The Commercial Appeal

UCF pulls away from Memphis

- Drew Hill Memphis Commercial Appeal USA TODAY NETWORK - TENNESSEE

ORLANDO, Fla. — Still in uniform, Memphis guard Jeremiah Martin stared down an empty hallway inside CFE Arena and had something he needed to admit.

“My head is all over the place right now,” Martin said.

In the moments after Memphis’ 7972 loss at UCF Saturday night, Martin was still frazzled. The Tigers’ senior leader nearly led another late charge to steal a game from the Knights through a series of clutch shots and assists.

Instead, Martin left feeling like he let a win slip away.

“It did get away,” Memphis coach Penny Hardaway declared. “For sure.”

In the final two minutes, Martin caught a lob pass on an inbounds play and flipped it up for a basket plus the foul. He followed that possession with a wrap-around pass to set up Raynere Thornton to cut the Knights’ lead to just one.

But this time, unlike Memphis’ 20point blowout of UCF last month, the experience­d Knight guards made the necessary plays to win the game.

And while that was enough to keep the Tigers well behind the Knights in contention for a first-round bye in the AAC Tournament, it’s clearly not enough to keep Martin from thinking any different about his team.

“I feel like I’m the best player in this league, I feel like we have the best coach in this league, and I feel like we’re the best team in this league, to be honest,” Martin said. with the (AAC) Tournament right around the corner,” Hardaway said.

Preseason AAC Player of the Year B.J. Taylor tied Martin with a game-high 25 points.

Penny Hardaway’s gameplan

Hardaway entered Saturday with a similar gameplan to the Tigers’ win over the Knights last month, and once again decided to go with a bigger starting lineup to match UCF’S size.

Instead of using his usual all-senior starting five of Martin, Kareem Brewton Jr., Kyvon Davenport, Raynere Thornton and Mike Parks Jr., Hardaway inserted 6-foot-10 junior Isaiah Maurice in place of Davenport.

The change initially made an impact on the defensive end, but a flurry of turnovers by the Memphis guards aided a 15-6 UCF run that put the Knights up by double digits in the first half.

Just as Memphis made its run to take back the lead, Martin was whistled for a technical foul for cursing at the UCF bench.

“It was a bonehead play by me and out of character,” Martin said. “I just feel like the (official) could have gave it both ways. He gave me a tech for someone that was on the bench, but the bench guy was saying something to me . ... I don’t understand how you can get a tech for someone on the bench and it’s not a double-tech.”

Antwann Jones’ brief return

After missing the Tigers’ last game with plantar fasciitis, Memphis freshman Antwann Jones returned to play five minutes.

Davenport, the Tigers’ second-leading scorer, left the game with an injury in the first half after landing hard after an alley-oop that was denied by 7-foot-6 Tacko Fall.

The senior returned to the Memphis bench a few minutes later and was able to finish the game.

 ??  ?? Memphis guard Jeremiah Martin (right) is fouled UCF center Tacko Fall (left) during action in Orlando on Saturday. MARK WEBER/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
Memphis guard Jeremiah Martin (right) is fouled UCF center Tacko Fall (left) during action in Orlando on Saturday. MARK WEBER/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

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