Tennessee cornerback Baylen Buchanan talked to the media Monday in a group setting to start Georgia week.

Tennessee cornerback Baylen Buchanan talked to the media Monday in a group setting to start Georgia week.
Tennessee long snapper Elijah Medford talked to the media Monday in a group setting to start Georgia week.
Tennessee punter Joe Doyle talked to the media Monday in a group setting to start Georgia week.
By Jimmy Hyams
Chris Rumph knows Tennessee fans have been asked to be patient with each new coaching staff that has arrived in Knoxville since 2009.
From Lane Kiffin to Derek Dooley to Butch Jones and now Jeremy Pruitt, the Vol Nation has been told to give the new regime a chance.
That can be a tough selling job when you get blown out 47-21 by an apparently average Florida team in Neyland Stadium with members of the 1998 national championship team on hand.
But Rumph asked folks Monday at the Knoxville Quarterback Club to hang with this team.
“It’s coming,’’ said Rumph, UT’s co-defensive coordinator. “I don’t know when … I know it’s been hard, it’s been a long time. It’s been tough.
“I wish I could say we’re going to win the rest of them, but I promise you before long we will put a product on the field you’ll be proud of.’’
When? Who knows?
The immediate future for this season isn’t bright. The Vols visit No. 2 Georgia this Saturday, then face, in a row, Auburn, Alabama and South Carolina.
Rumph was told the UT team quit last year and he was asked how to you prevent that from happening this season.
“They’re going to respond,’’ Rumph said. “We’re not going to allow them to quit. Quitting is not an option. This is not a multiple choice deal. This is a straight essay.’’
Rumph said if players tried to quit, the coaching staff might get in trouble.
“You’d probably get fired because there’d be some coaches choking some kids out,’’ Rumph said, sternly but not seriously.
The personable Rumph had an interesting way of describing UT’s predicament.
“Right now it’s an ugly baby,’’ Rumph said. “Let’s just be honest, but we got to take that baby home, all right. We got to own that baby. We got to nurture it, we got to love it, we got to support it, we got to discipline it. We got to teach it.
“One day, hopefully sooner than later, this baby’s going to grow up. It’s going to be everything that we want it to be, and this program will be the program that it once was because if it was done before, it can be done again.’’
What is biggest challenge to turning around UT program?
“It ain’t about the Xs and Os,’’ Rumph said. “It’s about the Jimmys and Joes. We’ve got to get some more players in here.’’
Rumph said the starters are “pretty good’’ but there’s a big gap from first and second team.
What do you say to recruits after a blowout loss like UT had against Florida?
“I tell them, `You see why we’re recruiting you?’’’ Rumph said.
Sponsored by Big Kahuna Wings: The wings that changed it all
Tennessee head football coach Jeremy Pruitt held his Monday press conference to kickoff Georgia week.
Maren Morris notched another Top 10 single this week as “Rich” reached No. 10 on the Mediabase chart.
The tune is the third single from Maren’s major-label debut album, Hero, to crack the Top 10, following “My Church” and “I Could Use a Love Song.”
Maren co-wrote every track on Hero, and as she recently told Kix Brooks of American Country Countdown, she needs to feel “emotionally connected” to her songs.
“The most important thing for me as a writer is I have to be emotionally connected to it,” says Maren to Kix. “If I don’t feel some sort of punch in the chest, whether it’s because it’s a heartbreaking song that’s really honest or just because it’s fun and it makes me laugh or makes me move, I have to have an emotional reaction to it, and so staying honest and staying true in the room is really important.”
Well look what cracked the top 10…OMG OMG OMG! 💸💸💸 pic.twitter.com/0r51VsV47L
— MAREN MORRIS (@MarenMorris) September 24, 2018
photo by JPA/AFF-USA.com
The guys from Old Dominion—Matthew Ramsey, Trevor Rosen, Geoff Sprung, Brad Tursi and Whit Sellers—scored the fifth No. 1 single of their career as “Hotel Key” ascended to the top of both the Mediabase chart and Billboard Country Airplay chart.
“Hotel Key,” which is featured on the band’s 2017 No. 1 album, Happy Endings, was co-penned by Matthew, Trevor and Josh Osborne.
The tune follows previous chart-toppers “Break Up With Him,” “Song for Another Time,” “No Such Thing as a Broken Heart” and “Written in the Sand.”
Old Dominion won Vocal Group of the Year at the 2018 ACM Awards. The five-piece band is nominated for Vocal Group of the Year at the upcoming CMA Awards in November.
photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com
Kalie Shorr has been carving out a name for herself since moving to Music City five years ago . . . and she hasn’t let a little thing like the lack of a record deal stand in her way.
Since 2016, Kalie has released three EPs, and as one of the co-founders of the all-female, singer-songwriter collective Song Suffragettes, the talented 24-year-old has been an incredible champion for women, not only in country music, but in all genres. The group’s 2018 song, “Times Up,” which Kalie co-wrote, addresses issues of gender inequality and sexual misconduct in relation to the #MeToo movement.
We talk about Kalie’s journey, shocking ways she’s been told “no” in the industry, her music and so much more. Hope you enjoy!
Podcast Participants:
Videos
Kalie’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
Carrie Underwood can cry tears of joy as her sixth studio album, Cry Pretty, has topped the all-genre Billboard 200 chart this week.
Cry Pretty moved 266,000 equivalent album units, according to Nielsen Music, giving it the best-selling opening week in country music since Luke Bryan’s Kill the Lights in 2015 (345,000 equivalent units).
Cry Pretty joins Carrie’s three previous No. 1 albums on the Billboard 200—2007’s Carnival Ride, 2009’s Play On and 2012’s Blown Away—making her the first woman in country music history to top the chart four times. The new album is also the best-selling album by a woman—of any genre—in 2018, surpassing Cardi B’s Invasion of Privacy (255,000 equivalent units).
photo by Jason Simanek
Thomas Rhett will take his Life Changes Tour north of the border in 2019 for nine dates in Canada.
Kicking off on April 24 in Montreal, TR will make additional stops in Ottawa, Calgary, Vancouver and more. Dustin Lynch will serve as support.
“My fans in Canada are incredible, so I’m really excited that we will be headed there for a couple weeks next year and get to bring all the energy of the Life Changes Tour with us,” said Thomas Rhett.
Tickets go on sale on Sept. 28.
Watch TR make the announcement below in another one of his amusing videos.
Life Changes Tour
April 24 | Montreal, QC | Bell Centre
April 26 | Ottawa, ON | Richcraft Live at Canadian Tire Centre
April 27 | London, ON | Budweiser Gardens
May 2 | Sakatoon, SK | Sasktel Centre
May 3 | Regina, SK | Brandt Centre
May 4 | Winnipeg, MB | Bell MTS Place
May 8 | Calgary, AB | Scotiabank Saddledome
May 10 | Edmonton, AB | Rogers Place
May 15 | Vancouver, BC | Pepsi Live at Rogers Arena
photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com