Kacey Musgraves will be spreading holiday cheer this season as the titular host of The Kacey Musgraves Christmas Show on Amazon Prime Video on Nov. 29.
Kacey will be joined by an all-star cast of friends for performances of both classic and original holiday songs, including Fred Armisen, Leon Bridges, Camila Cabello, James Corden, Zooey Deschanel, Lana Del Rey and Troye Sivan. In addition, the Radio City Rockettes and special guest Kendall Jenner stop by for the holiday special, which will be narrated by Dan Levy.
“I can say without a doubt that this project is unlike anything I’ve ever done before,” says Kacey. “What started as the small seed of an idea one night over a year ago has turned into something I’m so proud of. Some truly brilliant comedic and musical guests are featured in the show—as well as my own Grandma. My vision was to bring my old Christmas album to life visually and create a modern and fashionable, fresh take on a classic format. It’s a nostalgic, Wes Anderson-inspired reimagining of the holidays. It’s heartfelt, funny, and most of all, real. I can’t wait to finally share.”
The Kacey Musgraves Christmas Show will be accompanied by an official soundtrack available on Nov. 29.
The Kacey Musgraves Christmas Show Track List
1. “Let It Snow” feat. James Corden
2. “Countdown” – Dialogue
3. “Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas”
4. “Getting Ready” – Dialogue
5. “Present Without A Bow” feat. Leon Bridges
6. “Making A List” – Dialogue
7. “Rockin’ Around The Christmas Tree” feat. Camila Cabello
8. “(Not So) Silent Night” feat Fred Armisen
9. “Christmas Makes Me Cry”
10. “Amp It Up, Dan” – Dialogue
11. “Christmas Fail” – Dialogue
12. “Mele Kalikimaka” feat. Zooey Deschanel
13. “Cookies” – Dialogue
14. “Glittery” feat. Troye Sivan
15. “I’ll Be Home Intro” – Dialogue
16. “I’ll Be Home For Christmas” feat. Lana Del Rey
17. “NANA!” – Dialogue
18. “Ribbons And Bows” feat. The Radio City Rockettes
Vols HC Jeremy Pruitt / Credit: 99.1 The Sports Animal
“That was a really hard-fought game. Those guys, especially on defense, played an outstanding game. You can see why they (UAB) are one of the top-ranked defenses in the country. They have good players and good schemes. They did a good job executing. I thought, defensively, (we) really changed the game with the turnovers in the first half. It gave us an opportunity to put some alley-oops as far as score on the board. We were short field position. I felt like we won the field position battle there in the first half, which really helped. I wasn’t very pleased with the last drive of the half and the defense of the second half. We gave some young guys an opportunity there. We didn’t execute very well and we have to improve.
“Offensively, we didn’t really start very fast. We kind of played behind the chains and had too many negative plays. You run for six yards and the next one is minus three where you throw an incomplete pass and didn’t protect very well at all. We probably had a couple of throws out there that we had a chance to make and didn’t hit the guys there. I was very disappointed with the turnover at the end of the first half. We had a good drive going on there and had some good plays and made a poor decision. You never take points off the board, and that is what we did there. We can’t make those mistakes moving forward. We had some guys out tonight and hopefully will be able to get those guys back. They are getting closer and closer. It looked like we got out of this game pretty clean. We have a big challenge next week, and we have to get focused on that.”
On what his thought process was with playing the quarterbacks:
“I thought it gave us the best chance to win. One guy had surgery on Sunday. It is cold out there, and he has a cast on his hand. First time getting out there, you see him in warm ups and he practiced most of the week, but the ball was pretty slick there the way the air was tonight. If J.T. (Shrout) doesn’t run across the field or throw across his body, back over there when we were in field goal range, he might have kept playing. There are some mistakes as the quarterback that you can’t make. You might miss a throw. You might not check the ball to the proper side. You can’t let go of the football in the red zone. We can’t make those mistakes.”
