Lady Vols Beat Ohio 5-1, Advance to Super Regionals

Lady Vols Beat Ohio 5-1, Advance to Super Regionals

Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee scored three runs in the third inning and two more in the sixth to defeat Ohio 5-1 on Sunday and advance to the NCAA Super Regional.

The Lady Vols (48-12) will take on seventh-seeded Georgia next weekend in Athens. With Sunday’s victory, UT moves into the Super Regional round for the 10th time in program history.

The Bobcats (40-17) took the game’s first lead in the second inning, as a single from Allie Englant brought pinch runner Deanna Cole around to score from second.

The Lady Vols would come right back in the following inning, scoring three runs to claim a 3-1 advantage. After a Chelsea Seggern base knock loaded the bases, a fielding error allowed Meghan Gregg and Jenna Holcomb to advance home and give Tennessee the lead. Two batters later, Tennessee executed its second double-steal of the weekend, as while Brooke Langston was caught in a rundown between first and second base, Seggern was able to race home from third and score UT’s third run.

After a pair of scoreless innings, Tennessee added two insurance runs in the top of the sixth to pull away. After Amanda Ayala reached on a fielding error, a single from Abby Lockman put her on third. Lockman was able to reach second on the throw to set up runners in scoring position. The next batter, Haley Bearden, drove a single through the right side to score both runners and make it a four-run game.

Caylan Arnold went a complete seven innings for the Lady Vols, improving to 26-4 on the season. Arnold struck out eight batters in the winning effort, and was dominant when it counted most, as the Bobcats’ top three hitters went a combined 0-for-9 at the plate. Danielle Steine also went seven frames, recording three strikeouts while allowing just one earned run.

UP NEXT: The Lady Vols advance to the NCAA Super Regional and will travel to Georgia next weekend for a best-of-three series. Tennessee hosted the Bulldogs at Sherri Parker Lee Stadium on Mar. 31-April 1 this year, with Georgia taking two of three games in the series.


Tennessee 5, Ohio 1
May 20, 2018 | Knoxville, Tenn. | Sherri Parker Lee Stadium

Tennessee Co-Head Coach Karen Weekly

Opening Statement:

“First, I’d like to thank everybody at the University of Tennessee for all of their fantastic work putting on this Regional. All the teams had nothing but outstanding comments about it. Special thanks to our ground crew and facilities folks who had a tough day on Friday. They came through it like champs and pulled off a great Regional. Also, hats off to Ohio. We have a lot of respect for that program. Jodi and her staff are people we’ve come to know quite well over the years. Year in and year out, they develop an ace. Somebody on their staff just grows within their program. By the time they are a senior, they are an outstanding pitcher. A ton of respect for them, and it was a great battle out there. We knew it would be a difficult ball game if Ohio came through. Last but not least, to our players. Players win ballgames. These guys came out and they got it done today. We did it a little bit differently than yesterday, but that’s the sign of a good team. You’re able to win with different facets of your game. Caylan Arnold was certainly a big part in that. I thought she threw an outstanding game. I’m just really proud of our players.”

On Haley Bearden coming in to pinch hit:

“I think we had one on second and one on third with two outs – if we have no outs we might think about sticking with CJ because a chopper in the ground, we’ve got a chance there for something to happen – but I think in a two-out situation we just felt like Haley is the best option. We continue to have a lot of faith in Haley because we see what she does in practice every day. It’s just a matter of Haley knowing how good Haley is and going up there and swinging the bat. I think today she just really wanted to get it done for her team.”

On the previous meeting with Georgia vs. the upcoming meeting with Georgia and the absence of Brittany Gray:

“Well, Georgia is a very good team with or without Brittany Gray. Yes, when we faced them here Brittany was still in the lineup and that is such an unfortunate injury because she was having a phenomenal year – possibly could’ve been the SEC Pitcher of the Year the way she was throwing the ball. They have tremendous offense so it’s going to be a battle and it’s going to take us playing really, really well down there to achieve our goals. I like the way we’re playing right now – we were definitely at a low point in our season when Georgia came here. I’m not sure it mattered who was coming in, but Georgia capitalized on every mistake we made whether it was physically or mentally not being resilient. But that was a long time ago and I do think we’re a different team and we’ve learned a lot as the season has gone on.”

Biggest takeaway coming out of this Regional:

“I saw them get really locked on when they needed to. The way they played yesterday is something I think we can go back to over and over again. When they’re on a mission, one through nine, they can be pretty tough. I think they listened to some of the noise about us not being very strong at the bottom of our batting order and people picking us to lose this Regional and I think that got them fired up. Maybe it was thinking that a lot of people thought they were the underdog this weekend, but they certainly had an intensity about them.”

On how working on fundamentals contributed to the success this weekend and improvement:

“We all say it’s the little things that matter, and if you keep doing the little things right it’s going to add up to the big things which is winning on the scoreboard. If you get too focused on the big picture it becomes overwhelming and you don’t have much success, so a lot of that emphasis was getting their mind focused on individual things – fielding the ball, throwing the ball, hitting and running, it’s a simple game if you keep it that way. But sometimes you can get a little too in your head and think about where you are and the moment you’re playing in. It helped us physically to tune up some things maybe get a little bit sharper with our footwork in the infield and our reads in the outfield and some of our base-running. I thought we ran the bases really well this weekend and we focused a lot on base-running because this time of the year a lot of teams are really good and it’s going come down to little things in the game that are going to make a difference.”

