Brooks & Dunn are back in the saddle with a new Reboot album that features an all-star cast of artists performing duets with country’s greatest duo.
Artists taking part in the project include Kacey Musgraves, Kane Brown, Thomas Rhett, Brett Young, Lanco, Ashley McBryde, Midland, Luke Combs, Brothers Osborne, Cody Johnson, Jon Pardi and Tyler Booth.
“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.”
The new album will be Brooks & Dunn’s first studio album since 2007’s Cowboy Town. Brooks & Dunn have more than a dozen upcoming tour dates scheduled, including six shows in Vegas this summer with Reba McEntire.
If you didn’t make it to Nashville in September for the 17th annual AmericanaFest, you can still catch some of the action thanks to Austin City Limits on PBS.
Austin City Limits will air highlights of the 17th annual Americana Honors & Awards on PBS on Feb. 9 (check local listings) with performances by Brandi Carlile (“The Joke”), Buddy Guy (“Damn Right, I’ve Got The Blues”), I’m With Her (“Overland”), Irma Thomas (“Time Is On My Side”), Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit (“White Man’s World”), John Prine (“Summer’s End”), k.d. lang (“Trail Of Broken Hearts”), Lukas Nelson & Promise Of The Real (“Forget About Georgia”), Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats (“Hey Mama”), Fantastic Negrito, Nelson and Rateliff (“Fortunate Son”), Margo Price (“A Little Pain”), Rosanne Cash (“Everyone But Me”) and Tyler Childers (“Nose On The Grindstone”).
2018 AmericanaFest took over Nashville during the week of Sept. 11–16, with the Honors & Awards ceremony on Sept. 12 at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium serving as the week’s centerpiece. More than 250 acts performed more than 500 shows over the five-day festival that took place at 62 different venues.
Check out the new promo below for Austin City Limits.
From nominations and notes to performers and presenters, here’s everything a country music fan needs to know about the 2019 Grammy Awards on Sunday, Feb. 10.
The Notes
Date: Feb. 10 Location: Staples Center in L.A. Time: 8 p.m ET Channel: CBS Live Stream: CBS All Access
Host: Alicia Keys
Non-Televised Awards:Grammy.com at 3:30 p.m. ET
Red Carpet:Grammy.com at 5 p.m. ET
Country Performers
Maren Morris
Little Big Town
Kacey Musgraves
Dan + Shay
Dolly Parton
Additional Performers
Yolanda Adams, Fantasia, Andra Day, J Balvin, Camila Cabello, Cardi B, Brandi Carlile, H.E.R., Post Malone, Ricky Martin, Shawn Mendes, Janelle Monáe, Katy Perry, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Diana Ross, Arturo Sandoval, Young Thug, Chloe x Halle, Lady Gaga, Mark Ronson, Travis Scott, Dua Lipa and St. Vincent
Country Presenters
Kelsea Ballerini
Luke Combs
Kane Brown
Additional Presenters
Leon Bridges, Charlie Wilson, Alessia Cara, Julian Edelman, Eve, John Mayer, Bob Newhart, Smokey Robinson, Swizz Beatz, Meghan Trainor, BTS, Cedric The Entertainer, Nina Dobrev, Anna Kendrick, Jada Pinkett Smith and Wilmer Valderrama
Country Nominations
Album Of The Year Award to Artist(s) and to Featured Artist(s), Songwriter(s) of new material, Producer(s), Recording Engineer(s), Mixer(s) and Mastering Engineer(s) credited with at least 33% playing time of the album, if other than Artist.
INVASION OF PRIVACY
Cardi B
Leslie Brathwaite & Evan LaRay, engineers/mixers; Belcalis Almanzar & Jorden Thorpe, songwriters; Colin Leonard, mastering engineer
BY THE WAY, I FORGIVE YOU
Brandi Carlile
Dave Cobb & Shooter Jennings, producers; Dave Cobb & Eddie Spear, engineers/mixers; Brandi Carlile, Phil Hanseroth & Tim Hanseroth, songwriters; Pete Lyman, mastering engineer
H.E.R.
