The Music City Walk of Fame announced its 2019 inductees: Lady Antebellum, Clint Black, Mac McAnally, Chet Atkins (posthumously) and DeFord Bailey (posthumously).
Following in the footprints of stars Garth Brooks, Reba McEntire, Dolly Parton, Randy Travis and more, the new honorees will inducted into the Music City Walk of Fame on Oct. 22 at 2 p.m. at Nashville’s Walk of Fame Park. The event is free and open to the public.
The Music City Walk of Fame—created in 2006—is a tribute to artists of all genres who have contributed to the world through song and made a significant contribution to the music industry with a connection to Music City. Sidewalk medallions line the one-mile stretch with the names of the inductees etched in a star and guitar design. Past inductees include Johnny Cash, Vince Gill, Alan Jackson, Miranda Lambert, Martina McBride, Keith Urban, Hank Williams, Trisha Yearwood, Little Big Town, Kenny Rogers and more.
The inductees will receive the 85th, 86th, 87th, 88th and 89th stars on the Walk of Fame. The new honorees will be recognized for their significant contributions to preserving the musical heritage of Nashville and for contributing to the world through song or other industry collaboration.
Bios of each inductee are below, courtesy of the Music City Walk of Fame.
Lady Antebellum
After a wave of change, Dave Haywood, Charles Kelley and Hillary Scott have watched the tides rise and fall and are embracing the power of vulnerability with their upcoming album OCEAN, set for release Nov. 15. It marks a new beginning that brings the multi-Platinum trio back to their roots, showcasing their familiar vocal interplay and individual instruments on the emotionally resonant 13-track project. Over the course of their decade-plus career, Lady Antebellum has become one of the 21st century’s premier vocal groups, blending deeply felt emotions with classic country sounds. As a Country-radio staple, the trio has amassed record-breaking success with nine No. 1 hits while ushering in more than 18 million album units and 34 million tracks sold, with over 4 billion digital streams. Known for their nine-time Platinum hit “Need You Now,” which is the highest certified song by a Country group, they have earned ACM and CMA “Vocal Group of the Year” trophies three years in a row and countless other honors, including seven GRAMMY awards, Billboard Music Awards, People’s Choice Awards, Teen Choice Awards and a Tony Award nod.
Clint Black
Clint Black surged to superstardom as part of the fabled Class of ’89, reaching No. 1 with five consecutive singles from his triple-platinum debut Killin’ Time. He followed that with the triple-platinum Put Yourself in My Shoes and then a string of platinum and gold albums throughout the 1990s. Perhaps most impressively, he wrote or co-wrote every one of his more than three dozen chart hits, including “A Better Man,” “Killin’ Time,” “When My Ship Comes In,” “A Good Run of Bad Luck,” “Summer’s Comin’,” “Like the Rain” and “Nothin’ But the Taillights,” as part of a catalog that produced 22 No. 1 singles and 31 Top Ten singles, making him one of the most successful singer/songwriters of the modern era. Along the way, he sold over 20 million records, earned more than a dozen gold and platinum awards in the U.S. and Canada, including a GRAMMY, landed nearly two dozen major awards and nominations, and earned a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. He continues to tour more than 80 cities throughout North America in 2019 as he celebrates the 30th Anniversary of Killin’ Time.
Mac McAnally
A record breaking 10-time CMA Musician of the Year, Mac McAnally is a member of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, Mississippi Musicians Hall of Fame and Alabama Music Hall of Fame. The renowned songwriter, singer and instrumental virtuoso has authored dozens of hit records for other artists, several of which peaked at No. 1. His own recording career began with a debut hit single “It’s A Crazy World” (1977) and continues most recently with his 14th album release Southbound (2017), an ambitious orchestral adaptation of many of his best-known songs. He has written hits for Alabama, Jimmy Buffett, Kenny Chesney and Sawyer Brown, and he has studio credits that include albums by Toby Keith, Linda Ronstadt, George Strait, Dolly Parton, Brad Paisley and Amy Grant, among many others.
