Luke Bryan Adds Final Stop on “Sunset Repeat Tour”

Luke Bryan Adds Final Stop on “Sunset Repeat Tour”

Luke Bryan is gearing up to hit the road this spring and summer for his headlining Sunset Repeat Tour. Kicking off on May 31 in Philadelphia, the tour will make additional stops in Cincinnati, Phoenix, St. Louis, Toronto and more.

Luke announced he will cap the tour by adding an additional date: Oct. 25 at Ford Field in Detroit. Luke has performed three previous sold-out shows at Ford Field, the home of the NFL’s Detroit Lions. Tickets for the new date go on sale on May 17 at 10 a.m.

“I love a good family tradition and this has become one,” says Luke. “Wrapping up my tour for the fourth time at Ford Field is seriously unbelievable. This crowd brings so much energy and a big party and I can’t wait to get back there.”

Cole Swindell, Jon Langston and DJ Rock will serve as support during the tour.

Sunset Repeat Tour

May 31 | Philadelphia, Pa. | BB&T Pavilion
June 1 | Bristol, Va. | Jiffy Lube Live
June 2 | Charlotte, N.C. | PNC Music Pavilion
June 6 | Hershey, Pa. | HersheyPark Stadium
June 7 | Burgettstown, Pa. | Keybank Pavilion
June 8 | Cincinnati, Ohio | Riverbend Music Center
June 13 | Phoenix, Ariz. | Ak-Chin Pavilion
June 14 | Albuquerque, N.M. | Isleta Amphitheater
July 11 | Saratoga Springs, N.Y. | Saratoga Performing Arts Center
July 13 | Wantagh, N.Y. | Northwell Health at Jones Beach Theater
July 19 | Orange Beach, Ala. | The Wharf Amphitheater
July 20 | Orange Beach, Ala. | The Wharf Amphitheater
July 21 | Brandon, Miss. | Brandon Amphitheater
July 25 | Birmingham, Ala. | Oak Mountain Amphitheatre
July 26 | Atlanta, Ga. | Cellairis Amphitheatre at Lakewood
Aug. 17 | St. Louis, Mo. | Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre
Aug. 18 | Indianapolis, Ind. | Ruoff Home Mortgage Music Center
Aug. 22 | Fresno, Calif. | Save Mart Center
Aug. 23 | Sacramento, Calif. | Toyota Amphitheatre
Aug. 24 | Mountain View, Calif. | Shoreline Amphitheater
Sept. 5 | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | Budweiser Stage
Sept. 7 | Holmdel, N.J. | PNC Bank Arts Center
Sept. 8 | Virginia Beach, Va. | Veterans United Home Loans Amphitheater
Sept. 12 | Bethel, N.Y. | Bethel Woods Center for the Artsbethel
Sept. 14 | Cleveland, Ohio | Blossom Music Center
Oct. 12 | Raleigh, N.C. | Coastal Credit Union Music Park
Oct. 25 | Detroit | Ford Field

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Tennessee football will host Troy in 2020

Tennessee football will host Troy in 2020

UT vs. Troy / Credit: UT Athkletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee football will host Troy for a non-conference football game at Neyland Stadium in 2020, UT announced on Thursday.

The Vols and Trojans will meet on Nov. 21, 2020.

Tennessee previously announced 2020 non-conference games against Charlotte (Sept. 5), at Oklahoma (Sept. 12) and versus Furman (Sept. 19).

Tennessee and Troy will meet for the second time ever after facing off in 2012 when the Vols and the Trojans totaled the most combined yards in a game (1,439) in SEC history. Led by quarterback Tyler Bray’s school-record 530 passing yards, Tennessee defeated Troy, 55-48, on Nov. 3, 2012 in Knoxville.

Tennessee’s complete 2020 schedule with dates and opponents for conference games is expected to be announced later this year.

Listen to Randy Houser’s Vintage Croon in New Single, “No Stone Unturned”

Listen to Randy Houser’s Vintage Croon in New Single, “No Stone Unturned”

No one has ever questioned Randy Houser’s vocal abilities. The Mississippi native can belt with the best of ’em, a la the great Ronnie Dunn.

After releasing Top 40 lead single, “What Whiskey Does,” from his 2019 album, Magnolia, Randy is planning to ship his new single, “No Stone Unturned,” to country radio on May 20. Penned by Randy and Dallas Davidson, “No Stone Unturned” finds Randy delivering another vocal gem as he bellows out the mid-tempo tune.