H.E.R.
Darhyl “Hey DJ” Camper Jr, H.E.R. & Jeff Robinson, producers; Miki Tsutsumi, engineer/mixer; Darhyl Camper Jr & H.E.R., songwriters; Dave Kutch, mastering engineer
BEERBONGS & BENTLEYS
Post Malone
Louis Bell & Post Malone, producers; Louis Bell & Manny Marroquin, engineers/mixers; Louis Bell & Austin Post, songwriters; Mike Bozzi, mastering engineer
DIRTY COMPUTER
Janelle Monáe
Chuck Lightning & Janelle Monáe Robinson & Nate “Rocket” Wonder, producers; Mick Guzauski, Janelle Monáe Robinson & Nate “Rocket” Wonder, engineers/mixers; Nathaniel Irvin III, Charles Joseph II, Taylor Parks & Janelle Monáe Robinson, songwriters; Dave Kutch, mastering engineer
GOLDEN HOUR Kacey Musgraves Ian Fitchuk, Kacey Musgraves & Daniel Tashian, producers; Craig Alvin & Shawn Everett, engineers/mixers; Ian Fitchuk, Kacey Musgraves & Daniel Tashian, songwriters; Greg Calbi & Steve Fallone, mastering engineers
BLACK PANTHER: THE ALBUM, MUSIC FROM AND INSPIRED BY
(Various Artists)
Kendrick Lamar, featured artist; Kendrick Duckworth & Sounwave, producers; Matt Schaeffer, engineer/mixer; Kendrick Duckworth & Mark Spears, songwriters; Mike Bozzi, mastering engineer
Record Of The Year Award to the Artist and to the Producer(s), Recording Engineer(s) and/or Mixer(s) and mastering engineer(s), if other than the artist.
I LIKE IT
Cardi B, Bad Bunny & J Balvin
Invincible, JWhiteDidIt, Craig Kallman & Tainy, producers; Leslie Brathwaite & Evan LaRay, engineers/mixers; Colin Leonard, mastering engineer
THE JOKE
Brandi Carlile
Dave Cobb & Shooter Jennings, producers; Tom Elmhirst & Eddie Spear, engineers/mixers; Pete Lyman, mastering engineer
THIS IS AMERICA
Childish Gambino
Donald Glover & Ludwig Goransson, producers; Derek “MixedByAli” Ali & Riley Mackin, engineers/mixers; Mike Bozzi, mastering engineer
GOD’S PLAN
Drake
Boi-1Da, Cardo & Young Exclusive, producers; Noel Cadastre, Noel “Gadget” Campbell & Noah Shebib, engineers/mixers; Chris Athens, mastering engineer
SHALLOW
Lady Gaga & Bradley Cooper
Lady Gaga & Benjamin Rice, producers; Tom Elmhirst, engineer/mixer; Randy Merrill, mastering engineer
ALL THE STARS
Kendrick Lamar & SZA
Al Shux & Sounwave, producers; Sam Ricci & Matt Schaeffer, engineers/mixers; Mike Bozzi, mastering engineer
ROCKSTAR
Post Malone Featuring 21 Savage
Louis Bell & Tank God, producers; Louis Bell & Manny Marroquin, engineers/mixers; Mike Bozzi, mastering engineer
THE MIDDLE Zedd, Maren Morris & Grey Grey, Monsters & Strangerz & Zedd, producers; Grey, Tom Morris, Ryan Shanahan & Zedd, engineers/mixers; Mike Marsh, mastering engineer
Song Of The Year A Songwriter(s) Award. A song is eligible if it was first released or if it first achieved prominence during the Eligibility Year. (Artist names appear in parentheses.) Singles or Tracks only.