On showing excitement about Caylan Arnold being in the zone in the 6th inning:

“Did you take a picture, because that’s rare. It’s not because I’m mad, I just have a hard time smiling and thinking at the same time. She just executed pitches really, really well today. For her to shut down their top three hitters was phenomenal with seven strikeouts. She was dealing the pitches we needed at the time we needed them. About an hour before the game, I was doing my final prep for pitch calling. Ralph was behind me saying, ‘do you realize that Cooper has 12 home runs, and Day and Geno have this many?’. I was like, ‘yeah be quiet, please.’ They have a lot of power in their lineup. For her to shut down those three kind of deflates a team when their top three power hitters don’t produce. So yeah, I was excited.”

On if she sees Ohio being able to develop another ace pitcher for next year:

“You know we watched all of them on film because we were prepared for anything. We were prepared to see anybody start across the field. We were prepared to see three pitchers in one game or play two games. We were prepared to do whatever we needed to do. I know Jodi, and Jodi always has a winning team. It always starts in the circle, and she’s a heck of a pitching coach. Somebody will emerge from that group to be an ace for them next year.”

On Matty Moss’s status:

“I think you saw on Friday night that Matty is in pretty good form. Right now, everything is fine. We are just keeping our fingers crossed that we stay healthy through the remainder of the season.”

Tennessee SS Meghan Gregg

On the unconventional hit to get the 3-1 lead:

“Yeah, I think that third inning we just really came together and got some hits and just made the defense work. Obviously, we didn’t have a lot of power today at the plate, but we figured out a way to get things working. I was just following Jenna and Aubrey who started things off and we made a move. I think that’s really what we needed to do against Ohio, just make the infield move.”

On Ohio’s pitcher:

“There is a reason why Ohio got to this Regional. They’re a great team and I think their pitching got them there. Their pitcher was really good. She could change speeds and put it where she wanted it. We had to be really disciplined against her to be effective because she knew exactly what she was doing and she had her pitches in control.”

On her last game at Sherri Parker Lee Stadium:

“It’s pretty bittersweet. I felt like I was a little sad, but it’s hard to be sad when we’re going to a Super Regional. I started thinking about how we still have practice tomorrow on the same field. I can’t be too sad when we have practice tomorrow on the same field. We have a lot of work to do this week and prepare for Georgia.”

On Haley Bearden’s pinch hit:

“Haley’s been put in some pretty key situations and she just really came through today. We really needed that. We were only up 3-1 and anything can happen with a two-run game. Haley doing that just really brought all of the momentum on our side. After that hit, we really just saw some of their shoulders going down. We just really got hyped for that. I was really proud of Haley. She was really excited and couldn’t wipe the smile off her face. She was just happy she could do it for the team.”

On how the team has changed since playing Georgia in the regular season:

“That was quite a bit ago so we’ve definitely done a lot of things to improve our game. We’ve worked on fundamentals more since then. I think we were really worried about the big picture when we played Georgia then and now we’re just working on each pitch, each swing and each inning. You kind of saw that all throughout this weekend. We were down. We didn’t score first these last two games and it didn’t even faze us. When we played Georgia, I think when they scored one run we were down and we weren’t coming back up. I definitely see a big change in our mentality and attitude so I’m excited for next weekend.”

On how the attitude change happens:

“We really actually work on that. In practice, we always talk about the little things that create the big things and it all starts there. Having each other’s backs and play for each other and not yourself. We can’t be individualistic and that’s kind of how we were at the beginning of the season, so working on that and working on relying on one another.”

Tennessee RHP Caylan Arnold

On keeping the top of Ohio’s lineup in check:

“We always look over the hitters before the games. We look to see what’s the best pitch to throw them to get them out and just went in with a game plan for each one. I think we did a good job of following through with that game plan.”

On starting the game with three strikeouts:

“I think it’s a really good thing because the momentum is on our side when we go into hitting. That’s what I always want is to have a really good first inning so that the momentum is good going in. It does give me a lot of confidence and it’s a lot of fun going to play once you’ve done something like that.”

On her eight strikeouts and no walks:

“I hate walks. I really try hard not to walk people. That’s probably my favorite thing about today is the no walks. That’s been something that I’ve been working on all season. That’s definitely a really great accomplishment for me. I thought Abby did a great job behind the plate getting me pitches. I’m really happy with that stat.”

On how the team has changed since playing Georgia in the regular season:

“I would say that we’ve gone through everything you could possibly go through in a season and we’ve learned so much. I feel like we’re a different team. We handle situations differently and we’ve matured. I’m very excited going into the Super Regional just because I know where we are now as a team and I think we’ve made a lot of really great strides.”

Ohio Head Coach Jodi Hermanek

Opening Statement:

“Obviously, it’s not the way that you would want a ride like this to end. I thought we played competitive. Once we scored first, I thought that took a big nerve block out of our system, so we could just settle in and continue with our approach. It was a good game, a good matchup, and Tennessee competed hard and got some timely hitting at the right time.”

On how big Allie Englant’s RBI single was for the team:

“Huge. (There were) two outs, pinch run with Deanna (Cole) coming up for Natalie (Alvarez). I just knew that runs were going to be precious each opportunity we had to score. Allie has been connecting hard with some good strokes all weekend long and I just had this feeling that this is the time to make the change. Once that happened, I probably looked like the smartest person on the field at the moment, but that was just putting some trust into what Allie’s been connecting with all weekend and she came through with a timely cut.”

On how the pitching staff performed throughout the weekend:

“We knew we were going to utilize the change up a lot today. Usually what we try to do is bank it until the second time through, but we knew we were going to have to draw that card out early. She was throwing it effectively for a strike and she was throwing it effectively out of the zone for a chase and was able to draw the rest of the zone around with some good command, too. I trust one of our best pitchers and she did a great job delivering with it. What she’s been all year long is a workhorse, and she showed that again today.”

