 football season. TCU, Houston and Tulane have each been mentioned as possible WAC targets. And Louisville, Cincinnati, Memphis, South Florida, East Carolina, Marquette, Saint Louis, DePaul and Charlotte have been linked in some fashion to the Big East. "I've spent a lot of time with Britton, and I know he'll be prepared," said Mountain West commissioner Craig Thompson. "I'm sure he has contingency plans - A, B and C - right on down the line. So he'll be ready to go with whatever happens. "I think Conference USA will come out solidly one way or another." - Gary Parrish: 529-2365 |
| 07/18/03 | 2003 Memphis Football Preview (ConferenceUSA.com) | |
| When the 2002 college football season concluded, head coach Tommy West knew that he had to make some tough decisions in order to continue to build the Tiger football program. The decisions included making changes in his staff, adding new staff members, putting the defense into the capable hands of a well known defensive coordinator and adding another outstanding recruiting class designed to fill some very specific needs. “Last season I had to become far too involved in the day-to-day operation of the defense,” West said. “I knew that I wanted our defense to be more aggressive and to do so, I would need to make a change in the leadership of that unit. As the season came to a close, I found out that Joe Lee Dunn was available and I knew that his philosophy of defense and mine ran along the same lines.” Dunn, who had served as the Tigers’ defensive coordinator in the late 1980s under Chuck Stobart, had served as the defensive coordinator at Mississippi State University for seven years and had raised the Bulldogs’ level of defensive performance into the national spotlight. He had also accomplished the same feat at Ole Miss and Arkansas before joining Jackie Sherrill’s staff at MSU. “I was absolutely elated that Joe Lee decided to accept my offer and join our staff,” West continued. “He was one of the best signees I had for 2003.” With Dunn safely listed among the roster of Tiger assistant coaches, West and his staff set out to sign players for the 2003 season. Not just athletes that might develop into players or those who would some day fill roles, but key players recruited to fill specific needs for the 2003 season. “There were certain key positions that had to be filled in order for us to continue to build for the future,” stated the former Clemson head coach, now the mentor of the Tigers. “Last season we were hurt by the lack of experience at quarterback. When Danny (Wimprine) was injured, we did not have a veteran quarterback to replace him. That became a priority in our recruiting effort. And when we were able to sign the number one junior college quarterback in the nation, it allowed us to move other athletes into other positions that would help us immediately.” As recruiting continued, the Tigers landed one blue-chip player after another and by the end of the February signing period, the U of M had inked a second strong class. “After locking up a quarterback, I felt that our next biggest goal was to sign a punter and believe me, we needed a punter in the worst kind of way. I knew when we received a commitment from Brandon Roberson that we had filled our needs,” West said. “It was a key element, another building block in creating a strong football team.” During spring practice several key junior college players took their place with the Tigers’ youthful squad. Quarterback Bobby Robison, wide receiver Chris Kelley, and linemen Bobby Garafolo and Jason Matthews practiced with the Tigers in the spring and proved to be strong additions to the squad, as was LSU transfer Derron Parquet. As the team prepares for the 2003 season under Tommy West, it appears that his construction project is rapidly taking shape. THE QUARTERBACKS The Tigers will enter the 2003 season with a record setting junior quarterback in Danny Wimprine, the nation’s number one junior college quarterback in Bobby Robison and a redshirted freshman signal-caller, Patrick Byrne, who was named the Paul Gingold MVP of the annual Blue-Gray Spring game. Wimprine, who has lettered for two years, completely rewrote the Tiger record book sections on passing and total offense in 2002. The big right-hander entered his name in the Memphis football record section 50 times last season and should hold virtually every passing record by mid-season 2003. The New Orleans native set U of M records for most pass attempts in a game (53), most pass completions in a game (32), most touchdown passes in a game (five), most pass attempts in a season (435), most pass completions in a season (235), most yards passing in a season (2,820), most touchdown passes in a season (23), most touchdown passes in a career (37), highest number of 200-yard passing games in a career (10), most total offense plays in a game (66), most total offense plays in a season (533), most total offense yards in a season 2,860, most touchdowns responsible for in a game (five) and most touchdowns responsible for in a season (26). Wimprine had two, 300-plus yard passing performances last season, as well as six 200-yard passing games. He started every contest but was forced to play injured in several games due to the lack of experience at quarterback. Now a starter in 17 career contests, Wimprine needs less than 200 yards passing to become the Tigers’ all-time record holder. With a new backup quarterback in camp and a redshirted freshman wanting to show Memphis coaches that he was ready to play, Wimprine stepped up his game in spring drills and passed for over 600 yards and eight touchdowns in just five scrimmages. He connected on 65.2 percent of his pass attempts and suffered just one interception during the spring and that came on a tipped pass. If Wimprine falls victim to injury this season, Robison is waiting in the wings. The left-hander, who led Northwest Mississippi Community College to back-to-back winning seasons, was impressive in the spring, passing for 384 yards and six scores. Robison passed for 1,737 yards and 23 touchdowns in 2002 and had 2,285 yards and 20 scoring tosses as a freshman. He amassed 4,562 yards passing and 43 touchdowns en route to being named the nation’s top junior college quarterback by J.C. Gridwire Magazine. The Ft. Walton Beach, FL, native was selected to the 2002 Mississippi Junior College All-Star game and received the Hubert Tucker Award as the MVP of the North All-Star Team. The future of Memphis football seems to be in capable hands with the maturing of freshman quarterback Byrne. The Brewton, AL, native had an outstanding spring and after his four touchdown passing performance in the annual Blue-Gray Game, was voted the Paul Gingold MVP by the attending media. He finished spring drills with 366 yards passing and five touchdowns. Byrne, a multi-talented athlete, played basketball for John Calipari’s Tigers in the winter of 2002-03, after injuries depleted the guard positions. He appeared in three games for a Tiger hoops team that advanced to the NCAA Tournament. THE RUNNING BACKS The Tigers lacked for veteran players in the offensive backfield in ‘02 but that should not be a problem in 2003. Letterman tailback DeAngelo Williams and LSU transfer Derron Parquet will lead the way for the running backs and will receive support from redshirt freshman Brian Davis, walk-on candidate LaKendus Cole and newcomers Jamarcus Gaither and Taz Knockum. Williams, one of the most highly-touted signees in Memphis history, made a statement in his first game as a collegiate player. The speedster rushed for 129 yards and one touchdown against Murray State University and added 100-yard performances against Tulane, Southern Mississippi and Army before the season ended. He led the nation in average yards per carry for three weeks of the 2002 campaign, was ranked second in the nation entering the final game of the season and finished the year tied for fifth in the nation with a 6.6 yard average. Williams gained 684 yards rushing to lead the team, despite starting just one contest. He had a season long run of 86 yards in the Tulane game, which ranks as the fifth longest touchdown run in school history and had his first multiple touchdown performance against Army in a 38-10 Tiger victory. For his play during the 2002 season, Williams was named to the Conference USA All-Freshman Team and The Sporting News Conference USA All-Freshman squad. Parquet played at LSU for two seasons before transferring to Memphis in 2001. He sat out during that season under NCAA guidelines for transfers but has demonstrated why he was so highly recruited out of Rummell High School in New Orleans. The former high school all-American suffered a severe groin injury in spring drills but was still impressive with his speed and tackle-breaking strength. With Williams and Parquet, the Tigers possess a great one-two punch at tailback but young players such as Davis and Cole should provide strong support for the veterans, and newcomers Gaither and Knockum are vital to the future of the offensive backfield. Cole, a walk-on from Houston High School in Germantown, was at his best during spring drills. The speedy back rushed for 199 yards and four touchdowns in spring scrimmages and averaged 3.5 yards per carry. He is expected to help the team by participating on special teams and providing help at tailback. Davis was moved from defensive back to tailback in the spring and had to spend most of his time learning the Memphis offensive scheme. The former track star from Georgia has shown that he is ready to contribute at tailback and should help provide additional depth. Gaither, a prep star from Frayser High School in Memphis, rushed for 1,813 yards and 13 touchdowns last season in being named to the Associated Press All-State team. He averaged 164.8 yards per game rushing and was ranked second in Shelby-Metro. Knockum, the nation’s 24th ranked all-purpose back, was a prep star at Baton Rouge Catholic High School. He was the district MVP after rushing for 1,143 yards and nine touchdowns in 2002 and added 29 pass receptions for 418 yards and nine additional scores. He is the reigning Louisiana 5A state champion in the 110 meter hurdles and posted the fastest time in the indoor 55-yard hurdles in the winter of 2003. THE RECEIVERS When the talk turns to the deepest position on the Memphis offense, it often centers around the quarterback spot or perhaps some think that the running backs have the most star power. But when it comes down to the most veteran players, the receivers corps stands out. Back for the 2003 season are letter winners Tavarious Davis, LaDarius Price, Darron White, Darren Garcia and Von Webb and add to that group former Tiger quarterback Maurice