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Hey NCAAs, make room for Slay's Volunteers

Ron Slay, owner of the freshest, fastest and funniest mouth in college basketball, calls it the Boom Boom Room.

That's the paint. Slay's personal playpen. The hangout for the captain and MVP of the All-First Amendment Team.

The Boom Boom Room is where the Tennessee power forward throws 'bows, woofs, pushes off, chatters, hip checks, barks, leg whips and -- freedom of speech, baby -- yaps some more. Then the Eddie Haskell of the SEC swears he's innocent whenever the striped shirts look his way.

Cover charge is steep.

"Whole lot goes on in the Boom Boom Room," says Slay. "It's a club. There's no security, no exit doors, and you don't get out until after the game's over.

"We just reopened the Boom Boom Room in the Florida game. Everyone had to re-up their membership fee for that one."

And business is booming in the Big Orange Boom Boom Room. Slay (loudly) and the Volunteers (quietly) have become one of the surprise stories of the season.

The Florida game Slay mentioned was a 66-59 upset victory last Saturday, Tennessee's sixth straight in SEC play. It continues the Vols' elevation from afterthought to the upper half of the league. Tennessee (15-7 overall, 7-4 in SEC play) has surged past collapsing Alabama and into prime position for the fifth NCAA Tournament bid from a league that is starting to look a tad overrated.

"After Kentucky, I think Tennessee's playing as well as anybody in the league," said South Carolina coach Dave Odom, whose Gamecocks host the Vols Wednesday.

Along Tennessee's return course to SEC relevance, Slay has established himself as the leading candidate for something other than Undisputed Mouth of the South. He's the current favorite to be SEC Player of the Year.

"I think I'd have to cast one or two votes for myself," Slay said with a laugh. "But I'd have to put our team up there. Without my teammates, I wouldn't be anywhere.

"I came in this year with a different focus. I dedicated myself to team ball, and the individual accomplishments will come with it."

This is the New Ron Slay. The Grownup Ron Slay. The Team Ball Ron Slay.

He still emotes like a drama queen on the court, but less of it detracts from his game.

He still fills reporters' notebooks, but now as much of the talk is about his team as about himself.

And he even means it, according to his coach.

"He's been very positive all season," said Buzz Peterson, looking good in his second season at Rocky Top. "His leadership skills have been unbelievable. He's really tuned in, very responsible in practice. He's a much more mature person."

The mature Slay leads the SEC in scoring at 21.8 points per game. He's fourth in rebounding at 7.4 per game. And he's clearly the man in the Vols' locker room.

Slay's maturation process began after he blew out his knee Jan. 19 last year against Syracuse and missed the rest of the season. That brush with basketball mortality changed his perspective, and watching teammate Marcus Haislip being drafted in the first half of the first round that summer spiked his motivation.

Slay attacked rehab, toned up and pitched a tent in the weight room. When he reported for fall practice, his bench press had increased 50 pounds to 355 and his squat exploded upward 200 pounds to 500.

All the better to do battle in the Boom Boom Room. But he's getting out of the club quite a bit this season and seeing the rest of the floor. Slay hit 38 three-pointers his first three seasons at Tennessee and has 28 so far this season. His range and deceptive handle have made him that much harder to defend.

"No question in my mind, he's the best offensive player in this league," Odom said. "He really can get his points. He's terrific."

Terrific as he's been all season, Slay's help is starting to rise up to meet him. Freshman point guard C.J. Watson leads the league in assists at 5.6 per game, and sophomore center Brandon Crump has become the team's No. 2 scorer (10.8 per game) and rebounder (5.9).

"He's playing with a lot more confidence from eight feet to 17 feet," Odom said of Crump. "A year ago if he caught the ball in the high post, you could take your high-post defender and drop him in Ron Slay's lap and let (Crump) take all the shots you want, then go get the rebound. Now you've got to get out there and guard Crump."

Which leaves more space in the Boom Boom Room for Slay. He's more mature, but he's hardly been tamed.

You can't stop his attitude. You can only hope to contain it.

"I'm still the same old Ron," said Slay.