Chet Atkins (June 20, 1924 – June 30, 2001)
Chester Burton Atkins, nicknamed by throngs of fans as “Mister Guitar,” changed the world of guitar music, developing and elevating an innovative guitar playing style that has inspired scores of musicians, including Mark Knopfler, George Harrison and Paul McCartney, Earl Klugh, Tommy Emmanuel, Doc Watson, Lenny Breau, Jerry Reed and many others. He was a successful recording artist and became one of the most prolific record producers in history. While on Music Row in Nashville, Chet discovered and signed many talented artists as Vice President of RCA and ushered in what was later to be known as the “Nashville Sound.” Artists included Jim Reeves, Eddy Arnold, Dolly Parton, Jerry Reed, Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Charley Pride and many others. He received 15 GRAMMY Awards and the GRAMMY Lifetime Achievement Award. He also received 11 Country Music Association award for Instrumentalist of the Year. He was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum and the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum. He was a member of the Grand Ole Opry.
DeFord Bailey (December 14, 1899 – July 2, 1982)
DeFord Bailey, the Grand Ole Opry’s first African American member, made his first documented Opry appearance on June 19, 1926. Bailey, billed as “The Harmonica Wizard,” was a regular on the show until 1941, and his signature tune, “Pan American Blues,” often opened the broadcasts. His music is intertwined with the storied history of the Grand Ole Opry for it was after one of his performances that WSM program director George D. Hay proclaimed, “For the past hour we have been listening to music taken largely from Grand Opera but from now on we will present the Grand Ole Opry.” Bailey was born in 1899 into a farming family in rural Smith County, Tenn., where he was raised by his aunt and uncle. He had polio at age three, which stunted his growth. He began learning harmonica as a young child and grew up playing what he called “black hillbilly music,” a tradition of secular string-band music shared by rural black and white musicians alike. He moved to Nashville in 1918, where he learned jazz, blues and pop songs, becoming a bridge between rural folk music and the modern world of commercial popular music. His harmonica playing caught the attention of the music industry, and he was soon playing on a national stage through Opry appearances and recordings for Brunswick and Victor Records. He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.
To commemorate Dolly Parton’s 50th anniversary as a Grand Ole Opry member, the Opry will celebrate Dolly Week from Oct. 8–12 with a number of special performances. Dolly was inducted into the Opry on Jan. 4, 1969.
Dolly Week 2019 includes five consecutive nights of Dolly-themed Opry shows with performances by many of Dolly’s friends, including Bill Anderson, Dierks Bentley, Barry Gibb, Emmylou Harris, Chris Janson, Toby Keith, Lady Antebellum, Margo Price, Don Schlitz, Jeannie Seely, Hank Williams, Jr. and more. Artists plan to perform a mix of their own hits as well as songs written, popularized or inspired by Dolly.
In addition, Dolly will be performing during two sold-out shows on Oct. 12.
Tickets to some shows are still available.
Dolly Week Lineup
Oct. 8 | Dustin Dustin Lynch, Suzy Bogguss, The Isaacs, Stephanie Quayle and more
Oct. 9 | Sara Evans, Del McCoury Band, Don Schlitz, Sam Williams, Stephanie Urbina Jones and more
Oct. 10 | The Gatlin Brothers, Dale Ann Bradley, Emily West, Shawn Camp & Lauren Mascitti, Sierra Hull, Hannah Dasher and more
Oct. 11 (Two Shows) | Bill Anderson, Barry Gibb, Dierks Bentley (1st show only), Margo Price, Emmylou Harris, Chris Janson and more
Oct. 12 (Two Shows) | Dolly Parton, Lady Antebellum, Jeannie Seely, Toby Keith, Margo Price, Barry Gibb, Hank Williams, Jr. (1st show only), Candi Carpenter and more
Over the course of her career, Dolly has earned eight Grammy Awards, 10 Country Music Association Awards, five Academy of Country Music Awards and three American Music Awards. In 1999, Dolly was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. She has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame—both as a solo artist and as a member of Trio. She became a member of the National Academy of Popular Music Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2001. Broadcast Music Inc. (BMI) honored her with their Icon Award in 2003, and in 2004 the U.S. Library of Congress presented her with their Living Legend Award. In 2005, she was presented the highest honor bestowed by the U.S. government, the National Medal of Arts. Dolly will be honored as MusiCares Person of the Year during Grammy Week in February.
Zac Brown Band’s sixth studio album, The Owl, debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Top Country Albums chart.
