No. 23 Vols Lock Up Series Win with Wild Victory Over No. 15 Rebels

No. 23 Vols Lock Up Series Win with Wild Victory Over No. 15 Rebels

UT Baseball / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – No. 23 Tennessee came out with a 7-5 victory over No. 15 Ole Miss in a rollercoaster of a game on Friday night at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.

With the win, the Vols clinched their fifth SEC series win of the season and improved to 14-15 in conference play, their most wins in league play since the 2005 College World Series team went 18-11.

Andre Lipcius had yet another big night at the plate to lead the Big Orange, going 3-for-3 with a pair of intentional walks and two runs scored. Evan Russell and Pete Derkay both drove in a pair of runs as well for the Orange and White.

Tennessee scored three runs without registering a hit in the bottom of the eighth immediately after the Rebels tied the game at four with a run in the top of the inning. Despite allowing a run in the ninth, redshirt sophomore closer Redmond Walsh was able to finish the game off to earn his first win of the season.

The Rebels struck first on Friday with a pair of runs in the top of the first. Thomas Dillard led off the game with a double and came home on a passed ball to open the scoring. Dillard was a thorn in the side of the Vols all night, finishing with four of the Rebels’ seven hits. Tyler Keenan drove in Grae Kessinger with an RBI ground out to put Ole Miss ahead 2-0 later in the inning.

Sophomore left hander Garrett Crochet got the start for UT and bounced back nicely from a rocky first inning until a scary moment forced him to have to leave the game with one out in the top of the third inning after taking a line drive off his jaw. Camden Sewell came in to replace Crochet and was able to strand runners on the corners to end the frame.

The Vols took their first lead of the night with a three-run fourth inning. Russell drove in UT’s first run with a sacrifice fly and Derkay singled a few batters later to bring in two more runs to give the Big Orange a 3-2 advantage.

The Rebels scratched across a run in the top of the fifth with the aid of a Tennessee error. Kessinger drove in the run on play later with an RBI ground out to tie the game at three.

It looked like Ole Miss was on its way to tying the game with runners on first and second and nobody out in the top of the sixth, but some heads-up defense by the Vols and poor base running by the Rebels led to an unorthodox double play.

Colton Johnson was caught too far off second base after the pitch, prompting a throw to second by catcher Landon Gray. Johnson was thrown out at third for the first out before Lipcius quickly fired across the diamond to catch Cole Zabowski off the base at first to erase both base runners. Pinch hitter Anthony Servideo flied out to right field to end the inning as UT was able to preserve its one-run lead.

Tennessee had chances to add to its lead with multiple runners in scoring position in the fifth, sixth and seventh innings but was unable to take advantage. UT left 11 runners on base in the game.

The Rebels tied the game at four with a run in the top of the eighth on a two-out RBI double by Kevin Graham. Alerick Soularie misread the ball in left field, allowing it to get over his head to bring the tying run home. Soularie recovered nicely on the play, however, starting a 9-6-2 relay play to cut down the potential go-ahead run at the plate on the play to end the inning.

The Big Orange took advantage of four walks, a wild pitch and a passed ball in their pivotal three-run eighth inning and held on in the ninth for their 38th win of the year, the most in a season since 2005 (46).

NOTABLE
THE CENTURY MARK: With two stolen bases in the fourth inning, Tennessee reached 100 steals for the season, marking the first time the Vols have stolen 100 or more bases in a season since stealing 113 bags in 2005. UT finished with three stolen bases on the night and has 101 for the year.

SEC SUCCESS: With Friday’s win, the Vols locked up their fifth SEC series win of the season, which is the most since the 2007 team also won five conference series. UT will go for its second SEC sweep tomorrow afternoon in the series finale.

UP NEXT: The Vols will look to complete the series sweep of the Rebels tomorrow afternoon. First pitch for the series and regular-season finale is slated for noon and will be televised on the SEC Network. Fans can also listen live as John Wilkerson and Vince Ferrara call the action for the Vol Radio Network (FM 99.1/AM 990).

