Hoops Central: Lady Vols vs. No. 20/24 UCLA

Hoops Central: Lady Vols vs. No. 20/24 UCLA

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — The Lady Vols (19-12, 7-9 SEC) are the No. 11 seed in the Albany Region and will meet No. 6 seed UCLA (20-12, 12-6 Pac-12) at College Park, Md., on Saturday in the first round of the 2019 NCAA Tournament.

Tip-off is slated for approximately 1 p.m. ET at the XFINITY Center on the University of Maryland campus. The game will be televised by ESPN2 and carried by the Lady Vol Radio Network.

In the other first round game in College Park, No. 3 seed Maryland (28-4) will meet No. 14 seed Radford (26-6) at 11 a.m. ET on Saturday. The winner of those games will advance to the second round and play in College Park on Monday. Tip time and TV info. are to be determined.

The Lady Vols enter the NCAA Tournament having won two of their past three and seven of their last 12. In the SEC Tournament at Greenville, S.C., on March 7 and 8, they defeated LSU, 68-66, in the second round and then fell in the quarterfinals to eventual champion No. 5/5 Mississippi State, 83-68.

The No. 20/24-ranked Bruins, meanwhile, are 5-3 in their last eight games and are coming off an overtime loss in the Pac-12 Tournament to No. 6/6 Oregon, 88-83, on March 9.

BROADCAST INFORMATION

  • Roy Philpott (play-by-play) and Brooke Weisbrod (analyst) will have the call for ESPN2.
  • Mickey Dearstone is behind the microphone for IMG College/Lady Vol Network radio/online broadcasts for the 20th season. A link to the live audio stream can be found on each game’s Hoops Central page or the Lady Vol schedule on UTSports.com.
  • Air time for games on the Lady Vol Radio Network generally occurs 30 minutes prior to tip-off.

RANDOM FIRST-ROUND LADY VOL NOTES

  • This marks UT’s sixth game in College Park but its first NCAA appearance in the state of Maryland.
  • It is Tennessee’s initial visit to the XFINITY Center.
  • UT is 3-1 vs. Maryland and 1-0 vs. George Washington in games played in College Park.
  • Lady Vol freshman Mimi Collins hails from Waldorf, Md., and attended high school at Paul VI Catholic in Fairfax, Va.
  • In games played on March 23, the Lady Vols are 10-0.
  • This marks UT’s latest-on-the-calendar NCAA First Round game since 2013, when UT hosted Oral Roberts in an opening round contest on March 23.

SERIES HISTORY

  • This marks the 20th meeting between the Lady Vols and UCLA, with UT possessing an 18-1 record in the series.
  • UT is 1-0 at neutral sites, 8-1 at home and 9-0 on the road vs. the Bruins.
  • All 19 games between these teams have been completed in regulation.
  • The closest margin has been three points, with UT winning, 80-77, on Dec. 13, 1979, UCLA prevailing, 65-62, on Jan. 3, 1981, and UT triumphing, 73-70, on Dec. 10, 1983.
  • UT carries a 15-game series winning streak into Saturday’s match-up, but this will mark the first meeting between the Lady Vols and Bruins with Holly Warlick and Cori Close at the helm of the respective programs.
  • Tennessee is 68-21 all-time vs. Pac-12 schools.
  • The Lady Vols are 0-1 this season vs. Pac-12 teams, dropping a 95-85 decision at home to Stanford on Dec. 18.
  • The last time these programs met during the postseason, Tennessee raced to a 104-86 victory in Greensboro, N.C., in the third-place game of the 1979 AIAW Championships on March 25.
  • The Lady Vols’ point guard that season was Holly Warlick, who had nine assists, four steals, six points and the team’s only blocked shot of the day vs. the Bruins.
  • Warlick had the offense clicking, distributing the rock to three UT players who finished with 20+ points in the contest to offset the hot shooting of UCLA’s Denise Curry (38 points on 18-of-25 shooting).

