Tennessee freshman RB Eric Gray scored on a 16-yard TD run with just under four minutes remaining. It proved to be the winning score as UT held on to win 23-22 over Indiana in the TaxSlayer gator Bowl.
Gray went on to earn MVP honors for the bowl game.
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Shades of Gray – Eric Gray – carried Tennessee to an odds-defying victory over Indiana 23-22 Thursday night in the Taxslayer Gator Bowl in Jacksonville.
Gray, a freshman running back, sparked a late-game touchdown drive, recovered an on-side kick, then scored the game-winning touchdown with less than four minutes left as the Vols rallied from a 22-9 deficit in the fourth quarter.
FBS teams were 0-471 this season when trailing by 13 with less than five minutes left – until UT’s win.
UT was 0-for-14 on on-side kicks since 2011 – until Gray’s recovery.
And Jeremy Pruitt was 0-10 as Tennessee’s coach when trailing after three quarters – until Thursday night.
“Everybody in the country gave up on this team,’’ Pruitt said, “but the fans didn’t.’’
Tennessee (8-5) looked all but doomed after punting the ball with nine minutes left, down 13. The offense hadn’t scored a touchdown in over three quarters and looked stuck in neutral. Quarterback Jarrett Guarantano had played so poorly, he got pulled in the third quarter after throwing a pick six.
But seemingly out of nowhere, with 7:06 left and pinned back at its 18, the offense clicked.
“We were just saying, `We got to put on more steam. The game is not over,’’’ Gray said.
No, it wasn’t.
With Indiana playing what appeared to be a prevent defense, Guarantano hit Gray on two check downs for 12 and 22 yards. Then, he found Jauan Jennings for 23. A holding call on Indiana on third-and-10 gave UT a first down at the 6, and Quavaris Crouch scored three plays later on a 1-yard power run to make it 22-16 with 4:21 left.
Plenty of time to kick deep, get a stop and try to score.
But Pruitt had other ideas – like an on-side kick. Film study showed a gap in Indiana’s front line on kickoffs.
“Coach said it was there,’’ said kicker Paxton Brooks. “We saw it in the formation and got the look we wanted. I just had to put it in that gap.’’
He did so with precision. Gray waited until the ball barely traveled 10 yards and made the recovery against a stunned band of Hoosiers.
“Perfect play, perfect kick, perfect call,’’ said Marquez Callaway.
So why the on-side kick?
“We were down a score,’’ Pruitt said, succinctly, later adding that UT had practiced that onside kick 500-600 times.
From his 46, Guarantano, who didn’t complete a pass in the third quarter, hit Josh Palmer for 24 yards. A face mask moved the ball to the Indiana 16. Two plays later, Gray followed Trey Smith’s block into the end zone.
Brent Cimaglia added the game-winning point after with 3:51 left.
That was plenty of time for Indiana to respond and it did, completing a 39-yard pass. But Logan Justus, who missed an extra point earlier in the game, hooked a 52-yard field-goal attempt with 2:12 left.
UT was stopped a foot from gaining a first down and running out the clock. After a punt, Indiana took over at its 19 with 55 seconds left and non timeouts.
Indiana had completions of 24 and 12 yards to reach the UT 45. But quarterback Peyton Ramsey – named after UT’s Peyton Manning – misfired on four consecutive passes.
“It feels amazing,’’ said Gray, voted the game’s MVP. “You couldn’t dream of something like this.’’
Guarantano turned what could have been a nightmare into a dream-like ending.
“Crazy game,’’ he said. “We won, so I’m thankful for that.’’
The victory was the sixth in a row for UT and the seventh in eight games after stumbling out of the gate 1-4, including a loss to Georgia State, a 25-point underdog.
“We love each other man, that’s all there is,’’ Guarantano said of the turnaround. “Eight-and-five is a good year but it could have definitely been better. I’m just glad we finished on a high note.’’
So is Pruitt. He made the risky decision to bench Guarantano, then go back to the junior in the third quarter.
“Sometimes as a quarterback,’’ Pruitt said, “when you stand on the sidelines a series or two, the game slows down. We weren’t playing at our best there (at quarterback).’’
The Vols hit their stride when they went to a two-minute offense.
“We probably should have gone (uptempo) earlier in the game,’’ Pruitt admitted. Pruitt praised his team for its grit.
“Our guys kept fighting, trying to find a way to win,’’ Pruitt said. “It’s a 60-minute game and it took all 60 minutes.’’
KNOXVILLE – Tenn. – A dominant effort in the paint and an outstanding defensive second quarter helped the Lady Vols give Tennessee head coach Kellie Harper a victory in her Southeastern Conference debut Thursday, as No. 22/23 UT defeated Missouri, 77-66, to open conference play.