On how he felt the defensive line played tonight:
“I felt like we kept them behind the chains. They do a lot of seven-man protecting, which is what they do. That is one of the reasons why they don’t give up a lot of sacks, because they are in seven-man protect all the time. But we did get a little bit of pressure. I thought we guarded them in the back end. I thought our defensive staff did a really nice job getting our guys ready to play. I thought our defensive players practiced well all week, so it was not surprising how they played. So it was good when they made mistakes, we made them pay. Bryce (Thompson) made three interceptions. Darel Middleton caused a fumble that Aubrey Solomon recovered. We should’ve had that pick at the end, but it was dropped out there in the middle of the field. But when they make mistakes, you’ve got to make them pay, and we did that tonight.”
On what makes the offensive stall in the red zone:
“There are lots of things. It really helps you a lot by using formations. Whether it is formations, movements, motions and other stuff to create soft edges on the defense to make the defense have to adjust. But when you do that, the look also changes on the defensive side. You’ve got to do a nice job making sure that everybody knows who you are pushing to – who’s the linebacker, who’s working with who, taking the correct steps. Sometimes in all of that, it takes the quarterback to glue that together and sometimes it takes the front. You have to work hand-in-hand. We made some mistakes from just not blocking the right folks or just maybe not stepping with the right foot or the proper angle or maybe not straining enough. There are lots of things that go in there that go into it. And as a play caller, you have to have confidence in throwing the football in the red zone. We made some plays throughout the year where we have turned the ball over, which we can’t do. We have to get better there. We know that. We have to address it. We have got to do it on Saturdays.”
On if he considered playing Brian Maurer tonight and how he can explain the improvement on the team in the last few weeks:
“We worked Brian to be ready to play. But with three quarterbacks, it was hard to get Brian as many reps as he probably needed to be ready. So we elected to go with the other guys today. He will have an opportunity to get more reps as we get into it. We are still kind of seeing where we are at there.
With the improvement, our guys work really hard at practice. They work hard to prepare and to give themselves a chance to have success. They are a fun group to be around. We have had to execute at a little higher level in all three phases of our team, but you can see some of the guys are gaining confidence, with the fact they have been around and have been in the system a little longer. The younger guys are gaining confidence and some of the guys that have been here. It just comes from doing the same stuff over and over again. We just have to improve this week.”
On what the plan was to start the second half at the QB position:
“Well, we were going to go back with J.T. (Shrout) at some point, just kind of with the way the game kept going there. We kept getting turnovers that created a short field, so we were going to give Jarrett (Guarantano) those opportunities, and when halftime was over, we decided to go back the other way, but the interception absolutely doesn’t help.”
On what he saw out of Bryce Thompson tonight:
“He really just did what he was supposed to do. One time, we’re playing cut, and he splits the zone and the quarterback stares down when they run four verticals, makes a poor throw, and he breaks on the ball. One time, they ran a deep comeback and we’re playing two man, and the ball really shouldn’t be thrown that way, it was, and he made them pay there. The last time, he was playing the money position. Theo Jackson didn’t play tonight, so Bryce moved inside and played money, which is where we were going to play him all year until he was out for a few weeks and didn’t get as many reps, so there are a lot of balls that go to the fourth receiver on the other team on third down. You’ve got two guys outside, and you’ve got the guy that your star is on and our money guy, two and three, lots of balls go to them, so he made a good play and undercut the guy.”
On how Bryce Thompson has improved since returning to the team:
“It obviously hurt that he wasn’t practicing, but he’s improving. He’s been banged up for a couple of weeks now, he’s a tough kid that really wants to play and likes to play. He’s continued to improve, and he should. He’s playing more ball, he’s older, he’s maturing, he’s getting stronger, he’s been in the system a little longer. He needs to continue to do that.”
