TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Zaay Green recorded her first career double-double and No. 20/17 Tennessee out-rebounded Alabama, 49-44, but it wasn’t enough to overcome a UA team that shot a blistering 50 percent from the floor en route to an 86-65 Tide victory in Tuscaloosa.
Sophomore Evina Westbrook was Tennessee’s (12-5, 1-4 SEC) high scorer with 19 points and five assists. Zaay Green finished the day with 14 points and 11 rebounds, while fellow freshman Rae Burrell managed 12 points and seven rebounds.
Alabama (10-8, 2-3 SEC) was led by junior Cierra Johnson, who had 17 points and seven rebounds. Ariyah Copeland finished with 16 points and nine rebounds, while Shaquera Wade had 15 points.
The Lady Vols led by one on two occasions and out-rebounded Alabama 12 to nine in the opening quarter, but the Crimson Tide rode three-of-six shooting from behind the arc and a 52.9 field goal percentage to a 22-18 lead by the end of the first stanza. Nine players saw action for Tennessee in the first period with six of them contributing at least two points.
With 6:33 remaining in the half the Crimson Tide pulled ahead by six points, but Zaay Green and Kasiyahna Kushkituah combined for five straight points to put Tennessee within one by the media timeout. The Lady Vols took their first lead of the quarter off a Zaay Green 3-pointer with 2:23 remaining in the half. Alabama rallied with five quick points, but Evina Westbrook knocked down a 15-foot jumper to send UT into the locker room down two at 36-34.
The teams traded baskets in the opening minute and a half of the second half before a Copeland layup launched a 7-0 run by the Crimson Tide, giving the home team a 45-36 lead at the 7:36 mark. Zaay Green broke the drought for UT, driving and converting on a 10-foot jumper in the lane to set off a 10-2 run to pull UT within one with 4:21 to play in the third. UA rallied back, building back a five-point lead to go into the final stanza up 60-55.
Alabama had the hot hand in the fourth quarter, while Tennessee’s offense fell cold, and the Crimson Tide went nine of 17 to outscore the Lady Vols 26-10 in the fourth quarter and close out the victory.
Up Next: The Lady Vols will return home to host Arkansas on Monday in the annual We Back Pat game. The game is scheduled to tip at 7 p.m. and will be televised by the SEC Network.
Freshmen Finding Their Groove: Rae Burrell and Zaay Green each set new SEC and career highs against Alabama. Green set a new SEC high of 14 points and a new career high of 12 rebounds, while Rae Burrell set a new SEC highs of 12 points and seven rebounds.
Bench Contributing: After seeing single-digit scoring totals from the bench in its first two SEC games, Tennessee’s bench combined for 14 in the following two games before recording 24 against Alabama. It was the most points UT’s reserves have produced since scoring 38 points against Murray State.
Big On The Boards: Tennessee out-rebounded Alabama 49-44 and is averaging 47.4 rpg in SEC play while holding opponents to an average of 36.6 rpg. UT has now beaten 15 of 17 opponents on the glass this season.
Maren Morris released an uplifting new single, “Girl,” on Jan. 17. The new tune is the lead single from Maren’s upcoming album, which will follow her 2016 award-winning major-label debut album, Hero.
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.”
“The story behind my single, ‘Girl,’ started as something I was saying to another woman, like, ‘We don’t need to be competitive with each other,’” says Maren. “And then I kind of realized that I was talking to myself, like, ‘I don’t need to be so competitive with myself, I am enough.’ And it just became a really powerful concept after that point. I’m so excited it’s out.”
The Country Music Association announced 10 new recipients of the CMA Triple Play Award, an honor presented to songwriters who pen three No. 1 songs within a 12-month period. This year’s honorees include Luke Combs, Jesse Frasure, Nicolle Galyon, Ashley Gorley, Tyler Hubbard, Josh Kear, Shane McAnally, Chase McGill, Josh Osborne and Thomas Rhett.
The 10 songwriters will be honored at an industry-only luncheon on Feb. 19, followed by a concert at Marathon Music Works that features Nicolle Galyon, Luke Combs, Ashley Gorley, Josh Kear, Chase McGill and Josh Osborne. Tickets for the concert are on sale now, with $3 from each ticket benefiting the CMA Foundation.
CMA’s Triple Play Award is based on the Country Aircheck, Billboard Country Airplay and Billboard Hot Country Songs charts.