“I think with [past] albums, sometimes we would be into so much production stuff and trickery that my voice would get buried under some of that stuff, and we definitely didn’t want to do that with this,” says Randy to Nash Country Daily. “Because we weren’t aiming for a specific thing [with the album], we could focus on [song] specifics in a lot of places.”

Listen to “No Stone Unturned” below.

photo by NCD

FBI Honors Dolly Parton for Fundraising Efforts Following 2016 Smoky Mountains Wildfires

FBI Honors Dolly Parton for Fundraising Efforts Following 2016 Smoky Mountains Wildfires

Dolly Parton can add a new award to her trophy case that already includes eight Grammy Awards, 10 Country Music Association Awards, five Academy of Country Music Awards, three American Music Awards, two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, the BMI Icon Award, the Library of Congress Living Legend Award, the National Medal of Arts Award, induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame and more.

Dolly was recently recognized by the FBI with their 2018 Director’s Community Leadership Award for her fundraising efforts following the 2016 Smoky Mountain wildfires.

When wildfires devastated Sevier County in East Tennessee in November 2016, Dolly was quick to act. In an effort to raise funds for the families affected, Dolly held a telethonSmoky Mountains Rise: A Benefit for the My People Fundon December 13. The telethon raised millions of dollars for Dolly’s My People Fund, which began distributing checks in the amount of $1,000 each month to 884 families whose primary residences were completely destroyed due to the fires. Thanks to her fundraising efforts, Dolly was able to provide each family with an extra $5,000, which brought the total assistance to $10,000 per family.

While Dolly could not accept the Director’s Community Leadership Award in person, she offered her thanks to the FBI and the other recipients of the award via a video.

“Hey everybody, it’s Dolly, and I am so sorry I couldn’t be with you today to personally accept the award from Director Wray,” said Dolly. “But it is an honor for me to be recognized by the FBI, because there’s no higher calling than your mission to protect and serve us. And to my fellow recipients, thank you for all you do for our communities. Your work inspires all of us. So may y’all continue to have the faith, the strength, and the vision to make your dreams come true. So many thanks again, and remember that I will always love you! And thank you again.”

Watch Dolly’s thank-you video below.

photo by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com

Jimmy’s blog: NCAA might eventually alter grad transfer rule

Jimmy’s blog: NCAA might eventually alter grad transfer rule

By Jimmy Hyams

Since the inception of the graduate transfer almost 15 years ago, only 28 percent of football players have achieved their Masters’ degree.

That’s not a good look for the NCAA, so the organization’s Division I Council is considering a major change.

A proposal to make a grad transfer count two years against a football or basketball team’s roster was defeated last month by the NCAA, but it has gained enough conversation to possibly be adopted sometime in the near future.

The thinking: The NCAA doesn’t want the grad transfer rule to be a charade whereby student-athletes play a final year at a college, then leave with no intent to get a Masters – only to play at a better program their final year or better themselves for the professional ranks.

In other words, an NCAA study shows many student-athletes earn only a few graduate credit hours, then leave school when their eligibility is completed.

The number of graduate transfers has increased in men’s sports by four fold since 2011 and nearly tripled in women’s sports over that time frame.

Grad transfers in football have gone from 17 in 2011 to 168 in 2017.

It has gone from 15 in men’s basketball in 2011 to 94 in 2017.

It has gone from 23 to 36 in men’s track and field over that time frame.

In all other men’s sports, it has increased from 25 to 55.

Overall, the jump has been from 80 in 2011 to 353 in 2017.

On the women’s side, it has gone from four in basketball in 2011 to 48 in 2017; from 31 in track and field to 52; from 27 in all other women’s sports to 81.

Andrew Donovan, compliance director at the University of Tennessee athletic department, said the NCAA proposal is to “make sure the academic intent behind getting a Masters’ degree is real.’’

About 90 percent of Master’s programs take two years to complete; that’s why the NCAA proposal said grad transfers should count two years against football and basketball rosters – to curb the grad transfer epidemic.

“Are we taking grad school education seriously?’’ is the question the NCAA asked, Donovan said.

The proposal that was defeated has caused dissension in the NCAA ranks. Smaller schools say the proposal is a way to keep larger schools from poaching players that were trained and developed at the lower level.

Bigger schools are looking for an athlete to fill a need that could result in a championship season.

