Tennessee center Brandon Kennedy spoke to the media on Wednesday to discuss the team during it’s final open week of the season.

Tennessee center Brandon Kennedy spoke to the media on Wednesday to discuss the team during it’s final open week of the season.
Tennessee defensive end Matthew Butler spoke to the media on Wednesday to discuss the team during it’s final open week of the season.
Tennessee head coach Jeremy Pruitt spoke to the media on Wednesday to discuss the team during it’s final open week of the season.
Before the 53rd CMA Awards kicked off at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena on Nov. 13, many of country’s biggest stars walked the red carpet.
photos by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com
Zac Brown Band has extended its The Owl Tour with 20 dates in 2020. The tour takes its name from ZBB’s 2019 album, The Owl.
ZBB’s 2020 trek will kick off on Feb. 28 in Moline, Ill., with additional stops in Toronto, Las Vegas, Nashville and more. Tickets will go on sale to the general public on Nov. 22 at 12 p.m. local time. The Zamily Fan Club pre-sale will begin on Nov. 19 at 12 p.m. local time.
The Owl Tour 2020
* special guests Amos Lee and Poo Bear
+ festival stops
photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com
One of the highlights from the CMA Awards on Nov. 13 was the cross-genre collaboration between Lady Antebellum and indie pop star Halsey.
The collaboration kicked off as the artists joined forces on “What If I Never Get Over You,” a current Top 10 single that is featured on Lady A’s new album, Ocean. With Lady A’s Dave Haywood on piano, Charles Kelley and Hillary Scott harmonized the first verse before Halsey joined them.
The artists transitioned to Halsey’s “Graveyard,” which is featured on her upcoming album, Manic. Halsey plucked a guitar and began singing the song before Hillary and Charles joined her.
Watch Lady A and Halsey perform below.
photo by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com
Co-host Reba McEntire threw it back to 1990 for her performance of “Fancy” on the CMA Awards on Nov. 13.
Reba recorded “Fancy” for her 1990 album, Rumor Has It. Released as a single in 1991, “Fancy” reached No. 8 on the Billboard Country chart.
Watch Reba’s performance below.
Jimmy Kimmel rounded up some of his musical chums for the sixth installment of his popular late-night bit, Mean Tweets: Music Edition.
The premise is simple—and hilarious—as stars read unflattering tweets about themselves. Check out the new clip, which features Billie Eilish, Midland, Chance the Rapper, Luke Bryan, Perry Farrell, Green Day, Leon Bridges, Monsta X, John Mayer, Alice Cooper, Lizzo, Luke Combs and Cardi B.
photo by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com
More than 50 performers took the stage at the CMA Awards on Nov. 13, including Carrie Underwood, Reba McEntire, Dolly Parton, Terri Clark, Sara Evans, Crystal Gayle, The Highwomen, Martina McBride, Jennifer Nettles, Tanya Tucker, Gretchen Wilson, Kelsea Ballerini, Lindsay Ell, Maddie & Tae, Ashley McBryde, Carly Pearce, Runaway June, Dierks Bentley, Joe Walsh, Sheryl Crow, Chris Janson, Brooks & Dunn, Brothers Osborne, Garth Brooks, Blake Shelton, Eric Church, Luke Combs, Dan + Shay, Lady Antebellum, Halsey, Miranda Lambert, Maren Morris, Kacey Musgraves, Willie Nelson, Old Dominion, for King & Country, Zach Williams, Pink, Chris Stapleton, Thomas Rhett and Keith Urban.
photos by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com
By Jimmy Hyams
The NCAA denied an appeal to grant Tennessee center Uros Plavsic immediate eligibility.
Considering at the time that 54 of 62 men’s college basketball players had been declared eligible right away – including Kentucky transfer Quade Green (a Philadelphia native) to Washington after he’d played the first half of last season in Lexington – it’s head-scratching to rule against Plavsic.
A 7-foot transfer from Arizona State, Plavsic is from Serbia, played high school ball at Hamilton Heights in Chattanooga, went to Arizona State with his high school coach, redshirted, then left the Sun Devils when his coaching friend (also from Serbia) was not retained.
Seemed like a simple case.
Apparently, it wasn’t.
So why did the NCAA say no to Plavsic?
We don’t know for sure, other than to say he didn’t meet the criteria.
That prompted Tennessee athletic director Phillip Fulmer to fire off a strongly worded statement questioning the NCAA’s decision and saying UT would continue its appeal.
In a recent interview on WNML’s Sports Talk show, Fulmer was asked if he would like more transparency from the NCAA over its transfer rulings.
“Yeah, I would,” Fulmer said. “I was not very happy as to what happened to Uros. I said that. And we are still working on a couple of things.
“You know, the NCAA has absolutely created a mess and they cannot win.
“They are not going to win whenever they deny a young person that probably deserves an opportunity to go on and play.’’
Fulmer said there are cases when a transfer probably needs to sit out, “but to try and be the judge and jury there in Indianapolis and to farm it out to committees that aren’t even your peers often times, I don’t think it is the right way to go.
“Surely they will address this and get a handle on it. If we are going to do this, let’s get it better.’’
Fulmer had another concern about the NCAA’s handling of transfers.
“I’m okay as long as there is consistency,’’ Fulmer said. “There hasn’t been a lot of consistency. My struggle is, I’m looking at it as a coach … roster management is very important.’’
Fulmer isn’t a fan of allowing a one-time transfer for immediate eligibility.
“Maybe there is a good player that is a redshirt freshman or sophomore,’’ Fulmer said, “but between him and his parents or other outside influences or other schools kind of talking to him, if he makes a decision to leave that early, that doesn’t sit well with me.’’
Fulmer said he is in favor of the graduate transfer rule but not what some coaches are referring to as free agency in the college ranks, with freshmen and sophomores routinely leaving the school with which they signed.
“This kind of `leave when you want to,’ I don’t like that, really,’’ he said.
The Plavsic case is now in the hands of the Division I Committee for Legislative Relief.
It is considered a “body of your peers.’’
It includes an assistant athletic director for compliance from Rutgers, an associate commissioner of the Pac-12, a female a senior associate athletic director for compliance at Virginia Tech, a faculty representative at UTEP, director of compliance at James Madison, a senior women’s administrator at Monmouth University and a senior associate commissioner of the Atlantic-Sun Conference.
They will examine the Plavsic appeal and decide if Plavsic has to sit a year at Tennessee.
And they don’t have to explain their decision.
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