Tennessee defensive lineman Paul Bain spoke to the media in a group setting Monday of Charlotte week.

Tennessee defensive lineman Paul Bain spoke to the media in a group setting Monday of Charlotte week.
Tennessee defensive back Baylen Buchanan spoke to the media in a group setting Monday of Charlotte week.
Tennessee defensive end Kyle Phillips spoke to the media in a group setting Monday of Charlotte week.
Tennessee wide receiver Marquez Callaway spoke to the media in a group setting Monday of Charlotte week.
Opening statement:
“The outcome of the last game was not what we were looking for. There’s a lot of bright spots that we can build off of, especially offensively. We ran the ball a little better last week. We converted some on third down, but if you look at us, one time we had way too many penalties that created negative plays and negative yards. We had one in the red area that knocked us out of third-and-10, and we had to run the ball and kick a field goal. There are a lot of positives that we can build off of. Defensively, we didn’t stop the run and we didn’t create many negative plays. We gave up some explosive plays, we have to eliminate that. It’s interesting when you watch the first 24 plays versus the last 30 plays in the game. The difference when it comes from the defensive standpoint, is the production, so we have to improve there. The kicking game – we have to do better on kickoff cover, play with a lot more speed on the kickoff cover. We have to get some guys that do a little better job of going hand-to-hand and not give up one-for-ones down there. Our kickers and snappers have done a really good job, they’ve done a really good job all year. There’s lots of lessons that we can learn, and we’ve got to take them and move forward. I thought that last week we practiced really well, and I think it showed in the game and how we performed, but we have to be able to finish and find ways to win games like that.
“We’ve got a really good opponent this week in Charlotte. Their coaching staff has a ton of experience. They’re very well coached, offensively and defensively. They eliminate the run in the run game. They get lots of turnovers. They give you multiple looks offensively and then run the football. I know they’ve had an injury at quarterback, but they’ve got a guy that has experience. The guys are well coached in the special teams. We’ve got to focus on us and try to improve, I think when we do that it shows up on Saturdays. Then we have to take it to the game and we have to do a good job of finishing in the game.”
On how he would assess his game management in the final quarter against South Carolina:
“I think based off of the way the game was going, I would have done everything the exact same way.”
On what he saw on film that stood out from last week’s game:
“They did a really good job offensively. They gave us a lot of looks that we hadn’t seen. They got in what we call silver personnel, two tight ends, two wide receivers and a running back. It opened up some of the formations and moved some of the guys around. It’s not a lot of what they’ve done, and they did a really good job. We didn’t fit some runs up the correct way. There was a couple plays in the game particularly – you have the two minute before the half, which is probably the most important part of the first half, was the last two minutes. We put a great drive together, then we get a penalty, an undisciplined penalty. We gave them good field position and they move the ball down and convert one third down, pop a run down to the goal line and we turn a guy lose when we’re fixing to sack a guy. In the start of the second half we put a really good drive together. We went down there and scored. Then they bounced back and did some things that they hadn’t done in the first half. They went down and scored and from there we gave up a big pass play that got the ball down to the one- or two-yard line. We’ve got to make them earn it.”
On if early signing day puts a strain on the staff:
“No, I don’t think so. If you’re not recruiting every day then you’re probably not going to be a good recruiter, so we’ve got to be good recruiters regardless of when the signing date is. I think our guys know that.”
On kicker Brent Cimaglia’s range:
“You always get the kicker’s range in the pregame and going the other way it was at the 35-yard line and going to our tunnel was the 30. We were at the 35, and we knew the wind had died down a little bit, but at that point in the game we were either going to go for it or we were going to kick a field goal. We felt like we were a little bit out of his range. The play before we dropped a pass. We would have had the ball on 4th and 1 on the 30- or 29-yard line, and we would be in his range. We understood that, and we called a play to gain to make sure we could possibly make the first down or possibly be in a fourth and short to have choices, and we didn’t execute there, especially on the next down.”