“We might not have the golden ticket answer for a grad transfer,’’ Donovan said, so the Council wants to further study the matter.

The proposal targeted football and basketball only because most grad transfers are tied to those two sports.

Another interesting proposal that was passed allows first-time college athletes who enroll in the summer to transfer and play immediately at another school if the head coach departs before the first day of classes for the fall term. That does not apply to freshmen who have enrolled as a full-time student at mid-term in January.

The Division I Council also said walk-ons not on scholarship may transfer and play immediately at another school without sitting a year.

It’s preposterous to think that rule was ever on the books.

Former Heisman Trophy winner Baker Mayfield brought attention to this silly policy when he walked on at Texas Tech, wasn’t granted a scholarship, transferred to Oklahoma and had to sit a year before gaining eligibility – as a walk-on.

The Council also voted down adding another full-time assistant in baseball and softball. The SEC strongly endorsed this. The Big 12 and Big Ten said no.

One reason for the objection: Finances.

Another: Baseball has the odd number of 11.7 scholarships due to Title IX reductions in the 1970s and that’s way too few to field a team. So some feel it’s better to fix the 11.7 number in baseball before adding another assistant.

A third reason: If you add another assistant in baseball and softball, could you have a trickle down affect in golf and tennis and soccer and other non-revenue sports?

“You can hear sound arguments on both sides,’’ Donovan said. “Tennessee is very much in support. It helps in the development of student-athletes and gives a volunteer coach exposure to offseason recruiting off campus and makes them better equipped to take on a full-time job elsewhere.’’

The proposal doesn’t require baseball and softball to add a full-time assistant, but smaller schools that couldn’t afford to do so see a further divide of the haves and have nots and the pressure to add a full-time position to keep pace with other schools.

The Council amended the medical hardship rule to say if an athlete is injured and plays no more than 30 percent of a season, he or she can get the redshirt. In the past, the injury had to occur in the first half of the season.

Another major change was making the first permissible date for coaches to call or communicate with prospects and parents June 15 after the prospects’ sophomore year in all sports except football, basketball, softball and baseball.

“There’s been a big push the last two years to slow down the recruiting process in softball, lacrosse, golf, tennis and soccer because prospects are being offered scholarships and making commitments in the eighth, ninth and 10th grade,’’ Donovan said.

“The (NCAA) membership feels that’s not healthy. … We need to push back the time frame so prospects can make more informed decisions.’’

In softball, a prospect cannot make a campus visits or in-person contact until Sept. 1 of their junior year.


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

Chris Young Wants People to “Come Early, Stay Late & Party All Night Long” on His Upcoming Raised On Country Tour

Chris Young Wants People to “Come Early, Stay Late & Party All Night Long” on His Upcoming Raised On Country Tour

Chris Young will hit the road next week for his headlining Raised On Country Tour 2019.

The 28-date tour, which gets its name from Chris’ current single, could have been titled “The Chrises Tour,” as Chris Janson will serve as direct support for many of the dates, with additional special guests Chris Lucas and Preston Brust of Locash, Dylan Scott and Jimmie Allen.

As Chris told Kix Brooks of American Country Countdown, he wants folks to “come early, stay late, and party all night long.”

“It’s funny, on some of the shows when Locash is the opener, we’ve got three Chrises [laughing] out there,” says Chris to Kix. “I get excited about taking Chris Janson out on the road. He opened a couple of shows for us last year, and I love his energy and his vibe in his show. I mean, whether it’s the stuff that he’s released or some of the stuff that he’s written, he’s got a show full of hits, and anytime I’m putting together a tour, I want people to come early and stay late—I’ve said that for the past several years. With that opener slot being a rotation of Dylan Scott, Jimmie Allen and Locash, I want people to show up early, party all night long and go home feeling like they got their money’s worth coming out to a country show.”

The tour will kick off on May 16 in Alpharetta, Ga., making additional stops in Boston, Philadelphia, Dallas, San Diego and more.