-UT Athletics

 

No. 12-Seeded UT Opens Knoxville Regional with 8-0 Win vs. Lancers

No. 12-Seeded UT Opens Knoxville Regional with 8-0 Win vs. Lancers

Lady Vols softball / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – The No. 12-seeded Lady Vols continued their shutout streak against Longwood on Friday afternoon, downing the Lancers, 8-0, in Game 2 of the NCAA Knoxville Regional.

Throwing her 13th complete game of the season, freshman Ashley Rogers tied a career-high with 13 strikeouts through 6.0 innings. The righty allowed just two hits in the contest en route to her seventh-career shutout.

Tennessee was led offensively by Chelsea Seggern who dominated at the plate. The junior went 3-for-4 and drove in six of UT’s runs. Jenna Holcomb also went 2-for-2 and scored three times for the Lady Vols.

After two quiet innings, UT strung together a pair of hits to take a 2-0 lead in the bottom of the second. Holcomb led off with a single to short before moving into scoring position on a sacrifice bunt. Seggern then blasted a two-run bomb off the SEC tarp on the outfield bleachers to give the Lady Vols the advantage.

The Orange and White continued to pour it on in the fifth frame to take a six-run lead. Cailin Hannon opened the inning with a double up the middle before Holcomb laid down a bunt single to third base. Hannon then scored on a delayed double steal before an Aubrey Leach walk put runners on first and second. In the next at-bat, Seggern launched her second homer of the game to the bleachers again, making it a 6-0 game.

Looking to bring the run-rule into play, UT added two more runs to the board in the bottom of the sixth. Holcomb walked with one out before Leach laid a bunt down to third base. Seggern then hit an RBI single through the left side, plating one run. One at-bat later, Haley Bearden hit an RBI groundout that sealed UT’s 8-0 win over Longwood.

Tennessee will play Ohio State in Game 3 of the Knoxville Regional beginning at noon ET on Saturday. Per NCAA Tournament guidelines, the Lady Vols will be the visiting team and Ohio State will be the home team.

Broadcast information will be shared as it comes available following the conclusion of the remaining Regional games across the country on Friday night.

DON’T CALL IT A STREAK: In UT’s overall series vs. Longwood, the Big Orange have held the Lancers scoreless since the first meeting in 2005. Overall, the Lady Vols have out-scored the Lancers 35-0 through six games.

CAREER DAY: Junior third baseman Chelsea Seggern had a career game on Friday, hitting two home runs and six RBI in the contest against Longwood. Previously, she had driven in a career-high four RBI four times. This marked the first game she had two home runs in an outing.

SHE’LL CUT YOU DOWN: Freshman pitcher Ashley Rogers tied a career high in strikeouts with 13 on Friday. She previously fanned 13 batters against Boston University in February. The outing vs. the Lancers marked her fifth game of the season with 10+ strikeouts.

Tennessee Co-Head Coach Karen Weekly 

Opening Statement:

“First, I’d just like to thank our university for the tremendous job they do hosting the NCAA Regional event. I know we have a lot of experience at this, but I never take it for granted what a professional job they do and how great the event runs. I’m really proud of our girls and the way they came out today. Our pitching performance was stellar and I’m really proud of the way we swung the bat and put some good innings together to get some runs on the board. That’s something that we’ve been struggling with lately. We worked really hard in our practices this week and that hard work paid off today. I have a lot of respect for Longwood. They’re a tough program. We’ve played them here before in the same event and had wins like this and then faced them in the championship and had really tough games. So, I know they’re going to bounce back and I wouldn’t be surprised to see them later on in this event.”

On why the floodgates open after one run comes in:

“I think sometimes we’re up there thinking too much and I think when the kids are in the dugout watching each other and kind of taking inventory of their at-bat, they can see that and it takes them a while to just get loose with their swings. I didn’t think our swings were really good at first. We had a couple good swings the first time through the order but after that we just kind of cut loose. That’s what we were doing all BP, getting the barrel out and driving the ball. We shouldn’t have the check swings and the jam jobs that we were getting and that’s what we were seeing and they saw each other.”

