Vols Beat Gamecocks, Tie Program Record with 15th Straight Win

Vols Beat Gamecocks, Tie Program Record with 15th Straight Win

KNOXVILLE, TN – JANUARY 26, 2019 – Head Coach Rick Barnes of the Tennessee Volunteers during the SEC/Big 12 Challenge game between the University of West Virginia Mountaineers and the Tennessee Volunteers at Thompson-Boling Arena in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Andrew Ferguson/Tennessee Athletics

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Despite a push from the Gamecocks in the second half to make it a one-possession game, No. 1 Tennessee pulled away in the second half for a 92-70 victory Tuesday at South Carolina’s Colonial Life Arena.

The victory marked the 15th consecutive win for the Vols (19-1, 7-0 SEC), matching a program record that has stood for more than a century (Feb. 20, 1915, until Jan. 20, 1917).

Tennessee’s defense stepped up big in the final nine minutes of the game, holding the Gamecocks (10-10, 5-2 SEC) to just seven points and 1-of-10 shooting from the field down the stretch. During that span, UT was able to use a 19-6 run to secure the 22-point victory.

The offense was firing on all cylinders Tuesday, connecting on 56 percent (36-of-64) of its shots from the field. Tennessee’s 92 points were the most allowed by the Gamecocks in a game this season.

The duo of Admiral Schofield and Grant Williams posted a dominant performance, finishing with 24 and 23 points, respectively. Schofield added nine rebounds, four assists, two blocks and a steal, while Williams finished with nine rebounds and four steals. The pair helped UT hold a scoring advantage in the paint (42 to 22) and an edge on the boards (39 to 31).

Jordan Bone had an impressive game at the point, dropping 19 points and dishing out nine assists to fuel the offense. Lamonte Turner chipped in 13 points behind three 3-pointers, three assists and two steals.

Chris Silva led the way for South Carolina, finishing with a game-high 28 points and 10 rebounds.

Tennessee went to the paint early and often in the first half, scoring 20 of its 47 points there. The Vols had the hot hand shooting, knocking down 58 percent (19-of-33) of their shots over the opening 20 minutes. During one stretch, UT hit 13 out of 16 shots to help take a 47-38 lead into halftime over the Gamecocks.

The storyline in the first period was the battle between Williams and Silva in the post. Williams was 7-of-11 from the field for 17 points, while Silva posted 22 points on 6-of-10 shooting and six rebounds.

The two teams swapped buckets early in the second half, with the Vols keeping a small lead. However, South Carolina started to gain some momentum after a big three by Tre Campbell. On the next trip down the floor, Campbell pulled another quick three in transition to draw a foul and knocked down all three free throws to cut Tennessee’s lead to 60-58.

The Big Orange would answer, though, using an 11-3 run behind a trio of 3-pointers to extend its lead back to double digits at the 10:14 mark.

Up next, Tennessee stays on the road for a matchup against Texas A&M on Saturday night. That game will tip at 8 p.m. ET and will be televised on ESPN.

BOX SCORE  |  HIGHLIGHTS  |  BONE POSTGAME ON SEC NETWORK

-UT Athletics

Softball Ranked No. 8 in Preseason National Polls

Softball Ranked No. 8 in Preseason National Polls

Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – The two major national softball polls were released this week and for the 16th straight year, Tennessee is ranked in both polls to begin the season.

The Lady Vols are tabbed No. 8 in both the USA Today/NFCA Division I Preseason Coaches’ Poll and the //ESPN.com/USA Softball Collegiate Top 25 Poll as announced by the organizations on Tuesday.

Defending national champion Florida State begins the year as the No. 1 pick in the USA Today/NFCA Poll while UCLA begins 2019 as the No. 1 team in the preseason //ESPN.com/USA Softball Collegiate Top 25 Poll.