Raised On Country Tour

May 16 | Alpharetta, GA | Ameris Bank Amphitheatre^^
May 17 | Charlotte, NC | PNC Music Pavilion^
May 18 | Bristow, VA | Jiffy Lube Live^
May 24 | Darien Center, NY | Darien Lake Amphitheater^
May 25 | Saratoga Springs, NY | Saratoga Performing Arts Center^
May 26 | Holmdel, NJ | PNC Bank Arts Center^
June 13 | Syracuse, NY | St. Joseph’s Health Amphitheater at Lakeview^
June 14 | Boston, MA | Xfinity Center^
June 15 | Hartford, CT | XFINITY Theatre^
June 21 | Scranton, PA | The Pavilion at Montage Mountain^
June 22 | Philadelphia, PA | BB&T Pavilion^
July 11 | St. Louis, MO | Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre+
July 13 | Indianapolis, IN | Ruoff Home Mortgage Music Center+
July 18 | Southaven, MS | BankPlus Amphitheater at Snowden Grove#
July 19 | Rogers, AR | Walmart AMP~
July 20 | Dallas, TX | Dos Equis Pavilion~
Aug. 8 | Mountain View, CA | Shoreline Amphitheatre~
Aug. 9 | San Diego, CA | North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre~
Aug. 10 | Irvine, CA | FivePoint Amphitheatre~
Aug. 15 | Albuquerque, NM | Isleta Amphitheater+
Aug. 16 | Phoenix, AZ | Ak-Chin Pavilion+
Aug. 17 | Las Vegas, NV | MGM Grand Garden Arena++
Aug. 22 | Virginia Beach, VA | Veterans United Home Loans Amphitheater at Virginia Beach~
Aug. 23 | Raleigh, NC | Coastal Credit Union Music Park~
Aug. 24 | Burgettstown, PA | KeyBank Pavilion~
Sept. 12 | Jacksonville, FL | Daily’s Place+
Sept. 13 | Tampa, FL | MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre+
Sept. 14 | West Palm Beach, FL | Coral Sky Amphitheatre+

^^with special guest Dylan Scott
^with special guests Chris Janson and Dylan Scott
+with special guests Chris Janson and LOCASH
++with special guest LOCASH
#with special guest Chris Janson
~with special guests Chris Janson and Jimmie Allen

photo by NCD

Robinson Nkamhoua Signs NLI, will Enroll Next Month

Robinson Nkamhoua Signs NLI, will Enroll Next Month

Credit: UT Athletics

Tennessee basketball coach Rick Barnes announced Wednesday that versatile 6-9 forward Olivier Robinson Nkamhoua (pronounced: OH-liv-ee-AY RAH-bin-sin KAHM-wuh) has signed and submitted a National Letter of Intent and will enroll at UT as a freshman next month.

A native of Finland who transitioned to the United States in 2017 and attends Bishop Walsh School in Cumberland, Maryland, Robinson Nkamhoua joins a crop of newcomers that includes Davonte Gaines, Josiah-Jordan James and Drew Pember.

“Olivier is just starting to scratch the surface of his potential, and we’re excited about his development once he arrives,” Barnes said. “He comes from a great, high-character family—both in Finland and here in the U.S.—that has given him a solid foundation. He’s received excellent coaching at the high school level and comes to us with an outstanding work ethic and eagerness to learn.

“He’s a very athletic forward who has a level of versatility on both ends of the floor. He can play inside or on the perimeter, and he guards multiple positions defensively. He’ll fit well into our defensive schemes. He can bring pressure, play up-tempo, understands good ball movement and is a strong communicator.”

According to 247Sports.com, Robinson Nkamhoua is rated as the No. 150 overall prospect in the Class of 2019 nationally.

He was sidelined with a leg injury for most of his junior year, which he spent at Richard Montgomery High School in Rockville, Maryland. As a senior this spring at Bishop Walsh—where he was coached by Dan Prete—Robinson Nkamhoua helped lead the Spartans to a 20-win season.

He played his AAU ball with the 6th Man Sports program and also turned heads while competing in the 2018 Capitol Hoops Summer League at DeMatha Catholic High School in Hyattsville, Maryland.

Robinson Nkamhoua’s mother is from Finland, and his father hails from Cameroon. Robinson Nkamhoua competed for Finland (as a 6-4 point guard) in 2016 FIBA U16 European Championships divisional play.

He will become the first Tennessee basketball player from Finland and just the second from Europe, joining rising junior wing Yves Pons from France.

Williams Repeats as TNSHOF Male Amateur Athlete of the Year

Williams Repeats as TNSHOF Male Amateur Athlete of the Year

Credit: UT Athletics

For the second year in the row, Tennessee basketball star Grant Williams has been selected as the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame’s Male Amateur Athlete of the Year. He will be recognized during the organization’s 53rd Annual Induction Banquet on Saturday, June 15, at the Omni-Nashville Hotel.

