Video: Taylor, Guarantano and Smith – South Carolina postgame

Video: Taylor, Guarantano and Smith – South Carolina postgame

Tennessee outside linebacker Darrell Taylor, quarterback Jarrett Guarantano and offensive lineman Trey Smith spoke to the media in the postgame after the Vols beat the South Carolina Gamecocks at home Saturday 41-21.

Vols OLB Darrell Taylor, QB Jarrett Guarantano & OL Trey Smith / Credit: 99.1 The Sports Animal
Vince’s View: SEC score predictions including UT/SC

Vince’s View: SEC score predictions including UT/SC

Vols Defense / Credit: 99.1 The Sports Animal

By Vince Ferrara / @VinceSports

Below are my predictions for SEC games in Week 9 of the college football season here on my blog, “Vince’s View.”

These are straight-up picks. The point spreads are just for some context of who the favorites are. I will list broadcast information all season as well.

Check back here all season for score predictions on every game involving an SEC team all the way through the bowl season and perhaps, again, the national championship game.

2018 Game Prediction Record: 93-32 (74%)
2019 Week 8 Prediction Record: 6-1 (86%)
2019 Game Prediction Record: 59-12 (83%)

SEC WEEK 9 SCHEDULE

Mississippi State (3-4, 1-3 SEC) at Texas A&M (4-3, 2-2 SEC)
College Station, Texas • Kyle Field (102,733)
Noon ET • SEC Network
Series: MSU leads, 7-5-0
Last: MSU, 28-13 (2018 at Starkville)
Sirius: 134/137 • XM: 191/190
Line: Texas A&M -10 ½
Vince’s View: The Aggies offense has been disappointing this season. The running game and QB Kellen Mond are two reasons for that. Heck, despite the brutal schedule, the season has been disappointing for A&M. The Bulldogs are the perfect remedy to cure the offense.
Score Prediction: Texas A&M 38 Miss State 17

Auburn (6-1, 3-1 SEC) at LSU (7-0, 3-0 SEC)
Baton Rouge, La. • Tiger Stadium (102,321)
3:30 p.m. ET • CBS
Series: LSU leads, 30-22-1
Last: LSU, 22-21 (2018 at Auburn)
Sirius: 211/134 • XM: 192/191
Line: LSU -10 ½
Vince’s View: What a beautiful match-up of the seemingly unstoppable offense of LSU and the dominant Auburn defensive line. I think LSU’s Tigers have more answers with plans B, C and D than Auburn’s Tigers. LSU is slowly getting healthier on defense, so that should show-out today as well.
Score Prediction: LSU 35 Auburn 21

South Carolina (3-4, 2-3 SEC ) at Tennessee (2-5, 1-3 SEC)
Knoxville, Tenn. • Neyland Stadium (102,455)
4 p.m. ET • SEC Network
Series: UT leads, 25-10-2
Last: SC, 27-24 (2018 at Columbia)
Sirius: 137/99 • XM: 190/207
Line: South Carolina -4 ½
Vince’s View: Tennessee is 1-2 the last three games, but that doesn’t tell the story. The enhancement of play at the line of scrimmage and partially improved QB play has helped turn the season of lost hope around into at least conversation about obtaining bowl eligibility. It will make more sense if JT Shrout makes the start for UT. It will give him a clean slate, some confidence in believing in him and it will allow Chaney to start the game with his exact game-plan for the young quarterback. If you bring him in the game in relief, you may have to throw the plan out the window and it may be a difficult situation for him to succeed in. Overall, I like South Carolina’s playmakers on both sides of the ball and Will Muschamp, of course, is unbeaten against the Vols.
Score Prediction: South Carolina 27 Tennessee 16

Arkansas (2-5, 0-4 SEC) at Alabama (7-0, 4-0 SEC)
Tuscaloosa, Ala. • Bryant-Denny Stadium (101,821)
7 p.m. ET • ESPN
Series: UA leads, 19-8
Last: UA, 65-31 (2018 at Tuscaloosa)
Sirius: 134/81 • XM: 191/81
Line: Alabama -31 ½
Vince’s View: Arkansas can’t win in SEC play and even without Tua for the Tide, they won’t change that vs. Bama. Alabama should work on running the football and try to get to the open week as healthy as possible. The score will be helped by at least two non-offensive touchdowns by the Tide.
Score Prediction: Alabama 41 Arkansas 7