The SEC had the most teams represented in both polls once again as 11 schools were included in the NFCA Poll (eight in the top 15). The USA Softball Poll features 10 SEC teams, including eight in the top 15 and five in the top 10. Other SEC teams in the polls include Florida, Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina, LSU, Kentucky, Arkansas, Auburn, Texas A&M and Mississippi State. Ole Miss and Missouri also received votes in the polls.

The USA Today/NFCA Division I Top 25 Poll is voted on by 32 NCAA Division I head coaches, one representing each conference.

The //ESPN.com/USA Softball Collegiate Top 25 Poll is voted on by coaching representatives of 10 Division I Conferences in the 10 USA Softball Regions as well as members of the national and local media who consistently cover Division I Softball across the country.

The Lady Vols are coming off a 48-14 season which saw them reach their 15th consecutive NCAA Regional and their 10th overall Super Regional. Tennessee returns three players who earned SEC postseason honors a year ago and also brings back six of its top 10 hitters from 2018.

Last year, the Lady Vols finished the season ranked No. 10 in both the USA Today/NFCA Coaches’ Poll and the //ESPN.com/USA Softball Collegiate Top 25. 2018 marked the 15th consecutive year that the program earned a ranking in the final national polls.

The Big Orange begins its season at the Kickin’ Chicken Classic in Myrtle Beach, S.C., on Feb. 8 and then travels to Clearwater, Fla., for the St. Pete/Clearwater Elite Invitational on Feb. 15. Of the 16 participating teams in the invitational, 13 finished in the Top 25 of the NCAA Women’s Softball RPI last season. UT kicks off its home slate with the Tennessee Classic on Feb. 22 against Kansas.

 

UT Athletics

Zaay Green Named SEC Freshman Of The Week

Zaay Green Named SEC Freshman Of The Week

Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — University of Tennessee guard Zaay Green has been named the SEC Women’s Basketball Freshman of the Week, the league office announced on Tuesday.

The honor was Green’s second this season. She also earned acclaim on Dec. 4 after her performance vs. Oklahoma State in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge.

Green averaged 14.5 points, 5.0 rebounds and 5.0 assists last week to help the Lady Vols split a pair of games with No. 1/1 Notre Dame and LSU. She shot 41 percent from the field and dished out 10 assists with only one turnover in 71 minutes of action during that two-game span.

The 6-foot product of Duncanville, Texas, scored in double figures in both contests, including a career-high 19 points against Notre Dame on Thursday. She added eight rebounds and five assists in that match-up vs. the Fighting Irish while committing zero turnovers. Versus N.D., Green knocked down 5-of-8 shots in the second quarter to tally 11 points and stake the Lady Vols to a 34-31 lead at the half.

Green closed the week with 10 points, five assists, two rebounds, a block and a steal vs. LSU, as the Lady Vols snapped a six-game losing skid with a 74-65 home victory over the Lady Tigers.

The rookie, who has started the past 15 games, has scored in double figures 11 times this season, including the past four in a row. She is averaging 10.6 ppg., 4.3 rpg. and 2.6 apg. for the season.

 

UT Athletics

FBI Ends Investigation & Finds No Motive in Las Vegas Mass Shooting at Route 91 Harvest Festival

FBI Ends Investigation & Finds No Motive in Las Vegas Mass Shooting at Route 91 Harvest Festival

The FBI has concluded its investigation into the mass shooting at the Route 91 Harvest Festival in Las Vegas on Oct. 1, 2017, that left 58 people dead and more than 500 injured when a lone gunman opened fire from the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Hotel during Jason Aldean’s headlining set.

After a nearly 12-month investigation, the Las Vegas Review Panel (LVRP) highlighted 10 Key Findings regarding potential motivating factors as well as the gunman’s pre-attack behaviors.