Avery, junior college transfer Chris Kelley and newcomers Ryan Scott and Mario Pratcher. White is a two-year letterman for Memphis and will enter the 2003 season with 74 career receptions for 765 yards and five touchdowns. His 74 receptions ranks 11th on the UM career list and his 765 yards places him 27th in career yardage. He had a season-high eight catches for 73 yards and one touchdown in the Murray State contest and boasts a career-high 123 yards against Cincinnati as a freshman. White also serves as a punt returner for the Tigers. Garcia, a senior from Millington, TN, has earned three letters during his career. He caught 19 passes for 204 yards as a junior and asserted himself during the spring of 2003 as a possible star for the receiver corps. His nine catches for 232 yards during the spring led the team in average yards per reception at a whopping 25.7 yard mark. Webb, who has suffered through a knee injury and rehabilitation in his career, stepped up in 2002 with 10 catches for 166 yards. He had a season long 50-yard reception against Army, a 48-yard catch in the Houston game and grabbed two passes for 39 yards in the UAB contest. Avery lettered as a quarterback and punter in 2002 but was moved to wide receiver after the signing of Bobby Robison. An outstanding athlete who can play many positions, he proved to be a prime target for Tiger passers this past spring. He caught six passes for 88 yards and two scores in spring scrimmages. At 6’1, 210 pound, the Atlanta native will become a valuable asset for the offense. Price and Davis have both seen game action during their brief careers. Price had four catches for 22 yards in his first season of competition and Davis has played in 10 games over the last two years. Demonstrating that he was ready for more game time, Davis hauled in 16 passes in the spring for 155 yards and two scores. His improved play earned him a Chris Faros Most Improved Player Award for the spring of ‘03. Kelley came to Memphis in the spring after transferring to the Tigers from Northeast Mississippi Community College. The 6’1 native of Corinth, MS, was the overall Most Valuable Player in the Mississippi Junior College All-Star game in December and carried that over into a 13.2 yard average per catch in the spring. Tavares Gideon, who came to Memphis as a junior college transfer in 2002, was expected to be the Tigers go-to receiver this fall, but he suffered a torn ACL early in the summer and will miss the entire 2003 season. The team’s second-leading receiver with 466 yards and a team-leading eight touchdowns last year, his eight scoring catches rank as the fifth highest total in school history. With veteran receivers back for the fall, it would stand to reason that newcomers might not have an opportunity to play. But with new arrivals such as Scott and Pratcher, the Tigers can expect to have two additional big receivers to throw to this fall. Pratcher was an all-state receiver at Trezevant High School and sat out during the 2002 season to concentrate on academic work. At 6’4 and 215 pounds, Pratcher offers a huge target for UM quarterbacks. The holder of the Trezevant record for touchdown catches with 25, Pratcher averaged 25.4 yards per catch as a senior. A native of Jackson, TN, Scott was recruited by several SEC teams before deciding to sign with Memphis. He had 936 yards and 13 touchdowns as a senior and tallied 13 touchdown while averaging over 16.5 yards per catch as a junior. THE TIGHT ENDS It is not often that a freshman tight end comes to camp and finds himself a starter early in the season but that’s exactly what happened to John Doucette. The New Orleans, LA, native worked with Jeff Cameron in the fall but when Cameron was lost with a knee injury, Doucette became the starter and never relinquished the spot. The 6’2, 260 pounder caught just five passes for 44 yards in his 11 games but was used mainly as a blocker. He gained in strength and experience as the season progressed and by the end of the 2002 campaign, was named to the Conference USA All-Freshman Team. Doucette scored his first collegiate touchdown in the season finale against TCU. He tallied seven catches for 64 yards and one score during spring practice and is expected to return as the Tiger starter in the fall. Doucette will receive support from junior Isaac Daniel this fall. The walk-on candidate was used as a linebacker and defensive end for two seasons before being moved to tight end in the spring of 2003. He spent his time learning the Memphis spread offense and should be able to provide some depth at tight end this fall. THE OFFENSIVE LINE If there was one position that really felt the brunt of graduation, it was the offensive line. The Tigers lost eight of the top 10 offensive linemen from last year’s squad and have just one returning starter in junior guard Andrew Handy. Gone from the 2002 squad are both tackles, Wade Smith and Donald Marshall, guard Joe Gerda and three-year starting center Jimond Pugh. A great emphasis was placed on offensive line work in the spring of 2003 and several junior college players were brought in to help shore up the front. Handy, who has lettered for two seasons, started nine games for Memphis last year and is the most experienced of the returning offensive linemen. He will be joined at the guard positions by redshirt freshman Blake Butler and newcomers Jason Matthews, Bobby Garafolo and Aaron Grimes. Butler, the son of former Tiger great Keith Butler, was redshirted last season but at 305 pounds, made quite an impression in the spring drills. Matthews and Garafolo are both junior college transfers who bring game experience to the unit. Grimes is an all-state performer from Martin, TN, who might be able to contribute as a freshman. The center position appears to have been handed over to letterman deep snapper Gene Frederic. The St. Louis, MO., native has both size and experience and received nice reviews from coaches in the spring. He will be supported by redshirted freshman Bruce McCaleb and newcomer Abraham Holloway in the fall. McCaleb was moved from guard to center and is ready to back-up Frederic when needed. Holloway is the largest of the Tiger signees but will be expected to learn the offense very quickly if he is to play this season. The tackle slots could be filled by several players and a real battle should develop in fall camp. Jeremy Rone and Jason Johnson have both lettered during their careers at Memphis and should provide leadership in the line. Redshirt sophomore James Corder also saw limited action in 2002, while junior college transfer David Davis was held out of action last season to give the team more experience for 2003. Davis is joined at tackle by former prep all-American Willie Henderson. Davis, 6’4, 305, and Henderson, 6’7, 345, offer the Tigers two large bodies at tackle. Add to the group freshmen Lane Garcia and Andy Smith, and the U of M should have ample offensive line candidates for 2003. THE DEFENSE The return of Joe Lee Dunn has brought an entirely different attitude to the defensive unit. Installing a far more aggressive style of pressure defense, Dunn started building confidence and attitude during spring drills. “Joe Lee and I have the same philosophy about defense,” West quipped. “We both like to see a lot of hitting...people all around the ball. That’s what football is all about.” Dunn should have plenty of talent and experience to work with this fall as nine defensive starters and a host of lettermen return to action. Of the team’s 37 returning letterwinners, 21 are defensive players. THE DEFENSIVE LINE The defensive front was very thin and inexperienced in 2002 but with the return of starters Eric Taylor and Kenyun Glover and big Albert Means, the unit takes on a new appearance. Then add to the mix several young lettermen and some key newcomers and the defensive front is again back at full strength. Taylor and Glover had to carry the bulk of the trench warfare in 2002. The two combined for 68 tackles but had to play at less than full speed because of injuries. Glover finished the season as the 10th leading tackler, while Taylor came in at the 14th spot due to a broken hand which limited his playing time. Means, who received a great deal of attention in 2001 after he transferred to Memphis from Alabama, sat out last season to concentrate on academics. At 6’4, 355, Means gives the defensive front a great deal more size and depth for the fall. LaVale Washington played in 11 games for the Tigers as a true freshman, and he too wants his share of the playing time. Washington logged 18 tackles while learning the collegiate game and is hopeful of improving those numbers as a sophomore. Joining the more experienced down linemen will be Trumann, AR, native Aaron Bentley. An all-state performer at Trumann High, Bentley is 6’3, 260 and could see duty this season in a reserve role. THE DEFENSE ENDS All-star Tony Brown has graduated but the defensive unit will have back returning starter Treveco Lucas at one end slot, as well as lettermen Marcus West and David McNair. Toss in several young players and newcomers and the end positions seem to be solid. Lucas, a two-year letterman, was the team’s eighth leading tackler in ‘02 with 43 stops and tied Brown for the team lead in quarterback sacks with four. The Memphis native is expected to start as a senior and to provide leadership for the younger players. West and McNair both saw duty last season but will get a strong push from youngsters Greg Billingslea and Haracio Colen, as well as newcomers Tyus Jackson and Quintin Williams. Jackson, 6’3, 250 pounds, comes to the Tigers after a junior college career at Northeast Mississippi Community College, while Williams was one of the top high school defensive players in the state of Tennessee. Williams, a middle linebacker at East High in Memphis, was heavily recruited by area schools but signed with the Tigers over several SEC offers. THE LINEBACKERS Perhaps the deepest position on the Memphis football team this fall will be the linebacker spots. Back for their third season as starters are veterans Derrick Ballard, Greg Harper and Coot Terry. Joining the trio will be part-time starters Shaka Hill and Robert Douglas and lettermen Sheldon Taylor, Will Hyden, Charles Davis and Tim Goodwell. Now add in newcomers Carson Hunter, Jerran Humphrey and Mike Snyder and you have the makings for some great linebacker play. Ballard was the Tigers’ leading tackler in 2002 with 101 total stops. He had 13 tackles for lost yardage, three quarterback sacks, one fumble recovery and three pass interceptions on his resume as well. For his play, the Georgia native was named to the Conference USA second team defense as a junior and appears headed for even bigger