On how Derrick Ansley has helped the secondary this season:
“I can tell you this, I love coaching defensive backs. If I can’t coach defensive backs, I’m not going to coach anymore. Derrick Ansley is a guy that, for me, I don’t have to be in the room. I know what’s being said. I know how the room is prepared. I know how his meetings are run; he’s going to say exactly what I would say to him. He’s one of the best coaches that I’ve ever been around. It’s been great to watch him grow and develop over the years. At one time, he was my graduate assistant, and then the last couple of years, he’s been a defensive backs coach at places that I’ve been at, and he does a phenomenal job. He’s improving as a play caller; he does a really nice job with that. He commands attention. He’s done a great job coaching the guys up on the sideline, and he gets the information from the guys upstairs who do a really nice job, Kevin (Sherrer) and the other guys up there. Tracy Rocker and Chris Rumph do a nice job, too, so it’s a really good group to work with. We don’t have any secrets in our room. We say what we think to each other, which is the way I like to work. It’s fun being around them, and they do a really nice job, and I think the kids like being around them, too.”
On what the team needs to do to keep momentum defensively:
“We have to practice it. There’s no secret, we keep a tab up every week of caused fumbles, interceptions, shots on the ball. It might not be a fumble, but who took a shot on the ball, batted balls for passes? And the weeks that we do it in practice, it shows up in the game. The weeks that it doesn’t show up on Tuesday and Wednesday and Thursday, it doesn’t show up here on Saturday. It seems, pretty simple, right? If you just create the right habits in practice, it shows up on Saturdays. So, those are the things that we’ve been trying to stress to our players, and it’s the truth.”
On depending on Brent Cimaglia:
“He’s a guy that’s always working. He has talent, it’s obvious when you’re out there. The thing I like about him is that I think he could play middle linebacker, too. I like that guy. If he misses one, he jumps up there and wants to hit another one, and he doesn’t go and try to hide somewhere. He wants to get up there and do it again. I think he has a really good makeup about him. He’s a great competitor. We do our offseason conditioning and he’s an athlete. I don’t know what else he played besides kicker before he got here; he was probably a soccer player, but he might’ve been a defensive player. I don’t know, the way he acts, he gets out there and competes his tail off, and I’m glad we’ve got him.”
After topping the charts in 2018 with “Yours” and “Blue Tacoma,” Russell Dickerson has scored his third No. 1 single with “Every Little Thing.”
“Every Little Thing,” which was penned Russell, Parker Welling and Casey Brown, reached No. 1 on both the Mediabase chart and Billboard Country Airplay chart this week. All three of Russell’s No. 1 songs are featured on his 2017 debut album, Yours.
Russell shared his excitement via Twitter, saying: “THIS IS INSANE! #EVERYLITTLETHING IS OFFICIALLY THE NUMBER ONE SONG ON COUNTRY RADIO! HUGE thank you to country radio, my team, and the #RDFam that made THREE #1’s IN A ROW happen!!!!!!”
The Country Music Association announced the presenters for the 53rd annual CMA Awards on Nov. 13: Bobby Bones, Hannah Brown, Deana Carter, Kristin Chenoweth, Janie Fricke, Jim Gaffigan, Vince Gill, Kathy Mattea, Martina McBride, Midland, Craig Morgan, Jennifer Nettles, Madelaine Petsch, J.B. Smoove, Pam Tillis, Morgan Wallen and Trisha Yearwood.
Previously announced performers include Eric Church, Luke Combs, Miranda Lambert, Reba McEntire, Maren Morris, Dolly Parton with for King & Country and Zach Williams, Pink and Chris Stapleton, Carrie Underwood, Keith Urban, Kelsea Ballerini, Brooks & Dunn with Brothers Osborne, Garth Brooks with Blake Shelton, Dan + Shay, Kacey Musgraves with Willie Nelson, Lady Antebellum with Halsey, Old Dominion, Blake Shelton and Thomas Rhett.
Hosted by Carrie Underwood with special guests Reba McEntire and Dolly Parton, the CMA Awards will air live from Bridgestone Arena in Nashville on Nov. 13 at 7 p.m. CT on ABC.
Nominees are below.