CMA Triple Play Awards recipients:
Luke Combs
“Hurricane”
“When It Rains It Pours”
“One Number Away”
Jesse Frasure
“Unforgettable,” recorded by Thomas Rhett
“Marry Me,” recorded by Thomas Rhett
“Life Changes,” recorded by Thomas Rhett
Nicolle Galyon
“All the Pretty Girls,” recorded by Kenny Chesney
“Tequila,” recorded by Dan + Shay
“Coming Home,” recorded by Keith Urban ft. Julia Michaels
Ashley Gorley
“Fix A Drink,” recorded by Chris Janson
“Marry Me,” recorded by Thomas Rhett
“Life Changes,” recorded by Thomas Rhett
Tyler Hubbard
“Meant to Be,” recorded by Bebe Rexha ft. Florida Georgia Line
“You Make It Easy,” recorded by Jason Aldean
“Simple,” recorded by Florida Georgia Line
Josh Kear
“God, Your Mama, And Me,” recorded by Florida Georgia Line ft. Backstreet Boys
“Most People Are Good,” recorded by Luke Bryan
“Woman, Amen,” recorded by Dierks Bentley
Shane McAnally
“Written in the Sand,” recorded by Old Dominion
“Marry Me,” written by Thomas Rhett
“Get Along,” recorded by Kenny Chesney
Chase McGill
“Sunrise, Sunburn, Sunset,” recorded by Luke Bryan
“Break Up in the End,” recorded by Cole Swindell
“Lose It,” recorded by Kane Brown
Josh Osborne
“Drinkin’ Problem,” recorded by Midland
“All the Pretty Girls,” recorded by Kenny Chesney
“Get Along,” recorded by Kenny Chesney
Thomas Rhett
“Unforgettable”
“Marry Me”
“Life Changes”
The Recording Academy announced its first round of performers for the 61st Grammy Awards on Feb. 10: Kacey Musgraves, Dan + Shay, Camila Cabello, Cardi B, Post Malone, Shawn Mendes and Janelle Monáe.
Two-time Grammy winner Kacey Musgraves is nominated for four awards this year, including Album of the Year (Golden Hour), Best Country Solo Performance (“Butterflies”), Best Country Song (“Space Cowboy”) and Best Country Album (Golden Hour).
Dan Smyers and Shay Mooney of Dan + Shay are nominated for Best Country Duo/Group Performance (“Tequila”).
Hosted by Alicia Keys, the 61st Grammy Awards will be broadcast live from the Staples Center in Los Angeles on Feb. 10 at 8 p.m. ET on CBS
With eight rescue dogs of her own, it’s no secret Miranda Lambert has a soft spot in her heart for fury, four-legged friends.
That’s why in 2009, Miranda and her mom, Bev, started the MuttNation Foundation, an organization with the mission of ending animal suffering and homelessness on every front. Recently, MuttNation partnered with pet insurance company PetFirst to offer one month of coverage for every pet adopted through the foundation. In addition, anyone who donates to MuttNation will have access to PetFirst insurance at a discounted rate.
“We’re excited to be able to offer this additional benefit,” says Miranda. “MuttNation’s efforts to find forever homes for rescue animals is a great match with PetFirst helping to remove the financial worry from pet ownership. Together, we can make adopting rescue pets an even better experience.”
Over the last 10 years, the MuttNation Foundation has successfully raised millions of dollars to aid organizations, government institutions and entities that build animal shelters for better care and increased pet adoption.
:Maren Morris announced she will hit the road in March for her headlining Girl The World Tour, which takes its name from Maren’s new single, “Girl.”
Kicking off on March 9 in Chicago, the 40-plus-date tour will make additional stops in Nashville, Denver, L.A., Atlanta and more. The tour also makes multiple stops in Europe and Australia. Cassadee Pope and RaeLynn will serve as openers.
Tickets go on sale on Jan. 22 at 10 a.m. local time, with a pre-sale for Citi cardholders beginning on Jan. 18 at 10 a.m. local time.
Maren will release her new single, “Girl,” on Jan. 17 at 4 p.m. CT.