Among the review panel’s findings:

  • The LVRP found no evidence that [the shooter’s] attack was motivated by any ideological or political beliefs. He was not seeking to further any religious, social, or political agenda through his actions. He conspired with no one and he acted alone.
  • There was no single or clear motivating factor behind [the shooter’s] attack.
  • Investigators found no manifesto, video, suicide note, or other communication (hidden, encrypted, coded, or otherwise) relating to the planned attack or explaining his reason for attacking.
  • The LVRP concludes that [the shooter’s] intention to die by suicide was compounded by his desire to attain a certain degree of infamy via a mass casualty attack.
  • [The shooter] displayed minimal empathy throughout his life and primarily viewed others through a transactional lens of costs and benefits.

You can read the entire report here.

photo by JPA, AFF-USA.com

Texas Traditionalist Cody Johnson Has a New No. 1 Album . . . and Nothing But “Love & Respect for Florida Georgia Line & Sam Hunt”

Texas Traditionalist Cody Johnson Has a New No. 1 Album . . . and Nothing But “Love & Respect for Florida Georgia Line & Sam Hunt”

After releasing six indie albums, Cody Johnson dropped his major-label debut, Ain’t Nothing To It, on Jan. 18.

The Sebastopol, Texas, native is now busting out of the chute like one of the bucking bulls he used to ride. Cody’s new 15-song offering debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Top Country Albums chart, moving 35,000 equivalent album units, according to Nielsen Music. That total was good enough for No. 9 on the all-genre Billboard 200 chart.

With musical influences ranging from Elvis to Billy Joe Shaver, Cody says he worked with longtime producer—and friend—Trent Willmon to create a traditional-sounding country album, but he’s got nothing but “love and respect” for the guys on the other end of the country music spectrum.

“You know why I love Florida Georgia Line and Sam Hunt, that type of genre? ’Cause I can’t do it. I have a lot of respect for it,” says Cody to Kix Brooks of American Country Countdown. “There’s no way I could do that. That being said, that gives way to a guy like me for the opportunity to come into this town, do exactly what I’ve been doing all along, and to hopefully bridge that gap . . . for the people who didn’t get that opportunity . . . for the people that always said, ‘Well, if you’re gonna be here, you have to change.’ I know that what we’re doing is a little different, and I think that’s why I’m so excited is because I like the challenge. The competitor, the rodeo guy in me goes, ‘Come on! Bring it on! Let’s.’ I love the mountain to climb.”

Cody’s new single, “On My Way to You,” is currently No. 22 on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart after 25 weeks.

photo by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com

Jimmy’s blog: Punter honored at praise from Barnes

Jimmy’s blog: Punter honored at praise from Barnes

By Jimmy Hyams      

Kevin Punter was a junior college all-American who averaged 20.3 points per game as a sophomore.

He was a prolific scorer in high school, averaging over 24 points his final two seasons.

So when he was asked to change his shot his senior year of Division I basketball by a coach he’d known for a matter of weeks, Punter wasn’t sure what to think.

But then logic took over.

That coach was Rick Barnes, who had won almost 600 games, taken Texas to a Final Four, produced several lottery picks and tutored Kevin Durant.

That was enough to sway Punter.

“His track record,’’ Punter said of the reason he bought in to Barnes changing his shot. “I used to watch Texas play with Kevin Durant. The lottery and NBA guys he had.

“For me, it wasn’t hard to buy in. When a guy of his stature comes into your program, you know how much he has had success in the past.

“I felt like me and him were a great combination.  A guy just full of knowledge and wisdom, he’s been coaching for so long. And me, I just love to be in the gym, I love to work on my craft.’’

But that work didn’t come without frustration.

Punter had an unorthodox jump shot with the ball placed behind his head on jump shots. Many went in, as evidenced by his high school and junior college numbers and his 10.3 points per game average as a Tennessee junior.

In one of their first meetings, Barnes asked Punter if he wanted to be a pro.

“Of course,’’ Punter said. “Then the first thing he did was change my shot.

“Nobody ever told me that before. Imagine you’re an All-American junior college player and you get to Division I and a new coach says, I’m not going to be a pro if I don’t change my shot.

“All these different ideas were going through my mind.’’

But he kept coming back to this: Barnes has a proven track record.

