Darius Rucker to Receive Humanitarian Award at Music Biz 2019

Darius Rucker to Receive Humanitarian Award at Music Biz 2019

Darius Rucker will be the recipient of the Music Business Association’s Harry Chapin Memorial Humanitarian Award for his years of philanthropic support to various charities, including St. Jude Children’s Hospital and MUSC Children’s Hospital in his hometown of Charleston, S.C.

Darius will be honored at the annual Music Biz 2019 Awards & Hall of Fame Dinner on May 7 at the JW Marriott Hotel in Nashville. Since its inception in 1981, the Harry Chapin Memorial Humanitarian Award has celebrated the legacy of singer-songwriter Harry Chapin, whose philanthropic work to end world hunger earned him the Congressional Gold Medal.

Previous recipients of the Harry Chapin Memorial Humanitarian Award include Martina McBride, Dee Snider, Melissa Etheridge, Annie Lennox, Jackson Browne, Norman Lear, Bonnie Raitt and more.

Since 2010, Darius’ annual benefit concert and golf tournament has raised millions of dollars for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. Through the Hootie & the Blowfish Foundation, Darius and his bandmates have raised funds for more than 200 charitable causes that support public education and junior golf programs in South Carolina.

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Charley Pride’s “American Masters” Documentary to Air on PBS on Feb. 23 [Watch Trailer]

Charley Pride’s “American Masters” Documentary to Air on PBS on Feb. 23 [Watch Trailer]

After more than 50 years as a recording artist, Charley Pride will be the subject of a new documentary, American Masters—Charley Pride: I’m Just Me, on PBS on Feb. 22.

The film, which is narrated by Tanya Tucker, chronicles Charley’s improbable journey to country stardom, from his humble beginnings as a sharecropper’s son on a cotton farm in Mississippi and his career as a Negro League baseball player. The film includes interviews with Charley, Dolly Parton, Garth Brooks, Willie Nelson, Darius Rucker, Brad Paisley, Marty Stuart, Whoopi Goldberg and more.

“Charley deserves every accolade he can get,” said Willie Nelson. “And, uh, we’ll make up some new ones if we need to. He’ll deserve them too!”

Charley, a three-time Grammy winner, is considered country music’s first African-American superstar. He signed to RCA Victor in 1967 and earned a string of No. 1 hits, including “All I Have to Offer You (Is Me),” “(I’m So) Afraid of Losing You Again,” “Kiss an Angel Good Mornin’,” “Amazing Love” and many more.

Charley won the CMA’s Entertainer of the Year award in 1971 and Top Male Vocalist in 1971 and 1972. Charley was the first African-American to perform on the Grand Ole Opry stage and he became the Opry’s first African-American member in 1993.

American Masters—Charley Pride: I’m Just Me airs on PBS on Feb. 22 at 9 p.m. ET. The film will stream on pbs.org beginning on Feb. 23.

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

How, When & Where to View the Nominations for the ACM Awards on Feb. 20

How, When & Where to View the Nominations for the ACM Awards on Feb. 20

The nominations for the ACM Awards will be announced on Feb. 20 across multiple platforms beginning at 8 a.m. ET.

Here’s how to catch all of the action.

Facebook Live
Reba McEntire will appear on Facebook Live during the 8 a.m. ET hour to reveal nominees for Songwriter of the Year and Song of the Year. The live video will be available on Reba’s Facebook page, Academy of Country Music’s Facebook page and CBS This Morning’s Facebook page.

CBS This Morning
Reba McEntire will announce nominees for Entertainer of the Year, Female Artist of the Year, Male Artist of the Year, Duo of the Year, and Group of the Year during the 8:30 am. ET hour block on the CBS Television Network.

ETOnline.com
Nominees for New Male Artist of the Year, New Female Artist of the Year, New Duo/Group of the Year, Album of the Year, Single of the Year, Video of the Year and Music Event of the Year will be revealed on ETOnline.com at 8:50 a.m. ET.

ACM Awards Social Media
Nominees for the ACM Industry Awards and Studio Recording Awards will be revealed across the Academy of Country Music’s social media channels including on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram at 8:55 a.m. ET.

ACMCountry.com
The full list of available nominees for the 54th ACM Awards will be revealed immediately following the Entertainment Tonight announcements on ACMcountry.com at 9:10 a.m. ET.