THE LAST TIME WE MET

  • Meighan Simmons scored 18 points, Glory Johnson added 17 and No. 6 Tennessee made 18 of its first 20 shots in beating UCLA in Los Angeles, 85-64, on Dec. 17, 2011,
  • Vicki Baugh had 14 points and 12 rebounds, Taber Spani added 14 points and Shekinna Stricklen scored 11 for the Lady Vols, who shot 36 of 52 (69.6 percent) from the floor — not far off the school record of 72.1 percent against Old Dominion on Jan. 4, 1989.
  • Rebekah Gardner scored 15 of her career-high 24 points in the first half for UCLA (5-4), and Thea Lemberger and Markel Walker added 11 points each for the Bruins.

COMMON FOES

  • UT and UCLA share four common opponents this season. UT was 1-3, while UCLA was 2-3.
  • UT beat Oklahoma St. (76-63) and fell to Georgia (66-62), Kentucky (73-71) and Stanford (95-85).
  • UCLA beat Oklahoma State (71-59) and Georgia (80-69) and fell to Kentucky (75-74 OT), Stanford (86-80) and Stanford again (65-51).

UT’S NCAA TOURNEY HISTORY

  • The Lady Vols are making their 38th appearance in the NCAA Women’s Basketball Championship, and UT is the only program to appear in all 38 tournaments.
  • Tennessee was an at-large qualifier for the tourney field, finishing eighth in the Southeastern Conference regular season and bowing out in the quarterfinal round of the league tourney to No. 5/5 Mississippi State, the eventual champion.
  • UT earned a No. 11 seed for the first time.
  • No. 11 NCAA women’s seeds have an all-time record of 37-79 in first-round play.
  • The Lady Vols are 125-29 in NCAA Tournament play, and they rank first in games played (154) and victories (125) in NCAA tourney history.
  • Tennessee is second behind UConn in winning percentage at .812 in tourney play.
  • UT is 13-6 in NCAA play under Holly Warlick.
  • UT has advanced to the NCAA regional round on 34 occasions, posting a 28-6 record in the Sweet 16.
  • The only seasons UT did not make the regional level were 2009, 2017 and 2018. UT lost its opening round contest as a No. 5 seed to No. 12 Ball State in Bowling Green, Ky., in 2009. No. 5 seed UT lost its second-round game at No. 4 seed Louisville in 2017. No. 3 seed UT lost its second-round game to No. 6 seed Oregon State in Knoxville in 2018.
  • UT has made the Elite Eight 28 times and in three of the past six seasons, posting an 18-10 record in that round.
  • The Lady Vols have seen their season ended in the regional championship game in five of the past eight years (2011, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016).
  • UT has advanced to 18 NCAA Final Fours and won eight of them (1987, 1989, 1991, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2007, 2008), ranking second to UConn.
  • Tennessee has finished second in the nation five times and third on five more occasions.
  • Tennessee’s First/Opening Round opponents through the years have included: Jackson St. (1982), South Carolina St. (1983), Middle Tennessee State (1984), Virginia (1985), Iowa (1986), Tennessee Tech (1987), North Carolina A&T (1994), Florida A&M (1995), Radford (1996), Grambling (1997), Liberty (1998, 2018), Appalachian St. (1999), Furman (2000), Austin Peay (2001 & 2010), Georgia State (2002), Alabama State (2003), Colgate (2004), Western Carolina (2005), Army (2006), Drake (2007), Oral Roberts (2008 & 2013), Ball State (2009), Stetson (2011), UT Martin (2012), Northwestern State (2014), Boise State (2015), Green Bay (2016), Dayton (2017), UCLA (2019).
  • All told, UT has played 87 different opponents during all rounds of the NCAA tournament, including UCLA on Saturday.

