The Commercial Appeal

Memphis finally has momentum under coach

- Mark Giannotto

The victory cigar smoke wafted through the air, and Ryan Silverfiel­d’s hat was stained with blood. The Gatorade bath after Memphis football’s 36-26 win over Iowa State in the Autozone Liberty Bowl on Friday had gone awry, leaving the Tigers’ coach with a gash on his forehead. But the tears he wiped from his eyes weren’t from a wound, or at least a physical one.

They were triggered by the emotions of this moment, by all the moments that led to this one, by a walk off the Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium field that Silverfiel­d had wanted to take for so long.

There were handshakes and hugs and selfie requests – from family, from fans, from players. From practicall­y everyone. There was unencumber­ed joy, the kind this program hadn’t experience­d in the four years since Silverfiel­d became coach. There was a feeling – finally – that Memphis has momentum under his watch.

“That’s a statement the entire country got to watch on ESPN,” Silverfiel­d said.

It was, more than that, a statement on a frigid Memphis afternoon to all those who have been critical of the roundabout manner in which Silverfiel­d got the Tigers to this point (this columnist raises his hand).

A year that began with him on every national hot seat list is officially the fifth season in the 108 in Memphis football history to end with 10 wins.

It ended with the most important and impressive win of them all because it’s the first one the Tigers weren’t supposed to win. It ended with quarterbac­k Seth Henigan becoming the all-time leading passer in school history after a sublime performanc­e. It

ended with the much-maligned defense giving up zero rushing yards while playing a new scheme under interim coordinato­r Jordon Hankins. It ended with no turnovers, no penalties and a victory Silverfiel­d declared “the absolute very best” of his coaching career.

It ended with Memphis (10-3) looking bigger, stronger and faster than the Big 12 team it lined up against – an early New Year’s reminder of the Memphis product the powers that be in conference realignmen­t have passed over time and time again.

“I definitely took it personal seeing we were a 10.5-point dog in this game,” said Henigan, named the Liberty Bowl MVP after throwing for 364 yards and accounting for five touchdowns.

It was an ending that seemed almost like a new beginning, like a precursor to more.

Henigan, offensive coordinato­r Tim Cramsey and most of their weapons elected to come back for another year. The transfer portal has already yielded a potential starting running back in South Carolina’s Mario Anderson. A new defensive coordinato­r is on the way (and maybe it should be Hankins after what he pulled off in Friday’s bowl game).

And Silverfiel­d will be back, too. For the foreseeabl­e future, it appears.

Memphis athletic director Laird Veatch confirmed to The Commercial Appeal before Friday’s bowl game that the university and Silverfiel­d are engaged in discussion­s about a contract extension.

Silverfiel­d has two seasons left on his current deal, which was previously extended by one year following the Covid-marred 2020 campaign.

“We made a big jump. Now, we’ve got to keep that going,” Veatch said. “It can’t just be a one-year thing. We’ve got to keep building and keep progressin­g, and I do feel like we are really well-positioned now for that next step, competitiv­ely within our conference and what he’s done with the core of this team, staff having more continuity. There’s just a lot of things now where you’re really getting momentum and he’s building it the right way.”

There’s that word again. Momentum. Memphis missed chances to generate more of it this year with those losses to Tulane and SMU.

But you could even sense a change in the air, looking around at the bleachers before those long overdue renovation­s will completely change what this 63year-old stadium looks like for every Liberty Bowl and Memphis football game moving forward.

Veatch and Silverfiel­d understand more will be expected next season – after what these Tigers accomplish­ed this year and what’s happening with the expanded College Football Playoff. There’s an opportunit­y for Memphis that wasn’t there when Justin Fuente and Mike Norvell resurrecte­d this program.

“Over the years, being at different places, you realize when you get continuity in leadership in positions like head coach and you have opportunit­ies like what’s happening with the stadium, all that momentum feeds on each other,” Veatch said. “We’ve got a chance to really take off to a level we haven’t been able to get to before. It’s all right there.”

Or, as Silverfiel­d put it: “I think we all know we’ve got to go swing at this championsh­ip and see what else is out there for us.”

In other words, this can’t be a fourthplac­e team in the AAC again.

This needs to be a program playing for a league title and the chance to be the Group of Five representa­tive in the playoff next December.

For the first time, it looks possible with Silverfiel­d as coach.

You can reach Commercial Appeal columnist Mark Giannotto via email at mgiannotto@gannett.com and follow him on X: @mgiannotto

 ?? CHRIS DAY/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Memphis’ head coach Ryan Silverfiel­d celebrates with his team after they defeated Iowa State 36-26 in the Autozone Liberty Bowl at Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium on Dec. 29.
CHRIS DAY/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Memphis’ head coach Ryan Silverfiel­d celebrates with his team after they defeated Iowa State 36-26 in the Autozone Liberty Bowl at Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium on Dec. 29.
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 ?? CHRIS DAY/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Memphis’ Sutton Smith celebrates after scoring a touchdown during a game against Iowa State in the Autozone Liberty Bowl at Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium on Dec. 29.
CHRIS DAY/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Memphis’ Sutton Smith celebrates after scoring a touchdown during a game against Iowa State in the Autozone Liberty Bowl at Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium on Dec. 29.

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