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

Hoops Preview: #5 Tennessee vs. Vanderbilt

Hoops Preview: #5 Tennessee vs. Vanderbilt

Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Coming off its first loss in SEC play, fifth-ranked Tennessee will look to bounce back against in-state rival Vanderbilt Tuesday night at Thompson-Boling Arena.

The game will tip at 7 p.m. ET and will be televised on ESPN and can also be viewed online through WatchESPN. Fans can listen live on their local Vol Network affiliate to hear Bob Kesling and Bert Bertelkamp describing the action. Tickets for the game are still available at AllVols.com.

The game has been tabbed as Donate Life Night. “The goal for Donate Life Night is to encourage Tennessee fans to take action and register as donors,” said Tennessee Assistant Athletics Director Tom Satkowiak, who underwent an 11-hour liver transplant surgery in October. Fans who attend Tuesday’s game and use their mobile device to register as an organ or tissue donor from 5:30 p.m. ET through the end of the game will be invited onto the court to take a group photo with Tennessee head coach Rick Barnes following his postgame Vol Network radio interview. New registrants will be asked to show their registration confirmation email in order to access the court for the photograph.

The Vols (23-2, 11-1 SEC) are coming off their first loss since November, falling to No. 5 Kentucky, 86-69, in Rupp Arena Saturday. Now, UT has to turn its focus towards the Commodores, who have won three of the last four matchups in Knoxville. In the first meeting, Grant Williams exploded for 43 points against VU to carry the Big Orange to an overtime win. The performance garnered national recognition for the junior forward.

Vanderbilt (9-16, 0-12 SEC) is still searching for its first win in conference play. Despite its league record, Bryce Drew’s team does boast wins against Arizona State and USC and has given several teams, including the Vols, close calls. The freshmen duo of Simisola Shittu (11.5 ppg, 6.8 rpg, 2.1 apg, 0.7 bpg) and Aaron Nesmith (11.4 ppg, 46 3FG) have been two of the team’s best players this year.

THE SERIES
• Tennessee leads the all-time series with Vanderbilt, 121-75, dating to 1922. This is the 197th meeting.
• The Vols have a 71-20 edge when the series is played in Knoxville.
• Tennessee has won five of the last six meetings in this series.

A WIN WOULD…
• Stretch the Vols’ home win streak to 24 games, dating to last season.
• Make Tennessee 9-0 in regular-season SEC rematch games dating to the start of last season.
• Improve Tennessee’s record on Tuesdays to 7-0 this season.
• Help Tennessee avoid back-to-back losses, which it hasn’t experienced since the first two games of SEC play last season.

STORYLINES
• Tuesday’s game is Donate Life Night at Thompson-Boling Arena, with a goal of encouraging fans to become registered organ and tissue donors.
• Junior forward Grant Williams averages 24.2 points and 7.4 rebounds in five previous games against Vanderbilt.
• In UT’s last three games against Vanderbilt (all wins), point guard Jordan Bone has 12 assists and zero turnovers in 74 minutes.
• The Vols have shot 50 percent or better 16 times this season and rank second in the country with a .510 field-goal percentage.
• In SEC games, Tennessee averages a league-best 10.4 turnovers per game.

ABOUT VANDERBILT
• Vanderbilt (9-16, 0-12 SEC) is still searching for its first win in conference play. Despite its league record, Bryce Drew’s team does boast wins against Arizona State and USC and has given several teams, including the Vols, close calls.
• Freshman forward Simisola Shittu was a five-star prospect coming out of high school and has performed like it since arriving on campus. He leads Vanderbilt in rebounding (6.8 rpg) while ranking second in scoring (11.5 ppg), assists (2.1 apg) and blocks (0.7 bpg). He has three 20-point games this season and is shooting 48 percent from the field.
• At the beginning of the year, the Commodores had one of the best backcourt duos in the country in five-star freshman Darius Garland and sophomore guard Saben Lee. Unfortunately, Garland, who was averaging 16 points per game, went down with an injury early in the season and withdrew from school. Lee (13.1 ppg, 3.8 apg, 1.0 spg) has stepped up in Garland’s absence to pace VU in scoring and assists.
• Vanderbilt also has a trio of sharpshooters that can hit from deep in Matt Ryan (55 3-pointers), Aaron Nesmith (46) and Joe Toye (33), accounting for 71 percent of VU’s total 3-pointers for the season. If they have the hot hand early, it could open up the paint for Shittu and create options for the Commodores.
• Nesmith (11.4 ppg) is a player to keep an eye on in this game. The freshman forward has been playing very well recently, dropping four 20-point games in the last nine contests. Last week, he dropped a career-high 26 points against Florida and then followed that up by scoring 24 points against Auburn.