UT IN THE FIRST & SECOND ROUNDS

  • Tennessee is making its 38th appearance in the NCAA First/Second Rounds, and it owns a 58-3 record during those games.
  • The Lady Vols are 30-1 all-time in the NCAA First Round and 28-2 in the NCAA Second Round.
  • The only blemishes are a first-round loss to Ball State, 71-55, in Bowling Green, Ky., on March 22, 2009, a second-round setback to Louisville, 75-64, in Louisville, Ky. on March 20, 2017, and a second-round loss to Oregon State, 66-59, in Knoxville, on March 18, 2018.
  • In NCAA First/Second Round play, Tennessee is 45-1 at home, 4-1 away and 9-1 at neutral sites.
  • The breakdown for that is 23-0 home/0-0 away/7-1 neutral for the first round and 22-1 home/4-1 away/2-0 neutral for the second round.
  • Under Holly Warlick, UT is 6-0 in NCAA First Round games (4-0 at home/2-0 at neutral sites).
  • She is 4-2 in NCAA Second Round tilts (3-1 at home/1-1 away).

ABOUT UCLA

  • The Bruins finished the regular season 20-12 and were 12-6 in the Pac-12, placing fourth.
  • UCLA returned two starters and 10 total letterwinners from last year’s team, which finished 27-8 overall and 14-4 (t3rd) in the Pac-12. That unit posted an NCAA Elite Eight finish.
  • Returning starters included guard Kennedy Burke and forward Lajahna Drummer.
  • Joining Burke (15.2 ppg., 6.0 rpg.) and Drummer (9.1 ppg., 8.6 rpg.) in UCLA’s senior class is guard Japreece Dean (13.8 ppg., 4.9 apg.).
  • Sophomore forward Michaela Onyenwere has emerged, leading the team at 18.2 ppg. and 8.1 rpg.
  • The Bruins are coached by Cori Close, who is 170-98 in her eighth season as a head coach, all at UCLA. She has guided the program to five NCAA appearances during her tenure and one WNIT berth, winning a WNIT title in 2014-15.

UCLA’S LAST GAME

  • The 25th-ranked UCLA women’s basketball team took No. 6 Oregon wire-to-wire before the valiant effort came up short to the Ducks in overtime, 88-83, on March 9 at MGM Grand Arena in the semifinals of the Pac-12 Tournament in Las Vegas.
  • Kennedy Burke collected her second double-double of the season, tallying a team-high 27 points and 10 rebounds to go along with three blocks and two steals.
  • Japreece Dean flirted with a triple-double, posting 22 points, seven rebounds and seven assists. UCLA got another double-double from Michaela Onyenwere (17 points, 10 rebounds), her 12th of the season.

UT Athletics

Ashley McBryde Earns Daytime Emmy Nomination

Ashley McBryde Earns Daytime Emmy Nomination

The nominations for the 2019 Daytime Emmy Awards were announced on March 20, leaving one country artist something to be excited about.

Ashley McBryde earned a nomination for Outstanding Musical Performance in a Daytime Program for her renditions of “Girl Goin’ Nowhere” and “American Scandal” on CBS This Morning Saturday.

Both songs appear on Ashley’s 2018 debut album, Girl Going Nowhere.

“Holy crap! What is life right now!?! Thank you so much,” said Ashley via Twitter.

The 46th annual Daytime Emmy Awards take place Sunday, May 5, in Los Angeles, Calif.

Outstanding Musical Performance In A Daytime Program

Ashley McBride
“Girl Goin’ Nowhere / American Scandal”
CBS This Morning Saturday

Lindsey Stirling
“Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy”
LIVE With Kelly And Ryan

Ben Rector
“Old Friends”
Pickler And Ben

Adrienne Houghton, Israel Houghton
“Secrets”
The Real

Cast of The Band’s Visit
“Answer Me”
Today Show

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Woodstock 50 Lineup Includes Margo Price, Sturgill Simpson, Brandi Carlile & More

Woodstock 50 Lineup Includes Margo Price, Sturgill Simpson, Brandi Carlile & More

The lineup for Woodstock 50—a festival celebrating the 50th anniversary of the 1969 peace-love-music event—has been revealed and it features a handful of of country-centric performers, including Sturgill Simpson, Margo Price, Anderson East and Brandi Carlile.