ALL THE STARS
Kendrick Duckworth, Solána Rowe, Al Shuckburgh, Mark Spears & Anthony Tiffith, songwriters (Kendrick Lamar & SZA)
BOO’D UP
Larrance Dopson, Joelle James, Ella Mai & Dijon McFarlane, songwriters (Ella Mai)
GOD’S PLAN
Aubrey Graham, Daveon Jackson, Brock Korsan, Ron LaTour, Matthew Samuels & Noah Shebib, songwriters (Drake)
IN MY BLOOD
Teddy Geiger, Scott Harris, Shawn Mendes & Geoffrey Warburton, songwriters (Shawn Mendes)
THE JOKE
Brandi Carlile, Dave Cobb, Phil Hanseroth & Tim Hanseroth, songwriters (Brandi Carlile)
THE MIDDLE Sarah Aarons, Jordan K. Johnson, Stefan Johnson, Marcus Lomax, Kyle Trewartha, Michael Trewartha & Anton Zaslavski, songwriters (Zedd, Maren Morris & Grey)
SHALLOW
Lady Gaga, Mark Ronson, Anthony Rossomando & Andrew Wyatt, songwriters (Lady Gaga & Bradley Cooper)
THIS IS AMERICA
Donald Glover & Ludwig Goransson, songwriters (Childish Gambino)
Best New Artist An artist will be considered for Best New Artist if their eligibility year release/s achieved a breakthrough into the public consciousness and notably impacted the musical landscape.
CHLOE X HALLE
LUKE COMBS
GRETA VAN FLEET
H.E.R.
DUA LIPA
MARGO PRICE
BEBE REXHA
JORJA SMITH
Best Pop Duo/Group Performance For new vocal or instrumental duo/group or collaborative pop recordings. Singles or Tracks only.
FALL IN LINE
Christina Aguilera Featuring Demi Lovato
DON’T GO BREAKING MY HEART
Backstreet Boys
‘S WONDERFUL
Tony Bennett & Diana Krall
SHALLOW
Lady Gaga & Bradley Cooper
GIRLS LIKE YOU
Maroon 5 Featuring Cardi B
SAY SOMETHING
Justin Timberlake Featuring Chris Stapleton
THE MIDDLE Zedd, Maren Morris & Grey
Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album For albums containing at least 51% playing time of new traditional pop recordings.
LOVE IS HERE TO STAY
Tony Bennett & Diana Krall
MY WAY Willie Nelson
NAT “KING” COLE & ME
Gregory Porter
STANDARDS (DELUXE)
Seal
THE MUSIC…THE MEM’RIES…THE MAGIC!
Barbra Streisand
Best Country Solo Performance For new vocal or instrumental solo country recordings.
WOULDN’T IT BE GREAT?
Loretta Lynn
MONA LISAS AND MAD HATTERS
Maren Morris
BUTTERFLIES
Kacey Musgraves
MILLIONAIRE
Chris Stapleton
PARALLEL LINE
Keith Urban
Best Country Duo/Group Performance For new vocal or instrumental duo/group or collaborative country recordings.
SHOOT ME STRAIGHT
Brothers Osborne
TEQUILA
Dan + Shay
WHEN SOMEONE STOPS LOVING YOU
Little Big Town
DEAR HATE
Maren Morris Featuring Vince Gill
MEANT TO BE
Bebe Rexha & Florida Georgia Line
Best Country Song A Songwriter(s) Award. A song is eligible if it was first released or if it first achieved prominence during the Eligibility Year. (Artist names appear in parentheses.) Singles or Tracks only.
BREAK UP IN THE END
Jessie Jo Dillon, Chase McGill & Jon Nite, songwriters (Cole Swindell)
DEAR HATE
Tom Douglas, David Hodges & Maren Morris, songwriters (Maren Morris Featuring Vince Gill)
I LIVED IT
Rhett Akins, Ross Copperman, Ashley Gorley & Ben Hayslip, songwriters (Blake Shelton)
SPACE COWBOY
Luke Laird, Shane McAnally & Kacey Musgraves, songwriters (Kacey Musgraves)
TEQUILA
Nicolle Galyon, Jordan Reynolds & Dan Smyers, songwriters (Dan + Shay)
WHEN SOMEONE STOPS LOVING YOU
Hillary Lindsey, Chase McGill & Lori McKenna, songwriters (Little Big Town)
Best Country Album For albums containing at least 51% playing time of new country recordings.