Missouri (5-2, 2-1 SEC) at Kentucky (3-4, 1-4 SEC)
Lexington, Ky. • Kroger Field (61,000)
7:30 p.m. ET • SEC Network
Series: UK leads, 6-3
Last: UK, 15-14 (2018 at Columbia)
Sirius: 211/137 • XM: 192/190
Line: Missouri -10
Vince’s View: Still shaking my head at Mizzou’s loss at Vanderbilt. The Tigers were playing so well. Mizzou is not the same team on the road as it is at home. Kentucky is on the struggle bus and trying to smoke-and-mirror its way through ballgames. Mizzou is the better team with more options and motivation to bounce back after last week, as it did after the Wyoming loss.
Score Prediction: Missouri 28 Kentucky 17

Open: Florida (7-1, 4-1 SEC); Georgia (6-1, 3-1 SEC); Ole Miss (3-5, 2-3 SEC); Vanderbilt (2-5, 1-3 SEC)


Find more of my broadcasting work at VinceSports.net

Watch George Strait’s Face Become Pumpkin Art

Watch George Strait’s Face Become Pumpkin Art

Not only has George Strait’s face been immortalized on a bronze plaque in the Country Music Hall of Fame, but now his likeness has been captured on the choicest of Halloween media: a pumpkin.

In honor of George’s Las Vegas Residency, AXS Studios commissioned artists Jon Neill to carve the King of Country’s face into a pumpkin—complete with his trademark cowboy hat—while George’s hits played in the background, including “We Really Shouldn’t Be Doing This” and “Write This Down.”

Watch the pumpkin transform into George in the 60-second clip below.

 

photo and video by AXS Studios

Listen to Jason Aldean’s New Song, “Camouflage Hat”

Listen to Jason Aldean’s New Song, “Camouflage Hat”

Jason Aldean continues to release tracks from his upcoming ninth studio album, 9, which is set to drop on Nov. 22.

In addition to previously releasing lead single, “We Back,” and tracks “Blame It On You,” “I Don’t Drink Anymore,” “Keep It Small Town,” “Dirt We Were Raised On” and “Got What I Got,” Jason dropped “Camouflage Hat” on Oct. 24.

“Camouflage Hat” was penned by Ben Hayslip, Jameson Rodgers and Josh Thompson.

“People buy albums with eight songs for 10 bucks now, but with 9, it’s like you’re getting two whole albums at once,” says Jason. “I want fans to feel like they’re getting more than they bargained for, and I want it to be something they listen to from top to bottom, and never hit skip . . . or thumbs down or whatever.”

Watch the lyric video for “Camouflage Hat” below.

9 Track List & Songwriters

1. “Tattoos and Tequila” (Michael Dulaney, Neil Thrasher)
2. “Blame It On You” (Kurt Allison, John Edwards, Tully Kennedy, Michael Tyler, Brian White)
3. “Champagne Town” (Matt Dragstrem, Josh Thompson)
4. “Some Things You Don’t Forget” (Nick Brophy, Michael Dulaney, Jennifer Hanson, Neil Thrasher)
5. “Got What I Got” (Thomas Archer, Alex Palmer, Michael Tyler)
6. “Keeping It Small Town” (Jaron Boyer, Ben Hayslip, Morgan Wallen)
7. “Camouflage Hat” (Ben Hayslip, Jameson Rodgers, Josh Thompson)
8. “Came Here to Drink” (Jaron Boyer, Alex Palmer, Michael Tyler)
9. “We Back” (Tyler Hubbard, Jordan Schmidt, Brad Warren, Brett Warren)
10. “Dirt We Were Raised On” (Rhett Akins, Jaron Boyer, Josh Thompson)
11. “I Don’t Drink Anymore” (Kelly Lovelace, CJ Solar, Neil Thrasher)
12. “Cowboy Killer” (Jaron Boyer, Josh Hoge, Michael Tyler)
13. “One for the Road” (Lynn Hutton, Brandon Kinney, Josh Thompson)
14. “Talk About Georgia” (Kurt Allison, Tully Kennedy, Michael Tyler)
15. “The Same Way” (Brock Berryhill, Brantley Gilbert, Cole Taylor)
16. “She Likes It” (Jaron Boyer, Ben Stennis, Michael Tyler)

photo by NCD

Lady Antebellum’s New Video for “What I’m Leaving For” Is a Family Affair [Watch]

Lady Antebellum’s New Video for “What I’m Leaving For” Is a Family Affair [Watch]

Lady Antebellum is giving fans another sample of their upcoming eighth studio album, Ocean, with the release of new song, “What I’m Leaving For.”