The three-day festival takes place Aug. 16–18 in Watkins Glen, N.Y., about 115 miles from the original location in Bethel Woods, N.Y. Additional performers include Jay-Z, the Killers, Santana, Robert Plant, Imagine Dragons, the Black Keys, Chance the Rapper and more.

Tickets for the festival go on sale on April 22.

There will also be a 50th anniversary celebration at Woodstock’s original site in Bethel Woods in August, but no lineup or dates have been announced.

 

photo by Jason Simanek

Barnes Selected as Finalist for Werner Ladder Naismith Coach of the Year

Barnes Selected as Finalist for Werner Ladder Naismith Coach of the Year

Credit: UT Athletics

ATLANTA — The Atlanta Tipoff Club on Wednesday announced the finalists for the 2019 Werner Ladder Naismith Coach of the Year Award. Fourth-year Tennessee head coach Rick Barnes was among four coaches who made the cut.

“This is the most exciting time of year for our sport, and the competition for Werner Ladder Naismith Trophy Men’s Coach of the Year will be even more competitive as the tournament begins,” said Eric Oberman, executive director of the Atlanta Tipoff Club. “We are excited to watch these coaches push their teams toward a championship.”

Barnes—who is also a finalist for the USBWA’s Henry Iba Award for National Coach of the Year—has guided the Volunteers to a 29-5 mark. That impressive record includes a school-record 19-game winning streak, a program-record-tying three victories over top-five opponents and the second most victories in a single season in program history.

The Vols spent four weeks atop the Associated Press Top 25 rankings, and for the first time in program history, Tennessee spent the entire season ranked among the top 10.

Barnes and the Vols earned a No. 2 seed in the South Region of the NCAA Tournament, where they will face Colgate in the first round Friday afternoon in Columbus, Ohio. The game will be at Nationwide Arena and is set to tip at approximately 2:45 p.m. ET.

Fans will be able to support their favorite coach by visiting naismithtrophy.com/vote between March 22-April 3, to cast their ballot, and the fan vote will account for five percent of the overall final vote. Then, on April 7, the 2019 Werner Ladder Naismith Trophy for Men’s College Coach of the Year will be awarded at the Naismith Awards Brunch during the Final Four in Minneapolis.

“Each of the four finalists has coached their teams to outstanding seasons and are all deserving of being named Werner Ladder Naismith Coach of the Year,” said Stacy Gardella, vice president of brand marketing at WernerCo. “We look forward to watching these coaches guide their teams through the tournament in hopes of winning the championship.”

Other finalists for Werner Ladder Naismith Coach of the Year are Chris Beard (Texas Tech), Tony Bennett (Virginia) and Kelvin Sampson (Houston).

ABOUT THE OTHER FINALISTS
Chris Beard, Texas Tech

  • Beard led the Red Raiders to a 26-6 record and a regular season Big 12 co-championship.
  • He was named Big 12 Conference Coach of the Year.
  • In his second season as head coach, Beard led his team to the Elite Eight, where his team lost to the 2018 NCAA champions, Villanova.
  • His Red Raiders are the No. 3 seed in the West Region of the NCAA Tournament.

Tony Bennett, Virginia

  • Bennett led Virginia to a 28-2 regular season record and the team’s fourth Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) regular season title in six years, which they shared with North Carolina.
  • He was named ACC Coach of the Year for the fourth time.
  • Bennett coached the Cavaliers to an ACC record with five ranked road wins this season.
  • His team heads into the NCAA Tournament as the No. 1 seed in the South Region.