honors this year. Harper and Terry were both starters at the outset of the 2002 season but both saw their seasons ended by injuries. Harper, who logged 37 tackles, suffered a broken leg in the Tulane game and missed five contests. Terry, who had 60 tackles, also missed the final five games of the season with hand and knee injuries. Both are ready to resume their play for Dunn’s defense. When Harper and Terry left the lineup with injuries, Hill and Douglas stepped in and picked up the slack. Hill registered 53 tackles and a pass interception, while Douglas was credited with 39 tackles and a fumble recovery. Taylor, who played part of the season with a torn ACL, logged 25 tackles in 2002 and then had his knee repaired during the off-season. He is fully recovered and ready to return to the field. With the number of injuries to the linebackers, Goodwell was forced into action and he contributed four tackles in limited playing time. Davis and Hyden also saw playing time in a reserve role. He had four tackles in his 10 games played. Hunter came to the team as a walk-on in 2002 and immediately made an impression on the staff with his hustle and desire. He received the Scout Team Special Teams Player of the Year Award during the football banquet and after being redshirted, has four years of eligibility remaining. Humphrey and Snyder are both highly decorated prep players who are destined to be stars for the Tigers. Snyder, who prepped at the same high school, J.T. Curtis, as UM quarterback Danny Wimprine, is slated to work at middle linebacker, while Humphrey will join Douglas, Hill and Hunter at outside linebacker. THE SECONDARY The Tiger secondary is loaded with talent and experience. With the return of starters Scott Vogel, Cameron Essex and O.C. Collins, many would think that most of the positions are nailed down prior to the start of fall camp. But that is far from true given the level of talent in the defensive backfield. Vogel, who started 10 of the 12 contests at strong safety, was credited with 71 tackles and two pass interceptions in ‘02. The junior from Memphis, who has tallied 91 career tackles, was moved to free safety in the spring and will enter camp as the starter. Collins, who was named to two freshman all-America teams last season, logged 75 tackles and three pass interceptions in his first season of collegiate competition. He will work with Vogel at free safety as will Wesley Smith who redshirted as a freshman. Smith was most impressive in the spring registering four pass interceptions during the scrimmages. At 6’2, 214, he gives Memphis at big back at free safety. However, two impressive newcomers will also join the mix at safety. Memphian Jamaal Rufus of Frayser High School and Javar Pollard of Batesville, MS, will also be seeking their fair share of time on the field. Rufus was recruited by every major conference school in the southeast. At 6’3, 210, he will help give the Tigers a great deal of size in the secondary. Pollard, who has run a 4.4 40-yard dash, played both tailback and defensive back in high school and was sought after by West Virginia and Mississippi State. Essex will return to his field corner position, while Tristan Thomas is slated as the starter at boundary corner. Essex totaled 36 tackles last season after starting seven contests. Thomas was a starter against Southern Mississippi and finished the season with 15 tackles. Depth at the corner positions should come from veterans Lionel Pieh, Derron Johnson and newcomer Lee Hayes. Pieh has lettered for two seasons working as a defensive back and special teams member. Johnson, who was highly recruited out of Melrose High School two years ago, sat out in 2002 to work on academics. His return will give Memphis more size in the secondary. Hayes was a Parade All-American in Hopkinsville, KY, and signed with Arkansas before attending Northeast Mississippi Community College, He is expected to challenge for time at cornerback. The strong safety position will be battled out this fall between Olen Whitely, Sam Brewer, Cato Mott and newly arrived but highly-touted freshman Quinton McCrary of Columbus, MS. Mott lettered as a special teams player in 2002, while Whitely and Brewer were redshirted. McCrary was ranked as the number seven outside linebacker in the nation by Rivals.com and had committed to Mississippi State before Joe Lee Dunn joined the Tigers. He now brings his talent to Memphis along with his 170 tackles, eight sacks and two pass interceptions as a senior at Columbus High. At 6’2, 210, he gives Memphis yet another big defensive back. THE SPECIAL TEAMS During the 2002 season, the Tiger special teams struggled with the injury to kicker Danny Haynes and the demise of punter James Gaither. With junior college transfer Haynes injured, West was forced to sign baseball player Stephen Gostkowski and turn the kicking duties over to the true freshman. Gostkowski responded by booting a 50-yard field goal on his first collegiate kick. The Madison, MS, native maintained his kicking duties throughout the season and was named to the Conference USA All-Freshman team. He connected on 9-of-14 field goal attempts and 32-of-37 PATs to finish the season as the team’s leading scorer. Haynes has now recovered from his injury and will battle Gostkowski for playing time this fall. As Gaither’s statistics headed downhill in 2002, the Tigers were forced to use quarterbacks Danny Wimprine and Maurice Avery as rugby-styled punters. Therefore, when West sent his assistants out recruiting, signing a punter was a top priority. The staff responded by landing Brandon Roberson of Northeast Mississippi Community College. Roberson, who had committed to the University of Arkansas, averaged 42.8 yards per punt in junior college. However, the Mississippi Junior College All-Star reconsidered his decision and inked with the Tigers giving West his much needed punter. Memphis has veteran snappers and holders back for the 2003 campaign. Center Gene Frederic will again handle the snapping duties and will be supported by Jared Bidne and redshirt freshman Rusty Clayton. Ryan Ivy, who lettered last season as the team’s holder, will return to that position for his junior season. |
| 07/17/03 | Tidmore Shoots Her Way Onto U.S. National Team, Has Her Sights Set On 2008 Olympics (Daily Helmsman) | |
| By Daniel Ford July 17, 2003 She can fire a bullet through the period at the end of this sentence from 33 feet away. It's with that kind of precision that Beth Tidmore shot up the ranks of competitive shooting in the last three months, almost as fast as one of her 22 caliber bullets. With a win at the National Junior Olympics and a third place finish at the USA Shooting National Championships three months later, The University of Memphis freshman earned a spot on the U.S. National Team. Being a member of the U.S. National Team means that Tidmore can compete and represent the U.S. in international events such as world cups, which Tidmore described as 'mini-Olympics.' The lofty goals Tidmore has already attained seem even more astounding when learning that she didn't begin shooting competitively until just over three years ago. "My (high) school had a team and I decided kind of on a whim to join it," Tidmore said. Despite her fast rise to the top of the shooting world, Tidmore credits her mother and strenuous practice with her success, not natural ability. "About three months into it I wasn't really interested," Tidmore said. "Then my mom took me to look at an Olympic-style gun. I picked the gun up, shot a pretty good score and my mom turned around and told the guy, 'we'll take it.'" That was April 1, and the shooter said she thought her mom was playing a joke on her. She would soon learn it was no joke. "I was actually upset about getting the gun because it was pretty expensive," Tidmore said. "I remember crying to my mom asking her not to buy it because I knew she was spending her Christmas bonus on it." With a gun capable of shooting elite scores and the support of her family, the 19-year-old said she knew it was time to go to work. "Everybody my age had already been shooting since they were three years old and I knew if I wanted to ever be as good, I would have to work harder," she said. "I practiced five, six or seven hours a day, seven days a week for a year and a half." By that time, Tidmore had become one of the preeminent young shooters in the nation and, with a nearly 4.0 GPA, had a wide variety of colleges and universities, including virtually all of the top-10 teams in the nation, vying for her commitment. "I traveled to a lot of different schools and talked with a lot of different coaches, but Memphis felt the most like home to me," Tidmore said. "I loved the coach (Butch Woolbright) and everyone on the team seemed to be like a family." If the Memphis team is a family, then Woolbright is the proud father. "The main things Beth brings to us is intensity and encouragement," Woolbright said. "I don't see how she could have done any more in her first year than what she did." During her first year in her comfortable new digs the National Team member and freshman captain became the most decorated athlete in the program's 11-year history while earning a spot on the All-American team, the Academic All-American team and leading the Tigers to a top-25 ranking. Woolbright said Tidmore is on a higher plateau than almost every other collegiate shooter. "She's learned how to compete on a different level," he said. "She stays focused and can't be rattled. She is also probably the only freshman team captain at the collegiate level." Tidmore said being a first-class shooter is not accidental and must be earned through hard work. Teammate Bobby LeBlanc said Tidmore has devoted herself to being a top-notch shooter. "She's committed her life to this sport and she deserves every bit of success she's received," LeBlanc said. "She spent a lot of Friday nights at the (shooting) range instead of hanging out with her friends. She's more committed to this sport than anyone I know is committed to any other sport." Tidmore works relentlessly for the millimeters that determine the difference between the greatest shooters and the good ones, those millimeters are especially important since she can't actually see the bull's-eye when she fires. "First of all you're shooting at something you can't see," she said. "There's no magnification at all in our scopes. You also have to pay attention to your breathing and your heartbeat." However, the first and most important thing Tidmore takes into account before shooting is the wind. Wind can affect the bullet enough to push it off its course and therefore, the freshman must read the direction, strength and angle the wind is blowing before each shot. "Matches are absolutely won and lost over the wind," Tidmore said. "Good wind readers win matches." She said being calm and confident are important qualities found in great shooters, which explains why she isn't satisfied with the amount of success she was enjoyed and is setting her sights even higher. "It is possible that I could go to the Athens Olympics (in 2004), but it's not necessarily likely," the Olympic hopeful said. "The 2008 games are extremely reasonable though. In fact I'll go ahead and say it- I am going to the Olympics in 2008. That's what I'm training for and that's what I'm working for." Sometime after she was given her first gun and before she became a National Team member Tidmore asked her mom how she knew that she would have such a knack for shooting. "I asked her how'd you know I was going to be good?" Tidmore said. "When you picked up that rifle," her mother said. "I could just see this gleam in your eye. I could see that you would have a passion for it." |
