Tickets on Sale for University of UT Athletics Hall of Fame Induction Dinner

Tickets on Sale for University of UT Athletics Hall of Fame Induction Dinner

Credit: UT Athletics

Tickets are now on sale for the University of Tennessee Athletics Hall of Fame Class of 2019 induction dinner, which takes place Friday, Oct. 25, at 7 p.m. ET in the Student Union Ballroom.

This year’s six-person induction class includes Doug Dickey (coach/administrator), R.A. Dickey (baseball), Christine Magnuson (women’s swimming), Charles A. “Gus” Manning (administrator), Tony Parrilla (men’s track & field) and Candace Parker (women’s basketball). The induction dinner and ceremony also features the presentation of the annual T-Club service awards.

Tickets must purchased online and are available at the following levels:

  • $50: Active T-Club member or Tennessee Letterwinner (all purchases at this level will be verified by Tennessee Athletics)
  • $75: General Public
  • $800: Full Table – includes eight tickets plus admission for two to attend a private reception prior to the induction ceremony

A portion of each ticket or table is a non-refundable, tax-deductible donation to support the Former Players Scholarship Endowment.

Space is limited, and the deadline to purchase is Friday, Oct. 18. The Student Union address is: 1502 Cumberland Ave., Knoxville, TN 37916

Membership in the University of Tennessee Athletics Hall of Fame is based on a former student-athlete’s intercollegiate career at the University of Tennessee. Student-athletes are eligible for induction 10 years after their collegiate eligibility expires, and staff are eligible five years after retirement from or leaving employment of the University of Tennessee. Student-athletes and/or staff may be inducted posthumously.

DOUG DICKEY
COACH/ADMINISTRATOR | 1964-69, 1985-2003
In six years as head coach, from 1964 through 1969, Doug Dickey rebuilt the Tennessee football program and guided the Vols to a national championship and two Southeastern Conference titles. He also introduced UT’s famous checkerboard end zones and the “Power T” logo. As the university’s athletics director for 18 years starting in 1985, he managed a growing budget and administered a massive facilities overhaul. During his tenure as AD, Big Orange teams brought home 10 national championships, 38 SEC titles and captured more than 500 first-team All-America honors while positioning Tennessee as a beacon of intercollegiate athletics excellence.

R.A. DICKEY
BASEBALL | 1994-96
R.A. Dickey is one of the most decorated pitchers in the history of Tennessee baseball. The Nashville native is the program’s only three-time first-team All-American (1994-1996) and was named the National Freshman of the Year in 1994 by Baseball America and Collegiate Baseball Newspaper after posting a school-record 15 wins. Dickey followed up his sensational freshman season by helping lead Tennessee to the 1995 College World Series, the program’s second overall appearance and first in 44 years. Dickey still holds program records for career victories (38), games started (54) and innings pitched (434.0), while also ranking second in career strikeouts (345).

CHARLES A. “GUS” MANNING
ADMINISTRATOR | 1951-2000
Gus Manning held a plethora of roles during his nearly 50 years of service to the University of Tennessee, including administrative assistant, publicity director, ticket manager, business manager to assistant, associate and senior associate athletics director. The Knoxville native served eight ADs and 11 head football coaches during his career at UT. He attended 608 consecutive Tennessee football games from 1951 to 2003 and also attended 455 consecutive Tennessee football home games, a streak that ended in 2017. From 1960-2016, Manning co-hosted “The Locker Room” radio show which aired on The Vol Network on Tennessee football gamedays and remains the longest, continuous-running sports radio show in the country.

CHRISTINE MAGNUSON
WOMEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING | 2005-08
Christine Magnuson stands as one of the most decorated women in Tennessee swimming & diving history. Magnuson was the 2008 NCAA champion in the 100-yard butterfly and garnered several honors that year, including 2008 SEC Swimmer of the Year and 2008 SEC Scholar Athlete of the Year. She also received the 2008 SEC Commissioners Trophy as the high point-scorer at the SEC Championship meet. An Illinois native, she was a 23-time All-American and a three-time All-SEC performer. Magnuson also was a four-time SEC Champion in three different events (50 free, 100 free, 100 fly) during her career on Rocky Top.

TONY PARRILLA
MEN’S TRACK & FIELD | 1991-94
Tennessee track & field great Tony Parrilla won four NCAA 800-meter titles—three outdoor (1992, 1993, 1994) and one indoor (1994) —during his career as a Volunteer. The Homestead, Florida, native was a nine-time SEC champion, and he captured the outdoor 800-meter title all four years of his career. Parrilla was a 10-time All-American and was named the 1994 SEC Men’s Track & Field Outdoor Athlete of the Year.