Entertainer of the Year
Garth Brooks
Eric Church
Chris Stapleton
Carrie Underwood
Keith Urban
Female Vocalist of the Year
Kelsea Ballerini
Miranda Lambert
Maren Morris
Kacey Musgraves
Carrie Underwood
Male Vocalist of the Year
Dierks Bentley
Luke Combs
Thomas Rhett
Chris Stapleton
Keith Urban
Vocal Duo of the Year
Brooks & Dunn
Brothers Osborne
Dan + Shay
Florida Georgia Line
Maddie & Tae
New Artist of the Year
Cody Johnson
Ashley McBryde
Midland
Carly Pearce
Morgan Wallen
Single of the Year (Awarded to Singer, Producer and Engineer)
“Burning Man” – Dierks Bentley Feat. Brothers Osborne – Producers: Ross Copperman, Jon Randall, Arturo Buenahora, Jr. – Mix Engineer: F. Reid Shippen
Fresh off of his single “Love You Too Late” topping the charts last week, Cole Swindell has announced a new tour for 2020.
Cole’s 14-date Down to Earth Tour will kick off on March 5 in Toledo, Ohio, with additional stops in New Orleans, Kansas City, Louisville and more. Hardy and Trea Landon will serve as support.
“I have had such an amazing year in so many ways,” says Cole. “I never think each year can top the previous, but it does. To earn another career No. 1 last week with ‘Love You Too Late’ and then the response and honors that ‘Break Up In The End’ received this year has blown me away . . . I’m so fired up for 2020 to get back out there with two new artists whose music I just love and am really excited about. Hardy, Trea and I already have some fun things planned for this tour. The fans better get ready because this tour is for them!”
Tickets go on sale on Nov. 8, with a pre-sale beginning on Nov. 5 at 10 a.m. local time.
Down to Earth Tour
March 5 | Toledo, OH | Stranahan Theater
March 6 | Rama, ON | Casino Rama-Entertainment Centre
March 13 | Macon, GA | Macon Centreplex Auditorium
March 14 | Okaloosa Island, FL | The Gulf
March 15 | New Orleans, LA| Fillmore
March 25 | Sioux Falls, SD | Sanford Pentagon
March 26 | Dubuque, IA | Five Flags Center-Five Flags Arena
March 27 | Park City, KS | Hartman Arena
March 28 | Kansas City, MO | Uptown Theater
April 9 | Grand Rapids, MI | 20 Monroe Live
April 10 | Peoria, IL | Peoria Civic Center Theatre
Brett Young will hit the road in 2020 for his 30-date The Chapters Tour.
Kicking off on Jan. 30 in Knoxville, Tenn., the tour will make additional stops in New York, St. Louis, Nashville, Salt Lake City and more, as well as three dates in Canada. Matt Ferranti will serve as support.
“I’m so excited about The Chapters Tour for so many reasons,” says Brett. “Being in a position to continue to headline even bigger shows is an honor and humbling, and I can’t wait to show our fans what we’ve been working on for them. They’re definitely in for some surprises!”
Tickets go on sale on Nov. 8 at 10 a.m. local time.
Garth Brooks and Blake Shelton dropped a new video for their duet, “Dive Bar.” The new clip features Garth, Blake and the G-man’s band swimming with the sharks in a “dive” bar.
“We don’t do a lot [of videos],” said Garth. “Unless it’s something, pretty much, that brings another whole dimension to the song, we’re not gonna do it. This one brought a third, fourth and fifth dimension to the song!”
Penned by Garth, Mitch Rossell and Bryan Kennedy, “Dive Bar” was shipped to country radio in June and is currently No. 19 on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart after 19 weeks.
You can watch the new video below via Facebook, which is the only place it’s authorized to be viewed.
photos: Blake Shelton by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com; Garth Brooks by NCD
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee men’s basketball is set to open its 110th season when takes on UNC Asheville at Thompson-Boling Arena on Tuesday night. Tipoff is set for 7 p.m. ET on SEC Network +.
Tuesday’s game will be available online through SEC Network + on WatchESPN. Visit espn.com/watch or download the ESPN app to view the game on a computer or mobile device. Michael Wottreng (play-by-play) and Vincent Yarbrough (color) will have the call, with Kasy Funderburg providing sideline analysis.
Fans can also listen live on their local Vol Network affiliate to catch Bob Kesling and Bert Bertlekamp describing the action.