| 07/17/03 | 'Younger' Gasol To Walk-On This Season For The Tigers (Daily Helmsman) | |
| By Daniel Ford July 17, 2003 Memphis coach John Calipari is expected to make official the rumors that Marc Gasol, younger brother of Memphis Grizzlies Pau Gasol, will walk-on for the 2003-2004 season.Gasol had thoughts of coming to The University Memphis out of high school at nearby Lausanne, but the 7-footer decided to return to his hometown of Spain and discuss signing a professional contract overseas. Gasol's plans to sign overseas apparently fell through as as rumors began to swirl around two weeks ago that the Tennessee Division 2 Mr. Basketball would in fact stick with his original plans and play for Calipari. Gasol averaged 26 points and 13 rebounds in his senior season. Gasol's weight is going to be the main factor in determining how much action the Spaniard sees in his freshman year. Gasol is pushing 300 pounds, which cuts down dramatically on his agility and ability to run the court. Like most foreign big men, he has soft hands, good footwork and an above average face-up jumper. The addition of the 7-footer will help to bolster a frontcourt that was depleted greatly with the losses of Chris Massie and Earl Barron. There is still a possibility Gasol could red-shirt this season to get into shape, but if he plays he will likely back up Duane Erwin. |
| 07/17/03 | Women's Tennis Earns Third-Straight Team Award (GoTigersGo.com) | |
| MEMPHIS, Tenn. - The University of Memphis women's tennis team received the Intercollegiate Tennis Association's (ITA) ITA All-Academic Team award it was announced by the ITA, Thursday. In addition to their third straight team award, a program best five individuals were named to the ITA Scholar-Athlete honorees. In order to receive the team award, the team cumulative GPA for 2002-2003 had to be 3.2 or higher. Individual GPAs had to be 3.5 or higher to receive the Scholar-Athlete award. Memphis was one of four Conference USA schools to receive the team award. Memphis was joined by Charlotte, Houston and Louisville on the list of honorees. Memphis was one of just eight schools to have five student-athletes post a GPA of 3.5 or higher during the past academic year. Only Evansville (7), Notre Dame (7), Alabama (6), UCF (6), Princeton (6), Rice (6) and Yale (6) had more individual student-athletes receive the Scholar-Athlete award. 2002-03 was a banner year for the Lady Tiger tennis program. Memphis finished with a 17-7 overall record and a fifth-place finish at the Conference USA tournament, despite injuries to two of the team's top six singles players. The 17 wins was the eighth-best single season win total in the program's history and included a stretch where the Lady Tigers made their first-ever appearance in the national rankings. Also earning the program's first-ever national recognition was the No. 1 doubles team of seniors Sabrina Lindemann and Monica Gonzalez-Gordo. The duo finished their Lady Tiger careers as the program's most-decorated players. Lindemann, who graduated with her bachelor's degree in exercise science in just three years, was a second-team all-conference honoree in 2003, her third all-conference honor. She was honored by C-USA for having the highest GPA of all female tennis players in the league and was also a recipient of the league's sportsmanship award. In addition to her C-USA honors, Lindemann was named a third-team Verizon Academic All-District player and was named the University of Memphis athletic department's top female student-athlete in the spring. She also received the prestigious Elma Roane Award, as the athletic department's top female athlete. A native of Linz, Austria, Lindemann capped her four-year Lady Tiger career with a 90-56 record at No. 1 and 2 singles and a 98-44 record at No. 1 doubles. This individual honor is her second-straight ITA Scholar-Athlete Award and her second ITA honor of the season. Lindemann also received the ITA Southeast Region Cissie Leary Leadership Award at the end of the spring season. A finalist for an NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship, Lindemann will complete her Master's Degree in Business Administration in December. Gonzalez-Gordo, Lindemann's No. 1 doubles teammate and the team's No. 2 singles player, also was a highly-decorated player for Memphis in 2002-03. She is a two-time all-Conference USA honoree and earned her first Verizon Academic All-District honor in 2003. In addition to her national ranking in doubles, Gonzalez-Gordo had an impressive singles career, leading Memphis with a 17-5 singles mark during the spring. For her two-year Lady Tiger career, Gonzalez-Gordo was 58-16 in singles. Named a Conference USA Player of the Week one time during the spring, Gonzalez-Gordo was also one of five Tiger student-athletes to earn an Arthur Ashe Jr. Leadership Sports Scholar five team honor. A member of the C-USA Commissioner's Honor Roll, Gonzalez-Gordo will graduate next May with a degree in mechanical engineering. Junior Rebecca Garner received her first ITA academic honor in her second year as a Tiger. Garner came to Memphis in the fall of 2000 from her native England, and will complete her bachelor's degree in December of 2003. The junior went 4-4 in singles play during the fall season, advancing to the finals of the Middle Tennessee State Tournament in C singles. She also teamed with Murray State's Jamie Lee to advance to the consolation finals of the No. 3 doubles bracket at the University of Memphis/Varsity Pro Shop fall tournament before the match was rained out. A three-time member of the Commissioner's Honor Roll, Garner is majoring in sports management at Memphis. Newcomer Marlene Dirnstorfer came to Memphis in August of 2002 and immediately made an impact on the Lady Tiger line-up. Dirnstorfer finished the fall season with a 9-1 singles record, winning the C singles title at Saint Louis and advancing to the finals of the Middle Tennessee State tournament. In the spring, Dirnstorfer went 12-4 in singles, including a 7-3 mark at No. 5 singles before missing the Conference USA tournament with a foot injury. A Conference USA player of the week honoree after going 3-0 in both singles and doubles while helping Memphis pick up three straight road wins, including a win over No. 75 Georgia State, Dirnstorfer is majoring in economics at Memphis. Freshman Andrea Feichtinger made a solid run at the Conference USA freshman of the year award after leading the team with a 17-5 singles record during the spring, including an 8-1 record at No. 6 singles. Feichtinger, who went 10-2 in singles during the fall and advanced to the finals of the Saint Louis tournament before winning the No. 5 singles title at the University of Memphis tournament. Feichtinger also teamed with fellow Austrian Viktoria Gruber to post a 13-6 record at No. 3 doubles. Memphis loses three seniors off its 2002-03 roster, including Lindemann, Gonzalez-Gordo and Sumitra Rao, who led the team with a 12-2 singles record before a wrist injury affected her spring season. Garner will play in fall tournaments with the Lady Tigers before graduating a semester early and returning to England. Dirnstorfer, Gruber, Feichtinger and Memphis-area graduate Kristin Noble are all expected to return for 2003-04. Memphis opens its fall season at the UT-Chattanooga tournament, Sept. 26-27. The Lady Tigers will host their own fall tournament Oct. 17-18. The complete 2003-04 women's tennis schedule is available on the U of M website at www.gotigersgo.com. |
| 07/16/03 | Men's Tennis Earns ITA All-Academic Award (GoTigersGo.com) | |
| The University of Memphis men's tennis team earned its second straight Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA) All-Academic Team award it was announced by the ITA, Wednesday. Three Tiger tennis players also received individual ITA Scholar-Athlete awards for having individual GPAs of 3.5 or higher in 2002-03. To receive the team award, the team had to have a GPA of 3.2 or higher. In what was a banner year for the Tigers, Memphis received both national and conference awards for sportsmanship, stayed in the national rankings every week for the second straight year, watched one senior graduate in three years and posted a 16-7 record and a fifth-place finish in the conference before today's honors from the ITA. "I am pleased we have been able to achieve our three major goals in our program," Head Coach Phil Chamberlain said. "Our goals are 1) our on-court attitude and commitment, which we achieved with the ITA Team Sportsmanship and with Joe (Schmulian)'s Conference USA Sportsmanship honor; 2) competitiveness in the rankings and 3) our GPAs and the long-term, we want our student-athletes to get their degrees. We set those goals three or four years ago, and that is reflected by having three student-athletes receive this award today." This marks the first time Memphis has had three recipients of the ITA All-Academic Award. Junior Lee Taylor Walker (Jackson, Tenn./Univ. School of Jackson) and sophomores Alex Bucewicz (Melbourne, Australia/Salesian) and Andrew Olswing (Memphis, Tenn./Ridgeway HS) were the 2003 honorees for the award after graduated senior Michael LaHaie was the lone Tiger to receive the award last year. Walker was part of the team's No. 1 doubles team that ranked as high as No. 12 in the country after a highly-successful fall season that saw the Tigers advance to the finals of the Omni Hotels Region III Championships at Kentucky. Walker and doubles partner Ben Stapp won three doubles titles in 2002-03, including the Middle Tennessee Tournament, the Adult Southern Open and the Milwaukee Tennis Classic. Walker was 9-15 at No. 1 singles, facing a number of opponents who were ranked nationally in