Kelvin Sampson, Houston

  • Sampson was named The American Coach of the Year for the second-straight year.
  • He led the Cougars to a school record with 29 regular-season wins and an outright conference championship.
  • His team reached the top-10 in the national rankings for the first time since the mid-1980s.
  • Sampson’s Cougars are the No. 3 seed in the Midwest Region of the NCAA Tournament.

UT Athletics

Dierks Bentley to Headline Free Concert at the NFL Draft in Nashville

Dierks Bentley to Headline Free Concert at the NFL Draft in Nashville

The NFL Draft in Nashville on April 25–27 is shaping up to be football’s biggest preseason party.

Dierks Bentley will headline a free outdoor concert on April 27 at the Draft Main Stage in downtown Nashville. In addition, Charles Esten, Striking Matches, Charlie Worsham and more are slated to perform.

Previously announced, Tim McGraw will headline a free outdoor concert at the Draft Main Stage on April 26. More than 20 Nashville-based acts will perform during the three-day event

Draft Main Stage on Lower Broadway

Friday, April 26

  • Tim McGraw

Saturday, April 27

  • Dierks Bentley

NFL Draft Experience Stage

Thursday, April 25

  • New North
  • Striking Matches
  • Mikky Ekko

Friday, April 26

  • Willie Jones
  • Kid Politics
  • Jessy Wilson
  • Charlie Worsham
  • Jonny P
  • Rayland Baxter

Saturday, April 27

  • Katie Schecter
  • Jason Eskridge
  • Three Star Revival
  • Andrew Combs
  • Charles Esten

Downtown Nashville’s Lower Broadway and the area outside Nissan Stadium will host free, public activities for the 2019 NFL Draft during the three-day celebration. Representing the largest festival footprint ever created by the NFL, fans can participate in interactive exhibits, immersive games, virtual reality experiences, free player autograph sessions and more.

NFL Draft Experience

  • April 25 (Thursday): Noon to 10 p.m.
  • April 26 (Friday): Noon to 10 p.m.
  • April 27 (Saturday): 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Activities

  • Autograph Stage with current NFL players and NFL Legends
  • Interactive games, Play Football clinics, and PLAY 60 Zone presented by Danimals® for the smallest NFL fans
  • Photo with the Vince Lombardi Trophy
  • NFL Shop presented by Visa at Draft with exclusive NFL merchandise
  • Taste of Tailgate with Nashville restaurants and Bud Light Bars
  • NFL Draft Experience Draft X stage with 1 Nashville-based artists of all genres
  • Look Like a Pro: Step inside a replica NFL Draft Main Stage bearing a draft day jersey of your favorite NFL team and have your photo taken. Share your photos through your favorite social channel and Fan Mobile Pass.
  • PEPSI NFL Helmet Photo Opportunity: Find your favorite NFL team oversized helmet and have your photo taken. Share your photos through your favorite social channel and Fan Mobile Pass.
  • Combine Corner
  • 40-Yard Dash: Race down the field against your opponents and digital NFL players on a giant 40-yard long LED wall.
  • Vertical Jump: Jump as high as you can and hit the corresponding flag to discover your vertical reach just like at the NFL Scouting Combine.

Schermerhorn Symphony Center will host the Selection Square, which features the team tables where representatives from each club will make their Draft selections. The NFL Draft red carpet will take place on April 25 (Thursday) at The Green at Riverfront Park.

Admission to the 2019 NFL Draft is free and open to the public. Fans can follow the action at NFL Draft 2019 with the Fan Mobile Pass app.

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

George Strait Teams With Blake Shelton for Gillette Stadium Show on Aug. 17 [Watch the Funny Promo]

George Strait Teams With Blake Shelton for Gillette Stadium Show on Aug. 17 [Watch the Funny Promo]

George Strait will headline a show at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass., on Aug. 17—and he’s bringing along Blake Shelton, Cody Johnson and Caitlyn Smith.

This will be George’s first concert in New England since his Cowboy Rides Away Tour at Gillette Stadium in 2014.

