The Commercial Appeal

Memphis eager to end tourney drought

- Steve Megargee

Memphis has landed plenty of elite recruits yet still hasn’t earned an NCAA Tournament bid during Penny Hardaway’s coaching tenure.

Perhaps this is the year that changes. Memphis returns three of its top five scorers from a team that won the NIT last season and also brings in the nation’s No. 1 recruiting class according to composite rankings of sites compiled by 247Sports. The 12th-ranked Tigers are hoping that combinatio­n adds up to their first NCAA Tournament appearance since 2014.

“No matter what anyone says, you’re only going to win big when you have really good players,” said Hardaway, who enters his fourth season at Memphis with a 63-32 record. “And to have the roster that we have now, we have really good players.”

Memphis heads our list of teams that have excellent shots at reaching the NCAA Tournament this season after failing to get there in 2021.

The Tigers’ six-man freshman class includes two top-five recruits in 6-foot-9 forward Emoni Bates (No. 4 in the 247Sports Composite) and 6-11 center Jalen Duren (No. 5).

This isn’t the first time Hardaway has brought in the nation’s No. 1 recruiting class.

Memphis also had a top-ranked class in 2019 that featured James Wiseman, who played just three games before leaving school to prepare for the start of his pro career. That team won 12 of its first 13 games but faded down the stretch and likely wouldn’t have earned an NCAA bid, even if the pandemic hadn’t halted the postseason. This year’s team seems more balanced.

The Tigers return Landers Nolley II, who earned first-team all-american Athletic Conference honors and was the most outstandin­g player in the NIT. Hardaway believes that postseason run helped, even if it didn’t come in the NCAA Tournament.

“The kids that come back, that came back from that experience, they know that they’re champions, first of all, and they know what they want now,” Hardaway said. “They want more.”

Hardaway also has added some star power to his coaching staff by hiring Hall of Fame coach Larry Brown and fourtime NBA All-star Rasheed Wallace.

There’s still a lingering infraction­s case hanging over Memphis’ program as a result of Wiseman’s recruitmen­t, but that might be the biggest issue that complicate­s the Tigers’ postseason hopes.

On the court, Memphis has more than enough talent to end its NCAA drought.

Plenty of usual NCAA Tournament regulars didn’t go dancing during the unusual pandemic-impacted 2020-21 season. Here’s a look at some other schools that figure to earn NCAA bids this season, even though they didn’t in 2021.

Arizona: This traditiona­l power hasn’t played in an NCAA Tournament since making a first-round exit in 2018. Arizona’s 17-9 record likely would have merited a bid last season, but school officials imposed a postseason ban related to a pending NCAA rules infraction­s case. Arizona could end that drought under first-year coach and former Gonzaga assistant Tommy Lloyd. The Wildcats will need big returning players Bennedict Mathurin, Azoulas Tubelis and Christian Koloko to take a step forward. Arizona also added transfers Oumar Ballo (formerly at Gonzaga), Pelle Larsson (Utah) and Justin Kier (Georgia).

No. 22 Auburn: After replacing the nucleus of the team that earned the school’s first Final Four bid in 2019, Auburn fell to 13-14 last season. Auburn already had self-imposed a postseason ban for the 2020-21 season, but the Tigers wouldn’t have earned a bid regardless. Auburn has since restocked its roster by adding transfers Walker Kessler (formerly at North Carolina), Wendell Green Jr. (Eastern Kentucky), K.D. Johnson (Georgia) and Zep Jasper (Charleston), plus a freshman class featuring Jabari Smith, the nation’s No. 6 prospect in his class according to the 247Sports Composite.

No. 9 Duke: Duke opted to end its season in the midst of the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament after a positive COVID-19 test. The Blue Devils were just 13-11 at the time and probably would have needed to win the ACC Tournament to extend their streak of 24 consecutiv­e NCAA Tournament appearance­s. The Blue Devils figure to start a new streak in coach Mike Krzyzewski’s final season before retirement. Duke’s freshman class has three top-25 recruits in Paolo Banchero (No. 2), A.J. Griffin (No. 17) and Trevor Keels (No. 22). Duke returns 7-footer Mark Williams and adds Marquette transfer Theo John.

Indiana: Indiana is coming off a 12-15 season and hasn’t reached an NCAA Tournament since making a regional semifinal in 2016. But there’s a new energy surroundin­g this squad with the arrival of first-year coach Mike Woodson, a former NBA player and coach who starred for the Hoosiers from 1976-80. Indiana also features an Associated Press preseason All-america selection in Trayce Jackson-davis, who averaged 19.1 points and nine rebounds last season.

No. 10 Kentucky: Kentucky went 9-16 last year to finish below .500 for the first time since 1988-89. An NCAA Tournament was held without Kentucky for the first time since 2013. But there’s reason to believe that was an aberration rather than the start of a trend. Kentucky brought in two top-15 recruits in Tyty Washington and Daimion Collins, but the Wildcats won’t be relying on freshmen quite as much as usual. Kentucky’s roster features several returning players, including sixth-year guard Davion Mintz, plus transfers Oscar Tshiebwe (West Virginia), CJ Fredrick (Iowa), Kellan Grady (Davidson) and Sahvir Wheeler (Georgia).

Xavier: Xavier made 12 NCAA Tournament appearance­s in a 13-year stretch from 2006-18, but hasn’t been back since. Xavier went 13-8 last season and returns its top seven scorers from that team. The Musketeers’ list of returners includes Paul Scruggs and Zach Freemantle, who were second-team all-big East selections last season.

 ?? JOE RONDONE/MEMPHIS COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Memphis guard Landers Nolley II shoots against UCF forward Jamille Reynolds during a game last season.
JOE RONDONE/MEMPHIS COMMERCIAL APPEAL Memphis guard Landers Nolley II shoots against UCF forward Jamille Reynolds during a game last season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States