LAST MEETING VS. VANDERBILT
•  National Player of the Year candidate Grant Williams posted one of the most dominant performances in program history to lift No. 1 Tennessee to an 88-83 victory in overtime against Vanderbilt in Memorial Gym on Jan. 23, 2019.
•  Tennessee trailed by five, 76-71, with 1:22 remaining in regulation.
•  Williams finished with a career-high 43 points and also tallied eight rebounds, four blocks, two assists and a key steal to carry the Vols to their 13th-consecutive win. It was the most points scored in a game by a Vol since all-time leading scorer Allan Houston also dropped 43 against LSU on Feb. 10, 1990. Williams’ effort also tied for the fifth-most points in a single game in school history.
•  The junior forward was 10-of-15 from the field and a program-record 23-of-23 from the free-throw line. That mark broke the Tennessee records for most free throws in a game and consecutive free throws in a single game, surpassing Bill Justus’ 22 total makes and 18 consecutive free throw makes vs. Ohio on March 17, 1969.
•  Tennessee rallied late in the second half, going on a 6-0 run during the final 1:22 of play. A jumper in the lane by Admiral Schofield with 38 seconds left tied things up at 76-76. UT got the final shot off with just under 3.3 seconds left in regulation, but it was blocked to send the game to overtime.
•  Williams was 8-of-10 from the field and 19-of-19 from the free-throw line for 38 points in the second half and overtime. He had 10 of UT’s 12 points in overtime to outscore the Commodores.
•  The other two overtime points came from a pair of free throws by Jordan Bone with five seconds remaining to put the game away. The Nashville native finished with 14 points and seven assists in the victory.

MEMORABLE VOL PERFORMANCES AGAINST VANDERBILT
• Grant Williams erupted for a record-setting performance as the No. 1-ranked Volunteers held off Vanderbilt, 88-83, in overtime in Nashville on Jan. 23, 2019. Williams finished with a career-high 43 points and also tallied eight rebounds, four blocks, two assists and a steal. The junior forward was 10-of-15 from the field and a program-record 23-of-23 from the free-throw line.
• Josh Richardson (now a starter for the Miami Heat) helped the Vols rally from two separate double-digit deficits in the second half by scoring 15 of his game-high 22 points in the final stanza to lift Tennessee to a 67-61 comeback win over Vanderbilt in the 2015 SEC Tournament in Nashville on March 12, 2015. In what was the second-to-last game of his career, Richardson also led all players with three steals and was a perfect 6-for-6 from the free-throw line.
• Dyron Nix (17 points, 18 rebounds) and Doug Roth (10 points, 10 rebounds) recorded double-doubles and Tennessee beat Vanderbilt 79-69 in overtime in Stokely Athletics Center Feb. 4, 1987, in Knoxville.
• Dick Johnston made six free throws in double-overtime to lift UT to a 77-72 win over the Dores in Nashville on Feb. 2, 1970. Jimmy England led the charge with 27 points, and Bobby Croft had an 18-16 double-double.
• Danny Schultz holds UT’s single-game scoring record against Vanderbilt, as he dropped 35 points on the Dores on Feb. 15, 1964, in Nashville.
• Tennessee All-Century Team member Paul “Lefty” Walther (1948-49) never lost to Vanderbilt during his career as a Vol. The Covington, Kentucky, native helped lead Tennessee to a 4-0 record over the Dores, beating Vandy by an average of 9.8 points.

VOLS SUCCESSFUL ON THE IN-STATE CIRCUIT
• Tennessee has won its last six games against in-state opponents and is 12-4 vs. in-state foes under coach Rick Barnes.
• Those 12 wins include triumphs over ETSU (twice), Tennessee State, Vanderbilt (four times), Tennessee Tech (twice), Lipscomb (twice) and Memphis.

TENNESSEE TRIO ON TARGET
• In SEC play, three Tennessee players rank among the top 10 in the conference in field-goal percentage.
• Grant Williams ranks second (.569), Jordan Bowden ranks fourth (.533) and Admiral Schofield ranks seventh (.465).

THE VOLS MAKE FOR A HOT TICKET
• Tennessee’s seven true road games this season have drawn an average of 15,233 fans, which comes out to an average capacity of 94.4 percent.
• Games at Memphis, Florida, Vanderbilt, South Carolina and Kentucky were at or above capacity.

