Rick Barnes Media Availability (3/1/19)

Rick Barnes Media Availability (3/1/19)

Credit: UT Athletics

On the team’s physicality: 
“I think we are physical. We have a game plan, and we have to execute it on both ends. We know that it is going to be a hard-fought game, and rebounding is going to be a part of it. We have to do a better job of not fouling. They do a great job of getting to the free-throw line. I expect both teams to play hard, and I think we are both physical teams.”

On who was more physical in Lexington: 
“I think they were more physical. There is no doubt about that. Our guys know that, and we just have to play harder than we have played. I think everyone knows that.”

On how tough the back half of their schedule was: 
“You expect that this time of year. You look at your league play, and there are no easy games. I do not care if a team has not won a league game; teams keep getting better. Especially when you are in a league where there are terrific coaches and players that work hard. You truly expect down the stretch that you are going to be in some close games. The fact of the matter is, those games we won by good margins at the beginning of the year, we were not expecting that. Some of that had to do with us having an experienced team coming back. Right now, I think our guys know that every game we are going to be in are going to be like the other night.”

On the team’s defensive play lately: 
“We have gotten better, and the other night, I thought we did a pretty good job defensively. We really were able to keep ourselves in good rebounding position. There were some games where we got too spread out to do that.”

On previewing Kentucky:
“They have some depth, and when they lose a player, someone steps up. We saw that first hand at LSU. That is what you expect regardless of who you play. They would not be where they are if they were a one-man team. I think P.J. Washington brings the physicality they want, and that is probably why they recruited him.”

On the keys to the Vols’ offense: 
“As long as you take good shots and give yourself a good chance of rebounding the ball. We guarded Ole Miss really well the other night, and they made some shots from way out there. You have to just pat them on the butt and say, ‘great shot.’ Shooting is a big part of this, but you want to make sure you get high-percentage shots.”

On closing out the end of the regular season: 
“It has been a long year in a lot of ways with the notoriety that these guys have brought to the program. You want them to enjoy it, and they came back the next day and got back to work. You have to enjoy it; that is what you do it for. They have handled it pretty well to end the season, but they still know that we have work to do.”

On home-court advantage: 
“It does not mean anything if you do not come out and do your job. When we go on the road, we think that we can win in any building. I think that they have respect for their opponents and know they are coming in thinking the same thing. We just have to play good, solid basketball.”

On Jordan Bone
“I would like to see him get it back. He tested positive for the flu a few days before the LSU game. I just want to see him finish it strong so he can look back on it and be proud about it. He should, because he has had a lot to do with this.”

On Lamonte Turner’s play recently: 
“Every shot he took came within the offense. When you go back and look at the shots he took, our guys had good board coverage if it was missed. It made Breein Tyree have to defend. Lamonte did a good job of staying within himself.”

 

UT Athletics

Hoops Preview:  Lady Vols vs. Ole Miss

Hoops Preview: Lady Vols vs. Ole Miss

Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee (17-11, 6-9 SEC) travels to Oxford, Miss., this weekend to close out the regular season vs. Ole Miss (9-20, 1-13 SEC) on Sunday afternoon. Tip-off is slated for 2:02 p.m. CT (3:02 ET) at The Pavilion at Ole Miss in a contest that is being streamed on SECN+.

After winning five of six, UT has hit a bump in the road and has dropped three straight, including back-to-back home games vs. #13/13 South Carolina and Vanderbilt. The Commodores spoiled the Lady Vols’ Senior Night on Thursday, overcoming a 10-point deficit to get their first-ever win in Knoxville, 76-69.

Tennessee currently sits in 10th in the SEC standings at 6-9 and could move to eighth with a win on Sunday and losses by No. 8 LSU (7-8) and No. 9 Arkansas (6-9). UT defeated LSU during the regular season but lost to Arkansas.

Ole Miss, meanwhile, sits in 12th place in the league at 3-14. The Rebels enter with a losing streak of their own, having dropped four straight and nine of their last 10. On Thursday night, Ole Miss was in Tuscaloosa and nearly got the win over Alabama before falling, 46-43.

LVFL Ariel Massengale is in her second season as a graduate manager at Ole Miss. Massengale played in 122 games at Tennessee from 2011-15, averaging 9.5 points and 4.3 assists per contest as a point guard.