On the controversial non-fumble call at the goal line in the third quarter:
“Well it was definitely a fumble. I saw that, but unfortunately for the officials, they only have certain angles they can see, and from their angles they didn’t see that. You can look at it on our film, it’s obviously a fumble. It was disappointing for me because I could see it on the sideline, but they have a tough job to do, just like we have a tough job to do, and those guys are doing the best they can, and they have to take what they have to work with it. It is an unfortunate circumstance, but the officials had nothing to do with us getting nine penalties, they had nothing to do with us losing the battle at the line of scrimmage, so that’s really only one small part of the game.”
On the play of the offensive against South Carolina:
“I think we did a good job offensively giving them different looks. We have been pretty multiple the last three games if you go back to the Auburn game, Alabama and this game. We have presented a lot of problems for those defenses just being able to line up formation wise, giving them different looks, and different personnel. One thing we didn’t do was create a lot of explosive plays. We only had three explosive plays. Far and away this was our best output offensively. We weren’t just relying on explosive plays, but we need to create more, and we had opportunities to do that, but we had breakdowns in protection. A couple of times I didn’t feel like we threw the ball to the right side of the field, and then we had a drop. The plays were there to be made from the explosive standpoint, but I thought from an execution [standpoint] and kind of getting more plays right, that was far and away our best game offensively. We didn’t turn the ball over, [and] converted third downs. We just killed ourselves with penalties.”
On the offense being multiple and the play of Marcus Tatum at left tackle:
“You can be multiple a couple of different ways. You can have lots of playmakers and get them the ball in different scenarios, or you can give them different things formational wise, and maybe give them things that they don’t think they will get and create edges that way. I think our staff has done a good job with that. Our last three teams we’ve played we have been very familiar with. Defensively wise, we all kind of come from the same background, so that’s helped because you kind of know what you’re going to get a little bit just from our standpoint, we’re all coming from the same defensive tree. As far as Marcus Tatum, Marcus is a smart guy. He played hard for a guy that hasn’t been playing left tackle – and I don’t know if he has ever played left tackle – but I’m sure there are things he can improve on, and he will.”
On Saturday’s penalties and how he is addressing them:
“For one, some of them are unforced, lack of judgement. We can definitely fix that. I think a lot of the penalties on Saturday were going on the clap and not hearing the cadence, so when you’re playing on the road, we’ve got to do a better job of communicating, knowing when its coming. I think getting in and out of the huddle faster, so the offensive linemen are not having to make calls up there as the play clock’s going down, I think that would help. And that goes a bunch of different ways. That can go from hustling back to the ball. I think right now, based off of where we’re at offensively, we operate much better out of a huddle because we’ve had so many guys turn over, and some of that’s hustling back to the ball, some of that’s breaking out of the huddle, some of it’s as simple as we hold three yards from the ball, there’s four or five times in the game, somehow we huddle 8-10 yards from the ball. Some of it’s the quarterback standing right next to the huddle, so there’s not much movement for him getting the signal, some of it might be him getting the play in faster, but all of these things would help speed up the fact that we’re not making calls. The o-line is trying to ID the MIKE or the front, and I think would help in the communication of a simple thing is a clap, so we’ve got to do that.”
On what it is about the SEC that makes it difficult for true freshmen to come in and play right away:
“It’s probably no different in any conference. If you’re going to play young guys, they’ve got to be mature, they’ve got to know how to prepare. Lots of times the guys can start off really well early, but because of the grind of the season, the academic part, sometimes sustaining throughout the year [is difficult], but if you look at it all over the country, there’s teams that played lots of freshmen. Probably more times than not the teams that have experience, it probably shows on Saturday. There’s nothing more valuable that you can get than just going out there and playing and just getting used to it.”
