Tennessee running back Ty Chandler spoke to the media on Tuesday, in a group session, to review the South Carolina game and preview UAB.

Tennessee running back Ty Chandler spoke to the media on Tuesday, in a group session, to review the South Carolina game and preview UAB.
Scotty McCreery capped his first headlining mini-tour in Europe on Oct. 28, selling out all five shows during his week-long trek through Germany and the U.K.
Scotty kicked off the tour in Berlin on Oct. 23, followed by a second date in Cologne, Germany, on Oct. 24. Scotty performed two shows in London on Oct. 26 and Oct. 28, with a date in Manchester, England, sandwiched in between on Oct. 27.
“This was an incredible week,” says Scotty. “The audiences have been amazing. They knew the words to every song—not just the hits, but all the album tracks. As a songwriter, hearing an audience in another country across the ocean sing ‘Five More Minutes’ back to me is such an emotional experience. I can’t wait to come back to England and Germany, and also perform in other counties in the U.K. and Europe as well. We will be back.”
Scotty will hit the road in the United States with Old Dominion on Nov. 1 in Tampa, Fla., kicking off a series of dates as part of the band’s Make It Sweet Tour.
photo by NCD
Tennessee center Brandon Kennedy spoke to the media on Tuesday, in a group session, to review the South Carolina game and preview UAB.
Tennessee defensive end Matthew Butler spoke to the media on Tuesday, in a group session, to review the South Carolina game and preview UAB.
Little Big Town dropped a ’70s-inspired video for their new single, “Over Drinking.”
The clip for the twangy tune, which stars Michelle Monaghan, was directed by brother-sister duo, Stephen and Alexa Kinigopoulos, at the Silverados Dance Hall & Saloon in Goodlettsville, Tenn. (about 15 miles north of Nashville). The new video features many of the fun frills from decades past, including a mechanical bull, disco ball and fringed clothing.
Penned by Jesse Frasure, Cary Barlowe, Hillary Lindsey, Ashley Gorley and Steph Jones, “Over Drinking” is the lead single to LBT’s upcoming ninth studio album, Nightfall, which drops on Jan 17.
Watch LBT’s new video below.
photo by Arroyo/O\’Connor, AFF-USA.com
Dolly Parton rolled out the red carpet at her east Tennessee theme park, Dollywood, on Oct. 29 for the premiere of her new Netflix series, Heartstrings.
The eight-episode Netflix original series will tell the stories of eight of Dolly’s songs—including “Jolene,” “Two Doors Down,” “Sugar Hill” and more—with a different theme and cast for each episode. From rom-com to western, each episode was filmed at Dollywood and stars a number of actors, including Dolly, Kimberly Williams-Paisley, Julianne Hough, Delta Burke, Andy Mientus, Ben Lawson, Jessica Collins, Sarah Shahi, Holly Taylor, Willa Fitzgerald and more.
For the red carpet event at Dollywood, Dolly invited Heartstrings’ actors and actresses, 500 fans and 150 Dollywood employees to watch a sneak peek of one of the episodes at the park’s Showstreet Palace Theater.
Heartstrings will premiere on Netflix on Nov. 22.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — In head coach Kellie Harper‘s exhibition debut at the University of Tennessee, the women’s basketball team held Carson-Newman to 29-percent shooting in a 70-44 victory at Thompson-Boling Arena.
The Lady Vols, who played multiple lineup combinations and made personnel changes throughout the game, moved to 16-0 against Carson-Newman in exhibition games and to 49-4 all-time in preseason exhibition play.
Junior Rennia Davis, who was named to the SEC Coaches’ Preseason All-SEC First Team earlier in the day, led her squad with 20 points and eight boards. Sophomore Rae Burrell also nearly collected a double-double with 14 points and nine rebounds in the contest.
The Lady Vols opened up the game with a 12-0 run against the Lady Eagles with four different Tennessee players contributing. The Big Orange also had its best shooting percentage in the opening quarter, going 10-for-26 (.385) on field goals.