CANDACE PARKER
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL | 2005-08
One of only six Lady Vol basketball players to have her jersey hung in the rafters of Thompson-Boling Arena, Candace Parker led Tennessee to back-to-back national championships in 2007 and 2008 and was named NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player both years. The Naperville, Ill., native was a two-time recipient of both the John R. Wooden National Player of the Year Award and the USBWA National Player of the Year Award. She also was a three-time All-American and All-SEC honoree, ranks third on Tennessee’s all-time scoring list with 2,137 career points and was the first woman to dunk in an NCAA Tournament game, doing so twice vs. Army on March 19, 2006. She finished with a school-record seven slams during her career.

 

UT Athletics

Listen to Runaway June’s Sassy New Single, “Head Over Heels”

Listen to Runaway June’s Sassy New Single, “Head Over Heels”

Runaway June—comprised of Naomi Cooke, Hannah Mulholland and Jennifer Wayne—will follow up their Top 5 single, “Buy My Own Drinks,” with the release of “Head Over Heel” on Oct. 28.

Penned by Naomi, Hannah, Jennifer, Tommy Cecil and Jared Mullins, “Head Over Heels” is featured on Runaway June’s 2019 album, Blue Roses.

The sassy tune, which kicks off the album, serves as a bit of a break-up anthem for a guy playing the “drunk dial game,” with lyrics like: “These ain’t my ‘you get drunk, call me up, and head over’ heels.”

Listen to “Head Over Heels” below.

Michael Ray & Carly Pearce Tie the Knot

Michael Ray & Carly Pearce Tie the Knot

After getting engaged during their vacation in Tulum, Mexico, in December 2018, Michael Ray, 31, and Carly Pearce, 29, tied the knot on Oct. 6.

According to People, the ceremony took place at Drakewood Farm in Goodlettsville, Tenn., about 15 miles north of Nashville. The venue features 40 acres of rolling farmland, a mansion, three rustic barns and a 4,000-square-foot pavilion.

The rainy weather forced the wedding party indoors for the ceremony, where Carly and Michael exchanged self-penned vows while Opry mainstay Bill Cody officiated. Jake Owen treated the newlyweds to a rendition of his new song, “Made for You,” for their first dance.

“Carly is beautiful in every aspect of a human being, and her heart and who she is as a person is what made me fall in love with her,” said Michael to NCD earlier this year.

Congrats to Carly and Michael.

photo by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com

Dan + Shay Announce Headlining Arena Tour

Dan + Shay Announce Headlining Arena Tour

Dan + Shay announced they will embark on a 35-plus-date headlining tour in 2020.

Dan + Shay The (Arena) Tour will kick off on March 6 in Nashville, making additional stops in Dallas, Chicago, New York, Boston and more.

Ticket pre-sale of American Express card members begins on Oct. 7 at 12 p.m. ET. Tickets go on sale to the general public on Oct. 11 at 10 a.m. local time.

Dan + Shay The (Arena) Tour 2020

  • March 6 | Nashville, TN | Bridgestone Arena
  • March 7 | Nashville, TN | Bridgestone Arena
  • March 8 | Columbus, Ohio | Nationwide Arena
  • March 12 | Philadelphia, PA | Wells Fargo Center
  • March 13 | Charlottesville, VA | John Paul Jones Arena
  • March 14 | Greenville, SC | Bon Secours Wellness Arena
  • March 19 | San Antonio, TX | AT&T Center
  • March 20 | Tulsa, OK | BOK Center
  • March 21 | Dallas, TX | American Airlines Center
  • March 26 | Grand Rapids, MI | Van Andel Arena
  • March 27 | Louisville, KY | KFC Yum! Center
  • March 28 | Greensboro, NC | Greensboro Coliseum
  • April 9 | Kansas City, MO | Sprint Center
  • April 10 | Minneapolis, MN | Target Center
  • April 11 | Milwaukee, WI | Fiserv Forum
  • April 16 | Indianapolis, IN | Bankers Life Fieldhouse
  • April 17 | Chicago, IL | United Center
  • April 18 | Omaha, NE | CHI Health Center
  • Sept.17 | North Little Rock, AR | Simmons Bank Arena f.k.a. Verizon Arena
  • Sept.18 | St. Louis, MO | Enterprise Center
  • Sept.19 | Detroit, MI | Little Caesars Arena
  • Sept.24 | Washington, DC | Capital One Arena
  • Sept.25 | New York, NY | Madison Square Garden
  • Sept.26 | Pittsburgh, PA | PPG Paints Arena
  • Oct. 1 | Orlando, FL | Amway Center
  • Oct. 2 | Atlanta, GA | State Farm Arena
  • Oct. 3 | New Orleans, LA | Smoothie King Center
  • Oct. 9 | Boston, MA | TD Garden
  • Oct. 10 | Uncasville, CT | Mohegan Sun Arena
  • Oct. 11 | Hershey, PA | Giant Center
  • Oct. 15 | Denver, CO | Pepsi Center
  • Oct. 16 | Salt Lake City, UT | Vivint Smart Home Arena
  • Oct. 17 | Las Vegas, NV | T|Mobile Arena
  • Oct. 21 | Glendale, AZ | Gila River Arena
  • Oct. 23 | San Francisco, CA | Chase Center
  • Oct. 24 | Sacramento, CA | Golden 1 Center
  • Oct. 29 | Boise, ID | ExtraMile Arena
  • Oct. 30 | Portland, OR | Moda Center
  • Oct. 31 | Tacoma, WA | Tacoma Dome