On what the approach was pitching to Meghan Gregg:

“Our conversation before the game was corner pitches away need to stay at her knees or lower, and the rise ball needs to stay at her hands or higher. If we can do that, then we’re going to get her off balance. I thought we did a really good job living by that plan for her and (Chelsea) Seggern. Those two right there, we knew that we couldn’t let the longball beat us, especially back-to-back. We just really wanted to do a good job of making them move up and then making them go back down, and Dani (Stiene) lived by that and did a great job with it.”

On what makes Aubrey Leach difficult to get out:

“She can stand and swing for some gap power, so you can’t play her too tight, and then she can win with some short game too. What I told my defensive staff was that we have to play her like Allie Englant. Allie can drive the gap but she can also drop a bunt and use the short game, get a chop-slap in. So, that was common for us, it brought some common approach to us mentally. That’s how we approached it. I just wanted to do the same thing with her as well, take her up and all over the zone, change beats on her too, but she had a pretty productive day.”

On giving up runs while still limiting Tennessee’s power hitters:

“It’s tough when they’re on pitchers’ pitches. That one fly ball that dropped behind second was a jammed shot that was Dani’s pitch. She just got enough strength into it to get it to go somewhere with runners in scoring position. So, it’s tough to take those, but that’s why you play the game. Some of those you’re going to win, some of those you’re going to lose. Unfortunately, when those happen with runners in scoring position, it’s pretty hard to defend. I thought Dani did a great job contending against those batters.”

On what this run does for the program going forward:

“It’s a tough conversation to have at the end of a season, when you’re standing in a circle with the level of emotions that all those girls have. The message was thank you to the seniors because you’ve just honored the previous class, which was the winningest class in program history. You have now become that in your senior season, and now it’s time for you to pass the torch on to this great junior class to have that responsibility to do this again. Now everybody knows what it feels like to stand on this stage. The level of hunger that we had after last year that led into this year, and now the level of hunger that we’re going to have right where we’re at right now to lead us into next year, our mentality I think is a really awesome thing in our culture. I just think that we had such a program changing year. We’ve set many records, we’ve made so much history and it’s all come from their heart and their desire and their passion to play with each other and to be the best they can.”

On how the junior class will take on the responsibility of being seniors next season:

“They’ve already got so much experience and so that will really speak for itself. They know about me and they know about our expectations as a program, and they know why we do what we do, so they’re already a very self-motivated and driven class together as a unit. They’ve got great leadership to expand on to others. This freshman class was very easy to lead this year, and very much a part of the success that we’ve had. I think that all things are triggering in the right direction for Ohio softball, and it’s just a privilege and a pleasure to sit here.”

Ohio OF Allie Englant Quotes

On winning the first two NCAA Tournament games in Ohio history:

“The win against Monmouth was really huge, it kind of set the tone. We felt really good going into JMU. And it felt like that honestly just carried over and we didn’t care that we had already lost to JMU. We were just thinking ‘we need to beat them, we need to out hit them.’”

On using the momentum of the tournament run in the future:

“I think getting this far is going to play a huge part in teaching new players how to contain their nerves in pressure situations like the MAC Tournament and NCAA Regionals. That’ll be super important, but we’ll know how to deal with it.”

On hitting against Tennessee pitcher Caylan Arnold:

“My first at bat I saw a beautiful pitch, and I should have hit it. I did not think I was going to see another pitch like that, but the second pitch was exactly like that and I knew with a good pitcher like that I wasn’t going to get too many opportunities like that. So, I just tried to keep it simple and hit it past the infield.”

On the atmosphere for the entire weekend:

“I really enjoyed it, I love being in huge games. I think it really helps our team too because we were more amped up than I feel like we usually are.”

On her RBI single:

“I was trying to watch it as hard as I could to see if it actually went through, and it did. I was so ecstatic.”

Ohio OF Michaela Dorsey Quotes

On the team’s overall performance:

“It was a hard-fought game. It’s tough to be on the side of it that we are, but we took our program further than in the past years and just to get here is an amazing feeling. Now we know what it’s like so we can make progress in the future.”

On using the momentum of the tournament run in the future:

“I know we have quite a few in the junior class so now we know what it’s like to not only win MACs but come to Regionals and win some games. It’s awesome that we have the freshman class that we do and we can take in the new freshmen and tell them what it feels like to get here. Now everyone on the team knows so we can move forward with that.”

On getting the first NCAA Tournament win out of the way:

“It’s awesome because I’m one of the classes that has been to the MAC and been two and out, been to the MAC and been to the losers’ bracket and fought and lost through the losers’ bracket and lost in the championship and been in the winners’ bracket and lost twice. Having the experience of just going through and winning it is such a different feeling and a new perspective. I’m glad our team got to experience that and I think we can take that with us in the future. We need to make sure everyone knows that feeling and just get after it these next few years.”

On hitting against Tennessee pitcher Caylan Arnold:

“She just throws around inside and outside, tries to get you to chase high and if she’s high in the count, she’s going to give you something slow. So, our game plan was to go after the hard stuff, and if you get in a rut, then be prepared to hit the slow stuff.”

On the atmosphere for the entire weekend:

“I think our team feeds off of crowds, so the bigger the better. And I think we had a great support staff out there. Our crowd was pretty big too, traveling from such a long distance. We have a lot of friends that are goofy all of the time at home too, so it’s just fun.”

On the Ohio students that traveled to support the team:

“There’s a couple athletes. We had a basketball player, a football player, but they’re mostly boyfriends and friends of the team that just came down and supported. We call them ‘the boys.’ Like ‘oh, the boys are here.’ They’re at all of our games pretty much, and that’s who I’m talking about when I say they’re really goofy.”

On her hitting performance for the weekend overall:

“Nothing changes, you just have to trust your staff, that’s what I was thinking going in. Like she said, the crowd gets really big up here and that can get in your head, but as long as you stick to your guns and play to your strengths, then you’re going to be successful.”