 

UT Athletics

Vol Hoops Media Monday (2.18.19)

Vol Hoops Media Monday (2.18.19)

Credit: UT Athletics

Opening Statement:
“Donate Life Night is tomorrow night against Vanderbilt. The goal is to encourage fans to register as organ and tissue donors. Our program has seen the impact of an organ donation Tom Satkowiak looks really good. Our team will be wearing a shooting shirt tomorrow night. There will be more than 100 donors, families and recipients in attendance. We are thankful for the transplant work being done at both Vanderbilt and here at UT Medical. We are very thankful and blessed for what it has done for Tom’s life and we all know what he means to us here and to our basketball program. This is going to be a great night to bring notoriety to it.”

On if Kentucky’s physical nature affected his team and if it concerns him going forward:
“They did exactly what we talked about and what we thought they would do. We knew they would be very physical with Grant. We expected that. He sees that a lot. The fact is, we didn’t respond back. To their credit, they did it from start to finish. We never got going, we never got any flow offensively. We didn’t play together either. The shots that we were taking, the things that we were not doing. It was a great atmosphere, everything was what you thought it would be. We just didn’t answer the call with what we should have done.

“I’m not taking anything away from Kentucky, because they forced those issues. We’ll learn from it. We have to learn from it. You ask if I’m concerned about it going forward. I’m only concerned about it if we don’t realize what we need to do to get better. If we don’t know it by now, we better after what happened the other night.”

On if anything stuck out to him after the loss and how the team responded:
“Nothing one bit stood out other than what we thought during the game. How did the team respond? When we walked in and asked the team, ‘Do you feel any different today than you did two days ago? A week ago?’ We won a lot of a games in a row, and I thought one of the most mature answers I’ve ever heard was when Jordan Bone said, ‘Yes coach, I do feel different, because I’m really excited about going to practice tomorrow.’ That’s what he said, ‘I’m excited about practice. We have to get better, you’ve been saying it.’ That was one of the most mature things I’ve heard from anybody in a long, long time. We felt like if they really, really wanted to learn from this they would be eager to watch the tape and see themselves doing things that they know they shouldn’t be doing. His response of saying he was excited about going forward and seeing how much better we could be as a basketball team.”

On if the team was embarrassed after the loss and if the veteran players took responsibility:
“They should have been. On the outside, there’s so much going on. Unless you are on the inside every day, you really don’t know what is going on with the vibe of the team. We have been talking about it, and I talk about it with you guys — rebounding. We talked about it, talked about it, talked about it. But yet, we’re winning games. If they didn’t take to it, they have to now. That’s what it gets down to. They would all tell you, in their own mind, some way some how, they were getting lulled into thinking we could just get by with what we were doing. I think that’s a human reaction. The fact that they are able to admit it, that’s where the maturity comes in. They were able to see that we were beaten soundly and thoroughly because we didn’t do the things that go into winning.

“We didn’t play hard enough. We weren’t physical enough. We didn’t execute. We didn’t do anything well. It was everybody thinking ‘I can do this by myself.’ They found out and they all admitted it, which is a good thing. One of the first ways of getting better is to admit you have a problem and that you are mature enough to go fix it, and they’ve said all of the right things. Now we’ll see if they are mature enough to go do it.”

On if there are similarities to the blowout loss to Alabama last season and then going on a hot streak and the blowout loss to Kentucky this season:
“You know what, I haven’t thought about it. I should have talked to you earlier. I could have used that with the team yesterday. The fact is, and you probably get tired of me saying it, but you have to live in the moment. If you start thinking ahead or if you are still living in what you did yesterday, I don’t think there’s any question that our guys are drifting with the focus that we needed. If it takes something like that to wake you up, then so be it. You hate for it to happen, but it happens in real life. If something comes along that’s unexpected, it really makes you assess some things. Yesterday in the film, they understood. I hope what you’re saying can happen. I hope we can get going back to the team that I know we can be.”

On how much easier it is to get players focused after a loss:
“Believe me, it’s easier. I felt like it had been building. We kept using the word ‘It’s going to bite us if you guys don’t understand at any point.’ And it did, really, really hard. We’ve talked about it for at least two weeks. About rebounding, playing defense, about playing hard, about practicing. The way we need to with the intensity that we need to. Like I said yesterday when we came in, we watched it. I said, ‘Hey, if this is who we are, we aren’t going to win any more games.’ Are we going to go back to work and have the intensity, the toughness and the mentality? We have to be the team that we set out at the beginning of the year to be.”