The Owl moved 106,000 equivalent units, according to Nielsen Music, which was also good enough for No. 2 on the all-genre Billboard 200 chart, one spot behind Post Malone’s Hollywood’s Bleeding (149,000 units).
“We’ve been working tirelessly on this album over the past couple years, ensuring every detail is perfect,” said Zac Brown. “We are always pushing ourselves as musicians by blurring genre boundaries and incorporating all kinds of music we are personally inspired by, elevating what we are capable as a group. This album will have something for everyone, The Owl is exciting, raw, and unexpected.”
ZBB has scored five consecutive No. 1 albums since the release of You Get What You Give in 2010.
The new album’s lead single, “Someone I Used to Know,” is currently No. 23 on the Billboard Country Airplay chart.
ATHENS, GA – SEPTEMBER 29, 2018 – Quarterback Jarrett Guarantano #2 of the Tennessee Volunteers during the game between the Georgia Bulldogs and the Tennessee Volunteers at Sanford Stadium in Athens, GA. Photo By Maury Neipris/Tennessee Athletics
To illustrate just how rough the last few years have been for the University of Tennessee football program, I look at some numbers and decided to lay them out for you to digest them as you wish, here in my blog, “Vince’s View.”
Tennessee Football Team
In the last 18 SEC games, dating back to the final regular season game of 2016 vs. Vanderbilt, Tennessee is 2-16. Two and sixteen in the last 18 SEC games dating back to the last SEC game of 2016. Here’s how it shakes out.
2016 (Vandy) 0-1 2017 (season) 0-8 2018 (season) 2-6 2019 (Florida) 0-1 Total SEC Record – last 18 games = 2-16
For some, the unraveling of the Butch Jones era began with the 2016 loss to South Carolina and the Jalen Hurd transfer announcement. However, UT won some games after that until the final week of the regular season came when it traveled to Vanderbilt. With a win, Tennessee was almost certainly headed to the Sugar Bowl for postseason. A Sugar Bowl appearance would have been the program’s highlight mark since the 2007 season’s appearance in the SEC title game under Phillip Fulmer.
Yes, Tennessee won the Music City Bowl over Nebraska after that Vanderbilt debacle in Nashville, but the damage was done and many were done with Butch Jones as the Vols head coach. Plus, the wins have been few and far between since that point in SEC play. Many of the losses being ugly games or embarrassing blowouts. That’s why my numbers listed go back to that Vanderbilt finale in 2016.
During this 2-16 SEC stretch, Tennessee has been outscored 646 to 312. That’s an average of 35.8 points allowed per game to 17.3 scored per game. UT has allowed 40 points or more in 7 of the 18 games. 9 of the 16 losses have been by 25 points or more. Only 4 losses were by one possession. Here are the scores for Tennessee in this most recent 18 SEC game stretch.
2016 (Jones)
Lost 45-34 at Vanderbilt
2017
Lost 26-20 at Florida
Lost 41-0 vs. Georgia
Lost 15-9 vs. South Carolina
Lost 45-7 at Alabama
Lost 29-26 at Kentucky
Lost 50-17 at Missouri
Lost 30-10 vs. LSU (Hoke interim)
Lost 42-24 vs. Vanderbilt (Hoke interim)
2018 (Pruitt)
Lost 47-21 vs. Florida
Lost 38-12 at Georgia
Won 30-24 at Auburn
Lost 58-21 vs. Alabama
Lost 27-24 at South Carolina
Won 24-7 vs. Kentucky
Lost 50-17 vs. Missouri
Lost 38-13 at Vanderbilt
2019
Lost 34-3 at Florida
Here’s the 2019 schedule for Tennessee, with the remaining games for the Vols, including 7 more SEC games to try and turn things around.
vs. Georgia St 2-2 (Lost 38-30)
vs. BYU 2-3 (Lost 29-26 OT)
vs. Chattanooga 2-3 (Won 45-0)
at #10 Florida 5-0 (Won 34-3)
vs. #3 Georgia 4-0 (10/5)
vs. Miss State 3-2 (10/12)
at #1 Alabama 5-0 (10/19)
vs. South Carolina 2-3 (10/26)
vs. UAB 3-1 (11/2)
at Kentucky 2-3 (11/9)
open week
at Missouri 3-1 (11/23)
vs. Vanderbilt 1-3 (11/30)
Jeremy Pruitt Tenure
The Jeremy Pruitt era, starting in 2018, has at least produced the two most recent wins (and against good teams…at Auburn and vs. Kentucky) in SEC play last season, but the lopsided losses have continued.