UNAPOLOGETICALLY
Kelsea Ballerini
PORT SAINT JOE
Brothers Osborne
GIRL GOING NOWHERE
Ashley McBryde
GOLDEN HOUR
Kacey Musgraves
FROM A ROOM: VOLUME 2
Chris Stapleton
Best American Roots Performance For new vocal or instrumental American Roots recordings. This is for performances in the style of any of the subgenres encompassed in the American Roots Music field including Americana, bluegrass, blues, folk or regional roots. Award to the artist(s).
KICK ROCKS
Sean Ardoin
SAINT JAMES INFIRMARY BLUES
Jon Batiste
THE JOKE
Brandi Carlile
ALL ON MY MIND
Anderson East
LAST MAN STANDING
Willie Nelson
Best American Roots Song A Songwriter(s) Award. Includes Americana, bluegrass, traditional blues, contemporary blues, folk or regional roots songs. A song is eligible if it was first released or if it first achieved prominence during the Eligibility Year. (Artist names appear in parentheses.) Singles or Tracks only.
ALL THE TROUBLE
Waylon Payne, Lee Ann Womack & Adam Wright, songwriters (Lee Ann Womack)
BUILD A BRIDGE
Jeff Tweedy, songwriter (Mavis Staples)
THE JOKE
Brandi Carlile, Dave Cobb, Phil Hanseroth & Tim Hanseroth, songwriters (Brandi Carlile)
KNOCKIN’ ON YOUR SCREEN DOOR
Pat McLaughlin & John Prine, songwriters (John Prine)
SUMMER’S END
Pat McLaughlin & John Prine, songwriters (John Prine)
Best Americana Album For albums containing at least 51% playing time of new vocal or instrumental Americana recordings.
BY THE WAY, I FORGIVE YOU
Brandi Carlile
THINGS HAVE CHANGED
Bettye LaVette
THE TREE OF FORGIVENESS
John Prine
THE LONELY, THE LONESOME & THE GONE
Lee Ann Womack
ONE DROP OF TRUTH
The Wood Brothers
Best Bluegrass Album For albums containing at least 51% playing time of new vocal or instrumental bluegrass recordings.
PORTRAITS IN FIDDLES
Mike Barnett
SISTER SADIE II
Sister Sadie
RIVERS AND ROADS
Special Consensus
THE TRAVELIN’ MCCOURYS
The Travelin’ McCourys
NORTH OF DESPAIR
Wood & Wire
Grammy logo courtesy of Recording Academy; photos of Maren Morris, Little Big Town & Kacey Musgraves courtesy of Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com
“Since we talked about recruiting the last time in December, we have added Quavaris Crouch, an outstanding athlete who can play either side of the ball. He’s a very good student, a good competitor. His high school team won the state championship his junior year. Unfortunately, he got injured this past year and didn’t get to participate in very many games, but we’re excited we have him. Eric Gray is another young man that has been a part of several state championship teams. He won Mr. Football a couple of times. Again, another very good student. Both of these guys are mid-year, they’ve been here. They’ve been working. We’re excited to have them. We also added Aubrey Solomon, a transfer from Michigan. This young man we had recruited coming out of high school. We knew his family. Sometimes, in this day and time, things don’t work out. We had previous relationships. We’re very fortunate to get him and we’re excited about having him. Deangelo Gibbs is another young man that we recruited coming out of high school. He’s a guy that could really play either side of the ball, so we’ll see where he plays once he gets here. We’re glad we have him.
“We got Darnell Wright today. Darnell is a guy that is a big powerful man that can play any of the five spots on the offensive line. He looks like he probably weighs 310 (pounds), but he actually weights 335, so he holds it very well. Another good student, and a guy that won a state championship as a junior.