On the team’s defensive numbers being down from last year:
“Well, we are a better offensive team, and I think our guys think that we can just rely on that. Numbers have a lot to do with that. We had two players a year ago that, whether they played many minutes or not, they kept the other team on edge in James Daniel and Chris Darrington. We just haven’t played with the same sense of urgency on the defensive end the way we need too, just little things, as simple as where we pick the ball up, where we want to be guarding in the half court, how we want to play certain things, we just haven’t had the edge we had a year ago because last year we really struggled at times to score, we just shot the ball, and that’s what we did Saturday, some of the shots and things we were doing, we weren’t sharing the ball, we were getting shots blocked, not playing off two feet, every guy thinking that they have to go make something happen as opposed to we collectively have to make to make something happen. But defensively, it’s a mindset, and we haven’t had that the way we need to all year long.”

On the short rotation they had on Saturday:
“That’s my fault, and I’m going to fix that because we need Yves Pons, we need John Fulkerson, we need Derrick Walker, we need Jalen Johnson. We need those guys, and those guys need to understand that they are needed but they also need to understand that when they come in the game they can’t have any negative stuff, they can’t come in the game and give up two or three quick baskets because if they do then they can’t stay in the game. They need to come in and understand those minutes are really important and we need it probably more in the first half. So, it’s important, but they have to embrace that role, and we still got to get back where we were. Kyle Alexander hasn’t been a factor in three weeks, he has to go back and do his job, he just simply hasn’t done the job he is capable of doing, but we need those guys and it’s up to me to get them in the game.”

On Jordan Bowden and Lamonte Turner’s shooting on Saturday: 
“I think they missed shots. I don’t think they took good shots. I don’t think we played together. We had a couple times where Grant threw the ball out to Lamonté, and it wasn’t a great pass. It was down below his knees, and we always say, ‘don’t shoot a bad pass’ and he had plenty of time to pick it up, shot fake then take one dribble and pull the defender in, you had Admiral and Bowden on the other side. We are not making that extra pass, when we started making some threes in that game, those were the times when we did that, and I think they understand that at times they forget about Grant Williams, they give him the ball that’s when they get there best looks. We will go three or four minutes and those guys don’t realize that he hasn’t touched the ball. He actually came over to me the other night and said, ‘Coach, if you get me the ball I’ll create some offense for those guys,’ and he does, he doesn’t necessarily have to shoot the ball but when there not shooting the ball they are jumpy, thinking ‘I have to get a shot up’ as opposed to just playing the game.”

On Kyle Alexander
“I don’t know if I have the answer for why he is struggling, I wish I did because he has just got to get back, he had two games where he was terrific, and then from then on, it’s been a slow decline. Where he just isn’t playing with the same energy and effort, and I think some of it is that he went through a period where he was getting some tough calls against him that were tough and then I think he goes into the game thinking “I can’t be as aggressive early in the game” and if you don’t start off with the right mindset you won’t end with the right mindset. I think he has let some of those games where he got in foul trouble affect him where he needs to just go play, and again have confidence in his teammates, if you get In foul trouble you have to believe that these guys can come off the bench and do the job for us and we are going to have our bench for the reason to motivate guys to play hard.”

On Vanderbilt:
“Well, they lost a key player early in the year. They were terrific against us, no doubt about that, they have been in some really close games, they really have been there. They are playing a lot of young players, putting a lot on a lot of young players to do some things but it’s tough when you spend your whole preseason thinking you are going to play one way and then all at once you have to remake yourself. It’s hard to start remaking yourself once you spent all summer and all fall and then you lose key pieces and then you have to change. You have to put guys in roles they maybe weren’t expecting to be playing but they have been in a lot of close games even though they have not won a conference game they have been in closer games then people might expect if you really break it down and look at it.”

On what he has seen from the frontcourt bench guys: 
“Yves, I think we have to get him back, he was playing a great role for us when Lamonté was out, where he was really pressuring the ball, guarding the ball, doing those type of things that we need from him. Jalen (Johnson), he will play based on his defense and we need Derrick Walker to give us a physical presence and we need John Fulkerson to be the guy we know we recruited. I will always go back to his Freshman year when we were at North Carolina, he was the best player on the court then he got hurt after that. He can’t have the mindset that he has a role to play, he should be pushing every day to play more minutes and not be content with just being a role player, because he is too good to think that way. But we need each one of those guys to embrace what they have to do, what their job is for this team right now. All players want to do more, probably, but the fact is you have to do exactly what’s needed for your team right now and that’s what we need from those guys.”