March 9 | Chicago, Ill. | Riviera Theatre+ March 13 | Nashville, Tenn. | Ryman Auditorium+ March 15 | Kansas City, Mo. | Arvest Bank Theatre at the Midland+ March 16 | Oklahoma City, Okla. | the Criterion+ March 18 | Denver, Colo. | Fillmore Auditorium+ March 19 | Salt Lake City, Utah | the Union+ March 21 | Portland, Ore. | Crystal Ballroom+ March 23 | Seattle, Wash. | Showbox SoDo+ March 26 | San Francisco, Calif. | the Masonic+ March 28 | Anaheim, Calif. | House of Blues Anaheim+ March 30 | Los Angeles, Calif. | the Wiltern+ April 11 | Atlanta, Ga. | Coca-Cola Roxy* April 18 | Houston, Texas | Revention Music Center* April 19 | Dallas, Texas | Bomb Factory* April 20 | New Braunfels, Texas | Whitewater Amphitheatre* April 25 | Pittsburgh, Pa. | Stage AE* April 26 | Philadelphia, Pa. | the Fillmore* April 27 | Boston, Mass. | House of Blues Boston* May 2 | Washington, DC | Anthem* May 3 | Brooklyn, N.Y. | Brooklyn Bowl* May 4 | New York City | Terminal 5* May 9 | St. Louis, Mo. | the Pageant* May 10 | Indianapolis, Ind. | Egyptian Room at Old National Centre* May 11 | Detroit, Mich. | the Fillmore Detroit* May 17 | Berlin, Germany | Columbia Theatre* May 18 | Cologne, Germany | Kantine* May 19 | Zurich, Switzerland | Mascotte* May 21 | Hamburg, Germany | Gruenspan* May 22 | Amsterdam, the Netherlands | Paradiso* May 24 | Dublin, Ireland | the Academy* May 25 | Leeds, England, United Kingdom | O2 Academy Leeds* May 26 | Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom | O2 Academy Glasgow* May 27 | Manchester, England, United Kingdom | Albert Hall* May 29 | Bristol, England, United Kingdom | O2 Academy Bristol* May 30 | Birmingham, England, United Kingdom | O2 Institute* May 31 | London, England, United Kingdom | Royal Albert Hall* Aug. 16 | Auckland, New Zealand | the Logan Campbell Centre Aug. 17 | Christchurch, New Zealand | Town Hall Aug. 19 | Brisbane, Australia | Brisbane City Hall Aug. 21 | Melbourne, Australia | Forum Theatre Aug. 22 | Sydney, Australia | Enmore Theatre Aug. 23 | Canberra, Australia | UC Refectory
+ with Cassadee Pope as opener * with RaeLynn as opener
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee head coach Holly Warlick met with members of the media on Wednesday ahead of Thursday’s road match-up between the No. 20/17 Lady Vols (12-4, 1-3 SEC) and Alabama (9-8, 1-3 SEC). Tip-off is slated for 8:02 p.m. CT (9:02 ET) at Coleman Coliseum, with the game being carried by the SEC Network and the Lady Vol Radio Network.
The Lady Vols and Crimson Tide both come into the game hoping to get back on the winning track. UT has lost its last three contests to Missouri (66-64), Kentucky (73-71) and Georgia (66-62) by a combined total of eight points. The Crimson Tide enters Thursday night’s match-up having lost its last three contests and four of its past five.
This marks the 56th meeting between these programs, with Alabama holding a four-game winning streak over the Lady Vols and taking the past two games in Tuscaloosa. The Lady Vols, however, lead the series, 49-6.
On getting back on track:
“Our defense has to step up and be more consistent. We need to finish layups in traffic and really get focused a little bit more, things we will just continue to work on.”
On the confidence of the young team:
“I worry about them refocusing. We are going to make mistakes, but we have to learn to regroup and really concentrate on what is getting ready to happen. I think this group dwells on what just happened instead of putting it behind them and getting motivated on what we need to do moving forward.”
On talking to her team about confidence:
“We have (talked to them), but I mainly have talked about our ability to defend and really committing on the defensive end. I think our defense spurs a lot of action for us; it helps us get easy layups. It gives us energy, and when we get down and commit to the defensive end it feels like we are a better basketball team.”
On if the team will continue to primarily play zone:
“We are going to mix it up more, but our kids are confident with the zone. We have to get back to playing one-on-one, and this gives us a chance to get back as a group. We are going to continue to work on our one-on-one defense. It has to get better.”
On if the team is player-led:
“Our leaders are young. I still have to step up at times. Evina (Westbrook) and Rennia (Davis) step up at times, and Meme (Jackson) needs to be more consistent. That just comes with experience as they continue to play. They are going to develop more experience and gain more trust as they continue together.”
On who steps up during momentum swings:
“I would love the players to step up and say, ‘We are okay, let’s go,’ but I feel the need to do that as well. If a few could do that, it would be great. At times we do, but it is hard to refocus and get your whole group ready. We are capable of doing that; we just have to be more consistent.”