singles, including Daniel Klemetz from Middle Tennessee, a top 10 singles player. In two years at Memphis after transferring from Clemson, Walker is 28-26 in singles and 43-17 in singles. Bucewicz led the Tigers in the spring with a 21-3 mark in singles, and is 41-11 in singles during his two-year Tiger career. Bucewicz also teamed with all-conference third team performer Joe Schmulian at No. 2 doubles, where the duo posted a 14-8 record after Schmulian missed the fall season due to a foot injury. In singles, Bucewicz won the consolation singles title at the Milwaukee Tennis Classic in January. Olswing transferred to Memphis from Bradley University. In the one spring dual he played, Olswing locked up the Tigers' final home victory with a 6-1, 6-1 victory at No. 6 singles. Olswing was 1-1 in two doubles matches during the fall before Schmulian's injury moved Olswing's doubles partner up a notch and caused Olswing to miss the remainder of the doubles portion of the schedule. He did go 1-1 in singles in his first semester as a Tiger. Memphis will host two premier collegiate men's tennis events in 2003-2004. The Tigers will host the ITA Southeast Regional, Oct. 16-19, at The Racquet Club of Memphis. The Southeast Region of the ITA includes all NCAA Division I schools in Mississippi, Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama and Florida. Seven of the top 25 teams in the year-end national rankings compete in the Southeast Regional. Memphis will then be the final destination for the Conference USA Men's Tennis Championships in the spring. All 12 C-USA teams will descend on Memphis to determine who will take home the league crown and at-large bid into the NCAA Tournament. The Tigers finished 2003 the 70th-ranked team in the country. Five of C-USA's members were nationally ranked at the end of 2003. South Florida was the only other C-USA men's tennis program to receive the ITA Team honor. |
| 07/15/03 | Hunter Joins West's Staff At Memphis (GoTigersGo.com) | |
| Johnson "Jeep" Hunter has been hired as an assistant coach on Tommy West's staff at The University of Memphis. But the North Carolina native is certainly no stranger to West, having served as a graduate assistant and later as Director of Football Operations at Clemson. "I was impressed with Jeep when he worked for us at Clemson", West stated, "and I am sure that he will bring the same determination and desire to our staff at Memphis. He is a very organized individual and handled most of our recruiting weekends in addition to his other duties." Hunter, who will coach the Tiger tight ends, comes to Memphis from Eastern Kentucky University where he worked with the Colonels' secondary for two seasons. Prior to his accepting the position at Eastern Kentucky University, Hunter coached the defensive backs at UT-Chattanooga during the 2000 season and was instrumental in helping the Mocs to a 6-5 record. Before serving at UT-Chattanooga, he worked as a graduate assistant football coach at Clemson University from 1996-98 and was named by West as Assistant Athletic Director for Football Management at Clemson in 1999. As the Assistant AD for Football Management, Hunter was responsible for working with professional scouts, overseeing the walk-on program, handling coaching clinics and summer camps and handling official and unofficial visits to Clemson's campus. Hunter worked with back-to-back Peach Bowl teams at Clemson as the Tigers faced LSU in the 1996 Peach Bowl and Auburn in January of 1998. A native of Denver, North Carolina, Hunter played collegiate football at Catawba College, an NAIA Division II school, in Salisbury, NC, for three years. He lettered as a member of the secondary but his collegiate career was cut short during his junior year when he suffered a severe knee injury that ended his playing days. Hunter went to Catawba College from East Lincoln High School in Denver, NC, where he lettered as a quarterback, running back, defensive back and kick returner. He was an all-state defensive back for East Lincoln as a senior. He served as a student assistant coach at Catawba from 1987-90 after his career-ending injury. He spent the next three seasons as the assistant head coach, defensive coordinator and special teams coordinator at Bandys High School in Catawba, NC. From 1994-96, Hunter was an assistant football coach at North Carolina A&T State University where he worked with wide receivers, outside linebackers and defensive backs. Hunter received his bachelor's degree in business administration/physical education from Catawba College in 1990. He has done additional graduate work at both North Carolina A&T and Clemson. During the summer of 2001, Hunter served an NFL Minority Internship with the St. Louis Rams where he worked with defensive secondary coach Ron Meeks. Hunter is married the former Susan Potokar of Cleveland, Ohio. |
| 07/12/03 | Calipari Takes Big Chance On Banks (Commercial Appeal) | |
| By Don Wade waded@gomemphis.com July 12, 2003 John Calipari was speaking with a New Jersey newspaper reporter about prized recruit Sean Banks's latest arrest. Maybe you haven't yet heard what the Tiger coach had to say, but perhaps you have heard the "warm" story about why Banks was arrested. You know, his being accused of using a cigarette to burn a gang insignia onto a teenage girl's leg. Hey, if he had been accused of burning a Tiger onto her leg, at least we could champion the kid's school spirit. Sean Banks is hot to be a University of Memphis Tiger! OK, so that's in poor taste. But so was the way Calipari described Sean Banks. The coach - your coach, if you're a U of M loyalist - said Banks was "a little rough around the edges." Now, maybe it's just us, but when we think of a little rough around the edges, we think of a guy who maybe talks like a longshoreman but has a soft heart. We think of somebody with good intentions, but clumsy actions. And maybe this is, in fact, an accurate description of young Sean Banks, who posted $5,000 bail Monday and was released from the Bergen County Jail. He may in truth be, as Calipari has said several times, "a great kid" caught in a tough situation. But to be honest, today we're not as concerned about the kid's character as the coach's decision-making. Look, we may never know the complete context of the latest accusation against Banks. And we may never know all there is to know about his earlier arrest this year when he was riding in a car involved in a police chase, and police said Banks and the other guys in the car were all affiliated with a local gang called "The Outlaws." Banks came out of that scrape pleading guilty to a misdemeanor and paying a $100 fine. This much, however, is certain: Calipari is intent on giving Banks not just a second chance, but every chance. Banks, a 6-8 forward with a sweet shot, is the top Tiger recruit left after Kendrick Perkins chose to go to the NBA. Is it stretching credibility to suggest that John Calipari needs Sean Banks now more than ever? The coach would tell you it is. On Friday, he suggested that this is all about Coach Cal helping a young man turn his life around, not just what a basketball player can do for a guy still in search of his first NCAA Tournament victory here after three seasons. "Sure, he's a good player," Calipari said. "But this is a case where we're going to help this kid more than he helps us." Banks apparently has cleared the required academic hurdles to start school in the fall. And the kid, to give him the benefit of the doubt, just might be incredibly unlucky, might be a guy forever caught in the wrong place at the wrong time. "These are just allegations the girl's mother is making based on hearsay," Banks said. "No, I didn't do anything." Meantime, there is Calipari's theory that removing Banks from his present environment is good therapy, with a little hoops thrown in for exercise. Chris Carr, a sports psychologist at Methodist Sports Medicine Center in Indianapolis, said a positive change of environment could spark, well, positive change. "Can an 18-year-old kid come out of a bad situation where in the past he may have made bad behavioral decisions and be successful? Yes," said Carr. "But there's an asterisk with that, and it really depends on the type of support system that the kid is coming into . . ." In other words, this is one of those risks that some coaches won't take, some coaches take for the right reasons and some coaches take for the wrong reasons. We know Calipari is not in the first category. Whether he's in the second or the third, only he knows for sure. But from where we sit, there is only one description for the coach's decision-making: A little rough around the edges. Contact reporter Don Wade at 529-2358; E-mail: waded@gomemphis.com |
| 07/12/03 | On-Court Star To Be Tiger, Legal Woes Aside (Commercial Appeal) | |
| By Gary Parrish parrish@gomemphis.com July 12, 2003 Undeterred by recent legal problems, Sean Banks received his diploma from Bergen Catholic High in New Jersey on Friday. Now, unless something unforeseen happens, the basketball standout will play for the University of Memphis next season. "I'm qualified," Banks, a consensus top 25 national recruit, told The Commercial Appeal. "I'll be down there as soon as possible." Banks, who passed two classes this summer at Notre Dame Prep in Fitchburg, Mass., now needs to be approved by the NCAA Clearing House to become eligible, which shouldn't be an obstacle since his SAT score is solid. The one thing that could be problematic, however, is legal difficulties that have haunted the 6-8 wing over the past few months. Banks was arrested for the second time since February last Sunday after being accused of using a cigarette to burn a gang insignia onto a teenage girl's leg. He was charged with aggravated assault with a weapon and endangering the welfare of a child prior to posting $5,000 bail on Monday. "I didn't know what was going on," Banks said Friday. "These are just allegations the girl's mother is making based on hearsay." Asked if he burned the insignia onto the girl's leg, Banks responded quickly. "No," he said. "I didn't do anything." John Calipari, reached Friday in Teaneck, N.J., at the adidas ABCD Camp, said he had not spoken with Banks and did not know all the details of the alleged incident. Regardless, the Tiger coach indicated he would welcome Banks's imminent arrival and was not discouraged that Bergen County Police said they believed Banks was connected to a gang following his February arrest that involved a car chase with authorities. Banks pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor and paid a $100 fine. "I had to speak at a youth camp up here, and I met one of his teammates," Calipari said. "He said, 'Coach, Sean's a good guy. You just have to get him out of here.' " "This is a case where we're going to help this kid more than he's going to help us." Dr. Chris Carr, a renowned sports psychologist at Methodist Sports Medicine Center in Indianapolis, said Friday that he was unfamiliar with Banks's situation. Even so, Carr offered insight in general terms while explaining how past actions aren't necessarily indicative of the future when dealing with children from unstable backgrounds. "Can an 18-year-old kid come out of a bad situation where in the past he may have made bad behavioral decisions and be successful? Yes," Carr said. "But there's an asterisk with that, and it really depends on the type of support system that the kid is coming into. "The challenge that you have, particularly with kids who have rough backgrounds, is really having them see that it's a positive change for them because what they've done is all they've known. A person from white, middle-class America might sit outside and say, 'Oooh. That's bad behavior.' But for that kid coming out of the streets, that's normal behavior. That's all they know. "What it comes down to is if an individual desires to make a change and they have the appropriate support system, they can make that change," Carr said. "You don't have to look very far to find individuals who have come out of difficult upbringings and had success." - Gary Parrish: 529-2365 |