Penned by Sam Ellis, Micah Premnath and Laura Veltz, “What I’m Leaving For” follows the release of four previous songs from the new album, including the title track and Top 15 lead single, “What If I Never Get Over You.”

“I wore out the demo for this song,” says Lady A’s Dave Haywood. “I immediately related to it. It’s so hard stepping away from your family the way we do, and that song is such a great, beautiful way of articulating what we’re out here doing this for—our families, and those that we love and the fans that love us, too. This song is a beautiful picture of that push and pull of our journey.”

Lady A’s new video for “What I’m Leaving For” features a number of “home movies” with the trio’s six kids.

Lady Antebellum will release Ocean on Nov. 15.

The 13-track offering, which was produced by first-time collaboration Dann Huff, features a number of top songwriters, including Ross Copperman, Chris DeStefano, Hillary Lindsey, busbee, Ryan Hurd, Laura Veltz, Corey Crowder and more. Lady A’s Hillary Scott, Dave Haywood and Charles Kelley had a hand in writing seven of the tracks. The album’s “The Thing That Wrecks You” features a collaboration with Little Big Town.

Watch the video for “What I’m Leaving For” below.

Ocean Track Listing & Songwriters

1. “What If I Never Get Over You” (Sam Ellis, Jon Green, Ryan Hurd, Laura Veltz)
2. “Pictures” (Dave Haywood, Charles Kelley, Hillary Scott, Sarah Buxton, Corey Crowder)
3. “Crazy Love” (Charles Kelley, Nathan Chapman)
4. “You Can Do You” (Dave Haywood, Charles Kelley, Corey Crowder, Jordan Schmidt)
5. “What I’m Leaving For” (Sam Ellis, Micah Premnath, Laura Veltz)
6. “Be Patient With My Love” (Charles Kelley, Dave Barnes, Ben West)
7. “Alright” (Dave Haywood, Charles Kelley, Hillary Scott, Busbee, Justin Ebach)
8. “Let It Be Love” (Hillary Scott, Jordan Reynolds, Amy Wadge)
9. “On A Night Like This” (Dave Barnes)
10. “Boots” (Charles Kelley, Ross Copperman)
11. “The Thing That Wrecks You” feat. Little Big Town (Daniel Tashian, Tenille Townes, Kate York)
12. “Mansion” (Chris DeStefano, Hillary Lindsey, Josh Miller)
13. “Ocean” (Tofer Brown, Sarah Buxton, Abe Stoklasa)

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Lady Vol Media Day Player Comments

Lady Vol Media Day Player Comments

Lou Brown:

HC Kellie Harper and Lady Vol team / Credit: UT Athletics

“My expectation this year is that we’re going to come out, play hard, be intense every game and we’re going to get better. We’re going to get better throughout the season. We have a long way to go as a team, but I’m really excited to watch us get better. It’s also been a long time coming. I’m so excited, I can’t believe the season is here. I’m excited to finally represent No. 21 and represent the Lady Vols on the court. My knee also feels great. I’m in the backend of my rehab. I’m in full practices, I’m feeling fit and strong, and I’m ready to play.”

Rae Burrell:
“I’m just excited to see us put together all of the work we’ve put in over the summer and to finally see it all come to life.”

Rennia Davis:
“I’m excited for this season. I’m really excited. It’s an opportunity for me to do something different, be more vocal, help our team and do what I’m capable of doing.”

Zaay Green:
“My goals this year are to definitely have a better record than last year and to try to get to the SEC Championship. The transition has been really good. We’ve been practicing really hard, and we’ve been working really hard since they (new staff) got here. We just have to show it when we play.”
“I’m really excited to play. I’m not sure if there are words to describe it. I get jitters when I think about playing in our games coming up. I think my expectations are no losses. I don’t want any losses this year.”

Kamera Harris:
“I expect a big year this year. Over the summer I really worked on my shot and my face-up game. I’ve been stretched out to the four this year, so it’s been a bit of a position change. I’ve really just been trying to work on my outside shot a lot more.”

Jordan Horston:
“The transition from high school to college has been a big one for me. I would say the biggest adjustment for me has been time management. Just knowing that I have to have everything planned out each day. I would say our goals are to win, but if I dig a bit deeper, we just want to be the best team we can be. We want to do the right things, have each other’s backs and just do all of the little things right. If we do that, everything will work itself out.”

