Before the 53rd ACM Awards kicked off in Las Vegas on April 15, the stars walked the red carpet—actually, it was a blue carpet—at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.
Check out our red blue carpet photo gallery featuring Reba, Chris Young, Scotty McCreery, Sugarland, Miranda Lambert, Cam, Maren Morris, Brothers Osborne, Kelsea Ballerini, Jason Aldean and many more.
We’ve got all of the winners—as they are announced—from the 53rd annual Academy of Country Music Awards on April 15.
The Winners
New Female Vocalist of the Year
Lauren Alaina WINNER
Danielle Bradbery
Carly Pearce
RaeLynn
New Male Vocalist of the Year
Brett Young WINNER
Kane Brown
Luke Combs
Devin Dawson
Russell Dickerson
New Vocal Duo/Group of the Year
Midland WINNER
High Valley
LANCO
LOCASH
Runaway June
Song of the Year [Awarded to Songwriter(s)/Publisher(s)/Artist(s)]
“Tin Man” – Miranda Lambert WINNER Songwriters: Jack Ingram, Miranda Lambert, Jon Randall Publishers: Sony/ATV Tree Publishing/Pink Dog Publishing (BMI), Beat Up Ford Publishing (BMI), BMG Platinum Songs (BMI)/SWMBMGBMI/Lonesome Vinyl Music
“Body Like a Back Road” – Sam Hunt
Songwriters: Zach Crowell, Sam Hunt, Shane McAnally, Josh Osborne
Publishers: Universal Music Corp./Sam Hunt Publishing, Highly Combustible Music/I Love Pizza Music,/Songs of Southside Independent Music Publishing/Who Wants to Buy My Publishing/Atlas Music Publishing, Anderson Fork In The Road Music/Smackville Music/Smack Songs LLC, Smack Hits
“Female” – Keith Urban
Songwriters: Ross Copperman, Nicolle Galyon and Shane McAnally
Publishers: EMI Blackwood Music Inc./Rezolant Music/Plain Jane Songs, Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp./A Girl Named Charlie (BMI), Smack Hits/Smack Songs LLC (GMR)
“Whiskey And You” – Chris Stapleton
Songwriters: Lee Thomas Miller, Chris Stapleton
Publishers: WB Music Corp./New Sea Gayle Music (ASCAP), Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp./New Sea Gayle Music (BMI)
Album of the Year [Awarded to Artist(s)/Producer(s)/Record Company–Label(s)]
From A Room Vol. 1 – Chris Stapleton WINNER Producers: Dave Cobb, Chris Stapleton
Record Label: Mercury Records
Breaker – Little Big Town
Producer: Jay Joyce
Record Label: Capitol Records Nashville
California Sunrise – Jon Pardi
Producers: Bart Butler, Jon Pardi
Record Label: Capitol Records Nashville
Happy Endings – Old Dominion
Producer: Shane McAnally
Record Label: RCA
Life Changes – Thomas Rhett
Producers: Julian Bunetta, Jesse Frasure, Dann Huff, Joe London, Thomas Rhett
Record Label: The Valory Music Co.
Vocal Group of the Year
Old Dominion WINNER
Lady Antebellum
LANCO
Little Big Town
Midland
Vocal Event of the Year [Awarded to Artist(s)/Producer(s)/Record Company–Label(s)]
“The Fighter” – Keith Urban featuring Carrie Underwood WINNER Producers: Busbee, Keith Urban Record Label: Capitol Nashville
“Craving You” – Thomas Rhett Featuring Maren Morris
Producers: Julian Bunetta, Dann Huff, Joe London, Thomas Rhett
Record Label: The Valory Music Co.