Tickets for the new show go on sale on March 29 at 10 a.m. ET.

Blake and George dropped a humorous video promo for the tour via Twitter, which you can check out below.

photos: George Strait by Kirkland, AFF-USA.com; Blake Shelton by Jason Simanek

Luke Combs’ “Beautiful Crazy” Is No. 1 for Fourth Straight Week

Luke Combs’ “Beautiful Crazy” Is No. 1 for Fourth Straight Week

Luke Combs’ “Beautiful Crazy” is No. 1 on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart for the fourth straight week. The tune, which Luke co-penned with Wyatt B. Durrette and Robert Williford, is featured on the deluxe version of Luke’s debut album, This One’s for You Too.

With his latest No. 1, Luke is first country artist in history whose first five singles have reached No. 1, following previous chart-toppers “Hurricane,” “When It Rains It Pours,” “One Number Away” and “She Got the Best of Me.”

Luke is nominated for Male Artist of the Year and New Male Artist of the Year at the upcoming ACM Awards in April.

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

ACM Awards Adds Performers Dierks Bentley, Eric Church, Brooks & Dunn, Dan + Shay, FGL & More

ACM Awards Adds Performers Dierks Bentley, Eric Church, Brooks & Dunn, Dan + Shay, FGL & More

The Academy of Country Music announced another round of performers for the 54th ACM Awards on April 7: Dierks Bentley, Brooks & Dunn, Brandi Carlile, Eric Church, Kelly Clarkson, Luke Combs, Dan + Shay, Florida Georgia Line and Ashley McBryde.

Previously announced ACM Awards performers include Brothers Osborne, Kane Brown, Miranda Lambert, Little Big Town, Reba McEntire, Maren Morris, Thomas Rhett, Chris Stapleton, Jason Aldean and George Strait

Additional acts and presenters will be announced in the coming weeks.

Hosted by Reba McEntire, the ACM Awards will air live from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas on Sunday, April 7, 2019 at 8 p.m. ET on CBS.

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Williams Named Citizen Naismith Trophy Finalist

Williams Named Citizen Naismith Trophy Finalist

Credit: UT Athletics

ATLANTA – Tennessee’s Grant Williams earned more recognition for his impressive season Tuesday, being named a 2019 Citizen Naismith Trophy Men’s Player of the Year Finalist by the Atlanta Tipoff Club.

Williams, who was on the preseason watch list, the midseason team and was a semifinalist, was one of four players across the country selected as a potential recipient of the honor, joining Duke’s Zion Williamson, Gonzaga’s Rui Hachimura and Murray State’s Ja Morant.

The junior forward has been one of the nation’s most all-around players this year, averaging 19.0 points, 7.6 rebounds, 3.1 assists, 1.4 blocks and 1.1 steals per game. He is also shooting 57 percent from the field and an impressive 83 percent from the charity stripe.

Williams ranks in the top 10 of the SEC in scoring (1st), field-goal percentage (2nd), free-throw percentage (4th), rebounding (6th) and assist/turnover ratio (9th).

Williams’ list of postseason honors is already impressive. The Charlotte, North Carolina, native has been named SEC Player of the Year and a first-team All-SEC performer—both for the second straight season. He was also named to the SEC Community Service Team, SEC All-Tournament Team, United States Basketball Writers Association (USBWA) District IV Player of the Year and is a first-team All-American by Sporting News and the USBWA.

The junior forward is also up for consideration for several other player of the year honors, being tabbed to the Men’s National Ballot for the John R. Wooden Award, a 2018-19 Oscar Robertson Trophy finalist and a Karl Malone Power Forward of the Year finalist.

The 2019 Citizen Naismith Trophy will be awarded on at the Naismith Awards Brunch on April 7, 2019, during the Final Four in Minneapolis.