On the fumble issue and why he didn’t challenge it:
“Well there’s no more coaches’ challenges anymore. Every play is reviewed by the officials, so they look at everything from targeting to the spots, turnovers, but they’re limited to which views they have from the cameras. For us, we film from a sideline view, an end zone view, and from our sideline view, you can’t see anything, but definitely from the end zone it’s obvious. Those guys are doing the best they can do, and they’ve got to go with what they’ve got. It would probably make a whole lot of sense in the SEC, with as much money as we’ve got, to get end zone cameras. That was a big play in the game, and it’s unfortunate that it happened that way, but we made plenty of errors in the game, and you’ve got to give South Carolina credit for creating a lot of those issues, and we’ve got to get where we don’t make those errors.”
On the challenges that Charlotte presents this week:
“They’re very well coached. If you look at their coaching staff, there’s tons of experience on the staff, on offense and defense. Offensively, they give you multiple looks, they’re committed to running the football. They went for it nine or 10 times already this year on fourth down. Defensively, they stop the run, they create negative plays, they get turnovers, and when you watch them on special teams they play with speed. They’ve got good players and they’re very well coached. For us, every week we’ve tried to focus on us, because we feel like if we can just fix us, that’s what we can control. That’s what we’re going to go back and try to do this week.”
On what he like about Jarrett Guarantano’s performance:
“I’ve said all along, Jarrett’s a tough guy. He made some really good throws and made some really good decisions. I think we played 73 offensive snaps and probably 65 of those he played extremely well. There were probably three throws that he would’ve liked to have had back. There were probably five decisions, whether it was a check or with protection or maybe starting on the wrong side of the field, that he was wrong on. I thought he showed a lot of courage, played really hard and was a really good leader for our team. We just need to fix those other plays, and he can do that. We ask him to do a lot of things, which, I think it helps our offense. He gets us in the right plays in the run game, we can make checks from run to pass, he can change protections. There’s a lot of demand on him and he can handle it. There’s just a few things that we got to fix from this past week.”
On getting the ball in Carlin Flis-aime’s hands against South Carolina:
“Carlin can run, but he’s not going to learn the offense in three days just like Jeremy (Banks) won’t learn the defense. We just found a couple of special plays that we felt fit his skill set and kind of went with them. He’ll obviously get more reps this week and probably have a bigger role.”
On how much responsibility Jarrett Guarantano takes and how much the offensive line takes for him being hit:
“Well when you look at it, you can seven-man protect, you can eight-man protect, you can do five-out, empty, there’s a bunch of different ways you can do it. The closer you get everybody, there’s more guys that can actually come, so when you’re doing five-outs it’s on the quarterback to make sure you’re either going to be hot or you’ve got to be able to slide the protection. He got flushed a few times the other day in eight-man protection. I don’t know what the percentage would be.”
On the game plan for quarterbacks against South Carolina:
“We repped both guys and they actually took the same amount of reps this week. It was just going to be a game-time decision. One thing I never like to do is tell a kid something that I can’t follow through with, so the games that we’ve decided we’re going to play Keller (Chryst), I’ve told him. I’m not going to tell you what series it’s going to be, because I don’t want to tell you fourth series and we’re getting the ball on the minus-1-yard line and we’ve changed quarterbacks, so we’ve tried to be consistent with our message and I think our players respect that. I didn’t go into the game and say, ‘Hey, Keller you’re going to play’. Another part of that is that you don’t want the other guy looking over his shoulder, you want him to play with confidence. That’s the one thing to me about Keller Chryst that I respect so much, is he’s come here and been a phenomenal teammate and our players rally around him. I’ve seen him and Jarrett have really worked well together and he can do anything in our game plan.”
-UT Athletics
Midland—the trio of Mark Wystrach, Cameron Duddy and Jess Carson—will extend its headlining Electric Rodeo Tour into 2019 with a dozen dates.
The new tour will make stops in L.A., Detroit, Nashville, Austin and more. Tickets go on sale on Nov. 2 at 10 a.m. local time.