“When you look at this class, I think we signed guys that are used to having success. Some big men. Guys that are good with the ball in their hand. I think they are going to add depth of our team and create competition. I think it capped off a class that, if you look at it starting back in December, guys that are really good students with good characters and are used to winning. Leaders of their football teams. Captains of their football teams. I think it is a great class to lay the foundation for what we want to achieve here.”
On what this class says about the state of the program:
“To have a good recruiting class, it first starts with tradition. You have to have tradition that people recognize the brand. The Power T is recognized across the country. You have to have facilities, which we have great facilities. You have to have administration that is behind what you are trying to get done. I think you have to have success in all sports. One of the big selling points that has helped us in recruiting has been our men’s basketball team. Everywhere we go, people want to talk about our men’s basketball program. I think that’s a great thing, putting Tennessee on the map. Again, it’s building the brand.
“It takes good coaches, it takes everybody in the coaching staff. Sometimes in recruiting, guys get singled out. Whether it is the head coach or position coach – it takes everybody involved. From academic support, to nutrition, to the weight room, graduate assistants, quality control. People in the recruiting office. Everybody has to be willing to be bought in to recruit. Guys come to school to get an education first and foremost. It’s an opportunity to build a brand, to make connections that last a lifetime. The one thing about the University of Tennessee is that everybody is selling the university. Everybody is committed in the recruiting effort. It takes everybody. It takes a great fanbase. The passion of the fanbase, when you walk out here for the Vol Walk and there is somewhere between 60,000 and 80,000 folks out there. It’s a sight to see. A stadium that seats 102,000. The way we travel. All of these things go in to the opportunity to recruit student-athletes that want to win a championship at Tennessee.”
On the impact of the offensive line signees:
“Well we signed five offensive linemen. Wanya Morris, Darnell Wright, Chris Akporoghene, Jackson Lampley and Melvin McBride. When you look at these guys, they are all big men that are athletic. They can bend and they can slide their feet. They play the right way. They are all good students and are coming out of winning programs. It’s a position that we need some depth and competition in, but when you look at our football team, that is probably everywhere. There is probably not one position where you can say that we have enough guys. I think with this class, we have hit some needs and we have more depth. There will be more competition so that will make everyone better.”
On the staff recruiting Darnell Wright and Brian Niedermeyer’s impact on the recruiting trail:
“I think with every guy we recruit; we have to build relationships. If you have taken your son to a school and dropped him off, you have a feeling of what I am talking about. You are giving probably your most prized possession to someone else for the next four years. They aren’t going to be under your roof anymore. A lot of our guys on staff have kids that are in college and we understand what that is all about. When you look at everyone involved in our program, they all get it and understand it. They are willing to go the extra mile to build relationships where people want to come here. I think that it’s obvious with anything in life. If you enjoy the people that you are around and build trust with the people you are associated with, it gives a little more comfort dropping them off.”
On how the SEC dominates on the recruiting trail:
“In this part of the country, football is very important. You can get on the road on Saturday and start riding in the southeast and there are people playing football at all of the fields. Friday nights, you turn on the high school tapes and you see the fanbases and their passion and the pride of the communities that they are from. I think that has something to do with it.”
On the transfers and whether they will be sitting out a year:
“I think today should be more focused on recruiting and we will worry about that when the time comes.”
On how different it is to only wait on a handful of guys to sign versus 25-plus:
“I think the recruiting calendar has changed a lot of things. I think its moved the timetable up. I think probably in the SEC, somewhere between 77 and 85 percent of the guys were signed in the Early Signing Period. It reduces the numbers, and you start recruiting ahead and planning ahead, but for a day like today I think it is important how you finish a class. You have to hit your number, and I think we were able to do that. I am excited about the guys we have coming. I am excited about today and looking forward to the next class.”
On how he plans to construct the coaching staff after changes:
“We really have not sat down and gone over that. We got everybody in here and started working on recruiting. We have not divvied up areas. The first thing we wanted to do was to finish up this recruiting class. We will probably take a weekend off and start on Monday with figuring it out from there.”