“Dear Hate” – Maren Morris featuring Vince Gill
Producers: Brad Hill, Maren Morris
Record Label: Columbia Nashville
“Funny (How Time Slips Away)” – Glen Campbell And Willie Nelson
Producer: Carl Jackson
Record Label: Universal Music Enterprises
“What Ifs” – Kane Brown Featuring Lauren Alaina
Producer: Dann Huff
Record Label: RCA Nashville
Entertainer of the Year
Jason Aldean WINNER
Garth Brooks
Luke Bryan
Chris Stapleton
Keith Urban
Male Vocalist of the Year
Chris Stapleton WINNER
Jason Aldean
Thomas Rhett
Keith Urban
Chris Young
Female Vocalist of the Year
Miranda Lambert WINNER
Reba McEntire
Maren Morris
Carrie Underwood
Kelsea Ballerini
Vocal Duo of the Year
Brothers Osborne WINNER
Dan + Shay
Locash
Florida Georgia Line
Tim McGraw and Faith Hill
Single Record of the Year [Awarded to Artist(s)/Producer(s)/Record Company–Label(s)]
“Body Like A Back Road” – Sam Hunt WINNER Producer: Zach Crowell Record Label: MCA Nashville
“Broken Halos” – Chris Stapleton
Producers: Dave Cobb, Chris Stapleton
Record Label: Mercury Records
“Drinkin’ Problem” – Midland
Producers: Dann Huff, Shane McAnally, Josh Osborne
Record Label: Big Machine Records
“Better Man” – Little Big Town
Producer: Jay Joyce
Record Label: Capitol Records Nashville
“I’ll Name The Dogs” – Blake Shelton
Producer: Scott Hendricks
Record Label: Warner Bros.
Video of the Year [Awarded to Producer(s)/Director(s)/Artist(s)]
“It Ain’t My Fault” – Brothers Osborne WINNER Director: Wes Edwards, Ryan Silver Producer: Tiffany Davies
“Black” – Dierks Bentley
Director: Wes Edwards
Producer: Max A. Butler
“Legends” – Kelsea Ballerini
Director: Jeff Venable
Producer: Ben Skipworth
“Marry Me” – Thomas Rhett
Director: TK McKamy
Producer: Dan Atchison
“We Should Be Friends” – Miranda Lambert
Director: Trey Fanjoy
Producer: April Dace
The Academy of Country Music hosted its ACM Stories, Songs & Stars event in Las Vegas on April 13 at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino. The guitar pull format featured a number of singers and songwriters sharing stories and singing their tunes, including Jon Pardi, Thomas Rhett, Cole Swindell, Midland, Kip Moore, Lee Brice, Cam, Little Big Town, Rhett Akins, Ashley Gorley, Hillary Lindsey, Shane McAnally, Josh Osborne, Lori McKenna and Liz Rose.
Highlights of the evening included Jon Pardi dressed as Elvis, Cole Swindell’s performance of “You Should Be Here,” Midland accepting the ACM Award for New Vocal Group of the Year and Little Big Town’s performance of “Girl Crush” with songwriters Hillary Lindsey, Lori McKenna and Liz Rose.
A portion of the event proceeds will benefit ACM Lifting Lives, which works to lift lives through the power of music.
Check out the photo gallery below, courtesy of AFF-USA.com.
As part of the events surrounding ACM Awards weekends, the Academy of Country Music hosted the first ACM Lifting Lives Topgolf Tee-Off at Topgolf Las Vegas on April 14. Hosted by Charles Kelley of Lady Antebellum and Darius Rucker, the event benefited ACM Lifting Lives, the philanthropic arm of the Academy of Country Music dedicated to improving lives through the power of music.
More than 30 country music artists teamed up to compete in the Topgolf tournament, including Jimmie Allen, Shelby Blackstone, Lee Brice, Jillian Cardarelli, Luke Combs, Naomi Cooke, Jordan Davis, Devin Dawson, Russell Dickerson, Jennifer Fiedler, Ashley Gorley, Adam Hambrick, Levi Hummon, Chris Janson, Charles Kelley, Chris Lane, Tegan Marie, Terry McBride, Scotty McCreery, Kip Moore, Jake Owen, Eric Paslay, Carly Pearce, Cassadee Pope, Raelynn, Brad Rempel, Curtis Rempel, Darius Rucker, Trey Smith, Cole Swindell, Jennifer Wayne and more.
Team Triple Tigers, including Russell Dickerson and Scotty McCreery, took home the trophy. The event also featured performances by Levi Hummon, Chris Lane, Tegan Marie, Eric Paslay, RaeLynn and Dee Jay Silver.
Check out some of the photos below, courtesy of AFF-USA.com.
During the Nashville Predators 2017 playoff run to the Stanley Cup Finals, the Preds brought out some of country music’s biggest starts to sing the national anthem on their home ice, including Carrie Underwood, Luke Bryan, Little Big Town, Vince Gill, Lady Antebellum, Keith Urban, Kelly Clarkson, Trisha Yearwood, Martina McBride, Dierks Bentley and Faith Hill.