Williams joins football VFL Eric Berry as the only UT student-athletes to win the award multiple times.

Tickets for the 2019 Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame induction ceremony are available by calling 615-418-9595.

A consensus first-team All-American, Williams ranked among the nation’s most versatile and efficient players this year, averaging 18.8 points, 7.5 rebounds, 3.2 assists, 1.5 blocks and 1.1 steals per game. He also shot 57 percent from the field and an impressive 82 percent from the free-throw line.

Williams ranked in the top 10 in the SEC in scoring (1st), field-goal percentage (2nd), free-throw percentage (5th), rebounding (7th) and assist/turnover ratio (10th). He moved into the top 10 on UT’s all-time career lists for blocks (3rd/160), free-throw attempts (3rd/661), free throws made (4th/501) and offensive rebounds (8th/257). He also ranks 12th in scoring with 1,629 career points.

The Charlotte, North Carolina, native helped the Vols (31-6) advance to the Sweet Sixteen and match the program record for wins in a single season. Williams also played a critical role in this year’s team setting program records for points, field goals made, assists and blocks.

A finalist for virtually every major National Player of the Year award, Williams’ list of postseason honors was extensive. He was named SEC Player of the Year and a first-team All-SEC performer—both for the second straight season. He also was named to the SEC Community Service Team, the SEC All-Tournament Team and was the USBWA District IV Player of the Year.

This is the fourth straight year in which a Tennessee Vol has been named the TSHOF’s Male Amateur Athlete of the Year, as world-champion sprinter Christian Coleman shared the award in 2016 before winning it outright in 2017.

Other Tennessee male student-athletes who have received the award are tennis player J.P. Smith (2011), football player Eric Berry (2008, 2009, 2010), baseball pitcher Luke Hochevar (2006), sprinter Justin Gatlin (2003), football player John Henderson (2001), swimmer Jeremy Linn (1999), football player Peyton Manning (1998), baseball player Todd Helton (1996), baseball pitcher R.A. Dickey (1995), swimmer Melvin Stewart (1993), football player Reggie White (1984), basketball player Ernie Grunfeld (1977), steeplechase runner Doug Brown (1975), football/baseball player Condredge Holloway (1974), swimmer David Edgar (1973) and football player Bobby Majors (1972).

The Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame, which held its first induction banquet in 1966, has as its goal to enshrine successful teams and individuals who display sportsmanship, good character and success, creating a legacy for others to follow. The Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame Museum is housed inside the Bridgestone Arena in downtown Nashville.

While Williams is one of multiple annual award winners, there are several 2019 inductees with UT connections, including Kippy Brown, David Cutcliffe, Charles Davis, Kara Lawson and Peyton Manning.

 

UT Athletics

Maren Morris, Lindsay Ell & Tenille Townes to Play Free Nashville Show to Celebrate Female Empowerment

Maren Morris, Lindsay Ell & Tenille Townes to Play Free Nashville Show to Celebrate Female Empowerment

Maren Morris, Lindsay Ell and Tenille Townes will perform a free concert at Nashville’s Marathon Music Works on June 3.

Celebrating a night of female empowerment, the Pandora Live event is a call to action for more female representation in the country genre. Maren’s performance will be broadcast live on SiriusXM’s The Highway channel at 10 p.m. ET.

Pandora listeners can RSVP for the free event.

photos: Maren Morris by Curtis Hilbun; Lindsay Ell & Tenille Townes by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Alabama Extends 50th Anniversary Tour With Openers Scotty McCreery, Beach Boys, Charlie Daniels & More

Alabama Extends 50th Anniversary Tour With Openers Scotty McCreery, Beach Boys, Charlie Daniels & More

Alabama is celebrating a half-century of making music with their current 50th Anniversary Tour.

The tour kicked off in January with an announced run of 27 shows. Now the iconic band is extending their tour with 28 new dates, including stops in Indianapolis, Baltimore, Birmingham and more. The Charlie Daniels Band, The Marshall Tucker Band, The Beach Boys (date to be announced), John Anderson, Restless Heart, Exile, John Michael Montgomery, Scotty McCreery and Charlie Major will join Alabama on select dates.

Alabama’s Randy Owen, Teddy Gentry and Jeff Cook formed the band in 1969 when the cousins journeyed to Myrtle Beach, S.C., to play at a bar called The Bowery.