BROADCAST INFORMATION

  • Seth Austin (play-by-play) and Lindsay Roy (analyst) will have the call for the SECN+ broadcast.
  • 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.

TENNESSEE NOTES

  • RE IS GOLDEN AT THE LINE: Rennia Davis is having one of the finest seasons at the free throw line of any Lady Vol in history. She currently is fifth with a percentage of .887 and has missed only one free throw in 30 attempts since Jan. 10. Davis is shooting .925 in conference games.
  • CONSISTENT POINT-PRODUCER: Davis also is a consistent scorer, hitting double figures a team-high 22 times, including the past nine games.
  • LONDON RISING: Cheridene Green has doubled her scoring and rebounding averages in all games from 4.1 and 3.7 last year to 9.1 ppg. and 7.6 rpg. this season. She’s been even better in SEC games, producing 10.1 ppg. and 8.9 rpg.
  • EVINA’S ROAD SHOW: Evina Westbrook is averaging 15.1 ppg. and 5.2 apg. while shooting .415 FG/.384 3FG/.715 FT in 27 games, but she’s made it a habit of performing better on the road. In eight away games, she is averaging 19.3 ppg. and 5.3 apg. while hitting at rates of .464/.448/.735.
  • STRONG ON THE BOARDS: UT has won the rebounding battle in 23 of 28 games, including 13 of 15 SEC contests (MSU, VU).
  • SO MUCH BETTER AT THE LINE: UT has improved its free throw shooting so much this year, hitting at a .675 rate in the non-conference schedule and warming up to a .722 percentage in league play.
  • YOUNGSTERS HAVE THE BALL: All three of Tennessee’s youthful primary ball handlers have recorded more assists than turnovers this season. The players and their numbers: sophomore Evina Westbrook (138/86), freshman Zaay Green (65/50) and freshman Jazmine Massengill(41/27).
  • WHAT IT TAKES TO WIN: Tennessee is allowing only 61.8 ppg. in its six SEC wins this season and surrendering 77.7 ppg. in its league losses. UT also is standing at +14.5 in rebounding and shooting .784 at the free throw line in conference victories while possessing a +4.4 board edge and a .673 free throw rate in SEC losses.

LAST TIME OUT FOR THE LADY VOLS

  • Redshirt senior Cheridene Green posted a career-high 20 points, but it wasn’t enough to overcome a Vanderbilt team that shot 53.8 percent from the floor, handing Tennessee a 76-69 loss at home on Thursday night.
  • Green’s previous best scoring performance also came against Vanderbilt, on Jan. 17, 2018, when she tallied 17 points.
  • In addition to Green, sophomore Rennia Davis and freshman Mimi Collins were also in double figures for Tennessee (17-11, 6-9 SEC) with 14 each. Collins’ total was a career high, while Davis posted her 21st double-figure scoring effort of the season.
  • Vanderbilt (7-21, 2-13 SEC) was led by Mariella Fasoula, who finished the night with 19 points and a game-high nine rebounds. She was joined in double digits by Chelsie Hall with 14 and Cierra Walker with 16.

UT-UM SERIES NOTES

  • UT enters the 54th meeting in the series with a 45-8 edge, including a 21-2 record in games played in Knoxville, a 19-4 mark in Oxford and a 5-2 slate at neutral sites.
  • Tennessee had claimed 28 games in a row in the series (since last losing on Feb. 4, 1996, as #20/25 Ole Miss upended #3/3 UT, 78-72, in Oxford) before letting a 13-point second-half lead slip away en route to a 67-62 Rebels’ victory at The Pavilion at Ole Miss in UT’s last visit on Jan. 12, 2017.
  • The Lady Vols have won 18 straight over the Rebels in Knoxville, with the last Ole Miss victory (69-65) coming on Jan. 31, 1987, in Stokely Athletics Center.
  • This game marks only the second time in series history that both teams entered unranked.
  • Tennessee has been unable to reach 70 points in six of its last seven trips to Oxford, but its defense in those games helped the Lady Vols go 6-1 during that span.
  • Sophomore Rennia Davis has had the most success vs. Ole Miss among current players, tallying 18 points and eight rebounds last season.