For the Preds 2018 playoff run, which began on April 12 against the Colorado Avalanche, Rascal Flatts had the honor of singing the national anthem before Game 1.
Before Game 2 versus the Avalanche on April 14, Brad Paisley kicked off the festivities with his rendition of the national anthem.
As Reba saddles up to host the ACM Awards for the 15th time on April 15, she knows the biggest award of the night is Entertainer of the Year. It’s an award she won in 1994 after previous nominations in 1986, 1987, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1992 and 1993.
Five artists are nominated for the 2018 ACM Entertainer of the Year, including Jason Aldean, Garth Brooks, Luke Bryan, Chris Stapleton and Keith Urban. Jason will be vying for his third consecutive trophy, while Garth, who hasn’t won the award since 1998, is seeking his seventh, and Luke is going for his third. Chris and Keith have never won the award.
Leave it to Reba, a former barrel racer, to put the significance of the award into rodeo parlance.
“Entertainer of the Year means that they’re good onstage, they’re good with their fans, they put out records on the radio, an album that was a really good seller that the fans really enjoyed,” says Reba to Nash FM’s Jesse Addy. “They’re kinda like the All-Around Cowboy,” which is a professional rodeo title that designates the cowboy who has been the most successful throughout the year.
The ACM Awards will air from MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas on Sunday, April 15 at 8 p.m. ET on CBS.
Michael Ray will release his sophomore album, Amos, on June 1. The title of the upcoming album pays tribute to his late grandfather, Amos, who helped foster Michael’s love of country music.
Michael first began singing and performing in his grandfather’s band when he was only 9 years old. The Florida native still plays Amos’ 1978 Les Paul guitar as a reminder of the time they spent together.
“The day I made my debut on the Opry stage, all I could think about was how he would be so proud,” Michael says. “So, when we started making this record, before I would record vocals on the song, I would ask myself, ‘Is this a song I would have played proudly for him?’ It makes this album that much more special to think he would have said, ‘Ray, that’s a good one.’”
Amos will follow Michael’s 2015 self-titled debut album, which spawned two No. 1 hits, “Kiss You in the Morning” and “Think A Little Less.”
Amos features 11 tracks including Michael’s current Top 20 single, “Get to You.”
NEW YORK – The Tennessee women’s basketball program added to its impressive list of players advancing to the professional ranks, as three former Lady Vol standouts were selected in WNBA Draft 2018, presented by State Farm, at Nike New York Headquarters on Thursday night.
The Chicago Sky took Diamond DeShields (2015-17) with the third overall pick in the first round, UT’s highest draftee since Shekinna Stricklen went second to the Seattle Storm in 2012. DeShields will play for head coach Amber Stocks, who served as a graduate assistant and director of basketball operations at Tennessee from 2000-02. She is UT’s second all-time No. 3 pick (Tamika Catchings, Indiana, 2001), and she’ll join Bashaara Graves, a UT teammate in 2014-15, in the Windy City.
DeShields, a 6-foot-1 guard who played two seasons for the Lady Vols and spent the past year playing for professional team Cukurova in Turkey, became the 17th WNBA first round pick in UT history. She is the second first-rounder to play for Holly Warlick, following in the footsteps of Isabelle Harrison (2015, 12th pick, Phoenix). DeShields is the second Big Orange standout to be drafted by the Sky (Angie Bjorklund, 2nd Rd., 17th pick, 2011).
Jaime Nared (2014-18) was the second LVFL chosen, selected by the Las Vegas Aces with the 13th overall pick and first selection of the second round. With the Aces, who were previously the San Antonio Stars, the 6-2 forward will be reunited with Lady Vol alums Isabelle Harrison and Cierra Burdick, with whom she played as a freshman in 2014-15. Nared is UT’s third all-time selection by the Stars. Previous Lady Vols chosen by San Antonio were Shanna Zolman (2nd Rd., 16th pick, 2006) and Schaquilla Nunn (3rd Rd., 25th pick, 2017).
Mercedes Russell (2013-18) was the third Big Orange product to hear her name called, going to the New York Liberty with the 22nd overall pick in the second round. The 6-6 center is the sixth Lady Vol chosen by the Liberty. Previous picks by N.Y. include Loree Moore (1st Rd., 10th pick, 2005), Alberta Auguste (3rd Rd., 35th pick, 2008), Kelley Cain (1st Rd., 7th pick, 2012), Kamiko Williams (2nd Rd., 15th pick, 2013) and Meighan Simmons (3rd Rd., 26th pick, 2014).