The Naismith Trophy is awarded annually to the women’s and men’s college basketball players of the year. First awarded in 1969 to UCLA’s Lew Alcindor, later known as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the Naismith Trophy has become one of the most prestigious national honors awarded each year to the top players in the nation.

Named in honor of Dr. James Naismith, the founder of the sport, Tennessee has never had a player win the award.

 

UT Athletics

Jimmy’s blog: Loss to Auburn broke several trends for Tennessee

Jimmy’s blog: Loss to Auburn broke several trends for Tennessee

By Jimmy Hyams

The SEC tournament provided the good, the bad and the ugly for Tennessee basketball.

The good was a thrilling victory over Kentucky as the Vols rallied from eight points down in the final 2:58 in the semifinals.

The bad was a 20-point loss to Auburn in the SEC Tournament final, denying the Vols their first conference tourney title since 1979.

The ugly was, within an eight-day period, Bruce Pearl cost UT not only a tournament crown but an SEC regular season championship.

Auburn outplayed and outhustled the Vols before a 90 percent pro-UT crowd at Bridgestone Arena, 84-64. You knew Tennessee was in trouble when it trailed 32-23 at halftime after Auburn had shot just 5 of 20 from 3-point range and leading scorer Jared Harper had played just two minutes due to foul trouble.

Auburn hit 10 of 20 beyond the arc in the second half to blow out Tennessee.

The defeat raised questions about UT’s depth, UT’s stamina, UT’s focus and UT’s ball-handling.

Could those issues crop up again during the NCAA tournament?

It was apparent Tennessee had not recovered from a physical and emotional win over Kentucky the day before. It marked just the second SEC tourney win over Kentucky since the event’s renewal in 1979 (UT is 2-4 v. Kentucky since then). It also marked just the second time since 1979 that UT has beaten Kentucky twice in the same season (2018, 2019).

All that being said, Auburn broke a plethora of trends for Tennessee, these stats courtesy of John Pennington with the Sports Source.

UT had been 22-0 when attempting 21 or fewer 3s. UT was 8 of 15 against Auburn.

UT had been 25-1 when called for 21 or fewer fouls. UT committed 18 fouls against Auburn.

UT had been 21-1 when Jordan Bowden and Lamonte Turner took 18 or fewer shots. They took 18 against Auburn.

UT had been 21-0 when Kyle Alexander, Grant Williams and Admiral Schofield were called for nine or fewer fouls. They were called for eight.

UT had been 25-1 when holding the opponent to 45.9% shooting or less. Auburn shot 40.6%.

UT had been 23-0 when opponents shot 23 or fewer free throws. Auburn was 17 of 21 from the foul line.

UT had been 20-1 when opponents’ starting forwards and centers scored 23 or fewer points. Auburn’s had 18.

Some dubious trends continued:

UT is now 12-5 when attempting fewer than 18 free throws. UT was 10 of 13 against Auburn.

UT is now 4-4 when handing out 14 or fewer assists. UT had 11 against Auburn.

UT is now 4-5 when the opponent scores 80 or more points.

UT is now 3-3 when opponents have nine or fewer turnovers. Auburn had seven.

Tennessee opens play in the NCAA tournament Friday against Colgate at 2:45 p.m., or about 30 minutes after the Cincinnati-Iowa game in Columbus, Ohio.

Whether those trends continue remains to be seen.

This is the third time Tennessee has been a two seed.

In 2008, the two-seed Vols lost to Louisville in the Sweet 16.

In 2006, the two-seed Vols lost to Wichita State in the round of 32.

With one win, the Vols will become the second team in program history to achieve 30 wins.

But winning just one game in the NCAA tournament would be a major disappointment for this team.

As Grant Williams has often said, the Vols want to hang a banner. They’re 0-for-2 on hanging banners this season (SEC regular-season, SEC Tournament).

The only banner worth hanging now is the Final Four.

And that would be ground-breaking for the Vols.


Sponsored by Big Kahuna Wings: The wings that changed it all http://www.bigkahunawings.com

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