2019 Electric Rodeo Tour
* Tickets already on sale
photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com
Aaron Watson will hit the road in 2019 for a headlining tour that will make more than 20 stop in cities across the country, including Atlanta, Nashville, Philadelphia, Denver and more.
Aaron Watson Tour
On this week’s podcast, we’re featuring a young woman you are going to fall in love with: Logan Brill.
One of the great byproducts of this podcast is that it has allowed me to discover even more women in country music—Logan is a perfect example. She makes me so excited about the future of the genre and the work ethic of women in this industry.
Logan has worked hard to get to where she is today, drawing inspiration from strong women like her mom and sister. And her hard work has been paying off, as evidenced by Logan opening gigs for a number of artists, including Merle Haggard, Dwight Yoakam, Gary Alan, Lee Brice, The Band Perry and more.
We talk about Logan’s winding road, where she’s headed and so much more. Hope you guys enjoy!
Show Participants:
Videos:
Logan’s Women Want to Hear Women Playlist
Need a refresher what #WomenWantToHearWomen is all about?
Past episodes:
Kacey Musgraves
Dolly Parton
Carly Pearce
Shawna Thompson of Thompson Square
Tegan Marie
Clare Dunn
Stephanie Quayle
Sarah Darling
Rachel Reinert
Carrie Underwood
Abby Anderson
Runaway June
Kalie Shorr
Rachel Wammack
Jessie Chris
Tenille Townes
Delta Rae
Carrie Underwood joined forces with the Grand Ole Opry on Oct. 26 for the 10th annual Opry Goes Pink show in support of Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
Carrie flipped the switch on the Grand Ole Opry’s signature barn backdrop, turning it pink for the night as she took the stage to perform two shows that evening. Carrie also flipped the switch on the inaugural Opry Goes Pink show in 2009.
“Every time I get to step out on the Opry stage is an honor, but tonight was extra special,” said Carrie. “When I flipped that switch and saw the Opry barn light up pink, it was just overwhelming and powerful knowing what the night meant for so many women. It was so beautiful to see so many survivors in the audience and backstage, and to be able to celebrate them and their fight.”
In addition to Carrie’s performances, a number of artists took the stage, including cancer survivors Anita Cochran, Karen Mills and Rita Wilson, as well as Ronnie Milsap, Riders in the Sky, and Gone West featuring Colbie Caillat.
The Opry will donate $5 from each ticket sold since the announcement of the show in September to the Susan G. Komen Foundation.
Watch Carrie flip the switch in the video below, courtesy of the Grand Ole Opry.
photo courtesy of Chris Hollo/Grand Ole Opry
The Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame inducted its class of 2018 at the Music City Center on Oct. 28: Ronnie Dunn, K.T. Oslin, Byron Hill, Wayne Kirkpatrick and Joe Melson.
The fivesome joins more than 200 existing members of the organization, including Johnny Cash, Dolly Parton, Kris Kristofferson, Loretta Lynn, Garth Brooks and more.
Byron Hill and Wayne Kirkpatrick were selected in the Songwriter category, while Joe Melson secured his spot in the Veteran Songwriter category. Ronnie Dunn and K.T Oslin were elected in the Songwriter/Artist category.
In addition, the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame honored Reba McEntire with the inaugural Career Maker Award for her “significant influence on the songwriting careers of Hall of Fame members.”
Reba has recorded 80 songs—including 33 singles—that were written or co-written by more than 40 songwriters who have gone on to achieve induction into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. The Career Maker Award was created to honor a non-Hall of Fame member whose artistic endeavors have helped songwriters achieve their dreams of induction into the Hall of Fame.
A number of artists were on hand to honor the inductees with performances, including Runaway June, Brandy Clark, Shawn Camp, Mo Pitney, Jesse Labelle, Jon Pardi and Little Big Town.
Partial Songwriting Credits of New Hall of Fame Members
Take a look at our photo gallery from the event, courtesy of Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com.
photos by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com