In support of local teachers and education, fans may donate two new school supply items at the gates and receive one complimentary admission to the game. All supplies collected benefit the Knox County School Supply depot. More information about the promotion can be found here.
Tennessee, in its lone exhibition contest on Wednesday night, took down Eastern New Mexico, 107-59 in comprehensive fashion. The Vols saw 20+ point performances from their two senior returners, Lamonte Turner and Jordan Bowden, along with a scoring contribution from all 12 players who saw game action. This will be the Vols and Bulldogs 11th all-time meeting, with UT looking to uphold its perfect record against UNCA.
The matchup will also be the 10th against a team from North Carolina during the Rick Barnes era. Barnes, a Hickory, North Carolina native, has made a habit of scheduling opponents from his home state. The Vols hold a strong 7-2 record against teams located in North Carolina.
Up next, Tennessee will host Murray State, next Tuesday, Nov. 12 for a 9 p.m. ET tip, in the second of two consecutive home contests to begin the season. The game will be broadcasted on SEC Network and can be streamed online and on any mobile device through WatchESPN.
LAYUP LINES
• Tennessee, ranked No. 25 in the coaches poll, enters Tuesday’s matchup with a 29-3 all-time record in season-openers played in Thompson-Boling Arena.
• The 2019-20 campaign stands as Tennessee’s 33rd season in Thompson-Boling Arena.
• Four Tennessee home games have already sold out: Memphis, Kentucky, Florida and Auburn
• With sales of 15,465 to date, UT’s season-ticket sales this season are the third-most in program history and the most since 2008-09.
• Transfer forward Uroš Plavšic will sit out this season after his NCAA waiver for immediate eligibility was denied.
• Freshman forward Drew Pember suffered a right ankle injury during Wednesday’s exhibition, and his status is day-to-day.
• Tuesday is VFL Jordan Bone’s 22nd birthday. He was the 57th pick in June’s NBA Draft.
THE SERIES
• UT leads the all-time series with UNC Asheville 10-0, dating to 1997.
• Nine of the 10 previous meetings took place at Thompson-Boling Arena. In November of 2012, the teams met at the Puerto Rico Tip-Off in Bayamon.
• The only triple-double in UT hoops history came against UNC Asheville.
• UNCA head coach Mike Morrell has some East Tennessee ties, including a connection to Jason Witten.
• Bulldogs guards Tajion Jones (Oak Ridge HS), and Trent Stephney (Bearden HS) are local products. Stephney was a high school teammate of Vols freshmen Drew Pember.
A WIN WOULD…
• Give the Volunteers a 30-3 record in home openers at Thompson-Boling Arena.
• Mark Rick Barnes‘ 17th win in his last 18 season-openers.
• Mark Tennessee’s 27th consecutive home win.
ABOUT UNC ASHEVILLE
•The Vols and Bulldogs are set to meet Tuesday for the 11th time in the history of the programs and for the first time since the 2015-16 season. Tennessee hopes to maintain its unblemished record against Asheville, while starting 1-0 for the third consecutive season.
•The 2018-19 Bulldogs were nicknamed “The Baby Bulldogs,” as they were the NCAA’s youngest team, with 76 percent of their minutes coming from freshmen.
•Second-year head coach Mike Morrell hopes to bounce back from a difficult 2018-19 campaign that saw Asheville finish with a 4-27 overall record and a 2-14 mark in Big South play, placing them 10th in the 11-team conference.
•The Bulldogs return Big South All-Freshman selection DeVon Baker. The 6-2 guard, was arguably Asheville’s biggest contributor last season, starting all 31 games while averaging 16.1 ppg to lead all Big South Conference freshmen in scoring, including 26 double-digit point performances.
•NC State transfer Lavar Batts Jr. was rated as the top-ranked player in the state of North Carolina by 247Sports and Rivals coming out of high school.
•UNCA faculty, staff, students and members of the surrounding community, assisted world-renowned artist Mel Chin, in creating and installing the largest sculpture to ever be placed in Times Square in New York City.