On what she knows about Ohio State:

“I’ve looked at them a lot. You don’t want to give your players too much information because you want them focused on Longwood. They’ve seen a little bit of every team and a lot of Longwood. But now it’s going to be a deep dive on Ohio State. They come from a very good conference. I think the Big 10 was as strong as they’ve been in many years this year. So to finish where they did in the Big 10, it was a very good season for them. We just saw their pitcher shut down North Carolina. We played North Carolina earlier this year, and we thought they were a pretty darn good team. So she’s one of the top pitchers in the Big 10 this year, and they played some really strong opponents outside of their conference and did very well. They’ve got a pretty powerful hitting team. It’s going to be a real challenge.”

Chelsea Seggern

On if she’s been able to appreciate the career game she had:

“Someone said to me that six RBIs is my career high. I didn’t even know I had that many to be honest. We’re just out here to win ballgames and compete for each other and compete for our pitchers because they compete for us. We’re just trying to make it to the end, that’s our main goal.”

On what she knows about Ohio State:

“We definitely have looked at all their pitchers and their hitters and we just know they’re going to be a competitive team. They’re coming from a great conference and we definitely can’t overlook them. We’re going to be looking at them more tonight. Kudos to them for winning, but it’s going to be a matchup tomorrow. We’re excited.”

Ashley Rogers

On pitching in her first NCAA Regional:

“At the very beginning, I was really fired up and ready to go. I feel like I haven’t pitched in forever. I was really fired up and the first batter I got behind and then she got a hit, so I had to calm myself down a little bit and just take a few breaths and get locked in from then on. I felt like I did a pretty good job staying locked in and attacking batters from the very beginning.”

On staying mentally locked in throughout the season:

“Coming in as a freshman it’s definitely a challenge just because it’s so mentally exhausting. Every single game you have to be locked in and on your toes, which is pretty much the deciding factor every single game or somebody will beat you. It’s just something you have to practice and just build up over time. And I think that Karen’s really helped me and the team and the other pitchers have really helped me build that over the season.”

Longwood Head Coach Kathy Riley

Opening Statement:

“I just didn’t think we played well. So it was really difficult to see what we were truly capable of doing because we did not play good defense and didn’t have very good at-bats, so it was really tough to kind of get a feel for what we’re capable of doing.”

On how the pitching made it tough for the team to kind of find a groove today:

“Tennessee pitchers get to face a lot of really good batters during the season. So you guys know as well as I do play in the SEC means that you have to figure it out. Because you’re facing so many people and learning how to follow up certain sequences with pitches that are going to be to your advantage is something that they get to do really often and they’re good at. Even when it goes to play discipline on our part, we have less opportunities to really have to work at it at the level that’s necessary. When you get to a regional, it’s always like that for us a little bit simply because it’s a little bit out of the norm to face as good pitching as we see here. So even if you do your non-conference schedule, you’re doing all early, and then the last half is usually in your conference. So, it’s definitely more difficult.”

On Chelsea Seggern and the home runs or if there were pitches she could have back:

“That’s a good question. I didn’t call the pitch and it almost looked like she was really picking up the pitch early. I mean, both pitches look like they were off-speed pitches and it looked like she was really comfortable. So, I think she was really seeing the pitch early. In watching, it almost looked like if we could have thrown speed pitches just a little quicker; it might have been more effective. It looks like it would just slow enough for her to really pick it up and have a chance to sit back and still hit it well.”

On the crowd and atmosphere here compared to what she was used to seeing:

“I love the atmosphere, and I always love when people come out and want to support their own team and although you know, as a coach, you want to take up for your own players. To me, that’s what it’s all about is to, you know, you go to college, have that college atmosphere and have college athletics be a part of your community and them being able to get engaged with their hometown team. So, I’m all about that. I enjoy it, enjoy seeing them come out all the time and their school spirit.”