On how much peer-recruiting helped this recruiting class:
“I think our current players have really done a fantastic job in this cycle. They are only going to continue to get better, and I think a lot of that goes with relationships. I think if you look at when guys come on campus, the great players want to play with great teams and other great players. I think the coaching staff and the things I have named have a lot to do with it, but your best recruiters are your current players and I think our guys have done a really good job this cycle.”
On adding depth at offensive line:
“I think depth is a big thing and it is for every position on our team. We need competition and we have hit a lot of guys in the spots that we need. We need more depth. We need another really good recruiting class this next year. I think with the offensive line position, first of all if you do not have big men, you cannot just go and pick them off the street, so you better have some. You need to be able to practice, which is a thing we ran into last spring when we moved some defensive linemen to offensive linemen, because if you don’t have five offensive linemen it’s hard to get a linebacker, defensive back or a quarterback ready. I think we got depth now and our numbers are getting closer to what they should be for that position. That should help us develop our football team moving forward.”
On the number of running backs on the roster after National Signing Day:
“We have guys from last year coming back with Ty, Tim, and Jeremy Banks. We added Eric Gray and at the end of the year we moved Carlin to the running back position. I think we are getting closer to getting the right number at that spot.”
On the impact of recruits:
“The big thing in recruiting is that you do the best you can to find out the information. You have to trust your evaluations, and it helps if you can see them in person. It’s hard to predict how a 17 or 18-year old is going to be when he is 21 or 22. You do the best you can in doing that. What looks good today might not be so good in a couple of years and what doesn’t look good today, might be the best thing in a couple of years. That’s everywhere across the country. I think our staff has done a good job evaluating these guys. The guys that are here right now have been working hard in the weight room, which is no surprise to me, but that is the expectation here. Instead of guys having to bring them along, they have jumped in and been equal to.”
On evaluating versatile players:
“If you are going to sign an offensive lineman, it helps if he can play all five spots. If you are going to sign a running back, it might help if he has the size to play linebacker or vice versa. If you were signing a linebacker, I would rather sign a guy that can play all four positions. I think that it brings value to him and value to the team for the versatility there. Most of the guys that are used to handling the ball in high school, whether they were on offense or defense usually have good ball skills. The guys that pick off a lot of passes on Friday nights pick off a lot on Saturday. If they pick the ball off on Saturday then they pick them off on Sunday. I have never seen a defensive back that didn’t pick passes off on Friday all the sudden pick them off on Sunday.”
Tennessee head football coach Jeremy Pruitt spoke to the media at his annual National Signing Day press conference.
KNOXVILLE, TN – FEBRUARY 06, 2019 – Head Coach Jeremy Pruitt of the Tennessee Volunteers during a National Sining Day press conference in the Ray and Lucy Hand Digital Studio in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Andrew Ferguson/Tennessee Athletics
KNOXVILLE, TN – FEBRUARY 06, 2019 – The Tennessee Volunteers coaching staff during the National Sining Day celebration event in the Student Union Ballroom in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Andrew Ferguson/Tennessee Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — The Tennessee football program closed out National Signing Day by inking two of the top three uncommitted prospects remaining in the class of 2019 in offensive lineman Darnell Wright and linebacker Henry To’o to’o to give the Vols 21 total signees for the 2019 class.
Wright, the No. 10 prospect in the 247Sports.com composite rankings and top uncommitted prospect in the country, was named a 2019 First-Team American Family Insurance All-USA and a 2018 Second-Team MaxPreps All-American.
The Huntington, W. Va. product is coming off of a recent appearance in the Under Armour All-America Game, playing alongside future Tennessee teammates Jaylen McCollough and Wanya Morris.
In addition to national honors, Wright earned 2018 West Virginia Class AAA First-Team All-State and 2017 West Virginia Class AAA First-Team All-State honors at Huntington High School.
To’o to’o, a Concord Calif., native and No. 44 prospect in the 247Sports.com composite rankings, helped De La Salle High School to a 12-1 record and state championship game appearance during his senior season.
He earned 2018 First-Team MaxPreps All-America honors while also competing in the All-American Bowl alongside Vol signees Ramel Keyton and Eric Gray.