•UNCA is the only designated liberal arts institution in the 16-campus University of North Carolina system.
LAST MEETING WITH UNC ASHEVILLE
• Three Vols set then-career-highs for scoring as Tennessee tipped off the Rick Barnes era with an 82-78 win over UNC Asheville Nov. 13, 2015, at Thompson-Boling Arena.
• Kevin Punter Jr. scored 31 points, while Robert Hubbs III scored 18 and Jabari McGhee logged nine points.
• Vols senior Armani Moore did a bit of everything, totaling 12 points, eight rebounds, six assists, two blocks and one steal. He also drew two charges.
• UT shot 50 percent in the first half and had just three turnovers, but a 23-13 edge on the boards kept UNC Asheville within a point at the break, 34-33.
• Forward Will Weeks gave UNC Asheville the lead, 71-69, with 2:47 to go. But Moore went right back down the court to tie with a jumper, draw a foul and put the Vols back on top with the ensuing free throw.
• Weeks would tie the game back up with a free throw, but a 6-0 UT run, highlighted by a pair of baskets from Punter, swung the momentum back to the Volunteers. Hubbs had a huge block on the defensive end to key the second of those baskets, but he went down after the play with a cramp and did not return.
• The Vols hit four free throws over the final 37 seconds, and McGhee came up with a leaping steal at midcourt after the final of those to seal the win.
• Weeks led the Bulldogs with 25 points.
TENNESSEE’S LONE TRIPLE-DOUBLE CAME AGAINST UNC ASHEVILLE
• There has been only one triple-double in the history of Tennessee basketball, and it came against UNC Asheville on Dec. 3, 2008.
• Junior wing Tyler Smith finished with 12 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists as the Vols defeated the Bulldogs, 87-69, in Knoxville.
• Smith had one steal and no turnovers in his 26 minutes of action. He was 4-of-11 from the field and 4-of-6 from the free-throw line.
BULLDOGS HEAD COACH AN EAST TENNESSEE NATIVE
• Bulldogs head coach Mike Morrell, 37, hails from Elizabethton, Tennessee.
• After graduating from Elizabethton High School (where he was a teammate of Vol football legend and NFL All-Pro Jason Witten), Morrell was a two-sport athlete at NAIA Milligan College. He was a three-year starter and 1,000-point scorer in basketball and was a two-time all-league selection in golf.
• Morrell also was an assistant on the coaching staff that replaced Rick Barnes at Texas in 2015. Morrell was on Shaka Smart’s Longhorns staff from 2015-18.
ENMU EXHIBITION RECAP
• Jordan Bowden and Lamonté Turner combined for 45 points in Tennessee’s 107-59 exhibition win over Eastern New Mexico at Thompson-Boling Arena last Wednesday.
• It marked the most points the Vols have scored in an exhibition game during the Rick Barnes era and the most in any UT exhibition since 2007-08. Tennessee’s 48-point margin of victory also marked the highest in an exhibition game since that 2007-08 campaign.
• In total, the Vols had four players score in double figures, with John Fulkerson recording a double-double with 11 points and a team-high 10 rebounds.
• Josiah-Jordan James nearly ended the night with a double-double, as he posted 10 points and tied for a team-high seven assists while also adding five rebounds.
PLAVŠIĆ TO LOSE A YEAR
• As October came to a close, Tennessee learned that transfer forward Uroš Plavšic will lose a year of eligibility after his NCAA waiver for immediate eligibility was denied (also denied on appeal).
• Plavšic redshirted last season as a true freshman at Arizona State. He enrolled at UT in May.
LEAGUE MEDIA PICKS VOLS FIFTH; TURNER IS PRESEASON ALL-SEC
• In mid-October, a panel of league media picked Tennessee to finish fifth in the SEC regular-season race.
• The media tabbed guard Lamonté Turner as a second-team preseason All-SEC selection. Turner also was one of nine players who received votes for SEC Player of the Year.
BARNES CLOSING IN ON 700TH CAREER COACHING WIN
• Rick Barnes is eight wins shy of logging his 700th career victory as a college head coach.