Box Score

-UT Athletics

Jimmy’s blog: Barnes likes new rule proposals

Jimmy’s blog: Barnes likes new rule proposals

By Jimmy Hyams

Tennessee coach Rick Barnes has been pushing for several college basketball rules changes.

He may soon get his wish.

The NCAA has proposed a number of alterations that will be voted on June 5. If adopted, they would be effective immediately.

The proposals range from moving the 3-point line back to the international distance, allowing coaches to call timeouts in the final two minutes of a game, resetting the shot clock to 20 seconds on an offensive rebound to reviewing goal-tending in the final two minutes of regulation and overtime.

Barnes, in his second year on the NCAA basketball rules committee, endorses each one.

The only proposal Barnes supported that didn’t pass was widening the lane, shaping it like a trapezoid.

“I would eventually like to see us have a universal game, more like the Olympics,’’ Barnes said.

Barnes thinks widening the lane would help with movement and spacing. He also said officials feel it would help them officiate games.

“Sometimes I think we’ve got to do stuff to help them,’’ Barnes said.

Moving the 3-point line back about 16 inches (to 22 feet, 1 ¾ inches) will initially lead to a lower shooting percentage from beyond the arc, but Barnes thinks players will eventually adjust.

Another impact of the 3-point line moving back: “It will open up driving,’’ Barnes said.

Barnes said he doesn’t want the college game to look like the NBA, where players either dunk or shoot a 3.

“I’m a believer in, we can post the ball up,’’ Barnes said. “We do not want to lose the low-post game and we don’t want to lose the mid-range game.’’

Barnes has long opposed not allowing coaches to call timeouts from the bench. He said the rule was put in because coaches were calling timeout from the other end of the court when there was a scrum and no team had possession.

“The referee shouldn’t award a timeout unless your team has control (of the ball),’’ Barnes said. “But that was not happening.’’

Barnes said there were two instances during the most recent NCAA tournament when he wanted players to call a timeout but the players didn’t see or hear Barnes. So they played on.

“We’ve got to be able to help our players,’’ Barnes said.

Resetting the clock to 20 seconds after an offensive rebound is a “great rule,’’ Barnes said. “You shouldn’t have 30 (seconds) when you don’t need that 10 seconds to get the ball across half court. I think it will allow for more possessions.’’

The new goal-tending rule to allow for replay goes back to LSU beating Kentucky on an offensive goal-tending call at the buzzer that was not reviewable. The only thing reviewable was whether the ball went through the hoop with time left on the clock.

“All players and coaches just want the game called right,’’ Barnes said.

“You could imagine if that (LSU-Kentucky) had been the national championship game,’’ Barnes said, “and it ended on that play. We would all be sick about it.

“In those critical situations, I think everyone wants to see the right call made.’’


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

Jimmy’s blog: Bone posts impressive numbers at combine

Jimmy’s blog: Bone posts impressive numbers at combine

By Jimmy Hyams

As expected, Tennessee’s two-time SEC Player of the Year Grant Williams announced Friday he is staying in the NBA draft.

What was not expected were the numbers posted by UT guard Jordan Bone at the NBA Combine in Chicago.

Among the 66 invited to the combine – not all competed in drills – Bone was No. 1 in vertical jump (42.5 inches), standing vertical (36 inches), three-fourths court sprint (3.03 seconds), lane agility (9.97 seconds) and NBA shuttle drill (2.78 seconds).

The lane agility time was the fastest since 2001.

While Bone is not projected by most mocks to be drafted, he might be the best NBA prospect of UT’s trio that is trying to make it this year. He has elite speed and leaping ability. His assist-to-turnover ratio ranked among the best in the SEC. He can penetrate and hit pull-up jumpers near the basket.