OLE MISS NOTES

  • The Rebels are currently sitting at 9-20, 3-12 SEC and are coming off a tough 46-43 loss at Alabama.
  • Ole Miss has taken on six ranked opponents so far this season, including UConn in the Paradise Jam at the U.S. Virgin Islands (L, 50-90).
  • Redshirt senior Crystal Allen leads Ole Miss with 17.9 ppg. and averages 3.1 rebounds a game. She currently ranks third in scoring in the SEC.
  • Head coach Yolett McPhee-McCuin is in her first year at the helm and previously coached at Jacksonville University.
  • Coached by Matt Insell, Ole Miss finished 12-19, 1-15 SEC and advanced to the second round in the conference tournament as the No. 14 seed with a 48-43 win over Florida. Only twice since the conference expanded to 14 teams has the No. 14 seed advanced in the SEC Women’s Basketball Tournament. Both times it was Ole Miss.
  • The Rebels were knocked out of the SEC tournament with a 59-50 loss to Missouri in the second round.
  • Junior Madinah Muhammad led the team during the season by averaging 16.8 ppg. She transferred to North Carolina following her three seasons at Ole Miss.

UM’S LAST GAME

  •  Alabama handed Ole Miss its 12th SEC loss this season by a tight score of 46-43. The Rebels weren’t able to convert on a game-tying three-pointer in the final seconds of regulation.
  • Despite a rough day shooting, the Rebels led throughout the first half, entering halftime with a 22-16 lead after forcing nine Crimson Tide turnovers.
  • Redshirt senior Crystal Allen led the Rebels with a game-high 20 points, marking the fifth-straight game she has led the team.

THE LAST TIME WE MET

  • The 10th-ranked Lady Vols had a 75-66 victory over Ole Miss in Knoxville with Rennia Davis tying her then career-high of 18 points on Jan. 25, 2018.
  • Senior Jaime Nared recorded her eighth double-double of the season against the Rebels with 15 points and 10 boards.
  • UT held the Rebels to just 37 percent shooting and finished the game with a 20-4 edge in fast-break points.
  •  UM’s Madinah Muhammad dropped 22 points and six three-pointers in the contest.

LAST TIME IN OXFORD

  • Despite overcoming a 12-point deficit in the first half and leading by as many as 13, Tennessee couldn’t close it out in a 67-62 loss to the Rebels at The Pavilion at Ole Miss.
  • Redshirt junior Diamond DeShields recorded her third double-double of the season with 13 points and 12 rebounds, which tied a career high.
  • Junior Jaime Nared posted a dominant performance, scoring a then career-high 23 points to go along with seven rebounds.

SEC TOURNAMENT IS NEXT

  • The 2019 SEC Women’s Basketball Tournament gets under way on Wednesday morning in Greenville, S.C., at Bon Secours Wellness Arena and runs through Sunday.
  • Seeds 11-14 begin play at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, while the No. 5-10 seeds play their first games on Thursday.
  • The top four seeds don’t see action until Friday.
  • UT currently is the No. 10 seed and would play on Thursday if things stand. There is, however, room for UT to climb as high as No. 8 or drop as low as No. 11 pending the results of Sunday’s games.
  • This marks the third time Greenville has hosted the event. It was there in 2005 and 2017 as well.

UT Athletics

Barnes Announces Wade Houston Captain’s Award

Barnes Announces Wade Houston Captain’s Award

Credit: UT Athletics

Out of respect for former Tennessee basketball coach Wade Houston, current Vols head coach Rick Barnes has announced the creation of the Wade Houston Captain’s Award.

Conceptualized by Barnes—along with input he sought from Allan Houston, Wade’s son—the award will be presented annually following the completion of Tennessee’s basketball season to the team member who best exemplified leadership, a team-first approach and exemplary work ethic.

“Wade Houston was a trailblazer and should be celebrated,” Barnes said. “His tenure as the head coach here at Tennessee paved the way for much deserved opportunities for minorities in our sport, particularly in the Southeastern Conference. He did it the right way, stood for all the right things and is an important figure in UT’s basketball and overall athletic history.”

Each year’s award winner will be commemorated on a plaque that will be prominently displayed in the new Larry Pratt Basketball Locker Room Complex at Thompson-Boling Arena.

The Southeastern Conference’s first-ever African-American men’s basketball head coach—hired nearly 30 years ago on April 3, 1989—Wade Houston led the Volunteers for five seasons from 1989-94. His teams advanced to a pair of postseason tournament appearances and also made a memorable run to the championship game of the 1991 SEC Tournament.