Overall, Jeremy Pruitt is 6-10 as Tennessee’s head coach. 7 of the 10 losses have been by 25 points or more. UT has allowed 38 points or more in 7 of Pruitt’s 16 games as head coach.
The Vols haven’t been convincing against Group of 5 and independent opponents the last three seasons either, so it may be risky to assume a win over 3-1 UAB. FCS and Power 5 non-conference opponents are not included. UT’s margin of victory in those games the last three years is just 13 points with two losses this year.
Won vs. UMass 17-13 (2017)
Won vs. Southern Miss 24-10 (2017)
Won vs. UTEP 24-0 (2018)
Won vs. Charlotte 14-3 (2018)
Lost vs. Georgia St. 38-30 (2019)
Lost vs. BYU 29-26 (OT) (2019)
Jarrett Guarantano Era
Another area of heavy criticism has been Tennessee’s quarterback play. For the first time since taking over as the starting quarterback against South Carolina midway through the 2017 season, Jarrett Guarantano’s starting job is in jeopardy. Here’s a look at Guarantano’s career numbers.
As a starter: 7-15 SEC games: 2-12 (12 TDs/7 INTs/2,189 yards/156.4 avg yds per game) Non Conf games: 5-3 (10 TDs/2 INTs/1,397 yards/174.6 avg yds per game)
All games career numbers for Jarrett Guarantano
25 games played
22 starts
299 of 478 (63.3%)
23 TDs
9 INTs
3,640 yards
145.6 passer rating per game avg
Longest completion – 60 yds vs. LSU in 2017
Most completions in a game – 27 vs. South Carolina in 2018
Highest completion pct in a game – 78.3% vs. Kentucky in 2017
Most pass attempts in a game – 40 vs. Georgia State in 2019
Most passing yds in a game – 328 vs. Auburn in 2018
Most passing touchdowns in a game – 3 vs. Chattanooga in 2019
Jeremy Pruitt didn’t sound like he intends to reveal his plans at quarterback for this Saturday’s Georgia game. We’ll find out at or before kickoff if Guarantano will start and get to add to his stats or if the Brian Maurer or JT Shrout era begins in a starting role at the University of Tennessee.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Fresh off of its first bye week of the season, Tennessee prepares for its SEC home opener with a sizeable challenge ahead as the Vols welcome the No. 3/3 Georgia Bulldogs to Neyland Stadium on Saturday night.
Kickoff is scheduled for 7 p.m. (ET), but Vols fans will have a chance to get the day going earlier as SEC Networks’ SEC Nation pays a visit to Rocky Top with pregame coverage provided by Marty Smith, Marcus Spears, Tim Tebow and Paul Finebaum beginning at 10 a.m.
The week off from competition proved to be beneficial at head coach Jeremy Pruitt saw continued improvement across the board.
“We have worked really hard this past week,” Pruitt said at his press conference on Monday afternoon. “We have guys that are becoming more familiar with the positions that they are playing. It is good for us. It is not just our young guys, it is our older guys too.
“There’s a lot to learn about being a good football player,” Pruitt added. “First of all, you’ve got to learn what you need to do to have success, but the other thing, and probably the most important thing is figuring out what the other team is trying to do to you. So, it’s a lot to learn, and these guys have worked hard to do that, and you’ll see guys’ roles increase as the season goes.”
Fortunately, Pruitt and his staff are closely acquainted with the Bulldogs.
Tennessee – Georgia Ties
Several of Tennessee’s coaches have previous ties to Georgia, most notably head coach Jeremy Pruitt, who served as the Bulldogs’ defensive coordinator from 2014 to 2015. Vols’ offensive coordinator Jim Chaney served as current Georgia head coach Kirby Smart’s offensive play-caller from 2016 to 2018, while inside linebackers coach and special teams coordinator Kevin Sherrer (OLBs, 2014-17), defensive line coach Tracy Rocker (DL, 2014-16) and tight ends coach Brian Niedermeyer (defensive GA, 2015) were all recently on the Georgia staff.