Peterson will never get the headband off Slay's melon, though he's tried. He won't get him to stop shaking the opposing coach's hand before the game. He enlivened the Florida pregame by arriving at courtside by coming down through the student section, stoking up his fellow students.

"He loves the game," Peterson said. "Loves to play it, and he gets excited."

And if Ron Slay leads Tennessee back to the Big Dance, the party in the Boom Boom Room should be off the hook.

Will Work For Bid
Memphis' two years under John Calipari have resulted in two NIT bids -- not exactly what the school had in mind when it hired Cal, gave him an 82-percent raise to $1 million annually after one season and signed megastar Dajuan Wagner.

That might be why the Tigers appear to be playing with some urgency in recent weeks, racking up five straight wins against weak National Division competition before upsetting No. 3 Louisville on Wednesday. They've been riding the potent combination of strongman Chris Massie's inside work and a blistering perimeter shooting run by John Grice, Anthony Rice, Antonio Burks and Billy Richmond. Double Massie and the shooters go wild. Pressure the perimeter and the big man has room to operate inside.

That winning streak makes Memphis 17-5 and puts them in most projected NCAA Tournament fields as a No. 9 seed at this point, but it could definitely use an upset of Louisville in Freedom Hall on Wednesday to solidify its résumé.

"We didn't come here to win national titles in the NIT, though that was nice," Calipari said. "We are here to compete for national titles. Obviously, the first step is getting in the NCAA Tournament."

Beating Syracuse and Illinois early should get them there. But losses to South Florida, Saint Louis and Southern Mississippi (the last of those by 17 points) put them in this moderately precarious position. Now the Tigers played their first true marquee opponent since December, which might be why Calipari was in full spin mode Monday discussing the officiating for the game against the Cardinals.

"We have an NCAA Final Four crew on the game," Calipari said of Jim Burr, Curtis Shaw and Tim Higgins. "Which means you're not going to have the hand-checking, pushing, shoving, that kind of thing. ... There's not going to be shoving in the back on rebounds."

Gee, is it coincidence that Rick Pitino teams have been accused of such transgressions before? Think Calipari isn't trying to get into the heads of a few zebras and/or Cardinals?

"When people start talking about officials, you know you've got psychological problems," Pitino said.

He might've been joking, but he wasn't smiling.

Around the South

  • A pair of lower-major conferences (hey, they can't ALL be mid-majors) are clearing the decks for late-season showdowns that will decide regular-season champions and seeding for their crucial conference tournaments.

    In the Sun Belt, Louisiana-Lafayette has won eight straight games and Western Kentucky five straight. The two play Feb. 26 at Lafayette. The Hilltoppers have kept their season together despite year-ending injuries to 7-footer Chris Marcus and 6-9 Todor Pandov. The Ragin' Cajuns are rising with sophomore center Michael Southall, whose off-court troubles coming out of high school led to revoked scholarships from both Kentucky and Georgia Tech. Southall is averaging 13.8 points, 7.7 rebounds and 2.7 blocked shots while shooting 60 percent from the field, and he's led Lafayette in assists the past three games while facing increasing double teams.

    In the Ohio Valley, Austin Peay has won nine straight to keep pace with Morehead State -- including a win at Morehead. The two meet again in Clarksville, Tenn., March 1, in the regular season finale. Morehead is led by explosive junior Ricky Minard, best player you've never heard of, who is averaging 22 points, 6.3 rebounds, 4.1 assists and 2.2 steals per game. Austin Peay has gotten hot of late behind guard Anthony Davis, a sophomore from California who is averaging 20 points per game over his last four games, while getting to the foul line 31 times. Davis had one 20-point game in his first 15 games and four in his last eight.

  • W1E continues its 2003 backpedal into Bust Territory. Alabama (Worst No. 1 Ever) briefly revived by ripping Auburn at home Saturday, but then returned to recent form by being run out of Coleman Coliseum by Georgia on Tuesday. A late flurry made the score look better than it should've, after the Bulldogs obliterated the Crimson Tide on the backboards and forced them into another trademark scoring slump. Alabama is gruesome evidence that fractured chemistry cannot be repaired on a whim.