| 07/12/03 | Younger Gasol To Walk On With Tigers (Commercial Appeal) | |
| By Gary Parrish parrish@gomemphis.com July 12, 2003 The University of Memphis basketball staff will meet with Lausanne coach Jason Peters early next week. As long as everything goes well and there are no transcript problems, Marc Gasol, the brother of Grizzlies star Pau Gasol, will walk on and be a Tiger in the 2003-04 season. ''We're going to meet when I get back into town,'' Peters said Friday while vacationing. ''But from what I understand, Marc is coming back.'' A 7-foot center with good skills, Gasol, if he gets into better shape, could offer immediate help to a Tiger frontcourt that has been decimated by the departures of Chris Massie and Earl Barron and the high school-to-NBA jump of recruit Kendrick Perkins. As of now, the plan is for Gasol not to take a redshirt season and be in uniform come November to back up junior Duane Erwin and senior Modibo Diarra in the paint. Attempts to reach Gasol in his native country of Spain for comment were unsuccessful. He's overseas for the summer after graduating from Lausanne, where as a senior he averaged 26 points and 13 rebounds and was named Tennessee's Division 2 Mr. Basketball. Gasol and his family first came to Memphis before Marc's junior season at Lausanne, after the Grizzlies took Pau with the third selection in the 2001 NBA Draft. |
| 07/12/03 | Hamilton Standout Commits To U of M (Commercial Appeal) | |
| By Gary Parrish parrish@gomemphis.com July 12, 2003 Shawne Williams said he might commit as soon as he got back home. Turns out he wasn't kidding. Just hours after returning from the Nike All-America Camp in Indianapolis, Williams, a Hamilton High standout, pledged his allegiance to the University of Memphis on Friday and ended a recruiting saga that has been strange, if nothing else. "Tell the Memphis fans that I'm coming for sure,'' said Williams, who also considered Cincinnati and Tennessee. "I'm loyal. I'm not going anywhere." Ranked as the 13th-best rising senior in the nation by Rivals.com, Williams, a 6-9 wing who has already scored a solid 19 on his ACT, becomes the third Tiger commitment for the Class of 2004. He joins Darius Washington, a 6-0 combo guard from Florida, and Robert Dozier, a 6-8 small forward from Georgia, to give John Calipari one of the best early groups in the country. Williams's commitment comes less than a month after he - based on the advice of Hamilton coach Ted Anderson - told The Commercial Appeal that he would not play at Memphis because he needed to "get out of town." But at the Nike Camp on Wednesday night, the area's top prospect retracted that and said he would probably commit to the Tigers "really soon." Less than 48 hours later, Williams had done so while adding, "Now everybody can stop bothering me." On Friday morning, Calipari spoke with Anderson to make sure everybody was OK with the decision. When the Tiger coach was assured of as much, he became a man that already has most of his next recruiting class filled, assuming Washington, Dozier and Williams sign national letters of intent with the U of M in November. "Cal called me just to make sure that I was all right with Shawne saying that he wanted to go to Memphis, and I told him that I was fine with it," Anderson said. "I support him." At the Nike Camp, which concluded Thursday, Williams only increased his status as an elite prospect and had PrepStars.com deciding that he "looks like a future pro." The silky, smooth Best of the Preps finalist who averaged 18 points and eight rebounds per game as a junior spent the latter days of the camp running the point and showed the ability to play four different positions. "I love Shawne," said Andre Whitehead, who covers recruiting in the state of Tennessee for HoopScoop. "I like the way he flies. He shoots it pretty well. He's athletic as can be. He's strong going to the basket. He finishes well. He dunks everything. And he's long. "Shawne Williams is really impressive." - Gary Parrish: 529-2365 |
| 07/11/03 | Shawne Williams Commits To Tigers (Commercial Appeal) | |
| By Gary Parrish parrish@gomemphis.com July 11, 2003 Shawne Williams said he might commit as soon as he got back home. Boy, he wasn’t kidding. Just hours after returning from the Nike All-America Camp in Indianapolis, Williams pledged his allegiance to the University of Memphis and indicated he will sign a National Letter of Intent with the school in November. "Tell the Memphis fans that I’m coming for sure,’’ Williams said Friday afternoon. "I’m loyal. I’m not going anywhere.’’ Ranked as the 13th-best rising senior in the nation by Rivals.com, Williams, a 6-9 wing at Hamilton High, becomes the third Tiger commitment. He joins Darius Washington, a combo guard from Florida, and Robert Dozier, a small forward from Georgia, to give John Calipari one of the best early classes in the country. |
| 07/11/03 | Army Football Is Leaving C-USA After 2004 Season (Commercial Appeal) | |
| By The Associated Press July 11, 2003 WEST POINT, N.Y. - Army's football team will leave Conference USA after the 2004 season to play as an independent again. The U.S. Military Academy is making the move, in part, to have more scheduling flexibility, superintendent Lt. Gen. William Lennox Jr. said Thursday. "We are committed to building a competitive football program at the highest level," Lennox said. Army joined the conference as its sole football-only member in 1998 after having been an independent since the sport began at the academy in 1890. The departure will leave Conference USA with 10 football schools. "We are not surprised," commissioner Britton Banowsky said. "We have the greatest respect for the academy, its leadership, and we know this decision was not an easy one for them." Conference officials voted Wednesday to enforce a bylaw preventing member schools from leaving before June 30, 2005. They said the move would not keep a school from leaving but shows the league is prepared to fight to maintain its membership. Army athletic director Rick Greenspan said the academy must pay a $400,000 penalty to leave the conference after two more seasons. Lennox said the decision was based on information provided by a panel commissioned to evaluate the football program and propose ways to improve it. That panel included Dallas Cowboys coach Bill Parcells, who was an assistant coach at Army in the late 1960s, and former Nebraska coach Tom Osborne. "In no way should today's announcement be construed as a signal to downgrade the football program," Greenspan said. "Our goals remain strongly fixed to go in the opposite direction. We're looking to be as successful as we can. And absolutely, unequivocally, in no way will we not be a Division 1-A program." Army football has been mired in mediocrity since the Black Knights began playing in Conference USA. Army, whose other athletic teams compete in the Patriot League, is 7-27 in five seasons in Conference USA. The Black Knights finished 1-11 in 2002 - losing 58-12 to Navy in the season finale - and are 5-29 in three years under coach Todd Berry. Army's scheduling options have been limited. With eight conference games and the inter-service games against Navy and Air Force, the Black Knights have only one or two other games to schedule. Because of conference obligations, this year Army has just one home game at Michie Stadium in October, traditionally the peak month for attendance when the fall foliage is in its fullest splendor. Before joining the conference, Army regularly scheduled at least two Division 1-AA teams each season and sometimes as many as four because of the rigorous demands of cadet life. Greenspan said future schedules likely would feature Division 1-AA teams Army used to play regularly, such as Harvard, Yale and Colgate, as well as Division 1-A Boston College. |
| 07/11/03 | Tigers Set Fund-Raising Record -- $4.57 Million, Goal Within Sight (Commercial Appeal) | |