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Circle Gets the Square: CMT Rebooting “Hollywood Squares” With “Nashville Squares”

Circle Gets the Square: CMT Rebooting “Hollywood Squares” With “Nashville Squares”

CMT will be the home of a new game show, Nashville Squares, which will be hosted by Bob Saget and feature a bevy of country stars, including Tanya Tucker, Deana Carter, Jimmie Allen, Mitchell Tenpenny and more.

The tic-tac-toe series is a reboot of VH1’s Hip Hop Squares, which is a reboot of the iconic game show, Hollywood Squares. The paradigm of the trivia show consist of two contestants who utilizes advice from a panelist of celebrities to win a game of tic-tac-toe.

Celebrity contestants and squares include Bill Engvall, Caroline Rhea, Carson Cressley, Chris Sullivan, Deana Carter, Devin Dawson, Fortune Feimster, Gary Busey, Jana Kramer & Mike Caussin, Jimmie Allen, Kenya Moore, Kyle Busch, Mark Ballas & BC Jean, Marie Osmond, Melissa Peterman, Mickey Guyton, Mitchell Tenpenny, Sara Evans, Tanya Tucker and Ty Pennington.

CMT’s Nashville Squares will kick off with a two-episode premiere on Nov. 1 at 7 p.m. CT.

photos by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com

Jimmy’s blog: Despite strong first half, Vols fall to Bulldogs

Jimmy’s blog: Despite strong first half, Vols fall to Bulldogs

By Jimmy Hyams

Tennessee showed flashes of being able to compete with a top three team in the nation Saturday night.

But as the game progressed, the gap grew.

And it left you wondering how high the Vols must climb to be competitive in the SEC.

Georgia (5-0) outscored Tennessee 23-0 in the final 30 minutes and 9 seconds en route to a 43-14 before about 80,000 fans at Neyland Stadium — some 20,000-to-25,000 wearing Georgia red — and Peyton Manning.

Georgia has now won eight of the last 10 against the Vols and outscored UT 132-26 in the last three games. UT’s 1-4 start is its worst since the 1988 team opened 0-6.

Looking to ignite a struggling offense, Tennessee started true freshman Brian Maurer at quarterback. He provided a spark, throwing for 205 yards and two touchdowns in the first half, including a beautiful 73-yard scoring strike to Marquez Callaway. And the Vols had first-down plays of 16, 16, 18, 21 and 21 yards.

“Brian done a really good job in the first half,’’ said Tennessee coach Jeremy Pruitt. “He stood in there and made some throws down the field in the first half. He went through his progressions. He kept his poise, kept his eyes down the field, made some nice throws. And it enabled us to create some explosive plays and soften them up a little bit so we could run the ball some.’’

But in the second half, as Georgia’s defense adjusted, Maurer threw for just 54 yards – 33 coming on a long fade route to Jauan Jennings, who had seven catches for 114 yards and a touchdown. Jennings was UT’s best player against Georgia, fighting for extra yards with each reception and making a terrific snag on a long ball.

Pruitt praised his senior wideout.

“He’s not been healthy since we’ve been here,’’ Pruitt said. “He’s had two knee surgeries. He’s not practiced a lot. But the guy is the ultimate competitor. He competes every day. We need more guys like him.’’

Maurer, who played four series against Florida with limited success, was on target mostly with slants over the middle. His scoring pass to Jennings between two defenders was big league. Maurer also hit two long balls – to Jennings and Callaway.

But, Pruitt said, Maurer had about eight to 15 plays “he’ll learn from.’’

Pruitt said he went with the true freshman over Jarrett Guarantano because the redshirt junior had “kind of been pressing.’’

Pruitt complimented a 14-yard toss over the middle Guarantano made right after replacing Maurer, but it was

Guarantano’s only completion in five attempts.

“Jarrett is a team guy,’’ Pruitt said. “…Jarrett is a guy that will help us win some football games down the road, I guarantee you that, with his attitude and work ethic.’’

Maybe so, but you can just about guarantee Maurer will start when UT hosts Mississippi State (3-2) Saturday at noon.
A 25-point underdog, Tennessee led 14-10 after the first play of the second quarter. Georgia was up 20-14 with two minutes left in the first half when the Vols drove into field goal range, where Brent Cimaglia missed his first of the season, from 47 yards.