Georgia assistants Sam Pittman and Charlton Warren previously coached at Tennessee, as well. Pittman coached UT’s offensive line in 2012, while Warren coached the Vols’ defensive backs and was the special teams coordinator in 2017. Tennessee wide receiver Deangelo Gibbs is redshirting this season after transferring from Georgia following two years as a reserve defensive back for the Bulldogs. Former UT tight end Eli Wolf is a graduate transfer for Georgia this season. He started his career as a walk-on for the Vols before earning a scholarship in 2017. He finished with nine receptions for 86 yards and a touchdown during his career on Rocky Top.
With so much familiarity Pruitt believes the outcome will be determined by the minutia.
“We’ve all coached together over the years, so whether its offensively or defensively, we probably know some of the checks that each team’s accustomed to,” Pruitt said. “At the end of the day it comes down to blocking, tackling, executing, and taking care of the football. We’re familiar with them, they’re familiar with us, so it’ll be about the details and tangibles of the plays.”
An Emotional Engine Guides Pruitt
While the wins and losses are ultimately what define a coach’s success, Pruitt’s purpose for getting into coaching was much larger than the results on the ledger.
“One thing about me is that I am an emotional guy,” Pruitt said when asked about his reaction to last season’s hard-fought loss to the Bulldogs. “I got into this business to be a positive influence on our players. It is something that I have always loved doing.”
The Vols scored a pair of second-half touchdowns to come within 12 points of the second-ranked Bulldogs, after going scoreless in the first half. That fight impressed Pruitt.
“It was the first time that I felt like we had competed like you are supposed to,” Pruitt said. “When guys train and compete, it is what you want them to do. We have got to do that this week. To me, they are much improved on where they were last year. They are older and you can see that.”
Opening Statement:
“When you look at Georgia, it’s probably the best Georgia team that I can ever remember at this point in time in the season. Very complete on both sides of the ball and in the kicking (game). Offensively, it starts with Jake Fromm. To me, he does as good of a job as anybody in the country, and maybe as anybody I’ve ever coached against as far as keeping their offense in a positive situation. He takes care of the football, gets the ball out of his hand, controls protection, keeps them in positive run plays. If you look at their guys up front – they’ve got six or seven guys that play up front – very talented, big men. Their running back, D’Andre Swift, is as good as anybody in the country. The guy can make you miss, catch a ball out of the back field, has home run ability; he’s another guy that’s played a lot of football there. Probably tight end, Charlie Warner, he’s played the last three years, and he’s a really good football player. At wide receiver, they’ve had to replace a lot of guys, but they’ve replaced them with a couple of transfers and some guys that they’ve grown in their program that are big, tall, athletic and can create explosive plays. They run the football very efficiently, they’re balanced, so we’ve got to be able to stop the run, get off the field on third down, and find a way to create some turnovers. They’ve done an excellent job protecting the quarterback. Defensively, to me, they’ve added several pass rushers in this past signing class that you see out there, but they’ve got lots of depth up front, they’re big and physical. They’ve done a nice job stopping the run and haven’t allowed a rushing touchdown this season, and they’re creating many more negative plays probably than they have in the past. They’ve had a few injuries in the secondary, but they have depth back there and have done a really nice job. If you look at them in the kicking game, Rodrigo (Blankenship) seems like he’s been playing there for 10 years. They’ve got good returners, good speed on coverage teams, so it’ll be a challenge for our football team.”
Credit: UT Athletics
On the quarterbacks, and if he’s determined a starter for this week:
“We’re not going to give Georgia a scout report of what we’re going to do this week, so we’re going to rep the guys that give us the best opportunities to have success.”
On having fresh knowledge of UGA from OC Jim Chaney and how the team will go about utilizing him as a resource this week:
“It probably works both ways. With our staffs, we’ve all coached together over the years, so whether its offensively or defensively, we probably know some of the checks that each team’s accustomed to. At the end of the day it comes down to blocking, tackling, executing and taking care of the football. We’re familiar with them, they’re familiar with us, so it’ll be about the details and tangibles of the plays.”