| By Phil Stukenborg stukenborg@gomemphis.com July 11, 2003 The University of Memphis Tiger Clubs, the athletic department's fund-raising arm, surpassed $4.5 million in cash donations for the fiscal year that ended June 30, inching closer to what once was considered an unattainable goal of $5 million. Tigers athletic director R.C. Johnson said Thursday that a record $4.57 million was raised, topping last year's $4.47 million total. It represented the fifth straight year donations increased and marked the second straight year the total surpassed $4.4 million. "We are getting closer to that $5 million mark that we set years ago," Johnson said. "The only negative is we didn't hit our goal (of $4.675 million). But, once again, we set a record, and now we are legitimate contenders to get to $5 million." Money raised by Tiger Clubs goes into the general athletic fund and is used to pay for scholarships and the day-to-day operation of the department. The $4.57 million, of which $4.4 million was unrestricted cash donations, will help offset an expected operating deficit by the athletic department. The program has not finished in the black since 1992 and operated at a $900,000 deficit two years ago, a shortfall covered by the university. While the university will provide up to $1 million to cover losses incurred during the fiscal year that ended June 30, it will not provide a subsidy for fiscal year 2004. Budget cutbacks by the university eliminated what would have been at least a $500,000 subsidy for 2004. But, if contributions reach $5 million annually, and the football program can boost its average attendance from about 25,000 to 35,000, Johnson said the department can be self-supporting. "If we ever get this football program going, we'll really have some fun around here," Johnson said. The Tigers have not had a winning football season since 1994 and have not been to a bowl game since 1971. Johnson said he was particularly encouraged by the ability to raise a record amount during a poor economic environment. "This is not the greatest time to be fund-raising," Johnson said. "But we stepped up the pace, and the people responded. I'm proud of what the Tiger Clubs staff has done, and I'm grateful of the support from the community." Associate athletic director Kevin Grothe, who oversees the department's fund-raising efforts, said the goal for fiscal year 2004 will be $4.75 million. "To grow, we need to look outside of Memphis," Grothe said. "We are adding a representative from Jackson, Tenn., to our Tiger Clubs board of directors later this month." Johnson said he'd like to make significant inroads into Nashville and St. Louis before concentrating on Dallas, Chicago and Atlanta. "We still get very few people that don't help us if we ask," Johnson said. "We just have to continue to be aggressive." - Phil Stukenborg: 529-2543 |
| 07/11/03 | Tiger Recruit From Mali Sees Basketball As Future (Commercial Appeal) | |
| By Gary Parrish parrish@gomemphis.com July 11, 2003 INDIANAPOLIS - Mohamed Tangara came to this country almost three years ago to play basketball in hopes that one day he could provide for his family back home in Mali. There's really no other way to put it. This 6-9 center who is being heavily recruited by the University of Memphis is grabbing rebounds and swatting shots for one reason and one reason alone. "I have to be the one to take care of my family, especially my mom because I am the first child of my mom," Tangara, the middle of 11 children, said in broken English that is improving every day. "I have to do it." Asked if that seems like a lot of pressure for a kid going into just his senior year of high school, Tangara didn't hesitate. "Yes," he said. "It really is." Tangara is a long, lean player who in a lot of ways is like current Tigers Modibo Diarra and Almamy Thiero - though many assume the latest Mali sensation has more upside than his predecessors. He's smart, cordial and thinks more long-term than short-term while never losing focus on his original reason for coming to the United States. That's why when Tangara mentions the NBA, he only does so as an option to someday help better his family. He doesn't care about Escalades or gold chains. He just wants to provide. "His family doesn't have much," said Jeff Goodman, who covers recruiting for PrepStars.com. "Linzy (Davis), his guardian (and the coach of the Georgia Elite AAU program), told me that every time he gives Mohamed $20 he sends it back home. That's what this kid is like. "He's a terrific character kid." The U of M's track record with Malians like Diarra and Thiero is what gives the Tigers an advantage in this recruiting war that Tangara said includes Memphis, Louisville, UCLA, Arizona, Duke, Kentucky and Miami. Thiero has a relationship with Tangara that dates to their days in Africa. When you combine that with the fact that Tangara plays AAU ball with U of M commitment Robert Dozier, it's no surprise when Tangara claims the U of M as his current school of choice. "Memphis is at the top of my list," said Tangara, whom PrepStars.com ranks as the 47th-best prospect in the Class of 2004. "I see how Memphis has taken care of Almamy and Dibo and how they do well in school. That's why Memphis is my leader." Playing this summer with Georgia Elite, Tangara has built a reputation as someone who is tenacious on the court. He's active and full of energy. And though he wasn't overwhelming at the Nike All-America Camp - Daniel Gibson, a 6-2 point guard who has committed to Texas, dunked over him in what may have been the jam of the week - Tangara continued to show flashes often enough to keep observers intrigued by his potential. "Mohamed's worked hard this week, and he really wants to learn how to play," said John Livsey, who has helped coach Tangara at Nike. "He loves to play. And it shows. "Mohamed would be good for Memphis," Livsey concluded. "He would be good anywhere." - Gary Parrish: 529-2365 |
| 07/10/03 | Don't Forget the Tiger Football Caravan Will be in Memphis Again Saturday | |
| Mark Your Calendars For The 2003 Tiger Football Caravan (GoTigersGo.com)The Memphis Tigers' are getting ready for an exciting and relentless football season and we want you be apart of it by joining us during the 2003 Tiger Football Caravan. The caravan will take place at area Kroger stores from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, July 26. Come out and meet the football coaches and players, get autographs and information on this year's upcoming football season and season tickets. We will be available at the following locations: SATURDAY, JULY 26 - 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Store 416 - 2130 Exeter Rd., Germantown Store 410 - 676 Germantown Rd., Cordova Store 430 - 540 So. Mendenhall @ Sanderlin Store 188 - 3444 Plaza (Poplar Plaza) Come out and support your Memphis Tigers and get ready to be RELENTLESS! For additional information, please contact 678-4324. |
| 07/10/03 | Rebuilding Job -- Means Is Working Way Back To Field (Commercial Appeal) | |
| By Phil Stukenborg stukenborg@gomemphis.com July 10, 2003 On a University of Memphis football practice field - on a typically warm, July Mid-South morning - one finds Albert Means running 110-yard sprints, working to reshape his body and rebuild his promising career. The background accompaniment to this daily midsummer routine is the clamor of a construction crew laboring intensely to rebuild the adjacent indoor turf room that was destroyed by fire last fall. The analogy is difficult to dismiss. Means and the turf room, it appears, are racing toward the same deadline. The U of M football season opener is seven weeks away. Though they are making progress, neither Means nor the practice facility is a finished product. Means, the former prep All-American from Trezevant, has completed one phase of his comeback in successful fashion. An academic casualty last year, he missed the 2002 season and spring practice to concentrate on academics. The result: He regained his eligibility and made the honor roll in the spring with a 3.06 grade-point average. "I just worked hard and put my mind to it because this is what I want to do . . . play football," Means said. "I just refused to give up." Refusing to succumb to adversity has been somewhat of a motto for Means. He left the University of Alabama after the 2000 season when reports surfaced that his services had been sold, without his knowledge, to the Crimson Tide by his high school coach, Lynn Lang. The scandal resulted in Alabama getting hit with a two-year bowl ban and Lang pleading guilty to a federal racketeering charge. Means, a 350-pound defensive tackle, transferred to Memphis and played for the Tigers in 2001. The NCAA allowed Means to play immediately, instead of sitting out the year of his transfer, because of the unique nature of his case. But after playing 11 games for the Tigers and finishing with 51 tackles, Means had to shut down because of his academic shortcomings. It was a difficult sentence for Means, who hadn't been out of uniform during the fall since the eighth grade. "It was real hard, real hard," he said. "It was especially hard missing the team and missing out on all the activities and practices." He said he wanted to attend practices and show his support last year, but said "my mind was so messed up, I felt like I had let a lot of people down, including myself and my team." But he persevered because of the strength he drew from his faith, family, friends, teammates, coaches. Tiger coach Tommy West said he was impressed by Means's ability to tackle something as challenging as a shifty, 220-pound fullback. "I'm proud of Albert because he has done this on his own," West said. "When he (failed to qualify academically) we talked about how he has to learn to help himself and that others aren't going to help him. "I'm proud of him. He's been through a lot, but he's making it work for him. And this has not been an easy deal. It's taken a lot of hard work. Now we look forward to getting him into condition where he can play so he can help us win this year." Means's wife, Lavitta, also has served as an inspiration. The two were married last July 27. "We've been together for a while," Means said. "We grew up together. She's been behind me 100 percent." With his academic status in good standing, Means's next goal is to get in playing shape by the Aug. 30 season opener against Tennessee Tech at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium. "I need to get my speed back up and get my movement back and get more focused," said Means, who'd like to eventually reach a playing weight of 320 to 325 pounds. If Means can return in shape, he'll boost a defensive line that returns starters Eric Taylor and Kenyun Glover. But he'll have to adjust not only to a return to the practice field, but to a new defensive coordinator. Former Mississippi State defensive coordinator Joe Lee Dunn was hired after last season, but Means didn't participate in spring practice, missing an opportunity to learn Dunn's scheme and acclimate himself to a high-energy Dunn practice. "There's not a whole lot I can say about him because I haven't seen him on a practice field," Dunn said. "But I'm hoping he's a viable candidate for playing time. That would help us." Means met Dunn shortly after the defensive coordinator was hired. "I like his defense," Means said. "He likes to attack, he's aggressive, he likes to work. "That's what every football team needs." Means began his summer workouts June 9 and has been training daily at the U of M's Murphy Athletic Center on the south campus. Because of other commitments, including attending the second session of summer school, Means often gets to the complex shortly after 7 in the morning, before his other teammates arrive. He runs with Vic Cummins, 24, a graduate assistant strength and conditioning coach, before joining his teammates to lift. "You can see how happy the team is that he's working so hard and that he's back into it," Cummins said. "The guys really respond well when he's around. They're happy to have him back." And Means is elated to be back in an environment that seems like home. "He is coming in here with a great attitude," said Tiger strength and conditioning coach Mike Stark. "And he's a lot more mature. He's approaching everything with a better mentality. I just think he's doing a really good job." Cummins said Means will work out twice daily next week in an attempt to "get in a little extra work as the summer wears on." The Tigers open preseason workouts Aug. 5. "Fans have been asking me how I'm doing and saying they're glad to hear that I'm back," Means said. "I tell them I'm glad to be back. It's a great feeling." - Phil Stukenborg: 529-2543 |
