Tennessee men’s basketball forward/guard Admiral Schofield spoke to the media in a group session on Thursday ahead of their 1st Rd Tournament game in Columbus.

Tennessee men’s basketball forward/guard Admiral Schofield spoke to the media in a group session on Thursday ahead of their 1st Rd Tournament game in Columbus.
Tennessee men’s basketball forward Grant Williams spoke to the media in a group session on Thursday ahead of their 1st Rd Tournament game in Columbus.
Our Vince Ferrara spoke 1-on-1 with Vols guard Lamonte Turner ahead of the first round NCAA Tournament game vs. Colgate in Columbus.
Carrie Underwood’s Canadian-born husband, Mike Fisher, has become a U.S. citizen.
Mike, 38, who was born in Peterborough, Ontario, Canada, shared the news via his Instagram Story, with the caption: “Big day I’m officially American.”
In 2018, Mike retired from the NHL after 18 years, including eight for the Nashville Predators.
photo by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com
Here’s video of the Tennessee men’s basketball team at their open practice for media and fans at Nationwide Arena in Columbus, Ohio on Thursday ahead of their Friday NCAA Tournament 1st Round game vs. Colgate.
By Jimmy Hyams
Desmond Oliver had heard the talk, the chatter, the premise that Tennessee’s team was built on a bunch of three-stars that few other teams wanted.
Tennessee’s assistant wanted to set the record – as he sees it – straight.
“Every few weeks the storyline changes – like this team is filled with three-star guys and Grant Williams only had offers from the Ivy Leagues,’’ Oliver said recently at the Big Orange Tip-Off Club.
“That is so not true, but it sounds cool, so I go with it.’’
Actually, it is true. Each of the top seven players in the UT’s rotation, with one exception, was a three-star prospect. Yves Pons was No. 127, Lamonte Turner 144, Jordan Bone 171, Williams 191, Admiral Schofield 251, Jordan Bowden 262 and Kyle Alexander 362, according to Rivals.
Pons is the four star, and he saw his minutes diminish as the season progressed.
With that as a backdrop, two-seed Tennessee (29-5) takes on 15-seed Colgate (24-10) today at about 2:45 on CBS.
Williams, the two-time SEC Player of the Year, narrowed his final three schools to Yale, Richmond and Tennessee. Tennessee was the only major school to offer Williams.
But Oliver has a different version.
“From Day One, we have felt Grant Williams has been a five-star recruit,’’ Oliver said. “I saw him in the ninth grade and he was this little chubby dude. If he could stop eating the whole box of chicken and eat a couple of slices, he is going to be a great player.
“Williams was a legit four-star. He was a bad dude. He was outplaying the kids that would make it to the NBA.’’
No recruiting service that we saw ranked Williams a four star, perhaps because he was a chubby, undersized inside player who ate the whole box of chicken. But he did hold his own against higher rated players in AAU competition, and that got Tennessee’s attention.
Turner re-classed up due to his age and had to sit a year to gain eligibility at Tennessee. While Oliver says Turner was a four-star and a top 55 or 60 player, no ranking we saw had him nearly that high.
Mike DeCourcy, senior college basketball writer for The Sporting News, followed Oliver to the podium that day and disputed pretty much everything Oliver said.
DeCourcy said UT had to have “incredible coaches’’ to notice the potential of the three-star recruits even though they “look at it as insulting to their recruiting. It is not.
“It is flattering to them that they have a team filled with three-stars and they are doing this (a No. 1 ranking for a month, a 29-win season heading into the NCAA Tournament).’’
DeCourcy said a couple of things are at work.
“One, they have to be incredible scouts to find these players.
“Two, they had to be fantastic coaches to be able to turn to turn a three-star player into an almost certain first-team All-American and an SEC Player of the Year (Williams).’’
DeCourcy called Bone “one of the five most improved players in college basketball.’’
DeCourcy said he asked a college scout how Williams got overlooked. The response: Williams was undersized, played within 10 feet of the basket and couldn’t stretch the floor with his shot.
“The concern was how would that translate (to college),’’ the scout said.
“Well,’’ DeCourcy said, “it translated really damn well.’’
DeCourcy said no team since the 1970s achieved a No. 1 ranking without having a McDonald’s All-American. UT does not.
He said the last team to win an NCAA title without a first-round NBA draft pick was Indiana in 1987. He thinks UT could match that.
He also said only Maryland in 2002 has won a national title since 1977 without a McDonald’s All-American.
“You’re seeing something extraordinary,’’ he said of UT.
Oliver said he remembers Schofield telling him one summer that he wanted to one of the SEC’s top players and he wanted to inherit Robert Hubbs’ position at small forward.