-UT Athletics

Lady Vols Hit Four Home Runs to Beat James Madison, 12-3

Lady Vols Hit Four Home Runs to Beat James Madison, 12-3

Meghan Gregg – UT / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — The 10th seeded Tennessee Lady Vols continued their hot start to the NCAA Championships by defeating James Madison 12-3 on Saturday at Sherri Parker Lee Stadium.

With the win, the Lady Vols (47-12) move to 2-0 in the Knoxville Regional. After taking a 6-3 lead into the fifth inning, UT scored three runs in the fifth and three more in the sixth to claim the victory by run-rule.

Caylan Arnold improved to 25-4 on the season with the winning decision. Arnold went a full six innings for UT, striking out seven batters while yielding three runs.

James Madison (43-13) scored the game’s first run in the top of the second, as Natalie Cutright belted a solo home run just inside the right field foul pole to make it 1-0 in favor of the Dukes.

Tennessee would answer right back in the bottom half thanks to a two-run shot from McSwain over the center field wall. The blast brought Ashley Morgan around from first after she led off the frame with a single.

The Lady Vols recorded three more runs in the third inning to make it 5-1. CJ McClain led things off with a base knock to right field, and advanced all the way to third as Aubrey Leach followed up with a single through the right side of her own. Leach then took off for second, allowing McClain to score from third on a perfectly executed double-steal. Chelsea Seggern stepped in next and hit a two-run homer to right field that increased the UT lead to four.

The Dukes would get two runs back in the top of the fourth, with the first coming on a leadoff shot from Kate Gordon. Tennessee answered again in the bottom half via an Abby Lockman solo home run.

Tennessee got a rally going in the fifth that resulted in three more runs as the Lady Vols began to pull away. Leach led off with a hard-hit double off the left field wall, and later advanced to third on a wild pitch. Gregg brought her home on a single through the right side to make it 7-3. Treasury Poindexter came in to pinch run for Gregg on first, and when Morgan hit a single two batters later, Poindexter sprinted around second to set up runners on the corners. A McSwain groundout allowed Poindexter to come home for another Tennessee run, and Ayala singled two batters later to drive in pinch runner Sheridan Allen.

In the sixth, a triple from McClain put the Lady Vols in good position to close out the game, and they were able to do just that, as a single from Leach brought in McClain before Gregg belted her 18th home run of the season to make it 12-3 Tennessee.

UP NEXT: The Lady Vols will wait for the results of the next two games to determine who their next opponent is. Ohio and Monmouth, who both lost their Fridaymatchups, play each other at 2:39 p.m., and the winner will face James Madison on Saturday night for the right to take on Tennessee on Sunday.


Tennessee 12, JMU 3
May 19, 2018 | Knoxville, Tenn. | Sherri Parker Lee Stadium

Tennessee Co-Head Coach Karen Weekly

Opening Statement:

“Well that was a great win for the Lady Vols. We have a lot of respect for James Madison. Obviously, they came in here with great numbers, and we knew that, and we were prepared. I’m just really pleased with the way our kids came out. They were very locked in. Caylan pitched a terrific game. With that wind blowing out of here it was hard to keep the ball in the park today, but I thought she did a masterful job of, you know, limiting the damage that that offense was able to do. And then our offense, just all the way through the lineup I thought our kids just really challenged themselves to hit all the way through the lineup, and that’s what happened today.”

On calling pitches for Caylan Arnold this season versus last year:

“I think it changes the game completely. You will see us, when we’re behind in counts, we’ll use any pitch. We’ll use her off-speed. We’ll use her rise ball. It really doesn’t matter because I’m 100 percent confident in Caylan’s ability to execute any pitch under pressure. That makes a big difference in your game calling.”

On the home runs Tennessee hit:

“I think the first one, and Scarlet McSwain hit it, that was kind of the answer back because they had put a run on the board with a home run that had just barely made it out. When that ball first went up, I thought that was a catch, that it’ll be a deep catch. I think that was key that we answered back and I think that momentum is something that’s infectious. I think today, like Chelsea mentioned, our kids were really locked in pitch to pitch. You didn’t sense any emotional swings up or down with at-bats, whether the at-bat was a success or failure result-wise. It just felt like everybody was locked in one pitch at a time and that includes our entire dugout.”

On how Tennessee approached the short turnaround from last night’s game to today’s game:

“We really didn’t talk about it to them at all. I didn’t like it. I think it’s something that needs to be looked at and changed because I don’t think it’s to the student-athletes’ welfare to have to play on such a short turnaround, but we did not mention that to our players. What we told our players at the end of the game yesterday was, ‘you need to go home and go to bed right away.’ We had food there in the clubhouse and we put it in a box for them and said eat it in the car so when you get home, you hop in the shower, take the fastest shower you’ve ever taken and then get in bed. We delayed our pregame breakfast this morning by 30 minutes to give them a little extra sleep.”

On what time that was:

9:00 a.m. Some of them have treatment that they have to be here for and were probably a few minutes early for that.”

On the importance of getting the two wins and not needing to stay at the stadium all day:

“It’s big. You can win Friday night, but if you lose this game, you’re looking at playing five games to win this deal and being here all day today. It’s a hot one tonight so it’s going to be tough for whoever is out there today and survives to tomorrow. We just talked to our team about this not meaning that anything is won. You’ve got to come out tomorrow and take care of business. I certainly like being in this position better than playing all day.”

On the everybody having a role in the win:

“One of the best plays of the game was Treasury Poindexter’s baserunning at third base when she scored on a ground ball to shortstop. She got the lead, made them think she wasn’t going but kept inching up and had plenty of time. They didn’t even have a play at home. She went in standing up. That’s a kid who knows her role. Her role is to be the absolute best baserunner on the team and that’s what she does every day in practice. That’s an example of somebody just taking great pride in doing what they can do to help the team. You nailed it on the head, everybody in the dugout had a part in that win today.”