“I took it as a challenge,’’ Punter said while in Italy during an interview on WNML Radio. “I fell in love with how (the new jump shot) looked. It looked so pretty and if felt so effortless.’’

But it wasn’t always successful.

“I went days without making a jump shots,’’ said the native of the Bronx, N.Y. “It was quite difficult.’’

Yet it was smooth, effortless. And, finally, after taking 2,000 shots a day, it started falling – and falling with great consistency.

Suddenly a guy who barely averaged double figures as a junior was scoring at a 22.2-point clip in the SEC. It was the second largest jump from one season to the next in Tennessee men’s basketball history, behind only Terry Crosby.

When Tennessee ascended to the No. 1 spot in the both the AP and coaches’ polls last week, Barnes was asked about the journey from having a rocky start on Rocky Top – the Vols were 31-35 after Barnes’ first two seasons with not so much as an NIT bid – to the top of the college hoops world.

Barnes complimented Punter.

“I’ll always be thankful for and blessed to have coached Kevin Punter,’’ Barnes said. “He did buy in and he was the very first one to buy in.’’

When Barnes suggested Punter needed to change his shot, Barnes recalls Punter saying: “I’ll do whatever I need to do.’’

Barnes: “He literally would go 2,000 shots a day, starting from ground zero. He got frustrated at times. I said, `Hey I told him it wouldn’t be easy.’’’

When Barnes comments were relayed to Punter, who is in Italy playing pro ball, Punter was flattered.

“It’s just an honor,’’ Punter said. “He’s a Hall of Fame coach. For him to have those words to say about me is an honor. I put a lot of work in, so for coach to really take a note of that and understand how hard I worked, that’s nice.’’

Punter said he’s not only more accurate with his Barnes-instructed shot, but he’s got better range. At Tennessee, Punter not only added over 11 points per game, he went from shooting 41.9 percent from the field to 46 percent and from 68.5 percent at the free throw line to 81.7 percent.

Punter also said he thinks his new shot has added 10 points per game to his average. Considering he is averaging 15.4 points in Italy, that’s quite a statement.

Punter said he’s thrilled that the Vols are ranked No. 1.

“Amazing, amazing, amazing,’’ he said. “My senior year, those guys were freshmen. The growth they’ve had makes me happy, makes me proud. Those guys used to get chewed out at practice as freshman. I actually witnessed that.

“Now those guys are leaders of the team and playing well. The work really works. I’m glad those guys bought in.’’

Tennessee has never been to a Final Four in men’s basketball. But Punter has bigger goals for some of his former teammates.

Asked who will win the national championship this season, Punter didn’t hesitate.

“Tennessee Vols, baby,’’ he said. “Tennessee Vols. No doubt about it. No doubt about it.’’

 

Biggest single-season scoring jumps in UT men’s basketball history

NAME, YEARS                                         AVERAGES   INCREASE

Terry Crosby (1976-77 to 1977-78)                3.9 to 19.0       (15.1)

Kevin Punter (2014-15 to 2015-16)                10.3 to 22.2     (11.9)

Lang Wiseman (1989-90 to 1990-91)             2.8 to 13.2       (10.4)

Dale Ellis (1979-80 to 1980-81)                     7.1 to 17.7       (10.6)

Reggie Johnson (1976-77 to 1977-78)            11.0 to 21.2     (10.2)


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

Joe Diffie Celebrates 25th Anniversary as Grand Ole Opry Member

Joe Diffie Celebrates 25th Anniversary as Grand Ole Opry Member

Joe Diffie celebrated his 25th anniversary as a member of the Grand Ole Opry with a performance—and cake—during the Opry at the Ryman showcase on Jan. 25. The showcase also included performances by Vince Gill, Michael Ray, Ricky Skaggs and more.

Joe, who was inducted into the Opry on Nov. 27, 1993, was a mainstay of ’90s country with his blue-collar hits, including “Home,” “John Deere Green,” Pickup Man,” “Prop Me Up Beside the Jukebox (If I Die)” and more.