On what he’s seen from Derrick Walker:
“I think we’ve got to get Yves back, because he was playing a great role for us when Lamonte was out where he was really pressuring the ball, guarding the ball, doing those type of things; we need that from him. Jalen will play based on his defense, and we need Derrick Walker to give us a physical presence, we need John Fulkerson to be the guy that we recruited. I’ll always go back to the freshman year when we were at North Carolina, and he was best friends with Corey, and he got hurt after that, and he can’t have the mindset that he has a role to play. He should be pushing every day and want to play more and more minutes, and not be content with just being a role player. He’s too good to think that way, but we need each one of those guys to embrace what their jib is for this team right now. All the players want to do more probably, but the fact is, you’ve got to do what’s best for your team right now and that’s what we need from those guys.”

On the impact that Tom’s story has had on the team:
“When I first got here, Dave Hart and John Gilbert, we were at Dave’s house and some people came over, and I was talking about different teams, and he said, ‘we have a tremendous guy that works with basketball.’ When he mentioned his name the first time, he mentioned his last name and I said, ‘I’ll never learn to pronounce that.’ When Tom came in one day, Dave told me his situation, and he said but we don’t want you to act as if you know it, because he’s the kind of person that likes to come in and talk on his own. A couple days later he came in and I think he had a boot on, and he came in and he said, ‘has someone mentioned it to you?’ And I said, ‘sort of, kind of.’ He went into it and through that time, he and I have shared a lot of really good moments together and when they did the big article on Tom, I don’t think any of us really, other than his closest people to him, knew how sick he really was. We saw, at times, where a year ago, he missed some time during last season where he couldn’t travel with us. I never heard him complain. Not one time, even when I asked him how he was doing, he was ‘fine,’ even though you could look at him and tell that he wasn’t feeling great. I’ll remember that day he called and said, “I got the call”. I remember going over there, we were planning on going back that night, but we came back the next day. I remember we had just walked into the hospital and his wife had his phone, and one of our players texted and said, “Tom, can you send me some photos of me?’ And I took the phone and I texted back and said ‘Well, I’m in surgery right now, I’m having my liver transplant, can I get back to you later,’ and that person wrote back ‘I’m so sorry, I hope it goes well.’ The fact is, if you knew what we knew, and if you look at it today, I would say that you should always want to know that if you can donate when your time is up, you should want to do it because he’s got a new life, he’s a new man, he’s a person, he’s gotten to be better looking. He was a guy that was strong with it. I’m telling you, watching how he lives, and the fact that he was given a new life, because I don’t know how much longer he could’ve gone with what he had. His story has touched me, and a lot of other people around him, and I can’t imagine my life without him in it, I really can’t. I’m thankful for the fact that someone did what they did and it was a match, and I would just encourage everybody to be an organ donor if they can, and help give life to someone else when their time is up.”

On the team being selfish during the Kentucky game:
“Well, when I say selfish, I should probably say, we got to a point where we weren’t in sync, we never settled in on offense. Every guy said at some point, ‘I’ve got to make something happen’ as opposed to ‘we’ve got to stay together and work the game.’ When you think about it, as poorly as we were in the first half, it could’ve been a four-point game until the last play. We just had terrible ball-screen defense, but even with that, it was a two-possession game and we come out not ready. We just never adjusted to what was happening within the game, and then you get behind, then all at once, everybody thinks they have to do this. That’s the fine line between winning and losing, it really is. I don’t mean selfish from ‘I’ve got to get my points,’ it’s like ‘I’ve got to make something happen,’ as opposed to saying, ‘we’ve got to make something happen as a team.’ We never got all five guys that were on the court on the same page at the same time.”

On why Jordan Bone didn’t push the tempo in that game:
“I think there’s alit that happens, and when you talk about pushing the ball, he’s the catalyst, but the guys do have to go with him. Early, I thought he was doing it, but at the start of the game, I don’t think his decisions were great in terms of what he was doing with it. He’s’ gotten so much better in terms of starting to understand all that. Throughout the game, as a group, I don’t want our guys out there being robotic, I want them playing the game. We just have to execute what we do and the shots will come where they need to come from, and we’ll be in a position to rebound. When somebody comes down the floor and takes a quick shot, and guys aren’t down the floor, and it happened a couple times. Certain guys though they had to make something happen quick. We were way too impatient, and against a good team like Kentucky, you’re going to have to maybe give it your second or third option, and keep moving the ball, and the flow of the game. We didn’t get the flow like we needed, and every time we did do that, we got a good look at it. That where we’ve got to continue to have the discipline that we need to have in games, because every game that you’re going to be in from here on out is going to be a close game, and you’ve got to rely on each other.”