Tennessee (11-2, 1-0 SEC) held the Tigers (3-11, 0-1 SEC) to three field goals and just seven points in the second period. And the Lady Vols outscored Mizzou 44-22 in the paint during Thursday’s triumph.
The Lady Vols lived up to their reputation as one of the nation’s top-rebounding teams, out-rebounding the Tigers, 43-22. Tennessee pulled down 18 offensive boards and enjoyed a 19-4 edge in second-chance points.
Lady Vol junior Rennia Davis recorded her seventh double-double of the season and the 25th of her career Thursday, finishing with 19 team-high points and a game-high 12 rebounds. Jazmine Massengill handed out a career-high 12 assists and also added seven points and six rebounds.
The teams traded blows during the game’s first five minutes. Tennessee held a 14-12 lead at the first media timeout of the afternoon—the 4:18 mark in the first quarter. Each team was shooting 50 percent from the field at that point.
Mizzou then clamped down on defense—holding the Lady Vols without a field goal for close to five minutes—and strung together a 9-2 run to lead by five at the end of the first quarter.
The Tigers’ drained five 3-pointers in the opening frame, matching UT’s long-range output for the entire game. The Lady Vols held Mizzou to just six more triples over the game’s final 30 minutes, as nearly half of the Tigers’ 23 field goals Thursday came from beyond the arc.
Tennessee buckled down defensively in the second quarter, holding Missouri to 3-of-15 shooting in the frame. The Lady Vols, meanwhile, shot 62 percent (8 of 13) in the second quarter.
A transition layup in traffic by UT sophomore Rae Burrell less than a minute before halftime capped an 8-0 run and gave the Big Orange a 32-28 lead at the midway point.
Horston led the Lady Vols with eight first-half points, while fellow starters Lou Brown and Davis added six points each.
Massengill assisted on back-to-back baskets by Key early in the third quarter, pushing UT’s lead to eight points and forcing a timeout by the Tigers.
Minutes later, the Massengill-to-Key combo struck again on a fast break, causing Mizzou to burn another timeout in an effort to quell a 12-2 Tennessee run that gave the Lady Vols a 46-32 advantage.
The Tigers fought back in the closing minutes of the third quarter, making four straight field-goal attempts at one point and closing the period on a 9-2 run that trimmed the Tennessee lead to seven, 51-44.
A 3-pointer by Mizzou’s Haley Troup early in the fourth quarter cut the Lady Vols’ lead to 51-47, but that was as close as the Tigers would come. Tennessee erupted offensively in the game’s final 10 minutes, scoring 26 fourth-quarter points on 10 of 19 shooting.
Senior Amber Smith was Mizzou’s leading scorer with 22 points.
Up Next: The Lady Vols hit the road for a 4 p.m. matchup at No. 13/13 Kentucky on Sunday. The game will be televised by ESPN2.
UT In SEC Openers: The win over the Tigers was UT’s sixth straight in an SEC opener, moving the Lady Vols to 32-6 all-time, including 17-3 at home.
Massengill Dishing: Sophomore point guard Jazmine Massengill doled out a career-high 12 assists while committing only one turnover against Mizzou to make her way into the record book, tying for sixth-most single-game assists in Lady Vol history. She has managed double-digit assists in two of the last three games, averaging 8.0 apg. over that span while turning the ball over only three times.
Hot Hands: Tennessee shot 50.0% from the floor against Missouri, marking the fourth time this season the team has hit at least half of its shots.
Key Settling In: Freshman Tamari Key set a new career high of 16 points in her first SEC action. After scoring in double figures in just two of the first six games, she has now made her way into double digits in four of the last seven contests.
Davis Climbing The Charts: Tennessee junior Rennia Davis posted her 25th career double-double (seventh this season) against Missouri with 19 points and 12 rebounds. She currently ranks 11th all-time for career double-doubles and third in the SEC among active players behind Unique Thompson (Auburn) and Ayana Mitchell (LSU) who have each recorded 31 in their careers. Her 19 points on the game moved her career total to 1,076, passing Isabelle Harrison and Cierra Burdick and tying with Peggy Evans for 40th all-time among Lady Vol scorers.
Here’s some coverage of the Indiana football team practicing in Jacksonville this week preparing for the TaxSlayer Gator Bowl vs. Tennessee. 12-30-19. Our bowl coverage is presented by Kings of Real Estate.
Indiana CB Andre Brown Jr. & WR Nick Westbrook / Credit: 99.1 The Sports Animal
The Hot Country Knights—a band fronted by an incognito Dierks Bentley—signed a recording contract with Universal Music Group Nashville, which is Dierks’ longtime label partner.
The Hot Country Knights are comprised of Dierks’ road band, performing ’90s country covers while donning mullet wigs and over-the-top attire from the era.