Allan Houston completed his legendary four-year collegiate career under his father’s tutelage and remains Tennessee’s all-time leading scorer with 2,801 career points. The All-American is one of four Vols ever to have their jersey retired.

Wade Houston grew up in Alcoa, Tennessee, just 14 miles south of the University of Tennessee campus, and owns a trucking and logistics company headquartered in Louisville, Kentucky.

In conjunction with the inaugural Wade Houston Captain’s Award, the university has announced an endowed scholarship that will be awarded annually to an Alcoa High School student planning to major in Tennessee’s nationally ranked Supply Chain Management program.

Wade and Allan Houston have been wholeheartedly committed to fatherhood initiatives, mentoring, and youth and family development through the Allan Houston Legacy Foundation. Allan recently completed a book benefitting the foundation, sharing his story about his relationship with his father (www.fisll.com).

Wade and Allan Houston will be present for Tennessee’s sold-out  home game against Kentucky on March 2 (2 p.m. ET, CBS), and the pair will be recognized on the court during a timeout.

UT Athletics
Jimmy’s blog: Vols can’t get out muscled by Kentucky again

Jimmy’s blog: Vols can’t get out muscled by Kentucky again

 

By Jimmy Hyams

Tennessee assistant Michael Schwartz wasn’t pleased with the way the Vols lost 86-69 at Rupp Arena more than two weeks ago.

Kentucky had its way on the boards, outrebounding the Vols 39-26 – the largest negative disparity for UT this season.

“They mopped the floor with us,’’ Schwartz said recently. “ They banged us around. They made Admiral (Schofield) run and they made Grant (Williams) run. They were the more physical team, the more aggressive team.’’

That can’t happen Saturday if the Vols want to keep alive their streak of beating Kentucky three in a row at Thompson-Boling Arena – the longest UT streak over the Big Blue since reeling off seven straight from 1979-85.

Kentucky not only had its way on the boards against Tennessee in the first battle, but UT’s top three shooters – Schofield, Lamonte Turner and Jordan Bowden – were a combined 1-for-17 from 3-point range.

For Tennessee to beat the 4th-ranked Wildcats, UT not only has to hold its own on the boards, but shoot about 40% from 3-point range. That will help open up the middle against one of the SEC’s premier defenses.

Schwartz said the message in the first UT-UK game was for the Vols to rebound and be physical.

“We didn’t do that,’’ Schwartz said.

The rebound differential was astounding.

“We got outrebounded by 13 and that is a modest number,’’ Schwartz said. “Because if you were just really thinking about what the game looked like, you would have thought we got out rebounded by 25. That is how we felt sitting over there, and they just really took it to us.’’

UT shot 41% against Kentucky – not good enough to beat a team of that caliber.

Besides rebounding, another key for Tennessee will be assist to turnover ratio. At one point, UT led the nation in assists at 20 per game, but that number slipped to 11.2 over a 3-game stretch.


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

Lindsay Ell Gives Post-Surgery Update: “Everything Went Good”

Lindsay Ell Gives Post-Surgery Update: “Everything Went Good”

After undergoing surgery to remove pre-cancerous cells on Feb. 28, Lindsay Ell gave her fans a post-surgery update on March 1.

“Thanks for all the well wishes yesterday…everything went good,” said Lindsay via Twitter. “Grateful for the doctors & nurses for getting me in before my month trip around the world….I leave tonight, and am a surgery thumbs up.”

Lindsay is scheduled to perform in Germany on March 2, with additional European dates through March 6. She heads to Australia on March 14 for eight shows through March 26, before making a stop in New Zealand on March 26 and Japan on March 30.

photo by Arroyo/O\’Connor, AFF-USA.com

Brooks & Dunn, Kacey Musgraves, Keith Whitley & More to Be Featured in Full Exhibits at Country Music Hall of Fame

Brooks & Dunn, Kacey Musgraves, Keith Whitley & More to Be Featured in Full Exhibits at Country Music Hall of Fame

The Country Music Hall of Fame announced the subjects of its upcoming exhibits in 2019: Keith Whitley, Kacey Musgraves, Brooks & Dunn, and Boudleaux and Felice Bryant.

Keith Whitley: May 3

The exhibit encompasses Whitley’s entire career, from his bluegrass roots to his success as a singer in a traditional style of country music with No. 1 hits “Don’t Close Your Eyes,” “When You Say Nothing at All,” “I’m No Stranger to the Rain,” “I Wonder Do You Think of Me” and “I’m Over You.” The installation will also look at Whitley’s influence on the country singers who followed him.