 

UT Athletics

Thomas Rhett Will Be the Musical Guest on “Saturday Night Live” on March 2

Thomas Rhett Will Be the Musical Guest on “Saturday Night Live” on March 2

Thomas Rhett will be the musical guest on an upcoming episode of Saturday Night Live.

TR will take the stage on March 2, as actor John Mulaney tackles hosting duties.

Thomas Rhett commented on the exciting news in a video with daughter Willa Gray via Instagram, saying: “Playing NEW MUSIC out 3/1 on @nbcsnl on 3/2 <— how is that sentence even real!? #SNL”

In the past four years, a handful of country stars have performed on SNL, including Blake Shelton (January 2015), Zac Brown Band (March 2015), Chris Stapleton (January 2016, January 2018), Maren Morris (December 2016), Margo Price (April 2016), Sturgill Simpson (January 2017, January 2018) and Kacey Musgraves (May 2018).

photo by Jason Simanek

Maren Morris Says She Looks Up to “Kind But Unapologetic” Women Like Her Mom, Miranda & Dolly

Maren Morris Says She Looks Up to “Kind But Unapologetic” Women Like Her Mom, Miranda & Dolly

Maren Morris’ inspiring new single, “Girl,” is continuing its rise up the Billboard Country Airplay chart, currently No. 27 after four weeks.

Penned by Maren, Sarah Aarons and Greg Kurstin, who also produced the song, “Girl” features the encouraging chorus: “Girl, don’t hang your head low / Don’t lose your halo / Everyone’s gonna be okay, baby, girl.

In a sit-down interview on The Blair Garner Show, Maren told Blair about some of the inspiring women in her life—both inside and outside of the country music industry.

“In music, I’ve always looked up to Dolly Parton,” says Maren. “I love women that are kind but unapologetic. And there’s ways to be both of those things, and I think Dolly does it so beautifully. Also, Miranda Lambert has been such a great friend and inspiring person in my life, musically and professionally, just looking at the way she’s conducted her career, very strong-mindedly, but also my favorite moments are when she’s vulnerable in a song, so there’s such a strength and vulnerability I love in women especially.”

When in comes to strong women outside of the industry, Maren says her mom, Kellie Morris, is at the top of her list.

“My mom is pretty awesome,” says Maren. “She grew up really poor in Texas. Her parents were divorced. Her mom was a waitress her entire life. My mom decided that she wanted to become a hairdresser so she put herself through hair school and after a couple of years she opened her own salon, and it’s been in business for over 20 years now. It’s named after my sister and I. I think my work ethic definitely comes from my parents, because I was not, like, silver-spooned. It was a very middle class, working family. I have learned a lot about being a self-starting woman from my mom.”

Maren will release her new album, Girl, on March 8. On March 9, she will kick off her headlining Girl The World Tour with Cassadee Pope and RaeLynn.

photo by JPA, AFF-USA.com

Vols to Host Donate Life Night Tuesday at Thompson-Boling Arena

Vols to Host Donate Life Night Tuesday at Thompson-Boling Arena

Credit: UT Athletics

It will be Donate Life Night at Thompson-Boling Arena when Tennessee hosts in-state rival Vanderbilt Tuesday at 7 p.m. ET.

Doctors at Vanderbilt University Medical Center performed an 11-hour liver transplant surgery on Tennessee Assistant Athletics Director Tom Satkowiak on Oct. 18. Satkowiak returned to Knoxville to resume his duties as men’s basketball media relations director in mid-November.

He had suffered from an incurable liver disease for 18 years before benefitting from the gift of organ donation.

“A family I’ve never met and an individual I’ll never have the opportunity to thank made the decision to give the ultimate gift through organ donation,” Satkowiak said. “It has changed my life in extraordinary ways and has motivated me to advocate for organ and tissue donation awareness. Sadly, the high number of individuals on organ waiting lists, along with a shortage of registered donors, means that time runs out for far too many families.

“The goal for Donate Life Night is to encourage Tennessee fans to take action and register as donors.”

Tickets for Tuesday’s game remain available for purchase via AllVols.com.