A press release from Universal makes no mention of Dierks, but it does quote his alter ego, Douglas (“Doug”) Douglason, who said: “Some artists out there tried to put the ‘O’ back in country, that was a thing for a while . . . but what it’s really missing is the ‘T.’ Country music has Low-T right now . . . it could use a pick me up, if you know what I mean. Those record label people over at Universal finally realized that only the Knights could be up to a task this big and hard.”
The Hot Country Knights feature lead singer Douglas (“Doug”) Douglason, lead bass player Trevor Travis, lead guitarist Marty Ray (“Rayro”) Roburn, fiddle player Terotej (“Terry”) Dvoraczekynski, steel guitarist Barry Van Ricky and percussionist Monte Montgomery.
Watch the Hot Country Knights invade Universal Music Group to sign their record deal.
Carrie’s unexpected announcement has spawned lots of chatter regarding who the heir apparent(s) to the hosting throne will be in 2020. While there is plenty of time for the Country Music Association to make a decision before the show in November 2020, two front-runners spring to mind—Thomas Rhett and Kelsea Ballerini—and here are three reasons why.
✓ Star Power: TR, 29, and Kelsea, 26, are young, established stars with 19 collective No. 1 hits under their belts. The prospect that they could co-host the show for multiple years—like Brad and Carrie—is a definite plus.
✓ Onstage Chemistry: For the past three years, TR and Kelsea have co-hosted the three-hour CMA Fest TV special on ABC, which is the network that airs the CMA Awards. TR and Kelsea have demonstrated that they have the onstage chemistry to keep a show like the CMA Awards moving along.
✓ CMA Love: Over the past six years, TR (14) and Kelsea (7) have been nominated for 21 collective CMA Awards, with TR winning two. Kelsea and TR have been constants at the show during this time by performing, presenting and walking the red carpet.
Here’s some coverage of the Tennessee football team practicing in Jacksonville this week preparing for the TaxSlayer Gator Bowl vs. Indiana. 12-30-19. Our bowl coverage is presented by Kings of Real Estate.
Vols RBs Tim Jordan and Eric Gray / Credit: 99.1 The Sports Animal
Morgan Wallen kicked off 2020 by dropping a spirited new tune, “This Bar.”
Co-penned by Morgan, Michael Hardy, Jackson Morgan, Jake Scott, Ernest K. Smith and Ryan Vojtesak, “This Bar” takes a nostalgic look back at a 21-year-old’s buzz-filled bar days, featuring the chorus: “I found myself in this bar / Making mistakes and making new friends / Us growing up and nothing made sense / Buzzing all night like neon in the dark / I found myself in this bar.”
“Wrote this song with my buddies about some moments and times in my life that have made me who I am today,” said Morgan via Twitter. “Some good, some bad, but all of em I can look back on and grin a little. Hope it makes you do the same. Be safe in whatever Bar you find yourself in tonight. Happy New Years.”
Morgan is currently headlining his Whiskey Glasses Roadshow Tour.
Five years and 95 miles separated the lives of two Lady Vol basketball players – graduate student Lou Brown and freshman Jessie Rennie.
While Melbourne and Bendigo, Australia, may both be in the state of Victoria, the likelihood of Brown and Rennie both coming to America to play for the same program at the same time is just a bit unlikely.
In October of 2018, redshirt senior Lou Brown went down with a torn ACL. Mere months after arriving on Rocky Top, her final season of college basketball was cut short. Then, there was a ray of hope.
Brown was granted a sixth year of eligibility and was given the opportunity to play out the final chapter of her college career, while also completing her master’s degree in journalism and electronic media.
“Being able to finish my degree was truly a perfect situation,” Brown said. “But, in saying that, it has been a bit tough. Being around here, I’m 24, I’m going into my sixth year of college. This is not where I expected to be, looking back three or four years ago. I assumed I’d be a bit more into my life at this point, but at the same time, I’m in no rush and I’m playing basketball in one of the most amazing places to play basketball. I just try to stay present, stay where I’m at, while just staying in the now. At the end of the day a big part of me staying this sixth year is going to set me up for whatever is after.”
Her final chapter is occurring right alongside the opening pages of Rennie’s career.
“Jessie is my little sister,” Brown said. “As soon as she came in, I knew how daunting it can be. I also think another reason my knee (injury) happened was to help her with her transition.”
A transition that is quite different from those of non-athlete students and domestic student-athletes.
“Coming in as an international student, there’s a lot more you have to do,” Brown said. “Whether it’s through the international house for school, through athletics, getting social security numbers, getting phone numbers and bank accounts set up, all of it. So, when she came in, I went out of my way and made it a point of ‘I’ve got her.’ I told her, ‘Whatever you need, I’ve been through it all. Ask me anything. There are no stupid questions, whatever it is, I’m here for you.’ And being so far away from home it’s hard, and you want to know that someone has your back no matter what.”