On Meghan Gregg ending the game like that:

“Meghan saw that pitch really well and we got to finish an inning early.”

Tennessee 3B Chelsea Seggern

On all the home runs Tennessee hit today:

“I definitely think we stuck with our game plan really well today. A lot of girls knew that the pitcher kind of had some up spin, and we just had some really good swings at the plate.”

On if this is the best they’ve hit as a team all season:

“No, I definitely think we’ve had some peaks earlier in the season, but it’s just a great time right now for us all to be confident in the box.”

On if being finished with classes has helped the team focus:

“Definitely. It just gives us a better opportunity now, because we don’t really have limited hours, so we can come in with the coaches any time of the day, any time of the week. It’s just an enjoyable time because there’s no pressure from school, and we can just play the great game that we love.”

On if hitting well with runners in scoring position gives them a confidence boost:

“I think so. I just think a lot of girls are really locked in right now, and they’re maybe not thinking about situations that are clutch-time. They’re just really kind of sticking to their game plan, but I think it’s a great feeling knowing that all of us are doing really well.”

On CJ McClain’s performance:

“I’m happy for her. She’s worked all season just to be able to master the hard-slap game. You know, obviously staying in the box, our slappers did an awesome job today. And for her, she’s a senior, so I’m just happy for her to go out with a bang.”

Tennessee RHP Caylan Arnold

On quick turnaround between games:

“I think I got like seven hours of sleep (last night), so that’s not bad. Yeah, it was a very quick turnaround, but you know, we definitely did a good job of doing what we needed to do, which was get home quickly, get to bed quickly, and do what we need to do to come out and play the way we did today.”

On pitching to the JMU lineup and regrouping after giving up a homerun:

“My strategy is really just to be the best that I can be. They are a lineup full of great hitters, and just being able to move forward after someone hits a homerun like that takes a lot of maturity, which is something I’ve had to learn a lot throughout this year. I think I did a good job. I’m proud of myself for being able to turn around and come back after they did that.”

On the wind being an issue when pitching:

“You definitely have to be aware of (the wind). Before the game starts you have to know if the wind is blowing out, what’s the dirt like, how’s the zone, things like that. But you don’t want to be thinking about it when you’re throwing the pitch. You want to be focused on the pitch, but that is something you’re going to have to be aware of. Like, okay, if I throw this rise ball, and I miss, she could hit it out. But it’s not something I’m thinking about constantly when I’m throwing. I’m always focused on the next pitch.”

James Madison Head Coach Loren Laporte

Opening Statement:

“Well obviously Tennessee is a great ball team. It was pretty simple–their hitters did a great job today. They came in with a game plan. Odicci did a good job in the first couple of innings and then they started making adjustments, and they started to take hacks on their first-pitch strikes. They started timing her up a little bit. So, then we decided to change to Payton, who is a little bit different than Odicci, and then again, they did a good job at making adjustments late in the game.”

On how dangerous their lineup was and how to pitch to it:

“I mean it is tough. Really today, one through nine, there was no weak spot in their lineup. So that is something that, kudos to them for their hitters in the five through nine spots stepped up today and did a good job.”

On Natalie Cutright’s performance:

“We told our hitters in the third inning that we needed to start swinging at the first-pitch strike and taking hacks on it. That is what she did. It was the first pitch, she took a good swing and squared it up and she was able to get it out. Then I think she had another RBI where it was an outside pitch and she did not want to do too much with it. She was trying to pull it. She went with it and she was able to score Odicci. So, it was nice to see her in the seventh spot and to see her produce today for us.”

On what she will do to get the team to recover since they still have a shot at the regional championship:

“We just talked in the locker room a little bit and we talked about some things. We need to learn from that game, but the 15 minutes are over and we have to move on. We cannot focus on that game anymore. We have already learned from it and we have talked about it. Now we have to focus on game two.”

On Meghan Gregg being a great hitter and what they did to prepare for her:

“The thing with Meghan is that she can hit every single pitch. She does not really have a weak spot. A lot of hitters have kind of a lot of strengths and weaknesses. She has got a lot of strengths. She is powerful. The thing with her too is she does not go up there every time to try and hit a home run. When she has runners on, she is productive. She puts her teammates first. She hit a ground ball to the three-four hole. She is just a hitter that just makes adjustments and she is very hard to pitch to.”

 -UT Athletics

 

Lady Vols in the WNBA Update: May 18

Lady Vols in the WNBA Update: May 18

Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — The WNBA will tip off its 22nd season on Friday, and as the 2018 campaign gets under way there will be six former Lady Vols on league rosters.

Diamond DeShields became UT’s 17th first-round pick when she was taken third overall by the Chicago Sky in the 2018 WNBA Draft. The Sky is coached by Amber Stocks, who served as a graduate assistant and director of basketball operations at Tennessee from 2000-02.

Jaime Nared, a 6-2 forward, was selected 13th overall by the Las Vegas Aces, joining fellow Lady Vol alum Isabelle Harrison. Harrison remains on the roster but is taking a personal leave of absence due to medical reasons, per an April 28 report from the franchise. The Aces were previously the San Antonio Stars.

Candace Parker is Tennessee’s most seasoned WNBA veteran, as she enters her 11th season with the Los Angeles Sparks. Parker, a four-time WNBA All-Star forward and 2016 WNBA Finals MVP, will look to lead the Sparks to their third consecutive WNBA Finals appearance.

I voting by the league’s general managers, Parker was second in balloting for best forward in the WNBA. She also finished second in highest basketball IQ.