  • Meanwhile, the other hot team in the SEC behind Kentucky and Tennessee is Mississippi State, which plays Auburn on Wednesday for the right to go 7-4 and take the lead in the SEC West. That's a pretty solid comeback after an 0-3 league start for the Bulldogs, who still must make trips to Lexington and Knoxville.

  • Keith Bogans is Kentucky's candidate for SEC Player of the Year, but forward Erik Daniels could be running away with the league's Unsung Hero of the Year award -- if there were such a thing. Daniels has been the Wildcats' version of Luke Walton, a forward with exquisite passing skills and feel for the game who can beat a team any number of ways. His past five games, Daniels has averaged 13.4 points, six rebounds and 3.2 assists, while laying some tenacious D on deluxe scorers like Jarvis Hayes of Georgia and Ronald Dupree of LSU.

  • Daniels' commonwealth counterpart is Louisville power forward Ellis Myles. The junior has been heroic in some of the Cardinals' biggest wins this year, notably against Kentucky in December and last Saturday in a classic game at Marquette. Myles inhaled 14 rebounds, shut down Golden Eagles power forward Scott Merritt, took a pair of charges, dished out a couple of key assists and, a 58-percent foul shooter, hit two huge free throws with 30 seconds left. "He's the heart and soul of this team," said guard Bryant Northern of a guy who was petulant and fat under Denny Crum but a warrior under Pitino.

  • If it weren't for Reece Gaines' 24-foot dagger last Saturday, Marquette sophomore Travis Diener could have been the hero of a great game. Diener's third 3-pointer of the game tied it at 70 with 12 seconds left and looked like the final piece of a gutty performance (13 points, eight assists) for a guy severely bothered by back spasms leading up to the game. "He had an incredible effort in Saturday's game," Marquette coach Tom Crean said. "He's certainly not as healthy as he'd like to be, but you never saw it on his face."

  • Arkansas is having a plague season, but its freshman guard tandem of Eric Ferguson and Jonathan Modica has at least provided some hope for Razorbacks fans unaccustomed to moral victories. Ferguson and Modica are Arkansas' top two scorers, combining to average 23.9 points per game, while Modica is the team's No. 2 rebounder and Ferguson leads the Hogs in assists. "They're the backcourt of the future in the SEC," said Odom.

  • Obviously at wit's end, Florida coach Billy Donovan might finally pull guard Brett Nelson from the starting lineup. Donovan has given his senior chance after chance to pull out of a two-year shooting slump, but the revival never seems to last. "I'm going to give Brett a chance every single game to play," Donovan said. "Now, do we maybe take him out of the starting lineup, see if that helps get him going? Maybe. Do we change his role a little bit? Maybe." Donovan said he's personally worked on Nelson's shooting at night after practice in an effort to help the West Virginian he's known since his days coaching Marshall in the mid-1970s.

  • First-year DePaul coach Dave Leitao got Sam Hoskin in the best shape of his career in the off-season, and his confidence grew as his waist shrank. Now Leitao says of Hoskin, the guy leading the Blue Demons in a late charge at the NCAA tourney: "He believes he's supposed to be the guy that takes the shots, makes the shots and grabs the rebounds."

    Who's Hot
    Marque Perry and Saint Louis: The 11-12 Billikens have followed their leader to three straight wins, including a shocking upset of then-No. 2 Louisville last week and their first win in more than 20 years at Cincinnati on Tuesday night. In that streak Perry has averaged 38.3 minutes and 22.3 points per game, tirelessly running off screens and making one-on-one moves with the shot clock running down to score. If Perry isn't a first-team all-C-USA player, something is seriously wrong.

    Who's Not
    Cincinnati: The Bearcats have already has relinquished the regular-season league title they haves won or shared the previous seven seasons. Now, after fives losses in the past six games, are they also spitting the bit on an NCAA Tournament bid? Being dominated by a mediocre Charlotte team on the road was bad; losing at home to a sub-.500 Saint Louis is worse.

    Quotes To Note
    "Anytime we win a game, it's so what. Anytime we lose, it's absolutely tortuous."
    -- Memphis coach John Calipari, on life as the only respectable team in Conference USA's National Division and the expectations that go along with that status.

    Pat Forde of the Louisville Courier-Journal is a regular contributor to ESPN.com