Tamari Key:
“The transition has been good. It’s been a rollercoaster for sure. Adjusting my time management, the pace of the game is different, the physicality on the court for sure. I’m really looking forward to the season. This is a great group of girls. We all get along so well. My expectation for us is to just get better every day. To keep making strides and for myself I really want to get stronger physically, because post players dominate the SEC. As a team I just want us to be successful and the best team we can be at all times.”

Kasiyahna Kushkituah:
“I know for me and the team, it’s taking it one day at a time. Right now, it’s practice. Right now, it’s getting better every day in practice for the games. When the games get here, it’s taking it one game at a time. And I’m excited to finally start playing. I’m excited. The season just got here so fast. Once it starts, it’s taking it one game at a time and improving from there.”

Jazmine Massengill:
“My goal for us this year is to just be the best team we can possibly be. I understand we were picked No. 6 in the SEC and while we respect everyone’s opinion, we just have to try to be the best we can be. For me this year I expect to be a leader, to step up more and to be more aggressive. Whatever coach Kellie needs me to be, that’s exactly what I’ll be, on and off the court.”

Jaiden McCoy:
“My goal for this team this year is to win the tournament, really just like everyone else. For myself, it is to just grow as a player, especially coming from junior college and having an injury. I just want to grow to the SEC level and be as competitive as I can be. I’m so excited to play. I just feel like we’re going to have a really good season on and off the court.”

Jessie Rennie:
“Obviously I’ve moved from Melbourne, Australia, so the other side of the world. It’s been a massive, massive move, and I’ve settled in well. I think having Lou Brown here has helped me so much. But, you know I’m settled in, I know my way around and I know where I need to be, which is awesome. It’s less than a week until our first game, and it’s just crazy. I’m so, so excited just to play in orange, in TBA in front of our fans. It’s going to be incredible.”

Emily Saunders:
“The transition from high school to college has been a very big transition, because the college game is so much more fast-paced, and everyone is talented. In high school ball you can get by with little things, because you’re 6-4, but here it’s just a completely different level. My goal for myself is to be more confident in my game. In high school I was a defender, because I’m tall. I wasn’t looked at to score, but I want to transition my game from defense to scoring altogether, and I just want to be an all-around player. For this team I think we have excellent potential. It’s just up to us to fulfill that potential, which I think we’re capable of doing as long as we continue to put the work in.”

-UT Athletics

Kellie Harper Lady Vol Media Day Presser Transcript

Kellie Harper Lady Vol Media Day Presser Transcript

Lady Vol HC Kellie Harper / Credit: UT Athletics

Lady Vol head basketball coach Kellie Harper met with reporters during the team’s on-campus media day on Thursday.

Opening Statement
“Well, we’re all excited to get started. It’s almost unbelievable that we’re less than a week away from putting on uniforms and playing in Thompson-Boling Arena. I know our players are excited about that, ready for that opportunity. I’m actually still looking forward to the practices that we have before then, but they’ve been giving me great energy. They’ve been giving us good effort, and right now I think that’s the most important thing that we can be doing. So, we’re all excited.”

On if the players are ready for outside competition rather than playing each other:
“Usually about this time right now players are really looking forward to playing someone else in a uniform. They’re really looking forward to the games. Ours have definitely got a countdown going on, but I’ll be honest with you, they stayed locked in pretty good. Every team that I’ve ever coached, you get to this point and they’re just ready to play games, so it’s expected, but I’ve been really proud of their focus as we go into the season.”

On her relationship with Lady Vol fans:
“Listen, I have had more stories about me playing in the last month than I need to hear. It’s been great to reconnect with fans and to reminisce with some of my former teammates, and to reminisce about my former teammates and about our time here. I think it’s been important for me to be out in the community and out visiting with our fans, but our fans have stories and they want to talk about the nineties, the late nineties for sure, and hopefully they’ll be just as excited as we were back then about this upcoming season.”