Bone needs to improve his 3-point shooting and make better decisions when passing. At times he leaps in the air without knowing where he’ll pass.

But his measurables are off the chart.

His 3.03 in the three-fourths of a court dash were better than Derrick Rose (3.05) and Russell Westbrook (3.08). His vertical was better than Rose (40 inches) and Westbrook (36.5)

That doesn’t mean Bone can or will be as good as Rose and Westbrook – both are far better scorers than Bone. But it does enhance Bone’s draftability.

Tennessee coach Rick Barnes confirmed in an interview earlier this week on Sports Talk, WNML radio that Bone was going pro.

“We felt that all along,’’ Barnes said when asked if he expected Bone to stay in the NBA draft. “When he left, that was pretty much his thought process.’’

While Bone had an outstanding junior season at Tennessee, he will be easier to replace than Williams. The Vols have two solid guards returning in Lamonte Turner and Jordan Bowden and UT signed a 5-star recruit in Josiah James, who could easily be among UT’s top two scorers this season.

Williams measured 6-5 ¾ with a four percent body fat and a 6-9 ¾ wing span.

Admiral Schofield had 6.8 percent body fat with a 6-10 wingspan on a 6-4 frame.

Replacing Williams and his 18.8 points and 7.5 rebounds per game will be much more difficult than losing Bone – in part because UT doesn’t have anyone waiting in the wings to bang inside.

Is John Fulkerson ready to step up?

Is DJ Burns, who redshirted as a freshman last year?

What about Zach Kent?

Burns has the best chance to be physical inside, but he has no experience going against SEC big men. Neither does Kent. And Fulkerson was inconsistent.

Tennessee’s outlook would be much more favorable if they could sign the 7-foot-1 transfer from Arizona State or Virginia Tech grad transfer Kerry Blackshear, who could be worth four or five wins. Blackshear has entered the NCAA transfer portal and the NBA draft.

Without a proven inside presence, UT could go from 31 wins to an NIT team.

Much depends on the development of current players or the addition of an impact transfer.


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Stallings Shuts Down No. 15 Ole Miss as Vols Take Series Opener

Stallings Shuts Down No. 15 Ole Miss as Vols Take Series Opener

Garrett Stallings – Vols RHP / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee ace Garrett Stallings was back to his dominant self in Thursday night’s series-opening 7-0 victory over No. 15 Ole Miss at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.

The junior right hander threw his second complete-game shutout of the season, holding the Rebels’ potent lineup to just four hits as No. 23 Tennessee tied the program record with its 10th shutout of the season. Stallings did not walk a single batter and struck out seven while retiring the side in order five times on the night to improve to 8-3 on the year.

The Vols had the bats working as well, hammering out seven runs on 13 hits for the game. Six of those runs and 10 of those hits came against Ole Miss ace Will Ethridge before he was pulled after givng up a solo home run to Andre Lipcius to start the eighth inning.

Lipcius finished the game with three hits and three runs batted it while Ricky Martinez continued his hot hitting with a 4-for-4 night that included a run scored and two RBI. The four hits tied a career high for the junior shortstop.

The Vols jumped to a quick lead with some textbook baseball in the first inning. Justin Ammons doubled to lead off the inning and moved to third on a sacrifice bunt by Jay Charleston. Lipcius then ripped a single into left field to drive in Ammons and give UT a 1-0 lead.

After three scoreless frames, the Big Orange jumped on Ethridge for a four-spot in the bottom of the fifth to extend the lead to five. Martinez drove in both of his runs with a double to left field before Connor Pavolony singled him home one batter later. An infield single by Lipcius allowed Pavolony to score from third to cap the scoring in the inning.

UT added two more insurance runs in the eighth when Lipcius led off the inning with his 16th home run and Jake Rucker singled to score Alerick Soularie to make it 7-0.

Cole Zabowski had two of Ole Miss’ four hits on the night while Cooper Johnson and Kevin Graham had one each. The Rebels’ one through five hitters combined to go 0-for-15 in the game as Stallings was in complete control throughout.