On what sets Tennessee and him apart from Georgia and Kirby Smart’s defense:
“I don’t think there is a whole lot of difference in what either one of us does. If you look at how we played the last couple years, it has probably changed a little bit. Kirby Smart has been probably more of a 3-4 (defense) guy and we have been probably more of a 4-2-5. I think a lot of that has to do with personnel. As a football coach, both of us, we have a lot of things we can do in our systems. You figure out what is best for your personnel and if you look at them this year, they have added a lot of different wrinkles that I have not seen them do in the past, which makes sense because this is his (Smart’s) fourth year in the program. He has guys that have a lot of experience. They are playing a lot of guys on defense and trying to create roles for the guys. So, you see that with different packages of people that come in there.”
On why he thinks Kirby Smart has been able to establish Georgia as an elite program:
“I think the program he took over won 20 games in its previous two years. That helped. He had a very young football team that he inherited. He has done a really nice job and has a really nice staff together. It is a place where you can have success. Those guys were used to winning and now he has been recruiting in his fourth year and all those guys that he has there he has recruited there. He has done a nice job of that – evaluating talent and going to get some of the best players in the country and coaching them up. In this day and time, you need to be good at the quarterback position and he has a really good player there. Last year, they had two really good players there. They have got playmakers on the outside and they are big up front. They have recruited to their philosophy and you can see it.”
On if the bye week has been helpful for the younger players to take a step back and evaluate how they have been playing:
“We have worked really hard this past week. We have guys that are becoming more familiar with the positions that they are playing. It is good for us. It is not just our young guys, it is our older guys too. We have a lot of guys that have not played a whole lot of football and have improved. They have tried to master their position and that is something we have worked hard on this week.”
On why he was emotional after the Georgia game last year:
“It was the first time that I felt like we had competed like you are supposed to. If you go back to that game, there was a point in the game that was 24-12 and we had an opportunity on a third down and four to go down the field, but we didn’t. I guess you had to know who to grab when we got here to take a football team that was one of the best in the country and compete with them until the fourth quarter.
“One thing about me is that I am an emotional guy. I got into this business to be a positive influence on our players. It is something that I have always loved doing. When guys train and compete, it is what you want them to do. We have got to do that this week. To me, they are much improved on where they were last year. They are older and you can see that.”
On UT’s depth at linebacker:
“Well, Jeremy Banks is continuing to get better. Unfortunately, the Thursday before we played Florida, he turned his ankle really bad and struggled on that Saturday with trying to be able to compete, so we didn’t play him in the game. You’ve got Daniel (Bituli), you’ve got Henry (To’o To’o), you’ve got Jeremy, you’ve got J.J. Peterson, and Aaron Beasley is working there. So, we’ve got guys that are competing really hard every day at practice.”
On if he saw anyone elevate their role during the bye week:
“It was good for Jerrod Means, a guy that started off as a defensive back. He worked the whole summer until maybe July playing wide receiver and then worked at defensive back. So, it was good for him to get back and catch some balls there. Ramel Keyton, and also Cedric Tillman. Princeton Fant is a guy that has kind of bounced around but we’ve kind of put him at tight end to leave him there. So, all of our young guys have continued to improve. There’s a lot to learn about being a good football player. First of all, you’ve got to learn what you need to do to have success, but the other thing, and probably the most important thing is figuring out what the other team is trying to do to you. So, it’s a lot to learn, and these guys have worked hard to do that, and you’ll see guys’ roles increase as the season goes.”
On if freshman defensive back Tyus Fields has continued to progress:
“Tyus is a guy that is a runner, he’s a hitter, he’s got really good ball skills and he can play man to man. He’s a guy that was here during the spring, but he had injured his foot his senior year of high school, so he had foot surgery and he missed the entire spring. So, he gets here this summer and we put him at corner, and when we get to fall camp, we moved him to safety just to work him inside. So, that’s a lot to learn in a short period of time, but he’s a guy that has a bright future. He works really hard every day, so he’s just got to continue to go out there and compete and have a better understanding of what we’re trying to get done.”
On how he would evaluate the coaching staff so far this season:
“The biggest evaluation is your record and we’re 1-3. That’s what matters the most. We obviously as an entire coaching staff have to continue to improve and get our guys to play at a higher level. The big thing offensively is that we have to take care of the football. We’ve had nine turnovers in four games. Going into the season, we said that we needed to take care of the football, we need to be opportunistic on defense and we need to stay healthy. We’ve not been able to do any of those three things. Two of them we can control. So, we have to take care of the football and create some more turnovers. But as a coaching staff, we all need to do a better job.”