“It’s a very big move,” Rennie added. “I’ve been here nearly seven months now, and I absolutely love it. To start with, it was a little bit daunting. I’m 19, but moving away from home is always going to be scary, especially to another country on the other side of the world. Having Lou here has made things a thousand times easier. From big things like knowing the ins and outs of college in general, and then the basketball side of it, too. Just little things like – I always give the example – setting up my bank account and my phone account. Things like that, which I was just like, ‘I need to get organized.’ She was right there. She had done it all. She learned from Cheridene (Green), so Cheridene helped her. She helped me, so hopefully I can pass it on to another international student one day.”
Little things that seem normal and unassuming. Things that many domestic students don’t need to worry about, but they are things that must be done so aspiring international athletes are able to live out their dreams.
While the friendship of the duo from down under continues to grow, their meeting didn’t come immediately.
“I actually didn’t meet her literally until I turned up here,” Rennie said. “She was meant to be my host for my official visit, but she ended up having to head home in March, so we never ended up seeing her. I knew of her. I knew who she was because, obviously, we’re from the same state, playing in the same leagues and stuff. Being a little bit older, I never actually played against her. To start with, I didn’t think having an Aussie or not having Aussie would really matter that much, but I love it.”
Since that first meeting, they have taken off and grown together on the court and most notably off of it. Whether it’s a small conversation, a trip to one of Knoxville’s many sights or a simple walk up to Cumberland Avenue, the two are often together, walking stride-for-stride to wherever the next destination may be.
“The first day we were both here together on campus we walked to the Cumberland strip together, and ever since then that’s been our thing,” Brown said. “We’ll walk to the strip together and back to get food and things like that. You know we have a really good relationship, and I’m just glad that I was here for her first year to get her set up so when I leave she can go off and be her own Australian on her own.”
Before their meeting, however, there was one big hurdle to climb. Before the bank accounts could be set up, before the countless jaunts to Cumberland Avenue that filled their off time, before anything, they had to weave through the challenges of a previous coaching staff departing and a new group taking its place. What seemed like a hurdle was simply a situation that both girls navigated with ease.
“It was hard, and the coaching staff plays a really big part and has a lot to do with the school you’re at, but I mean, it’s Tennessee,” Rennie said. “The program, the history, just everything about this school sounded exactly right for me. I was definitely not considering not coming here.”
“It’s been good. It’s been really good,” Brown said. “It all happened so quickly, trying to develop relationships with the coaches. I myself am a bit different and I have a different relationship with the coaches compared to the other players on the team, but it’s been good. The coaches have made sure that we’re all comfortable, and they’ve tried to make sure that we know we’re a priority and that we’re important to them. They want to make sure that we have a good relationship with them off the court as well, so I really appreciate them for that.”
A successful transition and a phenomenal relationship have Brown, Rennie and the rest of the Lady Vols poised for a successful 2019-20 season. As the current season reaches its mid-point and the Orange & White begin conference play, the relationships that were made in June and July have reaped incredible benefits in November and December.
A high-profile victory on the road at Notre Dame, seven consecutive wins to begin the year and consistent production across the board have Tennessee in a great position to begin SEC action. Yet, when the season eventually ends, and the curtain falls on 2019-20, Brown in particular will be looking towards the next step in her life. For both her and Rennie, professional dreams can be realized not only abroad in Europe, but back home. Over the last four years, Australia has seen immense growth in its women’s basketball league—the WNBL—and in the popularity of the game as a whole.
“We have a really good league in Australia, the WNBL,” Brown said. “Which is starting to get a lot more exposure. Women’s basketball is really starting to grow back home, which is really promising to see. When I first moved over here, women’s basketball had been ripped off TV. It wasn’t televised at all and, honestly, I think America is to thank for the amount of growth there’s been recently. Just the media coverage and how social media has taken over and pushed sports over here has helped a lot, and it’s starting to do that in Australia as well. I’m really excited to head back home, play in my league back in Australia.”
It’s a league that is one of a multitude of opportunities for Tennessee’s two Aussies to continue to play the sport they love, long after they hang up their Orange & White gear.
“There’s so, so many opportunities in Australia for me to play,” Rennie said. “There’s the NBL1 competition and then there’s the WNBL—which is the women’s national basketball league—which is obviously equivalent to the NBL. It’s a really, really, good league. I want to go play in Europe after I’m done here to get a new experience, but I know I can always go home to Australia to play.”
While Knoxville is currently providing a new home and a place for Brown and Rennie to grow themselves and their game, it could one day help to propel both to the professional ranks of the league in the place they originally called “home sweet home.”