Henry To’oto’o
LB Pittsburg, CA (De La Salle)
6’2″ 230
Stars: 4 by 247Sports / 4 by ESPN / 4 by Rivals
Josh Ward’s Analysis: This is a major win for Tennessee, which beat out Alabama and Washington for the high school All-American. To’oto’o gives Tennessee another legitimate athlete at linebacker, which was top priority for the Vols in this class.
Highlights of To’oto’o from hudl…
Need To Know
Starred at De La Salle High School in Concord, Calif.
2018 First-Team MaxPreps All-American.
2018 First-Team USA Today All-USA California Team.
Helped lead De La Salle to a 12-1 record and state championship game appearance during his senior season.
Also starred at running back, finished his senior season with 489 rushing yards and three touchdowns.
Listen to an interview with his high school coach on SportsTalk…
ESPN:
Natl Rank: No. 47
Position Rank: No. 4 OLB
State Rank: No. 5 in CA
247 Sports:
Natl Rank: No. 46
Position Rank: No. 4 OLB
State Rank: No. 8 in CA
Rivals:
Natl Rank: No. 83
Position Rank: No. 3 ILB
State Rank: No. 13 in CA
Darnell Wright
OT Huntington, WV (Huntington)
6’6″ 320
Stars: 5 by 247Sports / 5 by ESPN / 5 by Rivals
Josh Ward’s Analysis: Wright helps Tennessee’s offensive line class become one of the best in the nation. Like early enrollee Wanya Morris, Wright will have a chance to start right away for Tennessee. This is a major get for the Vols.
Highlights of Darnell Wright from hudl…
Need To Know
Starred at Huntington High School in Huntington, W. Va.
Played in the 2019 Under Armour All-America Game.
No. 7 on USA Today’s Chosen 25 high school player rankings for the class of 2019.
2019 First-Team American Family Insurance All-USA.
2018 MaxPreps Preseason All-America second team selection.
Three-time Class AAA All-State selection by the West Virginia Sports Writers Association.
2018 First-Team USA Today All-USA West Virginia Team.
WVSWA Class AAA All-State first-team selection in 2017 and 2018.
WVSWA Class AAA All-State second-team selection in 2016.
Helped lead Huntington High School to a 12-1 record and the semifinal round of the Class AAA state playoffs as a junior in 2017.
ESPN:
Natl Rank: No. 5
Position Rank: No. 3 OT
State Rank: No. 1 in WV
247 Sports:
Natl Rank: No. 25
Position Rank: No. 3 OT
State Rank: No. 1 in WV
Rivals:
Natl Rank: No. 16
Position Rank: No. 2 OT
State Rank: No. 1 in WV
Keith Urban has been a vocal supporter of the NHL’s Nashville Predators for years, but on Feb. 23, Keith will take his vocal talents to Philadelphia.
The reigning CMA Entertainer of the Year will perform during the first intermission of the annual NHL Stadium Series game between the Flyers and Pittsburgh Penguins at Lincoln Financial Field, home of the NFL’s Philadelphia Eagle.
The outdoor performance will be televised as part of the NHL Stadium Series broadcast, which begins at 8 p.m. ET on NBC in the U.S. and on SN1, SN360 and TVAS2 in Canada. A limited number of tickets to the NHL Stadium Series game are still available for purchase.
Justin Moore released an emotional video for his current single, “The Ones That Didn’t Make It Back Home.”
The video features vignettes that depict first-responder situations, a military firefight and a school emergency. Directed by Cody Villalobos, a former EMT, the video utilizes real-life fire fighters and former police officers as actors.
Co-penned by Justin, Jeremy Stover, Paul Digiovanni and Chase McGill, the new single is currently No. 45 on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart after 13 Weeks. “The Ones That Didn’t Make It Back Home” is the lead single from Justin’s upcoming fifth studio album, Late Nights & Longnecks, which will be released on April 26.
Watch the video for “The Ones That Didn’t Make It Back Home” below.