Entering her seventh season in the league, Shekinna Stricklen is UT’s second-most experienced player in the WNBA. Originally drafted second overall by the Seattle Storm, Stricklen begins her fourth year with the Connecticut Sun. She saw action in 34 games last season, averaging 20.3 mpg and 7.7 ppg.

Glory Johnson is in her sixth season with the Dallas Wings. Johnson, a two-time Western Conference All-Star, appeared in 33 games for Dallas last season, averaging 13.7 ppg and 8.5 rpg.

Johnson will be the first LVFL in action this season, as the Dallas Wings face the Phoenix Mercury on the road in the WNBA season opener on Friday, May 18, at 10 p.m. ET (NBA TV).

WNBA GMs voted Glory Johnson (in a tie with Rebekkah Brunson and Tierra Ruffin-Pratt) as the toughest player in the WNBA. She also tied for second as most athletic player in the league.

DeShields, a Lady Vol from 2014-17, will look to make her rookie debut on Saturday as Chicago plays at Indiana at 1 p.m. (NBA TV).

In games involving Tennessee graduates on Sunday, Nared and Stricklen will be in action as the Connecticut Sun hosts the Las Vegas Aces at 1 p.m. ET. Johnson and the Wings will host the Atlanta Dream at 3 p.m. ET (FSSW-Dal+), and Parker will take to the court when Los Angeles travels to Minnesota at 3 p.m. ET (ESPN 2).

The Lady Vols had a trio of players drafted in the 2018 WNBA Draft. Mercedes Russell was taken 22nd overall by the New York Liberty but did not make the team’s final cut. The 6-6 center is now eligible to be picked up off waivers by other teams. Cierra Burdick and Bashaara Graves are two other LVFLs who could wind up on league rosters this season after spending training camps with Las Vegas and Indiana, respectively. Both have professional playing experience under their belts.

 

UT Athletics

Watch Dierks Bentley’s Inspiring New Video for “You Can’t Bring Me Down”

Watch Dierks Bentley’s Inspiring New Video for “You Can’t Bring Me Down”

Dierks Bentley dropped an inspiring new video for “You Can’t Bring Me Down” on May 17.

The new song follows the release of “Woman, Amen,” “The Mountain” and “Living” from Dierks’ upcoming ninth studio album, The Mountain (June 8).

The new video features scenic footage of Dierks and his band performing the song in front of a mountain backdrop, interspersed with clips that highlight Cultivate Kindness, a nonprofit that was created in honor of McKenzi Loid, who passed about at age 27 in 2017 after a car accident. The creators of Cultivate Kindness—Emily Wilkins (McKenzi’s younger sister) and Robin Loid (McKenzi’s mother)—raise funds through the sale of merchandise to support initiatives like Be the Light, which is an annual prom for special needs students.

Check out the new video for “You Can’t Bring Me Down.”

photo by Jason Simanek

Dan + Shay Release Wedding Song of the Summer, “Speechless” [Watch New Video]

Dan + Shay Release Wedding Song of the Summer, “Speechless” [Watch New Video]

Dan + Shay released “Speechless” on May 18, a tune that is likely to become the wedding song of the summer.

The new song, which is featured on the duo’s upcoming self-titled album (June 22), was inspired by Dan’s marriage to Abby Law (May 2017) and Shay’s marriage to Hannah Billingsley (October 2017). The new video for “Speechless” features footage from both Dan and Shay’s weddings.

“We both got married last year, and wrote a song about the moment we first saw our beautiful brides walking down the aisle,” said the duo via Instagram.”

The duo also released the 11 song titles on their upcoming album, one of which, “Keeping Score,” features Kelly Clarkson.

Watch the new video for “Speechless” below.

SELF-TITLED ALBUM | JUNE 22 ➕

A post shared by Dan + Shay (@danandshay) on

photo by Curtis Hilbun / AFF-USA.com

Watch Scotty McCreery Sing No. 1 Hit, “Five More Minutes,” on “Harry” TV Show

Watch Scotty McCreery Sing No. 1 Hit, “Five More Minutes,” on “Harry” TV Show

Scotty McCreery stopped by Harry on May 17 to chat with host Harry Connick Jr. and perform his recent No. 1 hit, “Five More Minutes.”

Scotty co-penned the deeply personal tune with Frank Rogers and Monty Criswell two weeks after the death of his grandfather in 2015.

“There was a time I thought this song would never see the light of day,” says Scotty. “Seeing this song, inspired by my Granddaddy Bill, go gold and then become my first number one means the world to me! After writing it with Frank Rogers and Monty Criswell, I tweeted out that ‘I think I just wrote my favorite song I’ve ever written,’ and that still holds true today.”

“Five More Minutes” is the lead single from Scotty’s third album, Seasons Change, which dropped on March 16. The 11-song offering features Scotty’s new single, “This Is It,” which was inspired by his engagement to Gabi Dugal.

Watch Scotty’s performance of “Five More Minutes” on Harry.

Photo by Arroyo-O\’Connor/AFF-USA.com. Video courtesy of \”Harry\” TV Show

Tennessee’s Big Orange Caravan Rocks Nashville

Tennessee’s Big Orange Caravan Rocks Nashville

Credit: UT Athletics

NASHVILLE – Nearly 1,000 Tennessee fans ignored an outside storm and packed the concourse at Nissan Stadium on Thursday night for the 52nd Annual All-Sports Picnic – the third stop of the 2018 Big Orange Caravan.

Director of Athletics Phillip Fulmer, head football coach Jeremy Pruitt, head men’s basketball coach Rick Barnes and women’s basketball assistant coach Sharrona Reeves posed for photos with fans, signed autographs and took part in a Q & A program with Bob Kesling at the event.