• With 692 Division I wins to his credit, he ranks seventh among active head coaches. He would become the 22nd head coach ever to log 700 Division I wins.
• He is 12 victories away from recording his 100th win at Tennessee.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee, which is receiving votes in the AP and USA Today Coaches Polls, opens the 2019-20 regular-season schedule on Tuesday, Nov. 5, as the Lady Vols take on ETSU at Freedom Hall in Johnson City at 7 p.m. ET.
The match-up marks the regular-season debut of Kellie Harper as UT’s head coach. She will attempt to become the first coach to win in her Lady Vol debut since Margaret Hutson beat MTSU at home on Jan. 15, 1971. The last time a Tennessee women’s basketball coach was victorious in her debut game on the road was Mabel Miller, who directed her Big Orange troops to glory against Cumberland (Ky.) on March 10, 1922.
Tuesday’s contest also matches a pair of Tennessee high school basketball products in Kellie Harper (Sparta/White County H.S.) and Brittney Ezell (Franklin/Franklin H.S.), who faced off in the SEC at Tennessee and Alabama, respectively, between 1995 and 1998. Ezell finished her college career in 1998, a year ahead of Harper.
UT will return to Knoxville to host Central Arkansas in the home opener on Thursday at 7 p.m. ETSU, meanwhile, will play at Liberty on Friday at 5 p.m.
BROADCAST INFORMATION
TV or live stream broadcast info. for the contest will be announced soon.
Mickey Dearstone is behind the microphone for IMG College/Lady Vol Network radio/online broadcasts for the 21st season. A link to the live audio stream can be found on each game’s Hoops Central page or the Lady Vol schedule on UTSports.com.
Air time for games on the Lady Vol Radio Network generally occurs 30 minutes prior to tip-off.
SECN+ games are online broadcasts and are available only on WatchESPN via computers, smartphones and tablets.
All of the games included in the ESPN package (ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU) and the SEC Network will be available through WatchESPN, accessible online at WatchESPN.com, on smartphones and tablets via the WatchESPN app, and streamed on televisions through Amazon Fire TV, Apple TV, Chromecast, Roku, Xbox 360 or Xbox One to fans who receive their video subscription from an affiliated provider.
TENNESSEE VS. IN-STATE OPPONENTS
The Tennessee women are 245-61-1 all-time vs. four-year college teams from the Volunteer State
UT was 3-1 vs. teams from the state of Tennessee last season, beating ETSU and Belmont at home and Vanderbilt on the road before losing to VU at home.
LADY VOLS IN OPENERS
The Lady Vols are 41-4 in season openers over the past 45 years, including 7-1 on the road, 26-3 at home and 8-0 at neutral sites.
UT has won its last six season openers and 18 of its last 19.
Tennessee has a 38-7 record in its first road game of the season and 42-3 all-time in its first home contest of the year.
UT has won four straight while playing the team’s first road game of a season.
THE KELLIE HARPER ERA BEGINS
Former Lady Vol Kellie Harper takes the reins at Tennessee after leading Missouri State to a Sweet 16 appearance in last season’s NCAA Tournament.
Harper, a native of Sparta, Tenn. (White County H.S.), played point guard at Tennessee from 1995-99, helping lead the Lady Vols to an NCAA Championship three-peat in 1996, 1997 and 1998. The ’98 squad went 39-0.
In 15 seasons as a head coach, Harper is 285-208 and is one of only 11 coaches to lead three different women’s programs to NCAA Tournament appearances (Western Carolina/NC State/Missouri State).
She will attempt to join Jim Foster (St. Joe’s, Vanderbilt, Vanderbilt, Ohio State, Chattanooga) in becoming the only coaches to take four different women’s teams to the NCAA tourney.
Harper has rebuilt and directed teams to 12 postseason appearances (5 NCAA/7 WNIT) in her career.
The LVFL was 118-79 at Missouri State in six seasons, earning 2019 Kay Yow National Coach of the Year and 2019 Missouri Valley Conference Coach of the Year accolades last season for leading the Lady Bears to the NCAA Sweet 16.