As part of Donate Life Night, the Volunteers will wear special shooting shirts during warm-ups and on the bench for Tuesday’s game. Members of Tennessee’s coaching staff will wear Donate Life lapel pins.

Donate Life Tennessee will have a presence on the arena concourse, with representatives available to answer questions and provide information about organ and tissue donation.

Before the game, organ transplant recipients and families of donors will form the human “T” that Tennessee runs through when it takes the court prior to tipoff.

Additionally, fans who attend Tuesday’s game and use their mobile device to register as an organ or tissue donor from 5:30 p.m. ET through the end of the game will be invited onto the court to take a group photo with Tennessee head coach Rick Barnes following his postgame Vol Network radio interview. New registrants will be asked to show their registration confirmation email in order to access the court for the photograph.

“What an awesome opportunity to celebrate the ‘gift of life,’ Tennessee Donor Services Executive Director Jill Grandes said. “Thank you to coach Rick BarnesTom Satkowiak, Tennessee Athletics and the entire Tennessee basketball team, along with all Vol fans, for their support of organ and tissue donation and saving lives.”

In 2018, 36,529 individuals in the United States—including 1,026 in Tennessee—received a life-saving organ transplant. And there are currently 113,886 Americans in need of a transplant, including 3,009 in Tennessee.

Individuals with a valid driver’s license can officially register as an organ or tissue donor by visiting www.BeTheGiftToday.com.

 

UT Athletics

Jimmy’s blog: Kentucky puts physical beating on Tennessee

Jimmy’s blog: Kentucky puts physical beating on Tennessee

By Jimmy Hyams

It should come as no surprise to anyone that Kentucky beat Tennessee at Rupp Arena.

Only three times in history have the Vols beaten a ranked UK team in Lexington. And only six times since 1970 has UT won at Kentucky.

But it was the manner in which the Wildcats disposed of Tennessee that created a concern.

Kentucky was clearly the more physical team during the 86-69 demolition Saturday night of the nation’s top-ranked team. That roughhouse play bothered the Vols.

And keep in mind, Tennessee is a physical team.

One weakness for UT the past month is lack of depth on the front court.

If Kyle Alexander or Grant Williams gets in foul trouble, Tennessee is in trouble against a team with a solid front court. And Kentucky has a solid front court.

The Wildcats’ PJ Washington had his way inside in scoring 23 points as the Vols man-to-man defense wasn’t up to the task and defenders too often allowed Washington to score going to his right.

There were three stats coming out of the game that revealed why Tennessee was trounced.

  1. Kentucky dominated the boards 39-26. That difference displayed UK’s effort and strength. UK freshman guard Tyler Herro had 13 rebounds – he was averaging 4.0 — go with 15 points.
  2. Tennessee’s three best outside shooters were a combined 1-for-17 on 3s. Lamonte Turner and Jordan Bowden were 0-for-11. Admiral Schofield was 1-for-6. Some of those shots were contested. Some were wide open. UT won’t beat many teams when that trio shoots that poorly from beyond the arc. The three were 10-for-36 overall from the field.
  3. Shooting percentage. Kentucky hit 54.7 percent, UT 40.7 percent. The Vols were a respectable 17 of 34 on 2s (50 percent) but hitting 7-for-25 on 3s hurt the overall effort. A 14 percent difference in overall shooting percentage is tough to overcome.

So where does Tennessee, now 11-1 and tied for first in the SEC, go from here?

Remember, last year, Alabama blasted the Vols 78-50 but UT recovered to win five of its last six SEC games to share the share the conference title.

And Tennessee started 0-2 in the SEC last season but rebounded.

This is a veteran UT team with mature players. It can still run the table in the SEC. But its remaining SEC schedule is more difficult that LSU’s or Kentucky’s.

Tennessee figures to be challenged when it goes to LSU and Ole Miss, and when it hosts Kentucky and Mississippi State, then finishes at Auburn. Its remaining SEC opponents are 41-31 in league play.

LSU’s remaining SEC foes are 32-40 with only UT having a winning record.

Kentucky’s are 39-33 with UT and Ole Miss having a winning record.

Tennessee could go 17-1 in the SEC, but it might lose two or three SEC games.

The challenge ahead is to better handle a physical opponent, shoot better from 3-point range and find inside depth in case Grant Williams or Kyle Alexander gets hurt or in foul trouble.

One other thing: Tennessee has been in only two single-digit games in the past 17 contests.

It wouldn’t hurt to get more battled tested late in games before NCAA tournament play begins.


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