“At the time, he couldn’t dribble better than most of you guys,’’ Oliver said to a crowd that averaged about 60 years old. “His handles were so awful that I was thinking, `There was no way in heck that this guy will be skilled enough to be a small forward.’
“I was dead wrong.’’
Rick Barnes has yet to coach a five-star at Tennessee, though he has signed one for next year: Josiah James.
Oliver said Barnes has stayed away from certain five stars in the past.
“Because the five-star guy has been told for the majority of his life that it is all about you,’’ Oliver said. “The majority of five-star guys come in with the idea of one-and-done.
“If you are a five-star and you do not want to be one-and-done, then there is something wrong with you, based on perception.’’
Oliver said whether a prospect is a five or four or three star, “We have to find the guys who have the right mindset because one thing about Rick Barnes is, the mindset has to be right about being a hard worker.’’
Oliver said it’s important that your best players – like Williams and Schofield – are “high character people.’’
Oliver admitted if you’d told him last year the Vols would inhabit the No. 1 ranking for four weeks, he would have said “there is no way.’’
Oliver believes Williams and Schofield will play in the NBA for a long time. And he said NBA scouts are calling about Bone.
Oliver said the narrative on Bone has changed dramatically.
“Last year,’’ he said, “people were calling in and saying, `I do not think he is good enough to get you guys in the Final Four and win the championship.’ That has changed.’’
Oliver said UT has a common theme when recruiting players.
“We want to bring in guys that continue to make you proud,’’ Oliver said.
“We want to keep bringing in those kids who are tough, blue collar, humble workers.’’
So far, so good.
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Reba McEntire is shipping a new single, “Freedom,” to country radio.
The tune, which was co-penned by Jay Brunswick, Tommy Cecil, Jaida Dreyer and John Pierce, is featured on Reba’s upcoming 33rd studio album, Stronger Than the Truth, which drops on April 5.
In addition to co-producing the project with Buddy Cannon, Reba co-penned two of the 12 tracks. Additional songwriters include Brandy Clark, Ronnie Dunn, Dallas Davidson, Hillary Lindsey and more.
“The response to Sing It Now: Songs of Faith & Hope reinforced my love for recording songs that speak to the heart,” says Reba. “So when I started selecting songs for this album, I stuck with that same formula—go with the songs that touch my heart, and hopefully when you hear me singing it, they’ll touch yours too. That honesty once again revealed itself. I grew up on an 8,000-acre family ranch singing at dance halls, honky-tonks and rodeos with my brother and sister. Stronger Than the Truth takes me back to that kind of country music that I grew up with. I haven’t gotten to do that in a while, so I’m thrilled to pieces to release this new music.”
Listen to “Freedom” below.
photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com
Two weeks before the April 5 release of their new album, Reboot, Brooks & Dunn have shared another track from the project: “Ain’t Nothing ’Bout You,” which features Brett Young.
The upcoming album features an all-star cast of artists performing duets with country’s best-selling duo, including Kacey Musgraves, Kane Brown, Thomas Rhett, Brett Young, Lanco, Ashley McBryde, Midland, Luke Combs, Brothers Osborne, Cody Johnson, Jon Pardi and Tyler Booth.
Brooks & Dunn took “Ain’t Nothing ’Bout You” to the top of the Billboard chart in 2001.
“This whole experience has been humbling to say the least,” says Ronnie Dunn. “What a cool rush to hear somebody do one of your tunes in a unique way, and it still holds up. That’s the greatest compliment you can get as an artist. People used to ask us all the time about the legacy we wanted to leave, and it’s honestly just that—you hope the music stands up over time. This is the first opportunity we’ve had to run it up a new flagpole . . . and it really flies.”
“They’re making their own music,” says Kix Brooks about the Reboot guest list. “But just like we did, they still remember and respect the music they grew up with. It makes you feel good that these acts were inspired by us in some small way.”
“I was so honored to get asked to be on this project with Brooks & Dunn, the lineup on this record is through-the-roof talent and the guys are country music icons,” added Brett. “As soon as I got into the studio Ronnie and Kix made me feel so comfortable, which I was so thankful for, and I can’t wait for everyone to hear what we came up with together.”
The new album will be Brooks & Dunn’s first studio album since 2007’s Cowboy Town.
Listen to Brooks & Dunn collaborate with Brett on “Ain’t Nothing ’Bout You.”
photo by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com
Tennessee men’s basketball forward/guard Admiral Schofield spoke to the media in a group session on Thursday ahead of their 1st Rd Tournament game in Columbus.