“I tell you what, this is a nice crowd,” Pruitt said to the fans during the program portion of the event held at the Tennessee Titans’ stadium. “First of all I want to say this, I’m excited to be at Tennessee. It seems like everywhere we go there are more and more people that turn out. You don’t have to be around the Tennessee fanbase very long to feel the passion, the energy and excitement. I’ve said this before, but everywhere I go I get a little more inspired and a little more fired up for the season to get started.”

The UT Knoxville Office of Alumni Affairs awarded a pair of scholarships to Nashville natives Zoe Babyar and Amanda Boeing at the event, which also featured face painting, corn hole, prizes, free food and a silent auction.

“It’s awesome to receive this scholarship and to see the love everybody has for this school,” said Babyar, who plans to major in computer science at Tennessee. “I’m really excited to go to UT. This will help me out a lot. College is really expensive. To be a women in STEM is a cool opportunity and this will help me with that.”

The Big Orange Caravan continues next week in Atlanta at SunTrust Park on Tuesday, May 22, before wrapping up on Thursday, May 24 in the Tri-Cities at the Meadowview Conference Resort and Convention Center in Kingsport.

Registration for all stops is open at BigOrangeCaravan.com.

Admission to all Big Orange Caravan events is $5 per person in advance or $10 at the door. Students and youth will receive complimentary admission. Proceeds from admission benefit the scholarship funds of the local UT Knoxville Alumni Chapter (these donations are non-refundable).

UT Athletics

Softball Central: 2018 NCAA Knoxville Regional

Softball Central: 2018 NCAA Knoxville Regional

Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — The No. 10 national seed Tennessee Lady Vols begin their quest to return to the Women’s College World Series this week by hosting Monmouth, Ohio and No. 23/25 James Madison at the NCAA Knoxville Regional from Friday, May 18 through Sunday, May 20.

For more information on the this week’s regional, please visit the Tennessee NCAA Softball Gameday Information page HERE.

2018 NCAA KNOXVILLE REGIONAL

Media & Broadcast Info

Every game of the NCAA Knoxville Regional will be streamed on WatchESPN or broadcast on ESPN 3.

Radio coverage for all Tennessee games will be carried on Sports Radio WNML (FM 99.1 or AM 990) and UTSports.com. Live stats will be available for every game on the Tennessee softball schedule page at UTSports.com.

Game Schedule

View the full NCAA Knoxville Regional schedule below:

Friday, May 18th:
Game 1 3:00 p.m. – Ohio vs. James Madison
Game 2 5:30 p.m. – Monmouth vs. Tennessee

Saturday, May 19th:
Game 3 12:00 p.m. – Winner Game 1 vs. Winner Game 2
Game 4 2:30 p.m. – Loser Game 1 vs. Loser Game 2
Game 5 5:00 p.m. – Winner Game 4 vs. Loser Game 3

Sunday, May 20th:
Game 6 1:00 p.m. – Winner Game 3 vs. Winner Game 5
Game 7 3:30 p.m. – Winner Game 6 vs. Loser Game 6 (if necessary)

Scouting Report

Tennessee Lady Volunteers

No. 10 National Seed | No. 1 Seed in Knoxville Regional

The Vols are making their 15th consecutive NCAA Regional appearance and the 16th overall in program history. UT is also hosting a regional for the 14th straight season. The Big Orange are looking to advance to their 10th NCAA Super Regional.

Tennessee enters the NCAA Tournament with a 45-12 overall record and finished in fourth place in the SEC regular season standings, posting a 14-10 mark in conference play. The Lady Vols had five players earn SEC postseason honors last week, led by senior shortstop Meghan Gregg, who, along with junior second baseman Aubrey Leach and senior outfielder Scarlet McSwain, earned All-SEC first team honors. Freshman Ashley Morgan and Amanda Ayala were both named to the SEC All-Freshman Team.

Gregg and Chelsea Seggern rank third and 10th in the nation in RBIs, with 67 and 62, respectively. Caylan Arnold leads the Lady Vols in the circle with a 2.10 ERA and a 24-4 record.

James Madison Dukes 

No. 2 Seed in Knoxville Regional

The Dukes earn a bid to the NCAA Tournament for the sixth consecutive year. They also notched 40 wins for the sixth straight year, amassing a 42-12 record in 2018.

As a team, James Madison ranks first in the nation in home runs per game (1.52, 82 total home runs in 54 games), sixth in scoring per game (6.34 runs) and eighth in on base percentage (.409). Entering postseason play, James Madison is No. 23 in the USA Today/NFCA Coaches Poll and No. 25 in the //ESPN.com/USASoftball Poll.

Freshman Payton Buresch leads the Dukes with a 1.69 ERA and a 18-5 record. Offensively, senior Morgan Teller set the single-season program record with 18 home runs, while left fielder Kate Gordon added 13 homers and had a .412 batting average. Sophomore Odicci Alexander has been effective both as a pitcher and a hitter. Alexander has a team-leading 56 RBIs while striking out 206 batters.

Ohio Bobcats

No. 3 Seed in Knoxville Regional

The Bobcats return to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2014. After winning the Mid-American Conference Tournament, Ohio earned its third postseason bid in program history.

Ohio (38-15) is led offensively by Alex Day and Mikayla Cooper. Day leads the team in batting average (.344), hits (63), RBIs (44) and home runs (12). Cooper leads in runs scored (45), slugging percentage (.634) and on base percentage (.443).

Danielle Steine was named MAC Pitcher of the Year at the end of the regular season. Steine compiled a 27-6 record, with her 27 victories ranking sixth in the nation. She recorded a 1.51 ERA and tallied 257 strikeouts. Day and Cooper joined Steine on the All-MAC First Team.