On how important tempo is to the team:
“When we got ahead (last game) and we fought back, our defense spurred a lot of that. Then we went down, got a shot blocked, missed some layups and it plays with our mind a little bit. Make defense a priority, and that in turn for us makes easy shots, which gets our momentum going.”
On what makes Alabama tough to play:
“They are big and athletic. I think this team is very respectful of Alabama since we have not beaten them in four times now. Alabama gets up to play us, as everyone does, and we have to match that intensity. We have to come out and treat Alabama like they are everyone else. Why wouldn’t we? They win games, they are a solid basketball team, and we have to come to play.”
On what impresses her about Alabama:
“They have a kid from junior college that can shoot the ball really well. They are an offensive threat, they penetrate, and they are really quick, athletic kids. So, our job is to keep them in front of us and that has been something that has been hard for us to do this year.”
On what caused the team’s shooting slump last game:
“I think it was the things we were not doing on the defensive end. That triggered the whole thing. At the end of the third quarter they threw it out to a kid, and she hit a 3-pointer. I just think we let up on the defensive end and then, in turn, it affected our offense. Then we stopped going to the boards, so it was a combination of a bunch of things. One thing seemed to trigger a lot of other things, and that is where we have to learn to refocus. We have to stay in the moment and understand what we have been doing so well that got us where we were.”
On finishing shots:
“Half of the shots we took were shots we should have made, and half were contested. We have to go up strong, and when we aren’t comfortable, we need to dribble the ball back out. We let their defense affect our shooting, and we can’t do that.”
On ball movement:
“I thought we got stagnant in our offense. I thought it went well throughout the game, but in the third quarter I think we just stopped attacking the basket.”
On playing through emotions:
“We will continue to practice on the things that we need to work on. We have to stay in the moment and stay focused. We are going to continue to talk about that. It is a 40-minute game, and there are going to be runs. We need to answer those runs, and there is going to be a time when we go down and we need to comeback. I keep saying defense and rebounding can solve a lot of problems.”
On the past couple of days:
“We had to take off Monday because we have to take a day off (per NCAA rules), but I thought we had a solid practice yesterday. We will see how they do today, and we are going to continue to go hard and not let up. I hope they retain what we teach them from practice to the court. At times we are really good practice players, and we haven’t carried it onto the court.”
On similarities from last year:
“In comparison to last year, we probably are going through the same thing. We are losing by two, two and four, so as long as we keep learning from this then we will be fine. I understand our confidence might be down, but the only way to get it back up is to get back out here on the basketball court and work hard on defense, work hard on your free throws. And they have done that. I think you will see a different team. They had a good practice yesterday, they are focused today, and when they do that they are a solid basketball team.”
The Vols score over 100 points in an SEC game for the first time in a decade, lead an SEC foe by 30 points, get 50 points from the bench, leave an opposing coach saying he’d vote you No. 1, and your coach and players aren’t happy.
That’s how far.
Tennessee toyed with Arkansas 106-87 Tuesday night before over 19,000 at Thompson-Boling arena. The outcome was never in doubt after UT ran off 14 straight points to take a 20-5 lead. It was 55-34 at halftime. It was 91-61 with eight minutes left.
But it was the second half – mostly those last eight minutes — that riled coach Rick Barnes and disappointed some of the players.
Arkansas outscored Tennessee 53-51 in the second half and shot 57.1 percent from the field against the No. 1 field-goal defense in the SEC.
“I told our guys at halftime, they (Hogs) won’t stop playing,’’ Barnes said. “They came out and won the second half.’’
Barnes wants his players to play like the game is tied. That’s hard to do when you’re up 30. With big leads can come sloppy play or questionable decisions. He was unhappy with a wild pass from Turner that led to a turnover.
“We tried to make home run plays when we don’t need to do that,’’ Barnes said.
As for the second half, Barnes said: “We didn’t have answer,’’ Barnes said, adding that UT did a “horrible job’’ of zone defense.
“I’d be disappointed if you guys aren’t disappointed in the way you played the whole game,’’ Barnes said he told his team post-game.
“We’re not going to be perfect, but I do expect us to try to make the right play every time. … We gave up so many rebounds we should have had.’’
But for all of Barnes’ complaining, there were plenty of bright spots. UT shot 50 percent in the first half to take the 21-point lead while holding Arkansas to 37.5 percent from the field.