| 07/10/03 | C-USA To Stay Intact -- No Defections Until 2005-06 (Commercial Appeal) | |
| By Phil Stukenborg stukenborg@gomemphis.com July 10, 2003 Despite reports of its league losing members as a result of recent defections of Miami and Virginia Tech from the Big East, Conference USA will remain unchanged... at least through the 2004-05 season. The league's presidents and chancellors reaffirmed a C-USA bylaw Wednesday that prohibits members from withdrawing before June 30, 2005. The reaffirmation, which came about during a weekly conference call, apparently was directed at the University of Louisville, which reportedly is the leading candidate to join the recently raided Big East from C-USA. Big East football powers Miami and Virginia Tech announced last month they will join the ACC beginning with the 2004-05 season. Without Miami and Virginia Tech, the Big East will field only six football teams - Syracuse, Pittsburgh, Rutgers, Boston College, West Virginia and Temple - in 2004. Louisville had been mentioned as a possible replacement as early as the 2004-05 season. By 2005, conferences must have eight football-playing members to be recognized as a league by the NCAA. C-USA commissioner Britton Banowsky said Wednesday he was "comfortable knowing that any future changes will not be effective prior to the 2005-06 academic year." "We have a policy or a bylaw that requires a calendar year notice (before exiting), and we're in a position now where no one can do that for the 2004-05 season,'' Banowsky said. ''So the earliest we could have that change would be the '05-06 season," the commissioner said. C-USA, however, could lose Army after the 2004 season. Army athletic director Rick Greenspan told the Tampa Tribune earlier this week that Army will decide by the end of the month whether to remain in C-USA, which the Cadets joined in 1998 as a football-only member. Army wants to expand its scheduling options, which are limited inside a conference. Banowsky downplayed a New York Times story Wednesday that reported C-USA and the Big East were discussing a possible merger of selected football-playing schools in the leagues. The Times also reported the possible formation of a basketball league with Big East and C-USA schools that don't field football teams. "We spent the vast majority of our time discussing process as opposed to speculating about particular outcomes," Banowsky said. As for the 2005-06 timetable, he said it's one shared by "virtually all the other conferences that might be affected." "I've had ongoing conversations with (Big East commissioner) Mike Tranghese, who has been public on the issue. We need to take some time to do this carefully. I've also had conversations with Linda Bruno of the Atlantic 10, Craig Thompson of the Mountain West and Karl Benson of the Western Athletic Conference. There's been a high level of support among us for the '05-06 implementation time frame for any changes that might come," Banowsky said. University of Memphis athletic director R.C. Johnson welcomed the time frame announced by the C-USA board of directors. "Everyone is trying to get the train slowed down a little and let the dust settle," Johnson said. "We need to take a look at the landscape and go from there." Banowsky also is a proponent of a more deliberate pace. "What you don't want to do is compromise the quality of the decision making by feeling a sense of pressure," he said. "I think people were feeling a great sense of pressure. It's very important for our conference to do this the right way." - Phil Stukenborg: 529-2543 |
| 07/10/03 | Tiger Soccer Loses Leading Scorer, Hometown Standout In Same Week (Daily Helmsman) | |
| By Daniel Ford July 10, 2003 Tiger soccer head coach Richie Grant discovered last week that he would be without Daniel Ronan and Matt Bryant when Memphis begins play next season. Grant said Ronan, a native of Blanchardstown, Ireland, left the team due to homesickness. Ronan is leaving after leading the Tigers in points, (25), goals (11) and game-winning goals (3). Ronan was also a member of the Conference USA All-Freshman team and was the first option of the high-octane Memphis offense that ranked eighth in the nation in scoring last season. "After being here for a year, the homesickness was too much for Daniel to overcome," Grant said. Bryant was a local product out of Ridgeway High School and was considered by Grant as one of the most multi-talented and resourceful players on the squad. Bryant is leaving due to personal reasons. After two seasons at The University of Memphis, Bryant would have been one of the corner stones of this year's team. In his first year, Bryant led all freshmen in scoring , with 17 points coming on six goals and assists, with five. Bryant displayed his versatility last season as he rotated between forward, midfielder and defender during the season. "We will miss Matt and wish him the best," Grant said. With the beginning of the season a couple of months away the Tigers, who finished two games out of qualifying for the Conference Tournament last year, are without an offensive leader and one of their craftiest athletes. The loss of Ronan, a forward, will be the hardest to compensate for, but Grant hopes incoming freshman Brad Whitsitt will be able to contribute at the forward position. Whitsitt is from Christian Brothers High School and will join other incoming freshmen -- midfielder Harrison Kiser and goalkeeper Tyler Trew -- when Memphis kicks off its 2003 season against UNC-Wilmington in the 2003 Memphis-Diadora Tournament at the Mike Rose Soccer Complex. |
| 07/10/03 | Home Where His Heart Is (Commercial Appeal) | |
| By Gary Parrish parrish@gomemphis.com July 10, 2003 INDIANAPOLIS - To call it a change of heart would be inaccurate because his heart never wavered one bit. Shawne Williams's first love has always been the University of Memphis. But based on the advice of others - namely his high school coach, Ted Anderson - the Hamilton star had recently said that he planned to play college basketball somewhere other than his hometown. Now, Williams is retracting that statement. In fact, the dynamic wing who has wowed onlookers this week at the Nike All-America Camp told The Commercial Appeal on Wednesday that he plans to be a Tiger and could publicly commit within days. "I've just got to go to Memphis," said Williams. "That's what I've been wanting to do since I was little. Since Larry (Finch) was there I've been wanting to play in front of the home crowd because I don't feel like anybody can support me like my hometown. "It's my decision," Williams added. "I thought I should get out of town. But then I started thinking, 'Why should I leave?' I don't want to leave. I don't have a reason to leave." That last statement is one Anderson disagrees with whole-heartily, so much so that he's strongly advised his top talent to mark Memphis off his list. Anderson said previously that because Williams wasn't living with either of his parents he was essentially "not in the best situation" and needed "to get out of town like no other (he's) ever had." Williams, on Wednesday, said he respected his coach's thoughts. But the recent Best of the Preps Finalist claimed his situation isn't "that bad" and that he'd be fine at Memphis. "Coach wants me to go to Arkansas, but he's not going to be the one up there," Williams said. "I'm going to be the one up there going to school. And I might not like it there. So I don't want to go there." Reached by phone Wednesday night back in Memphis, Anderson insisted he won't stand in Williams' way. "If Shawne emphatically wants to go to Memphis then I am OK with it," Anderson said. "Ultimately, it's his decision. And if that's what he wants to do, then he will go there with my blessing. I just hope it works out." As for when a commitment might happen, Williams said it could be as soon as he gets back home on Friday. He added that he's been wanting to inform Memphis coach John Calipari of his new plans but because of NCAA regulations barring any communication hasn't been able to do so. "I've been trying to talk to him and tell him but we can't talk right now," Williams said. "I guess he'll just see it in the paper." A 6-9 rising senior, Rivals.com ranks Williams as the No. 1 small forward prospect in the nation. If anything, he has improved his standing this week. Playing on the same team as Marquise Gray, a Michigan State commitment, Williams has buried threes and slashed to the rim and dunked enough times to turn - in addition to Calipari - Buzz Peterson of Tennessee and Bob Huggins of Cincinnati into regulars at his games. Those, by the way, are the only two schools Williams said he is still even remotely considering. Even so, Williams made it clear it would take something close to a miracle for the Vols or Bearcats to convince him Memphis isn't the place to be. "Shawne's helped himself tremendously up here," said Andre Whitehead, who covers recruiting within the state of Tennessee for HoopScoop.. "We have him as one of the top 10 players at the camp." - Gary Parrish: 529-2365 |
| 07/10/03 | Calipari Lands Top Recruit Dozier To Play Next Season (Daily Helmsman) | |
| From our press services July 10, 2003 Robert Dozier announced Tuesday that he would attend Memphis and play for coach John Calipari after next season. Dozier is a 6-foot-8, 191-pound forward for Lithonia High School in Georgia. He averaged 9.3 points, 5.0 rebounds and 3.0 assists last season as he burst onto the recruiting scene quickly. Linzy Davis, who coaches the Team Georgia Elite AAU team, said Dozier first drew attention when he played with the U.S. national team in France. Dozier said he chose Memphis over Florida State, Georgia, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Clemson because he wanted to play for Calipari. "It's a perfect situation for me," Dozier said while in Indianapolis for the Nike All-American Camp. "It's close to home, I like the scene, I like it there and I like coach Calipari." |
| 07/09/03 | Lady Tigers Soccer Recruiting Class Gives Program Bright Future (GoTigersGo.com) | |
| MEMPHIS, Tenn. - After a successful 2002 season in wh |