After the first stanza, UT had a 26-9 lead behind Burrell, who led the team with eight points. Both Burrell and sophomore Zaay Green also collected four boards throughout the first 10 minutes of play.
At the end of the second quarter, Tennessee had eight different players on the scoreboard and led 36-13, with 20 of those points coming from UT’s bench. The Lady Vols also forced 11 turnovers by Carson-Newman compared to Tennessee’s five and only allowed the Lady Eagles to score four points in the quarter.
During the third quarter, Davis hit a clutch three-pointer halfway through the period to spark another scoring streak for the Lady Vols and brought the lead to 46-22. Tennessee finished the third frame with a last-second bucket from sophomore Jazmine Massengill, extending UT’s lead to 52-31.
In the last quarter of play, the Lady Vols reached their biggest lead of the game at a 32-point advantage with just over seven minutes remaining. At the end of regulation, UT had held the Lady Eagles to zero free throw opportunities and only allowed 13 points in the final 10 minutes.
Six Lady Vols made their debut and combined for 22 points with three of them all scoring six points. That group included freshmen Jordan Horston and Tamari Key and junior transfer Jaiden McCoy. Horston led the group in minutes, playing more than 22 minutes in her first game for the Big Orange, and freshman Jessie Rennie was right behind her with 20.
Tennessee finished the game with 31 points from the bench and 42 from inside the paint. The Lady Vols also only committed 11 turnovers and forced 19 by Carson-Newman, scoring 15 points off those opportunities. The Big Orange led the entire competition and never allowed the Lady Eagles a chance to tie the game.
Up Next: UT opens the season vs. ETSU at 7 p.m. ET on Tuesday, Nov. 5, at Freedom Hall in Johnson City. The Lady Vols return to Thompson-Boling on Nov. 7, playing their regular-season home opener against Central Arkansas with another 7 p.m. tip.
Davis Sniping: Junior Rennia Davis shot a blistering 64.2 percent from the floor against C-N, going nine of 14 from the field and two of four from behind the arc to finish as UT’s high scorer with 20 points.
Dominating the Paint: The Lady Vols scored 42 of their 70 points in the paint while holding C-N to just 16 points in the paint. They also won the rebounding battle 59 to 35 and converted 25 offensive rebounds into 25 second-chance points.
New Faces: Tennessee had six players donning the Lady Vol uniform for the first time on Tuesday (McCoy, Brown, Rennie, Key, Horston and Saunders). Collectively the group played 95 minutes, combining for 22 points, 19 rebounds and five steals.
UT Athletics
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – University of Tennessee junior forward Rennia Davis has been named to the SEC Women’s Basketball Coaches’ Preseason All-SEC First Team.
Davis was one of eight players chosen for preseason all-league first-team honors. The Lady Vol standout earned All-SEC Second Team recognition as a sophomore following her play during the 2018-19 campaign and was a preseason All-SEC Second Team choice by the media earlier this month. She also is on the 20-player Cheryl Miller Award Preseason Watch List.
A 6-foot-2 product of Ribault High School in Jacksonville, Florida, Davis led UT in scoring (14.9), rebounding (7.7) and free throw percentage (.856) in her second season on Rocky Top. She ranked No. 1 in the SEC in free throw percentage, No. 8 in rebounding and No. 12 in scoring a year ago.
Davis’ scoring average tied for No. 5 all-time by a UT sophomore, while her rebound average was the ninth-best for a second-year performer at Tennessee. Her sophomore-year double-double total (9) was the sixth-most by an active player in the SEC last season and the second-most by an underclassman.
Texas A&M’s Chennedy Carter was voted as SEC Women’s Basketball Preseason Player of the Year. Tennessee’s Davis and Arkansas’ Chelsea Dungee also received votes.
Joining Carter, Dungee and Davis on the All-SEC Preseason First Team are Rhyne Howard, Kentucky; Ayana Mitchell, LSU; Jordan Danberry, Mississippi State; Amber Smith, Missouri; and Tyasha Harris, South Carolina.