“25 years at the @opry!!” said Joe via Instagram. “What a great night!!!! Had a bunch of family to celebrate with and cake!!!!”

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Rick Barnes Press Conference Transcript (1.28.19)

Credit: UT Athletics

On if Lamonte Turner will be starting on a regular basis:
“I really haven’t given it a lot of thought to be honest with you. I would think now, yes, but I haven’t given it a lot of thought. A lot of it is based on matchups with other teams. Now, I’ll probably stay with it, but I really haven’t given a lot of thought to it. I thought he handled it well. I think Yves Pons has handled it well. I think Jordan Bowden’s handled it well. Like I said, I consider us having seven starters, and whatever we need to do from game to game, we’ll do that.”

On the environment when on the road as the No. 1 ranked team:
“We know it’s different. We know it is what it is. Teams have a chance to continue to build their resume, but I can tell you going to south Carolina tomorrow wouldn’t matter if we were ranked or unranked. Frank Martin’s teams are going to get after it and play hard. We were there a year ago, and I thought the atmosphere was tremendous. Every year we’ve been there it’s been a great atmosphere. Obviously, with the ranking that we have, it’ll add something to it, certainly. His guys are going to play hard, and they’re going to battle. I respect him so much, it wouldn’t matter if there is a ranking or not, his teams come to play.”

 On the amount of turnovers on Saturday:
“Being sloppy with the ball and being too careless. Those turnovers are the plays that make your defensive numbers go up, because you’re basically just giving teams points. If teams are going to score on you, you want them to have to earn it, but when you take the ball out and throw it away or go in sloppy with the ball, those kind of plays are going to lead to baskets for the other team. During our first timeout, I talked to them. I thought we were way too casual on the offensive end, and we weren’t protecting the ball the way we needed to. We had to fix it. South Carolina, like any basketball team, they’re going to thrive on your turnovers. They do a great job of their defense creating offense, so taking care of the ball is a must.”

On Frank Martin’s coaching and preseason rankings:
“I’ve known Frank Martin for a long time, and his teams are as tough, hard-nosed as anybody. I don’t care what his record is. There’s certain things that he’s not going to tolerate, and if you don’t play hard and do your job, he’s going to set you down. His guys go on the floor understanding how valuable those minutes are. Coaches really don’t care about preseason rankings. We all know that we do what we do, and we’ve all been around long enough to know that we look at our problems, but we also know that other teams have problems too. They’ve got things that they’re dealing with. The preseason rankings don’t really mean anything. I just know he’s got some guys on his team that were on that final four team, and it was just a matter of time before you felt like they would get things going. There’s other games, if you go back and look at, that they easily could’ve won, too. If you ask me if I’m surprised, I’m not surprised. If you ask me if they’re like our team a year ago, I don’t think there’s a any team in the country that plays any harder, works harder at trying to rebound the ball, play good defense, and will fight you for everything that you have. I think that when you do that consistently, you’re going to find a way to win games, and they do that. His teams have always done that.”

On how much of a problem Chris Silva is for the team going into tomorrow:
“He’s a problem for everybody. He posts up really hard, and he’s going to work really hard defensively. They work really hard at denying every pass. They want to make plays off the bounce, and they do a good job of helping, recovering and working early in the post. He posts up as hard and tries to get as deep as post ups as anybody that we’ll play against. We run very similar breaks, and it’s not going to be a surprise. He plays with a lot of tenacity, a lot of effort, a lot of energy, and he’s tough. It’s going to be tough to guard him. Both teams try to do a lot of the same things, and we’ll get down to how things go. Officials will be a big part of it, and I think we both know that.”

On how important Derrick Walker is behind Kyle:
“Probably the most important thing, because in this game, it’s going to be important. I thought Kyle really played hard on Saturday. He just didn’t get the best whistle, but he played hard and worked hard. We need John Fulkerson and Derrick to come in and really help. That may be as important as anything we do with our  team right now. Yves is going to continue to do what he does, and I think Jalen Johnson will be ready to play. But we need Fulky and Derrick a lot. Kyle needs them, Grant needs them, we all need them. What we need them to do is defend, rebound, set screens, and bring the energy that we need to come off the bench.”