Lamonte Turner (21 points) and Jordan Bowden (19) came off the bench to combine for 40 points. They were a perfect 8-of-8 from 3-point range until each missed in the final mop-up minutes. Grant Williams scored 18 points, thanks to hitting all 14 free-throw attempts. Admiral Schofield scored 17 second-half points – 14 in a row to start the second half – after a scoreless first half due to foul trouble.
Arkansas coach Mike Anderson summed the game up by saying it was “experience versus inexperience.’’
Anderson observed that UT shot 39 free throws (and made 35).
“I don’t think they need no help,’’ Anderson said, later adding that if he had a vote, he’d put Tennessee No. 1 in the nation.
Anderson described UT as a team that is hungry, humble and plays for each other. He also said UT’s bench is playing well, “that’s a big key.’’
Another note: Tennessee is only the third team from a Power conference to outscore its first four conference opponents by at least 100 points.
But, Barnes will tell you, there is still room for improvement.
Kelly Clarkson will hit the road for her 28-date Meaning of Life Tour on Jan. 24—and the original American Idol will be bringing along Kelsea Ballerini for 19 dates.
Kelsea will serve as Kelly’s support during stops in Oakland, Salt Lake City, Detroit, Chicago, Nashville and more.
For Kelsea, who headlined The Unapologetically Tour in 2018 and will headline The Miss Me More Tour in April, opening for Kelly gives her the chance to learn from an artist she truly admires.
“I literally love her so much, and I think the thing that I admire most about her is she’s so real,” says Kelsea. “She just does not care to say something wrong. She doesn’t care—like, she’s just so authentic, and to be that successful and that authentic, I think is something that I really want to learn how to navigate and stand up for and be confident with, so I’m stoked.”
Meaning of Life Tour
Jan. 24 – Oakland, CA – Oracle Arena**
Jan. 25 – Fresno, CA – Save Mart Center**
Jan. 26 – Los Angeles, CA – STAPLES Center*
Jan. 30 – Salt Lake City, UT – Vivint Smart Home Arena**
Feb. 1 – Glendale, AZ – Gila River Arena*
Feb. 7 – Kansas City, MO – Sprint Center**
Feb. 8 – Tulsa, OK – BOK Center**
Feb. 9 – Southaven, MS – Landers Center**
Feb. 14 – Grand Rapids, MI – Van Andel Arena*
Feb. 15 – Green Bay, WI – Resch Center**
Feb. 16 – St. Paul, MN – Xcel Energy Center*
Feb. 21 – Detroit, MI – Little Caesars Arena**
Feb. 22 – Chicago, IL – Allstate Arena**
Feb. 23 – St. Louis, MO – Chaifetz Arena**
Feb. 28 – Dallas, TX – American Airlines Center*
March 2 – Wichita, KS – INTRUST Bank Arena**
March 7 – Uniondale, NY – NYCB Live Nassau Coliseum*
March 8 – Boston, MA – TD Garden**
March 9 – Allentown, PA – PPL Center*
March 14 – Uncasville, CT – Mohegan Sun Arena*
March 15 – Uncasville, CT – Mohegan Sun Arena*
March 16 – Baltimore, MD – Royal Farms Arena**
March 21 – Cleveland, OH – Quicken Loans Arena**
March 22 – Indianapolis, IN – Bankers Life Fieldhouse**
March 23 – Cincinnati, OH – U.S. Bank Arena**
March 28 – Duluth, GA – Infinite Energy Arena **
March 29 – Nashville, TN – Bridgestone Arena**
March 30 – Greenville, SC – Bon Secours Wellness Arena**
**with Kelsea Ballerini and Brynn Cartelli
*with Brynn Cartelli
Kane Brown will follow in the successful footsteps of past winners Carrie Underwood, Sam Hunt and Maren Morris as the recipient of the Music Biz 2019 Breakthrough Artist Award.
Kane will be honored with the award alongside fellow 2019 Breakthrough Artist Bebe Rexha during the Music Biz 2019 Conference’s Awards & Hall of Fame Dinner on May 7.
Kane’s sophomore album, Experiment, debuted at No. 1 on the all-genre Billboard 200 chart and Billboard Top Country Albums chart in November 2018. Kane has also scored three consecutive No. 1 singles with “What Ifs,” “Heaven” and “Lose It.” Kane kicked of his 22-date headlining Live Forever Tour on Jan. 10.
Music Biz is a nonprofit that seeks to “advance, promote and invest in the future of the music business.”