She guided Missouri State to 2016 & 2019 MVC tourney titles, two NCAA appearances (2016, 2019) and three WNIT berths (2015, 2017, 2018).
HARPER IN OPENERS
Kellie Harper is 4-0 while coaching a Power 5 school (NC State) in season openers.
2019-20 SEASON OUTLOOK
Members of the media who cover SEC women’s basketball have projected the Lady Vols to finish No. 6 in the league this season, while the coaches have UT slotted at No. 7.
Considering Tennessee lost three starters and four total letterwinners from last season’s eighth-place-finishing squad, that’s an encouraging development.
Tennessee is receiving votes in both the AP Poll (31st) and USA Today Coaches Poll (34th) this week.
UT is ranked No. 23 nationally by HerHoopsStats, No. 24 by CollegeSportsMadness.com and No. 25 by espnW.
PRESEASON RECOGNITION
Junior wing Rennia Davis is a member of the 20-player Cheryl Miller Award Watch List. She was a semifinal finalist a year ago.
Davis was named to the SEC Coaches Preseason All-SEC First Team.
She was a second-team selection on the SEC Media Preseason squad.
Last season, Davis was an All-SEC Second Team choice by both the media and coaches.
Davis was recently named the Jacksonville (Fla.) Times Union’s Girls Basketball Player of the Decade.
The story said “Nobody in Jacksonville made a bigger impact on the court this decade than Davis.”
Davis played at Ribault High School and tallied 2,304 points and 1,043 rebounds during her career.
ABOUT ETSU
The Bucs are led by head coach Brittney Ezell, who is in her seventh season at the helm. She enters the year at 92-95 during her time in Johnson City and is 212-208 beginning her 14th season as a head coach.
ETSU returns nine players, including two starters, and welcomes six newcomers to the roster for 2019-20.
The team’s top two leading scorers from a year ago return, including junior guards Erica Haynes-Overton (16.8 ppg.) and Micah Scheetz (11.2 ppg.).
Haynes-Overton is poised to become the 24th Buc to score 1,000 points in a career. She enters the 2019-20 campaign just 45 points shy of that milestone.
Besides scoring, Haynes-Overton is ETSU’s returning leader in rebounding, steals, blocks, assists and minutes played.
The Bucs typically play their games at 3,500-seat Brooks Gym on campus, but the school has moved the contest to 6,149-seat Freedom Hall, where the ETSU men’s team plays its home games.
The last time ETSU hosted the Lady Vols, 6,072 fans filed into the ETSU Minidome to see a Volunteer State showcase of women’s hoops.
LAST SEASON AT A GLANCE FOR THE BUCS
ETSU finished the 2018-19 season with a 10-21 overall record and an 8-6 mark in the Southern Conference, good for a tie for third in the league.
After opening 0-8 and standing 2-15 through 17 contests, the Buccaneers won eight of their last 14, with three of their losses coming in overtime.
ETSU lost starters Britney Snowden (9.3 ppg., 6.2 rpg.), Lexus Spears (7.1 ppg., 4.1 rpg.) and Raven Dean (6.8 ppg., 4.0 rpg.) from a year ago.
THE LAST TIME WE MET ETSU
Senior wing Meme Jackson fired in 23 points to help No. 9/8 Tennessee head into the holiday break at 9-1 with an 80-61 win over ETSU on Dec. 21, 2018, at Thompson-Boling Arena.
Senior Cheridene Green (12 points) and sophomore Rennia Davis (11 points and seven rebounds) joined Jackson as double-digit scorers for the Lady Vols, who bounced back from a loss to No. 8/9 Stanford.
Jackson notched 21 of her 23 points from beyond the arc on 7-of-12 shooting from deep, tying for the fourth-most treys made by a Lady Vol in a single game.
Freshman Jazmine Massengill led the Lady Vols defensively with nine rebounds, five blocks and a pair of steals.
Tennessee held the Buccaneers to 31-percent shooting on the night and won the rebounding battle by a 50-33 margin.