On Admiral’s performance against West Virginia: 
“We all know that you are going to go through stretches where you don’t shoot the ball well, and the more pressure that you put on yourself trying to shoot it well. It just snowballs on you, and all we have asked him to do is get lost in the game defensively, let the offense work for itself and take shots when he’s open. He’s going to make shots; there’s no doubt that he is going to make shots. I think he has had two double-double games, where he hasn’t shot the ball well, but he has impacted the game in other ways. I think he can take a lot of pressure off himself by doing that, and when he starts making his shots and continue to rebound like he is capable of. There’s no question he is at his best when he is rebounding the ball on both ends. There is no question about that, but again, he works so hard at it. He wants to do well, he doesn’t want let anybody down, and he went through some games where he was letting the fact he wasn’t making shots affect him.”

On his team’s performance on the road so far this season:
“I’m good with the formula we have so far. It works. I don’t think I’ve ever had a team that has led from start to finish. It’s part of basketball, and it speaks to our league that this is a very competitive league. On any given night, anybody can win, and we know that. I think you go back to having a ranking, you expect to bring out the best in people. I think you are probably surprised when that doesn’t happen. It’s a 40-minute game, we have to stay locked in and just worry about what we need to do to execute and stay together and continue to understand as a group that we have one goal. That’s obviously to win the game but also to play the best basketball we can play.”

On his team’s rebounding the last two games: 
I think when you go back to these last two games, West Virginia is an extremely difficult team to outrebound. They are great at that. We had our hands on a couple balls that went out of bounds that should have been rebounds, so we probably would have been closer to being even. We are getting ready to play another team that’s puts a premium on rebounding. Everybody does, and we should be a team that wants to do that. We are too inconsistent getting to the offensive boards, defensively. Our guards stand around and watch too much. There’s a lot of balls that are going to be batted around, tipped around that your guards need to come and clean up and help you with. We still had some possessions where guys just stood and watched, expecting Kyle, Grant or somebody else to come up with it. Grant has to get back to rebounding. If you go back and look, he has had a couple games where he hasn’t had five rebounds combined, and that’s an issue. That’s something that he is going to have to look at himself and know that’s him doing his job, and I would say the same thing about him that I said about Admiral. When you are doing those things, normally the offensive side of the ball takes care of itself, so we need to be more focused and have more consistency on that as a group. The one thing about starting Lamonte is that we lose what Yves brings early in the game. Yves does a great job of doing that, but what we need there now would be Admiral, Grant and Kyle doing a great job there. When Bowden comes in the game, he is a guy we expect to attack the boards like Yves would. We expect Lamonte and Bone to rebound the elbows. We expect them to help us, and we need them to do that.”

On Kyle fouling out early: 
It was tough, and again, West Virginia ran some of those inside screens that are tough. In the post, when a guy starts moving, you have to get your hands off. On one of the fouls, I though he got fouled first and then tried to fight back around. That happens sometimes where the first one is missed then the second guy gets caught. I thought he actually had two of those where he was fighting for post up then got around then pushed back, and when he did it, he pulled an arm down. Another one across the lane where he definitely was in great position, and he put two hands on the guy coming across the top of the screens, which you can’t do that. Kyle’s going to keep battling, but he did he had a tough whistle Saturday.”

On South Carolina and the difference between conference and non-conference games:
“I think they do a really good job. They turn you over, get down and shoot it quick. They turn you over, and like any good team, they are capitalizing there. I think they are doing that well. It goes back to teams. We start out in different spots, and you think about it. We started out with a group that was pretty much intact. Frank Martin had some things to do to get them going, but he has done it. That is what you respect about an experienced coach being around, because they realize that it is a long season. They realize that the second part, and we are all down with non-league now and in conference play. We will have another conference tournament and postseason. I just think that it is getting everybody together, and it takes that sometimes when you are adding pieces to it. You rebuild every year whether people want to hear that number. No team is ever the same. This team we have is not the same team we had a year ago. We all had to go through some of those growing pains at times, but they certainly pick the right time to start playing well. They had a tough one this weekend playing against a good team in a very emotional arena. I think he has done a great job with his guys and getting them to understand to know what is needed to win.”