The win was the 13th for the Vols in conference play this season, marking the most SEC wins for UT since the 2007 team also had 13.

NOTABLE
VOLS TIE SHUTOUT RECORD: With Thursday’s shutout win, Tennessee tied the 1994 team’s program record for shutouts in a single season with 10. Three of those shutouts have come in SEC play as the Vols shut out Georgia in back-to-back games to start that series back in mid-April.

ANDRE’S DINGERS: Tennessee junior third baseman Andre Lipcius has been on a tear with the long ball as of late. His solo shot in the eighth inning was his eighth homer in the last 15 games and his 16 jacks this year are the most by a UT player in a season since Cody Hawn had 22 back in 2009.

UP NEXT: The Vols will look to lock up another series win tomorrow night. First pitch for game two is slated for 6:30 p.m. and will be streamed online via SEC Network+ and the ESPN app. Fans can also listen live as John Wilkerson and Vince Ferrara call the action for the Vol Radio Network (FM 99.1/AM 990).

-UT Athletics

Three Lady Vols Garner All-Region Honors

Three Lady Vols Garner All-Region Honors

Lady Vols / Credit: UT Athletics

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Three Lady Vols were named to 2019 NFCA Division I All-Region Teams as announced by the National Fastpitch Coaches Association on Thursday.

Freshman Ashley Rogers and senior Aubrey Leach were tabbed First Team All-Region while senior Haley Bearden earned Third Team All-Region accolades.

The selections marked the first of both Rogers’ and Bearden’s careers while Leach has now earned All-Region accolades three years in a row. The Woodlands, Texas, native was also recognized as a First Team selection in 2018.

Leach enters the NCAA Tournament as Tennessee’s all-time leader in runs scored and walks. She is a finalist for the Senior CLASS Award and currently leads the Orange and White with a .401 batting average, 61 hits and 58 runs scored.

Rogers is the first freshman since Annie Aldrete in 2014 to earn First Team honors. She is also the first freshman pitcher to be selected to the First Team since Ellen Renfroe was in 2011. The Athens, Tenn., native is having a stellar freshman season that has seen her lead the SEC in conference wins (10) and become the first Tennessee freshman since Renfroe to throw six shutouts. Rogers was also recently named to the Schutt Sports/NFCA Freshman of the Year Top 10 List and became the first freshman to earn First Team All-SEC since 2014.

In a breakout senior campaign, Bearden has tallied 43 hits, 42 RBI and a team-leading 14 home runs en route to a .312 batting average. Not only do her homers lead the squad, but her .674 slugging percentage is also tops on the staff. Bearden’s hits, RBI and homer totals for 2019 alone surpass her previous three season totals combined and her 2019 average is 193 points higher than her batting average as a junior.

Overall, the Southeastern Conference paced all leagues with 40 honorees, while the Pac-12 and Big 10 were right on its heels with 38 and 37, respectively.

The 2019 NFCA Division I All-America teams will be announced at approximately 5 p.m. ET on Wednesday, May 29, via NFCA.org.

-UT Athletics

Maddie & Tae Channel the 1990s With Cover of Diamond Rio’s “Meet in the Middle” [Listen]

Maddie & Tae Channel the 1990s With Cover of Diamond Rio’s “Meet in the Middle” [Listen]

Maddie Marlow and Taylor Dye of Maddie & Tae were both born in 1995—four years after the release of Diamond Rio’s debut single, “Meet in the Middle,” which topped the charts in 1991.

The duo channeled the 1990s by covering Diamond Rio’s hit for the Amazon Original series, which is available for streaming and purchase via Amazon Music.

“We have always loved this song and had such a blast putting our own spin on it,” says Maddie. “Our producers, Jimmy Robbins and Derek Wells, really helped us balance the original magic of the song with our own artistic style on it.”

Listen to Maddie & Tae’s “Meet in the Middle.”