On what she expects from Jordan Horston:
“Well, any time there’s change you have to put yourself in those young players’ shoes and their families’ shoes. They didn’t know me, and I think it’s hard to be able to turn your daughter over to someone you don’t know, and so we had to build some relationships pretty quickly with them, but they were on board from the beginning, and I think one, that’s a testament to the University of Tennessee. I think there’s a big pull to be in Big Orange Country. I think we had a pretty quick connection, Jordan and I did, and I was really happy that her parents were willing to give me that opportunity. Jordan is a fun young woman to coach. She’s a little bit of a perfectionist. She wants to do things right. She’s very skilled. She’s very savvy. She asks questions. She communicates well with her teammates. I think she has some leadership qualities that I think we’re going to be able to develop over time, but she’s still a freshman and she, like a lot of other players, has a lot to learn. I think right now the best thing about that is she’s willing and she’s excited about learning, whether that’s learning how to deal with time management on a daily basis or learning how to run an offense.”

On her relationship with Rick Barnes and his staff:
“I think it’s really important that you have a strong relationship with the men’s basketball staff. I think you’re going to work in very close proximity with one another. I think you have valuable resources just down the hall. Right now, we have not spent a lot of time together. His schedule and my schedule are very packed. We are trying to squeeze a lot in before the season starts. To be quite honest with you, I think when games start we’ll be able to probably visit a little bit more, at least that’s the way I view it, and be able to watch some games and be able to maybe step into some practices, because we’ll have few other things to grab our attention other than our season at that point.”

On what she has seen out of the sophomores, specifically Jazmine Massengill:
“Jazmine has been pretty steady. I think she has been pretty consistent. I think it is very interesting the way that she plays compared to the way a Zaay Green plays or a Jordan Horston. Jazmine is just a little more reserved, a little bit more composed at times, and I think it has been a nice balance. There are times that I want Jazmine to be a little bit more aggressive, but I think the balance that she brings to our team has been really good. Again, having somebody you can count on to be steady is important. She is very coachable.”

On anything that surprises her about Rennia Davis’ game and what she needs to do to become more of a leader:
“I think Rennia has been working really hard on several aspects of her game to develop as the best basketball player she can be. Part of that is her communication with her teammates, as well as her coaches. I think a lot of people naturally look to her. She is the most experienced player on the team, and her teammates are looking at her. She has been thrust into that role, and she is really trying. She is being really considerate of that position, and we are trying to help her along there. In terms of basketball, she is a fantastic shooter, she is really good in transition and she is good on the boards. We just want to find a little more consistency with her rebounding. Her defense is a work in progress, and it has gotten better. She is working on that daily, and it is a big deal for her to get better. I think her on-the-ball defense has improved the most. I think for her, the next step will be improving her off-the-ball defense as well.”

On what the conversations have been like with Zaay Green on developing her offensive game:
Zaay Green is one of the most athletic players that I have ever coached. She can get from point A to point B quickly. I think the most impressive thing about her is that she is athletic, skilled and is able to score, but she also works so hard every single possession. She doesn’t take a practice off. She doesn’t take a possession off. She gives us everything she’s got in every single possession. I think that matters. I think it is making an impact on her teammates; it has made an impact on our staff. She can’t give us any more than she is giving us. She is extremely coachable. I am happy for her because she is putting herself into position to be something special. We are just trying to work everyone’s strengths into our system right now. One of her strengths is getting the ball down the court in a hurry, being aggressive offensively and aggressive on the ball defensively and (just) using that athletic ability.”

On what has been the biggest positive surprise on the state of the program:
“I think one of the biggest positives – you know this, but until you get in the middle of it, you can say sometimes you don’t understand the depth of it – the resources we have for our student-athletes at the University of Tennessee are unparalleled. I am so impressed with the staff in the athletic department that is here for the success and the well-being of our student athletes. They are elite, whether that is academics, nutrition, health, mental health or strength and conditioning. There are so many talented folks and I have been really impressed with that. That is one of the biggest positives here.”

On the point guard position:
“In terms of our point guards right now, we’re playing three point guards; We’re playing Zaay Green at point, Jordan Horston at point, and Jazmine Massengill. Those players could all be on the court at the same time as well. So, we’re utilizing our point guards really as combo guards, and I think offensively we will be more of a threat when we have dual point guards. That will be harder to guard at times. For me, I want our point guards to know what I see, and sometimes I’ll back them up and I’ll say, ‘Do you see this?’ I want them to look at the court the way that I do as their coach, so sometimes that takes a little bit of extra communication. One of the things I like to do is grab my point guards more than anybody, pull them to the side, just for little tidbits of knowledge. It’s not that I’m yelling at them so much as just giving them more. They’re going to get a little bit more information than most people because I just think they need more information. At some point, we will talk about holding them to a higher standard, because they have to get everybody in the right position, no one else has to do that. I think there’s a lot going on at point guard, and right now I’m just trying to be there for them, trying to be a strong supporter and educator for them.”