“We are very fortunate to have made many friends over the last 50 years,” says Teddy. “On this tour, we decided to ask some of them to come along and play with us. We have the best of the best. It’s a lot of fun to hang out and watch our special guests every night.”

“Randy, Teddy and I have been overwhelmed by the support the fans have given us and especially me since my Parkinson’s diagnosis,” says Jeff. “The only reason for this is because we want our music to live on, and we love our fans. Thank you so much.”

“Teddy, Jeff and I thank God every day when we walk onstage and share our songs and voices that He blessed us with,” adds Randy.

Tickets for the new dates are on sale now.

Alabama 50th Anniversary Tour (*new dates)

  • May 9 | The Wharf Amphitheater | Orange Beach, AL (w/ The Charlie Daniels Band)*
  • May 10 | Bon Secours Wellness Arena | Greenville, SC (w/ The Charlie Daniels Band)*
  • May 24 | Harrah’s Cherokee Event Center | Cherokee, NC*
  • May 31 | U.S. Cellular Center | Cedar Rapids, IA
  • June 1 | Tumbleweed | La Cygne, KS
  • June 6 | Carolina Country Music Festival | Myrtle Beach, SC
  • June 7 | Macon Centreplex Coliseum | Macon, GA (w/ The Marshall Tucker Band)
  • June 15 | Maverik Center | Salt Lake City, UT (w/ Exile)
  • June 16 | Country Jam | Grand Junction, CO
  • June 26 | Target Center | Minneapolis, MN (w/ The Charlie Daniels Band)
  • June 27 | Country USA | Oshkosh, WI
  • July 11 | CenturyLink Center | Bossier City, LA (w/ Exile)*
  • July 12 | Walmart AMP | Rogers, AR (w/ John Anderson)*
  • July 19 | The Arena at TD Place | Ottawa, Ontario, Canada (w/ Charlie Major)*
  • July 20 | Big Sky Music Festival | Oro|Medonte, Ontario, Canada*
  • July 26 | Columbus Civic Center | Columbus, GA (w/ John Michael Montgomery)*
  • July 27 | Thunder Valley Amphitheatre | Bristol, TN (w/ John Michael Montgomery)*
  • Aug. 16 | State Fair of West Virginia | Lewisburg, WV*
  • Aug. 17 | PNG Bank Arts Center | Holmdel, NJ (w/ Scotty McCreery)*
  • Aug. 23 | Van Andel Arena | Grand Rapids, MI (w/ Restless Heart)*
  • Aug. 24 | The Country Fest’s Neon Nights | North Lawrence, OH*
  • Aug. 29 | Mohegan Sun Arena | Wilkes|Barre, PA (w/ The Charlie Daniels Band)*
  • Aug. 31 | Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion | Gilford, NH (w/ The Charlie Daniels Band)*
  • Sept. 1 | Darling’s Waterfront Pavilion | Bangor, ME (w/ The Charlie Daniels Band)*
  • Sept. 13 | Fox Theatre | Detroit, MI (w/ Exile)*
  • Sept. 14 | Tailgates N’ Tallboys | Peoria, IL
  • Sept. 27 | Martin Luther King Jr. Arena | Savannah, GA*
  • Sept. 28 | Hertz Arena | Estero, FL*
  • Oct. 3 | Colonial Life Arena | Columbia, SC (w/ The Charlie Daniels Band)*
  • Oct. 4 | Legacy Arena at the BJCC | Birmingham, AL (w/ The Charlie Daniels Band)*
  • Oct. 10 | Donald L. Tucker Civic Center | Tallahassee, FL (w/ The Charlie Daniels Band)*
  • Oct. 11 | Spectrum Center | Charlotte, NC (w/ The Charlie Daniels Band)*
  • Nov. 1 | WinStar World Casino & Resort | Thackerville, OK*
  • Nov. 8 | Veterans Memorial Coliseum at the Alliant Energy Center | Madison, WI (w/ The Charlie Daniels Band)*
  • Nov. 9 | Bankers Life Fieldhouse | Indianapolis, IN (w/ Restless Heart)*
  • Nov. 22 | Royal Farms Arena | Baltimore, MD*
  • Nov. 23 | Wicimico Civic Center | Salisbury, MD (w/ Exile)*

photo courtesy of Absolute Publicity

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