Instead of a 20-17 halftime deficit for UT, Georgia marched down for a touchdown with nine seconds left for a 26-14 lead and the momentum at halftime.

UT went scoreless in the second half and couldn’t stop a balanced Georgia attack that rushed for 238 yards and passed for 2887 more.

Bulldog junior quarterback Jake Fromm carved up the UT defense, going 24 of 29 for 288 yards and two touchdowns as the Vols rarely mounted a pass rush.

“That’s the third time in my career I’ve gone against Jake Fromm,’’ Pruitt said. “It’s hard to fool him. I think we did one time and they had a false start.

“When you play against a guy like that, you got to call the game backwards.’’
In other words, be unpredictable.

While UT had some positive moments, Georgia outgained the Vols 526 yards to 343, had 36:28 time of possession to 23:32, and held UT to 70 rushing yards on 29 attempts.

“Nobody is looking for a pat on the back for playing hard, right?’’ Pruitt said.

“Our No. 1 goal is to win every game we play. That’s our No. 1 goal. We didn’t walk out there and say, `I hope we play good tonight or I hope play ‘em good for the first half. Our goal is to find a way to win every game. That’s the bottom line.

“And that will always be our goal. … That’s gotta be the expectations.’’


Sponsored by Big Kahuna Wings: The wings that changed it all 

Video: 4 Vols players in the postgame after 43-14 loss to UGA

Video: 4 Vols players in the postgame after 43-14 loss to UGA

Tennessee S Nigel Warrior, WR Marquez Callaway, LB Henry To’oto’o and C Brandon Kennedy spoke to the media at their postgame press conference after the Vols lost to #3 Georgia at home, 43-14.

Vols C Brandon Kennedy and LB Henry To’oto’o / Credit: 99.1 The Sports Animal

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vols S Nigel Warrior & WR Marquez Callaway / Credit: 99.1 The Sports Animal
Vince’s View: SEC football Week 6 score predictions; Vols/Dawgs

Vince’s View: SEC football Week 6 score predictions; Vols/Dawgs

Vols OLB Darrell Taylor / Credit: 99.1 The Sports Animal

By Vince Ferrara / @VinceSports

Below are my predictions for SEC games in Week 6 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 5 Prediction Record: 6-0 (100%)
2019 Game Prediction Record: 45-7 (87%)

SEC WEEK 6 SCHEDULE

SATURDAY, OCT. 5
Utah State (3-1) at #5 LSU (4-0, 1-0 SEC)
Series: LSU leads, 2-0
12 p.m. ET • SEC Network
Baton Rouge, La. • Tiger Stadium (102,321)
Sirius: 137 • XM: 190
Line: LSU -27 ½
Score Prediction: LSU 42 Utah State 21

#7 Auburn (5-0, 2-0 SEC) at #10 Florida (5-0, 2-0 SEC)
Series: AU leads, 43-38-2
3:30 p.m. ET • CBS
Last: AU 17-6 (2011 at Auburn)
Gainesville, Fla. • Ben Hill Griffin Stadium at Steve Spurrier-Florida Field (88,548) Sirius: 81/78 • XM: 81/191
Line: Auburn 2 ½
Score Prediction: Auburn 27 Florida 13

Troy (2-2) at Missouri (3-1, 1-0 SEC)
Series: MIZ leads, 2-1
4 p.m. ET • SEC Network
Columbia, Mo. • Faurot Field (71,168)
Sirius: 137 • XM: 190
Line: Missouri -24 ½
Score Prediction: Missouri 48 Troy 14

#3 Georgia (4-0, 1-0 SEC) at Tennessee (1-3, 0-1 SEC)
Series: Tied, 23-23-2
7 p.m. ET • ESPN
Last: UGA, 38-12 (2018 at Athens)
Knoxville, Tenn. • Neyland Stadium (102,455)
Sirius: 81/78• XM: 81/191
Line: Georgia -24 ½
Score Prediction: Georgia 45 Tennessee 10

Vanderbilt (1-3, 0-2 SEC) at Ole Miss (2-3, 1-1 SEC)
Series: UM leads, 49-40-2
7:30 p.m. ET • SEC Network
Last: VU, 36-29 OT (2018 at Nashville)
Oxford, Miss. • Vaught-Hemingway Stadium (64,038)
Sirius: 135/137 • XM: 202/190
Line: Ole Miss -7
Score Prediction: Ole Miss 35 Vanderbilt 31

Open Date: #1 Alabama (5-0, 2-0 SEC); Arkansas (2-3, 0-2 SEC); Kentucky (2-3, 0-3 SEC); Mississippi State (3-2, 1-1 SEC); South Carolina (2-3, 1-2 SEC); #25 Texas A&M (3-2, 1-1 SEC)


Find more of my broadcasting work at VinceSports.net

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