Kacey Musgraves: July 3

Musgraves has created a sound that is rooted in traditional style country music, but also draws on new influences. Her love of witty wordplay and her willingness to tackle what some may see as taboo subject matter have endeared her to like-minded artists such as John Prine and Loretta Lynn. This exhibit will trace her musical journey, which began in the 1990s in her East Texas hometown, Golden.

Brooks & Dunn: Aug. 9

Initially united by their love of songwriting, Brooks and Dunn rocketed to stardom in the 1990s with their first four singles hitting No. 1. This success continued as the pair—the best-selling country duo of all time—remained leaders in country music for two decades with hits including “My Maria,” “Red Dirt Road,” “Hard Workin’ Man,” “Neon Moon,” and “Boot Scootin’ Boogie.” The museum’s exhibition will recall their early careers as solo artists and songwriters, the circumstances that united them as performers, and their innovative approach to stage production and touring.

Boudleaux and Felice Bryant: Oct. 4

The couple, who were the first full-time songwriters in Nashville, were elected together to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1991. They found initial success in the 1940s when Little Jimmy Dickens recorded their song “Country Boy.” During the 1950s and 1960s, they had hit after hit with the Everly Brothers, including the siblings’ first big song, “Bye, Bye Love” and chart-toppers such as “Wake Up Little Susie.” Among the Bryants’ hits for others are Red Foley’s “Midnight” (co-written with Chet Atkins), Eddy Arnold’s “How’s the World Treating You” (also with Atkins), Jim Reeves’ “Blue Boy,” Bob Luman’s “Let’s Think About Living,” and Roy Orbison’s “Love Hurts,” later an international hit for the rock group Nazareth. One of the Bryants’ best known songs is “Rocky Top.” Popularized by the Osborne Brothers in 1968, “Rocky Top” is now an official Tennessee state song and the beloved anthem for the University of Tennessee’s athletic teams. During their distinguished career, the Bryants had some 800 songs recorded by more than 500 artists, amounting to sales of hundreds of millions of records.

In addition, the previously announced exhibit, American Currents: The Music of 2018, will open on March 8

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Thomas Rhett Announces New Album and Drops Dance-Inducing Lead Single, “Look What God Gave Her” [Listen]

Thomas Rhett Announces New Album and Drops Dance-Inducing Lead Single, “Look What God Gave Her” [Listen]

Thomas Rhett revealed that he will release his upcoming fourth studio album, Center Point Road, on May 31. The album takes its name from the street in his Tennessee hometown that shaped much of his life experiences.

To get the party started, TR has released the album’s uptempo lead single, “Look What God Gave Her.”

“I think I played this song 2,000 times in a month after we first wrote it,” says Thomas Rhett. “It makes me want to dance. It makes me want to move. And to me, the song really is a celebration of how awesome my wife is. I know I’ve done that in the past, but I’ve never really done it in an uptempo way.”

Penned by Thomas Rhett, Rhett Akins, Julian Bunetta, John Ryan and J Cash, “Look What God Gave Her” will ship to country radio on March 4. TR will debut the new single on Saturday Night Live on March 2, along with another new tune from the album.

“I was really glad we were able to nail this one,” TR added. “My wife is so beautiful, but at the same time she’s inwardly beautiful, she’s funny, she’s kind, she’s the best mom I know . . . and she’s hilarious. It’s really just about thanking God for the human being He made, and singing it in a fun way.”

Listen to “Look What God Gave Her” below.

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Vol Hoops Providing Special Fan Cards for Kentucky Game

Vol Hoops Providing Special Fan Cards for Kentucky Game

Credit: UT Athletics

Thompson-Boling Arena will be decorated for Saturday’s top-10 clash between the seventh-ranked Vols and No. 4 Kentucky with 15,000 special Tennessee Basketball Fan Cards.

The two-sided cards are orange and white with one side featuring the Thompson-Boling Arena fan mantra of “Feed the Floor” and the other containing a photo collage of head coach Rick Barnes and members of the 2018-19 team.

UT fans will get the opportunity to perform a few card stunts with the posters during the game by following the instructions provided by members of the spirit squad.

This special giveaway and interactive fan initiative is compliments of longtime UT Athletics corporate partners Food City and Coca-Cola.

UT Athletics

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