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Thomas Rhett Taps Jon Pardi for New Song, “Beer Can’t Fix” [Listen]

Thomas Rhett Taps Jon Pardi for New Song, “Beer Can’t Fix” [Listen]

Thomas Rhett is gearing up for the release of his upcoming fourth studio album, Center Point Road, which will drop on May 31. The 16-song album takes its name from the street in his Tennessee hometown that shaped much of TR’s life experiences.

TR co-penned every track on the album, which also features a number of collaborations, including Kelsea Ballerini (“Center Point Road”), Little Big Town (“Don’t Threaten Me With a Good Time”) and Jon Pardi (“Beer Can’t Fix”), which is available now.

Penned by TR, Julian Bunetta, Zach Skelton and Ryan Tedder, “Beer Can’t Fix” was inspired by a golf outing.

“I was playing golf with one of my producers, Julian Bunetta, in Knoxville and we were both playing terribly, so we decided to drink a beer and suddenly we both started playing much better,” Thomas Rhett says. “Julian looked at me and said ‘Well, ain’t nothing a beer can’t fix’ and we both were like, ‘We have to write that.’ As soon as it was done I knew I wanted Jon on it. It’s basically about not taking life too seriously, and I just knew Jon’s voice would be the perfect addition to the song.”

Listen to “Beer Can’t Fix” below.

photo by O\’Connor, AFF-USA.com

Listen to Lady Antebellum’s Heavy-Hearted New Single, “What If I Never Get Over You”

Listen to Lady Antebellum’s Heavy-Hearted New Single, “What If I Never Get Over You”

Lady Antebellum returned to country radio with a new single, “What If I Never Get Over You,” on May 17. The new single is the lead from their upcoming eighth studio album, which will be the trio’s first project since leaving Universal Music Group and signing with Big Machine.

The new tune, which was helmed by longtime producer Dann Huff, finds Lady A’s Hillary Scott and Charles Kelley trading heavy-hearted vocals over a failed relationship. The duet was penned by Laura Veltz, Sam Ellis, Jon Green and Ryan Hurd.

“It’s been several years since we’ve had a chance to release a duet like this as a single,” says Charles. “When we played it for our team their excitement reassured us this song was the one to lead with out of the gate. It’s been a bit of our magic from day one. Our very first song in 2006, ‘All We’d Ever Need,’ was just written for Hillary, but she said, ‘Charles, you should sing a verse too’ and that’s how we started the co-lead singer thing.”

Listen to “What If I Never Get Over You” below.

photo by NCD

Montgomery Gentry to Release New 7-Song EP, “Outskirts”

Montgomery Gentry to Release New 7-Song EP, “Outskirts”

Montgomery Gentry will release a new seven-song EP, Outskirts, on June 14.

Produced by Noah Gordon and Shannon Houchins, the EP was recorded in September 2017, days prior to Troy Gentry’s death in a helicopter crash on Sept. 8, 2017. The new EP includes covers of Merle Haggard’s “What Am I Gonna Do With the Rest of My Life” and Darrell Scott’s “You’ll Never Leave Harlan Alive,” while “King of the World” features the guitar chops of Grammy-winner Steve Vai.

“Can’t wait for my friends to hear these songs,” says Eddie Montgomery. “T-Roy and I had a blast recording them.”

Outskirts Track List & Songwriters

  1. “Outskirts” (Dallas Davidson, Rodney Clawson, Ashley Gorley)
  2. “River Take Me” (Darrell Scott)
  3. “What Am I Gonna Do With the Rest of My Life” (Merle Haggard)
  4. “Never Been Nothin’ Else” (Dallas Davidson, Bobby Pinson)
  5. “You’ll Never Leave Harlan Alive” (Darrell Scott)
  6. “King of the World” feat. Steve Vai (Troy Jones)
  7. “Joe’s Six-Pack” (Jeremy Stover, Jesse Frasure, Travis Denning)

photo by NCD

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