Will a Jaren Jackson Jr. extension get done?
Jaren Jackson Jr. could play this season without an extension in place to prove he is worth a max deal.
Columnist
Chris Herrington has covered the Memphis Grizzlies, in one way or another, since the franchise’s second season in Memphis, while also writing about music, movies, food and civic life.
There are 1781 articles by Chris Herrington :
Jaren Jackson Jr. could play this season without an extension in place to prove he is worth a max deal.
The Grizzlies will host the Chicago Bulls on MLK Day, one of seven nationally televised games for the franchise as the 2021-2022 NBA schedule was released.
The Grizzlies have added five new players in their past three trades. Which, if any, are likely to wear Beale Street blue this season?
It’s no longer Elvis Week, but they’re still rocking at Graceland. Meanwhile, there’s barbecue in the park and dining deals all over.
With the Mem Dim Sum food truck, Denny Law serves Chinese small plates, made fresh and cooked to order.
Centers Steven Adams and Jonas Valanciunas are different players. The former has long been known as a dirty-work guy. The latter is a buckets-and-boards machine. But I’m struck by the similarities.
Our schools: A two-front political battlefield our kids didn’t ask for and really don’t need right now. Education shouldn’t be conscription, especially in the service of others’ political ambitions.
With the Delta variant spiking local COVID rates, will tougher, more restrictive measures at venues and festivals become more common in Memphis?
This week in Memphis: Big concerts, throwback flicks, dining specials and the unbeatable combo of chicken and beer. Plus, it’s Elvis Week.
Red sauce? Green sauce? Cheese sauce? El Gallo Giro on Lamar Avenue says, why choose?
In an early evaluation of the conference, the Grizzlies still might be in a position to make the playoffs again.
Here is the scenario with Eric Bledsoe, and what about those two draft picks the Grizzlies got from the Bucks for Grayson Allen?
The Grizzlies are trading the guard to the reigning NBA champion Milwaukee Bucks for Sam Merrill and two draft picks.
At the Backlot Sandwich Shop, on South Front, the meats are done in-house and piled high, from clubs to Reubens to po’ boys and more.
This week in Memphis, a movie that’s become hard to see and artifacts of Memphis soul history never-before-seen are among our picks for reasons to leave the house.
Masks will be required at indoor festival screenings, with partial theater capacity for social distancing.
On Monday, free-agency negotiation period begins. The Grizzlies have other things to consider, such as sign-and-trades and other maneuvers.
Now that the 2021 NBA draft is over, it’s also time to see what others thought of the Grizzlies’ picks.
It was smoke-screen season, and when it came to draft-night prognostication, the smoke got in the eyes of even the high-profile specialists.
This week Lucero frontman Ben Nichols will play a solo acoustic birthday show and septuagenarian gospel artist Elizabeth King, flanked by some ace Memphis sidemen, will perform a live score to a pioneering work of Black cinema.
As NBA draft day arrives, the Grizzlies stand at No. 10. Do they stay or do they move again? And do they have an eye on a specific target?
While the Grizzlies’ pick at No. 10 has gotten the attention, they also have a decision to make in the NBA draft’s second round. Some possible candidates.
After making a splash with last fall’s BVOE, Off the Walls Arts returns with FIREBIRD, blending modern dance and sculpture at its unconventional South Memphis arts space.
The Grizzlies have already moved up to pick No. 10 in Thursday’s draft, but they seem to be aiming higher.
As Thursday’s NBA draft approaches, minor Grizzlies rumors and shifting mock drafts create ripples in an otherwise quiet day.