The Preseason All-SEC Second Team is comprised of Cierra Johnson, Alabama; Daisa Alexander, Auburn; Unique Thompson, Auburn; Gabby Connally, Georgia; Chloe Bibby, Mississippi State; Mikiah Herbert Harrigan, South Carolina; Ciera Johnson, Texas A&M; Kayla Wells, Texas A&M and Mariella Fasoula, Vanderbilt.
Coaches cannot vote for their own team or players and ties are not broken, which led to nine on the second team.
Texas A&M was predicted to win the 2020 Southeastern Conference women’s basketball championship in a vote of the league’s coaches. South Carolina, Mississippi State, Kentucky, Arkansas, LSU and Tennessee round out the top half the league. Auburn, Missouri, Georgia, Alabama, Vanderbilt, Ole Miss and Florida fill spots eight through 14.
The Lady Vols were 19-13 overall and 7-9 in SEC play a year ago, tying for eighth place in the league standings. UT enters the 2019-20 season led by new head coach Kellie Harper and returning two starters and six total letterwinners who saw action last year. UT welcomes five new players and another who sat out 2018-19 due to injury.
Order of Finish
1. Texas A&M
2. South Carolina
3. Mississippi State
4. Kentucky
5. Arkansas
6. LSU
7. Tennessee
8. Auburn
9. Missouri
10. Georgia
11. Alabama
12. Vanderbilt
13. Ole Miss
14. Florida
Player of the Year
Chennedy Carter, Texas A&M
First Team All-SEC
Chelsea Dungee, Arkansas
Rhyne Howard, Kentucky
Ayana Mitchell, LSU
Jordan Danberry, Mississippi State
Amber Smith, Missouri
Tyasha Harris, South Carolina
Rennia Davis, Tennessee
Chennedy Carter, Texas A&M
Second Team All-SEC
Cierra Johnson, Alabama
Daisa Alexander, Auburn
Unique Thompson, Auburn
Gabby Connally, Georgia
Chloe Bibby, Mississippi State
Mikiah Herbert Harrigan, South Carolina
Ciera Johnson, Texas A&M
Kayla Wells, Texas A&M
Mariella Fasoula, Vanderbilt
UT Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee hits the hardwood for the first time in 2019-20 when it takes on Eastern New Mexico on Wednesday night at Thompson-Boling Arena for its lone exhibition matchup of the preseason. Tip-off is set for 7 p.m. ET on SEC Network +.
Wednesday’s game can streamed online through SEC Network+/WatchESPN. Visit espn.com/watch or download the WatchESPN app to view the game on a computer or mobile device. Roger Hoover (play-by-play), Vincent Yarbrough (analyst) and Casey Funderburg (reporter) will have the call.
Fans in Knoxville can hear Bob Kesling and Bert Bertelkamp’s call of the game on WNML while this week’s edition of Vol Calls will air on WIVK. Vol Network affiliates throughout the state will have the option to carry one of the two programs, but both are available to stream online through UTSports.com and the UT Gameday app.
The Vols are coming off one of the greatest season’s in program history as UT tied the school record for wins, finishing 31-6 (15-3 SEC). National Coach of the Year Rick Barnes guided Tennessee to a school-record 19-game win streak and a perfect 18-0 record at Thompson-Boling Arena, with a program record tying three wins over teams with a top-five ranking. The Orange & White also spent the entire season ranked inside the top 10, including four weeks atop both major polls.
The 110th season of Tennessee Basketball officially begins next Tuesday, Nov. 6, when the Vols take on UNC Asheville (7 p.m. ET on SEC Network +).
LAYUP LINES
• Tennessee enters Wednesday’s game with a 78-18 all-time record in exhibition contests, including a 61-10 mark on the U.S. mainland.
• The 2019-20 campaign is Tennessee’s 33rd season in Thompson-Boling Arena. UT owns a 385-129 record in 514 games at TBA (exhibition results do not count toward official wins totals).
• 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.
LAST SEASON
• TOP SPOT: The Vols spent four weeks atop the Associated Press Top 25 rankings. And for the first time in program history, Tennessee spent the entire season ranked among the top 10.