Monmouth Hawks

No. 4 Seed in Knoxville Regional

The Hawks earned their first-ever berth to the NCAA Tournament by winning the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference tournament. The conference title was also the first in program history. Monmouth ran through the MAAC regular season schedule, amassing a 19-1 record in league play.

Monmouth (32-14) comes into the Knoxville Regional riding a 13-game win streak. During conference play, the Hawks outscored opponents 109-38. As a team, Monmouth led the MAAC in ERA (2.89), home runs per game (0.85), and slugging percentage (.431).

Senior Amanda Riley was named MAAC Pitcher of the Year after going 11-0 in conference games. Riley’s 21 wins were the second most in program history, with her top performance being a 17-strikeout effort to lead the Hawks to a semifinal win in the MAAC Tournament. Riley ranks 28th in the nation with 216 strikeouts in 2018. Since March 31, she is 15-0 with a 1.05 ERA. Katie Baron leads the team offensively with 56 hits and a .389 batting average.

Fan Information/Stadium Policies

Please be advised that the university’s clear bag policy for all of its athletic venues will be in effect for the NCAA Knoxville Regional and all other events at Sherri Parker Lee Stadium. In order to enhance safety and expedite fan entry at Tennessee athletic events, the university is implementing new safety policies for fans bringing bags into all athletic venues.

Only one clear plastic bag no larger than 12 inches by 6 inches by 12 inches or a one-gallon, clear, resealable plastic storage bag per person will be permitted. Fans will also be allowed a small clutch purse not to exceed 4.5 inches by 6.5 inches. Fans interested in purchasing an approved clear bag may visit the Official Team Store at Neyland Stadium, VolShop locations in the Student Union, 17th & Cumberland Avenue and University Commons; as well as other area retailers.

For more information on the new bag policy and all other stadium policies please visit the NCAA Knoxville Regional Gameday Information page HERE.

What’s Next?

The winner of the NCAA Knoxville Regional will advance to the NCAA Super Regionals from May 25-27.

 

UT Athletics

Five Lady Vols Named to NFCA All-Region Team

Five Lady Vols Named to NFCA All-Region Team

 

Credit: UT Athletics

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Five Tennessee softball players received All-Region accolades for the 2018 season, the National Fastpitch Coaches Association announced Wednesday.

Senior Meghan Gregg and junior Aubrey Leach collected first-team honors in the Southeast region, while Sophomore Jenna Holcombwas selected to the second-team and sophomores Caylan Arnold and Chelsea Seggern earned third-team nods.

The awards honor softball student-athletes from the Association’s 10 regions with first, second and third-team selections. NFCA member coaches from each respective region voted on the teams, and all the honorees now become eligible for selection to the 2018 NFCA Division I All-American squads.

Gregg, the program’s career leader in home runs and RBIs, once again showcased her offensive prowess in her senior year. The Williamson, Ga. native recorded 67 hits during the season, with 30 going for extra bases. She leads the Lady Vols with a .760 slugging percentage, and her 67 runs batted rest atop the SEC leaderboard. Gregg hit 16 long balls in 2018, good for second most in the conference.

While many expected such a campaign from the reigning SEC Player of the Year, Gregg is joined on the first-team by perhaps the Lady Vols’ breakout star of the season in Leach. In her third season on Rocky Top, Leach increased her runs scored and hits totals by more than 10 each compared to the previous two years. Her 74 total runs are the most in the SEC, and she ranks second in the conference in batting average (.435), on base percentage (.562), and hits (74). From Feb. 24 to Mar. 25, Leach recorded at least a hit in 18 consecutive games. Last week, she was named to the All-SEC first team for the first time in her career.

After a strong showing as a freshman in 2017, Holcomb followed up this season by finishing fourth in the SEC in batting average (.499) and recording 59 hits. On the defensive side, the versatile outfielder caught 61 fly balls this season while not committing a single error.

Arnold answered her own impressive freshman campaign by establishing herself as one of the conference’s best pitchers in 2018. She finished in the top five in the SEC in wins (24, T-3rd), strikeouts (207, 3rd), games started (30, 1st), and saves (3, 5th). A member of the SEC All-Freshman team a year ago, Arnold is already up to 351 career strikeouts in just 88 total appearances. She earned conference pitcher of the week honors three times this season, sharing the recognition with Florida’s Kelly Barnhill and Alabama’s Alexis Osorio on Feb. 26 before being named again on Mar. 20 and May 1.

Like Leach, Seggern spent the spring asserting herself as one of the college game’s top offensive talents. In three less total games played than her freshman year, Seggern recorded 19 more hits and 32 more runs batted in. Her 62 total RBIs trail only Gregg for the conference lead and rank 10th nationally. She has hit 16 doubles, good for third in the SEC, and is also second on the team with a .571 slugging percentage.

What’s Next? First team All-Region choices are eligible for selection to the NFCA All-America team, which will be announced the evening of May 23 online at NFCA.org and in person at the NCAA Division III Championship banquet in Oklahoma City.

 

UT Athletics

Darius Rucker to Perform as Part of Star-Studded Lineup on Season Finale of “American Idol”

Darius Rucker to Perform as Part of Star-Studded Lineup on Season Finale of “American Idol”

Darius Rucker will perform live on the season finale of American Idol on May 21.

The two-night finale, which begins on May 20, will also feature performances by judges Luke Bryan, Katy Perry and Lionel Richie, as well as Bebe Rexha, Gary Clark Jr., Nick Jonas + Mustard, Patti LaBelle, Yolanda Adams, Kermit the Frog and the Top 10 Idol finalists.

Gabby Barrett, Caleb Lee Hutchinson and Maddie Poppe will compete for the Idol crown during the two-part finale, airing on ABC on May 20 at 7 p.m. CT and May 21 at 8 p.m CT.

photo by Jason Simanek

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