On teaching a program how to win:
“Creating the right habits every day. I had an opportunity just to watch some games on Saturday and to start with, the first thing I talked about is it’s just about the ball. It’s amazing, the team that doesn’t turn the ball over sees their percentages go up and have an opportunity to win. Teams that get a lot of turnovers, same thing. It’s just creating the right habits in the details and being able to do it over and over and over. Whether you’re playing at home, whether you’re playing away, whether you’re sore or tired or a little bit hurt. Creating depth and having a team that can do it, so that if one guy goes down, the next guy can come in and play winning football. To me that’s what you see, the guy that are playing the best football right now, that’s what they’re doing. If you look in the next 25 years, the teams that are doing it the best will be playing winning football too. I don’t think it’s changed. I think that’s what you have to do to have success.”
On Marquez Callaway’s impact this season:
“We have some really good wide receivers. It seems like Jauan (Jennings) has had more targets than some of the other ones, but we have to be able to get the ball to our playmakers. That’s something that we’ve really focused on here in the off week, not that we haven’t before, we’re just trying to make sure we can get some of these guys some touches.”
On Jarrett Guarantano’s confidence level:
“He had a really good practice last week, which isn’t unusual, he’s practiced really well in spring and fall camp. The big thing with Jarrett is taking it to the game and being consistent, creating the right habits. That’s something that he has to improve on in taking care of the football. That’s the number one goal.”
Chris Lane scored the second No. 1 single of his career as “I Don’t Know About You” ascended to the top of the Mediabase chart this week.
Penned by Ashley Gorley, Hardy, Hunter Phelps and Jameson Rogers, “I Don’t Know About You” is featured on Chris’ 2018 album, Laps Around the Sun. Chris notched his first No. 1 single in 2016 with “Fix.”
As Chris told Kix Brooks of American Country Countdown, “I Don’t Know About You” has become synonymous with a line from its chorus, instead of its title, which isn’t totally out of the norm. How many times have you heard someone refer to Tim McGraw’s “Something Like That” as the “Barbecue Stain” song or Chris Young’s “Gettin’ You Home” as the “Black Dress” song?
When it comes to “I Don’t Know About You,” Chris says fans have given it the alias of “Wrist Tattoo Bible Verse” song, which is actually the lyric from the chorus that initially grabbed him: “What’s your name, what’s your sign, what’s your birthday? / What’s your wrist tattoo bible verse say? / Tell me this, do you kiss on the first date? / Don’t hold anything back.”
“There were a lot of lines that stood out in this song, but the one line that stood out to me, honestly, is the same line that I think stands out to everybody else—the ‘wrist tattoo bible verse’ line, because people don’t call this song ‘I Don’t Know About You,’ which is the real name of it,” says Chris. “I don’t care if I’m in a grocery store or whatever, people will come up and say, ‘I love your “wrist tattoo bible verse” song’ [laughing]. So, people have associated that line as being the line of the song.”
Hit songwriter and producer Michael James Ryan—known professionally as busbee—died on Sept. 29 at the age of 43.
Busbee was diagnosed with an aggressive form of brain cancer over the summer, according to a friend.
Busbee’s songwriting credits include Maren Morris’ “My Church,” Florida Georgia Line’s “H.O.L.Y.,” Keith Urban’s “Fighter,” Garth Brooks’ “People Loving People,” Lady Antebellum’s “You Look Good,” Carly Pearce’s “Every Little Thing” and more.
Busbee also produced and co-produced albums for a number of artists, including Maren Morris, Keith Urban, Lauren Alaina, Lady Antebellum, Carly Pearce and more.
A host of stars reached out via social media to share their condolences.
This just doesn’t seem fair. I will always love you and the songs and albums I was lucky to make with you, Busbee. Rest well, my sweet friend. 💔 pic.twitter.com/9DKsU5G77a
I absolutely can’t accept the loss of mine and Gwen’s friend Michael (Busbee)..Too much to say for social media. Too much pain and unfairness period. I guess sometimes you gotta dig extra EXTRA deep for peace to continue to have faith. And I will because Michael ALWAYS had faith.