On if this is the most talented roster she’s coached:
“These are some of the most talented players I’ve coached, the top end of our roster is. I think it is exciting when you know that you can go out and coach some of the best players in the country. I think it’s challenging at times when you have players that come in that are really good and talented, because it can be challenging to find ways to get them better. I feel really good about what we can do there. I love teaching basketball; I love teaching the game, and everybody can learn. I think right now that’s one thing we’re seeing with all of our players. They are so willing to learn and are very open-minded right now. It’s just exciting.”

On upperclassmen taking on new leadership roles:
“A lot of people have asked me, ‘Who is your leader?’ You’re looking at her, first of all. We’re still establishing that. They need me more than anybody right now. They need me to help guide them and show them the way, but I also have to be preparing our leaders, because by the end of the year we’re going to need those people. They need to be able to look at their teammates, and obviously we talked about Rennia (earlier). Jazmine Massengill has been a positive leader for our team thus far in that she wants to do it right. She’s relaying messages from the staff to the team, which I think has been really good. Lou Brown has been a consistent positive voice in practice, and I think we need that. I think there’s definitely a space for that on our team. Obviously, she’s been around and seen a lot, so she has some experiences there that she can share with especially the young players. You know, Kasi (Kushkituah) is a player that I want to see emerge as a team leader, as a positional leader as well. Our post players lack the experience that the guards have; Kasi is going to be the most experienced post player. I think her voice needs to be a little louder for that group. She’s working on it, she knows we have high expectations for her, and I think she’s very willing, it’s just going to take some time.”

On addressing turnover problems from last year:
“As a former point guard, I cringe with turnovers for sure, but I do think that the process we have right now, it’s not the biggest priority for me at this moment. It will be. We are still working on our execution, where the players are supposed to be offensively, working on spacing, and at some point, the turnovers will become a priority. We are trending that way right now, but we’ve not been running in practice for every turnover yet. It’s going to happen at some point, but we’re just not to that point yet, as far as our execution is concerned.”

On biggest questions about team heading into exhibition game:
“When we break down our defense, and we’re in a halfcourt defense, you feel pretty good about what we’re doing when it’s in isolation working on one specific thing. But when we get out in a uniform with lights, with fans, with officials, with another team, and you’re going multiple possessions, how focused can we be in every possession? We started working on talking about how every single possession matters, and sometimes that’s a hard concept. You’re in the middle of the game, and you may not have the urgency in the middle of the second quarter as you might have in the fourth. We have to get to that point. That’s going to be interesting to see where our team is in terms of their focus for 40 minutes.”

On team consistency and effort:
“I think the effort has been probably a little higher than the consistency. I think we lose our focus a little bit at times, and we’re not disciplined enough that everything is a habit. So, for instance using boxing out, I expect them to box out every single possession, and we don’t do that right now. Isolated in a drill we do. We understand that, but being disciplined where it’s actually a habit? We’re not to that point yet. The effort is there when we do, but it’s just the focus and attention to all the little details that we’re working on. It takes time. It doesn’t just happen. You can’t just magically push a button, and then they remember everything they’re supposed to know. We’re putting a lot on them; we’re pretty demanding, but I like where we’re trending, because right now we can watch a possession and they know what they did wrong. That’s a big step for us, because now we’re able to correct it and learn.”

On trusting young players to run offense, especially Jordan Horston:
“Right now, to be honest with you, it feels like I have 12 freshmen. No player on our team has ever played for me, so they’re all rookies. When you’re trusting one of them, you’re trusting all of them really. Obviously, there are a few more guards that have college experience, more than Jordan, but nobody has more experience with Coach Kellie. We’re just trying to teach them all like they’re all freshmen in terms of our vocabulary and pace and what we want it to look like. I think Jordan is confident enough to be able to go out and be a point guard at this level.”

On Lou Brown:
“I have a lot of admiration for what she’s done and what she’s been through. It’s not been an easy road for her. When she steps out on the court, probably the thing I’ve been most impressed with is how hard she plays, and how competitive she is when she’s out there. That’s been a real positive for our team. I think she’s respected for that by her teammates, and anytime you have somebody doing it the right way, that’s a big deal because it’s contagious.”

-UT Athletics

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