On having a number of teams being three point happy and if they are going to start playing the percentage and limit them:
“We are still trying to play our principles We are still going to try and guard the 3-point line, but we cannot really keep people from shooting the ball all the time. We can turn them over some. They are going to get shots up, and sometimes you sit there and look at the percentages and guys that do not normally make them, make them. As long as we are trying to play good sound defense, and contest shots. What we do not want to do is give the wide open shots, and we gave two that I can think of right here on Saturday where we gave up. We were in a four-man rotation and one guy did not rotate and they get wide open shots. It goes back to our defense. We still know we got to improve there with everyone being engaged the entire time. We have been putting people deep into the shot clock where the drive starts and we do not stand in front of the ball, or we get split on ball screens, forced into a rotation when the clock’s come down. Don’t particularly shoot the ball well without a conscious. Anybody that plays at this level is capable of making a shot, and we are always going to try and defend the line. Each game, our game plan is going to change a little bit by we are always going to try and take away what the other team does best which is hard to do.”

On the opponent shooting over 50 percent in the second half:
“Some of it is those turnovers. You get turnovers, and they dunk the ball. When you go back, we were shooting over 50 percent because we were getting out and getting those layups. You give up layups off turnovers and miss rotations, they are going to shoot a high percentage. We do not even get a chance to give our defense set, and that has something to do with it too when you get sloppy with the ball. Then game comes out, and when you are up big at halftime, you build a lead and teams start putting their heads down. You know you do not want to foul. You do not play defense the way you should. Teams that get to the rim because you are not on edge the way you should be, but there is a lot that goes into it at different times in the game. I would say one of the biggest reasons looking at it. I know we gave West Virginia 12 points, give them credit because they took it, we gave it two them and they scored. That is six baskets. You take those six away and it would bring that percentage down, but you cannot take them away because we made the mistake. They capitalized on it.

On his Super Bowl prediction:
“Who is in in it? Patriots and the Rams. Who is favored? I do not know anything about the Rams. I know it is hard to go against that New England team.”

 

UT Athletics

Mason Ramsey Announces New Spring Tour Dates

Mason Ramsey Announces New Spring Tour Dates

After a big year in 2018 in which he made his Grand Ole Opry debut and helped open the CMA Awards, Mason Ramsey will try to continue his meteoric rise with a new set of tour dates this spring.

Mason’s How’s Your Girl & How’s Your Family Tour will kick off on March 22 in Tuscaloosa, Ala., and make additional stops in Austin, Nashville, Milwaukee and more. Mason’s 2019 tour announcement arrives after wrapping his special guest appearance at Florida Georgia Line’s Las Vegas residency. He also recently concluded his first nationwide tour as the opener on Chris Lane’s Laps Around the Sun Tour.

Pre-sale tickets are available now, while general ticket sales begin Feb. 1 at 10 a.m. local time.

How’s Your Girl & How’s Your Family Tour

March 22 | Tuscaloosa, AL | Druid City Music Hall
March 23 | Starkville, MS | Rick’s Café
March 27 | Austin, TX | Scoot Inn
March 28 | Waco, TX | Baylor University (Waco Hall)
March 29 | Nacogdoches, TX | Banita Creek Hall
March 30 | Baton Rouge, LA | Texas Club
April  12 | Iowa City, IA | Blue Moose Tap House
April  13 | Lincoln, NE | The Bourbon Theatre
April  24 | Nashville, TN | Exit/In
April  25 | Oxford, OH | Brick Street Bar
April  26 | Milwaukee, WI | The Rave II

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

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