• EIGHTH SWEET SIXTEEN: Tennessee advanced to last year’s Sweet Sixteen with NCAA Tournament wins over Colgate and Iowa. It marked the eighth time UT reached the Round of 16 in its history, and the sixth since 2000.
• BRINGING IN THE HARDWARE: Grant Williams was a consensus first-team All-American and repeated as SEC Player of the Year. Admiral Schofield was a first-team All-SEC selection, and Jordan Bone garnered second-team honors. All three players were selected in June’s NBA Draft. Rick Barnes earned a pair of National Coach of the Year honors, including the Werner Ladder Naismith College Coach of the Year Award.
A WIN WOULD…
• Give the Volunteers a 9-0 record in exhibition games under head coach Rick Barnes.
• Extend Tennessee’s exhibition win streak to 20 games.
ABOUT EASTERN NEW MEXICO
• Eastern New Mexico is a public university located in Portales, New Mexico founded in 1934, with an enrollment of 6,027.
• Greyhounds head coach Tres Segler got his start in collegiate basketball as a student assistant with Rick Barnes‘ Texas program. From 2003-09, Segler served as a student manager, camp coordinator, weight room assistant and graduate assistant with the Longhorns.
• Notable alumni of ENMU include current Oregon men’s basketball coach Dana Altman. Altman was the former coach of current Tennessee guard Victor Bailey Jr. at Oregon.
• Former longtime Kansas State football coach Bill Snyder also is an alumni of Eastern New Mexico, earning a master’s degree in 1965.
• ENMU competes in the Lone Star Conference. The conference headquarters are located in Richardson, Texas. The league has 18 member institutions located in Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico.
• ENMU has a longstanding tradition of wearing green around campus on Fridays, similar to the tradition of Big Orange Fridays at the University of Tennessee.
• There is a time capsule buried on ENMU’s campus that is set to be opened in 2035.
• ENMU is New Mexico’s largest regional comprehensive university and is the most recently founded state university in New Mexico.
• The Greyhounds, following a solid 2018-19 campaign, return their leading scorer, junior Devin Pullum. The slashing guard was named to the All-Lone Star Conference second team after averaging 12.7 points per game, with all but three of his 27 appearances coming off the bench.
• The Hounds, however, do lose significant production entering the new season as their second-, third- and fourth-leading scorers graduated this past May.
• The Hounds took a big step forward last season, finishing better than .500 in conference play (10-8) for the first time since 2005-06 when they finished 9-3.
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.
VOLS FIVE FRESHMEN AVERAGE 6-8
• Tennessee’s five scholarship freshmen have an average height of 6-8.
• Josiah-Jordan James is the shortest of the bunch at 6-6. The others, in ascending order, are Davonte Gaines (6-7), Olivier Nkamhoua (6-8), Drew Pember (6-9) and Uroš Plavšic (7-0).
VOL FANS EAGER TO PACK TBA
• Four of Tennessee’s home games this season sold out before the end of October: Memphis (Dec. 14), Kentucky (Feb. 8), Florida (Feb. 29) and Auburn (March 7).
• Last season, Tennessee had five sellouts.
• The Vols and Lady Vols combined for a total attendance of 476,317 last season—the most of any school in the country.
UT Athletics
Miranda Lambert has teamed with Apple Music for a new short film—Behind Miranda Lambert’s Wildcard—that chronicles the making of her upcoming seventh studio album, Wildcard, which drops on Nov. 1.
Behind Miranda Lambert’s Wildcard features appearances and commentary from Miranda, the album’s producer Jay Joyce and songwriters Natalie Hemby, Ashley Monroe, Luke Dick, Liz Rose, Lori McKenna and Hillary Lindsey.
In the film, Miranda discusses her creative approach to making the album, channeling her confidence, blending country and rock and more.
“Country is what I do, it’s who I am, it literally just seeps out of my pores,” says Miranda in the film’s teaser, “but I love rock and roll.”
The new movie will air exclusively on Apple Music on Nov. 4.
Watch the film’s teaser below.
photo by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com