The three-person draft class is UT’s biggest since Harrison, Burdick and Ariel Massengale were chosen in 2015. All three of Tennessee’s newest WNBA players earned their degrees prior to their senior seasons.
All time, 42 Lady Vols have been taken in the WNBA Draft, including 11 during the Holly Warlick era. The eight previous Lady Vols taken during Warlick’s six years include: the duo of Jordan Reynolds (2nd Rd., 19th pick, Atlanta) and Schaquilla Nunn (3rd Rd., 25th pick, San Antonio) in 2017; Bashaara Graves (2nd Rd., 22nd pick, Minnesota) in 2016; the trio of Isabelle Harrison (1st Rd., 12th pick, Phoenix), Cierra Burdick (2nd Rd., 14th pick, Los Angeles) and Ariel Massengale (3rd Rd., 29th pick, Atlanta) in 2015; Meighan Simmons in 2014 (3rd Rd., 26th pick, New York); and Kamiko Williams in 2013 (2nd Rd. 15th pick, New York).
DeShields, Nared and Russell join six other former Lady Vols who currently are on WNBA rosters, including Burdick (Las Vegas), Graves (Chicago), Harrison (Las Vegas), Glory Johnson (Dallas), Candace Parker (Los Angeles) and Shekinna Stricklen (Connecticut).
Under Warlick, UT has had two first-rounders (Harrison, DeShields), six second-rounders (Williams, Burdick, Graves, Reynolds, Nared and Russell) and three third-rounders (Simmons, Massengale and Nunn). Teams drafting Lady Vols under Warlick include New York, Phoenix, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Minnesota, San Antonio/Las Vegas and Chicago.
DeShields led Tennessee and ranked fourth in the SEC in scoring in 2016-17 at 17.4 points per game, marking the highest average by a Lady Vol since Candace Parker put up 21.3 ppg. in 2007-08 and the sixth-highest ever recorded by a Lady Vol junior. She also averaged 6.6 rebounds and 3.8 assists per contest.
DeShields hit double figures in points 26 times as a junior, scoring 20 or more points on 11 occasions. Despite leading the team in scoring average, she only paced the team in points during 10 games while leading UT 16 times in assists and five times in rebounds. She also led the team in charges taken with eight. The next closest player had three.
Her postseason accolades included WBCA Honorable Mention All-America, Coaches All-SEC First Team, AP All-SEC Second Team and the SEC Academic Honor Roll. She also was on the Dawn Staley Award, Ann Meyers Drysdale Award, John R. Wooden Award, Naismith Trophy and Wade Trophy Watch Lists during the year as well.
Russell averaged 15.3 points and 9.2 rebounds per contest, ranking second on the team in scoring and first in rebounding in 2017-18. She also ranked first in field goal percentage (.583) and blocked shots (44), while standing third in steals (39), fifth in free throw percentage (.682) and sixth in assists (27). Her 1,597 points and 1,085 rebounds rank her 16th and third, respectively on the Lady Vol career lists and her rebound average (9.2) is the fifth-highest ever recorded by a UT senior.
With her UT senior-record 16th double-double of the season in her final game, Russell finished with 46 for her career to wind up second behind only Chamique Holdsclaw (57). Her .583 field goal percentage is ninth-best in a single season, while her career numbers in field goal percentage (.570), blocks (195) and rebound average (8.0) ranked her fifth, fifth and sixth, respectively, all-time at Tennessee.
Russell netted WBCA Honorable Mention All-America and WBCA All-Region accolades for the second year in a row. She was an All-SEC First Team selection after earning second-team honors a year ago, and she was a finalist for the Lisa Leslie Award as well in 2017-18.
Nared led Tennessee in scoring at 16.7 points per game in 2017-18 and was third with 7.4 rebounds per contest. She also ranked first in steals (73), second in three-pointers made (27), third in assists (84) and third in blocks (20), while leading the Lady Vols in free throw percentage (.820), free throws made (169) and free throws attempted (206).
With 19 double-doubles during her career, Nared’s 10 this season ranked her sixth among SEC players and seventh-most ever by a Lady Vol senior. She finished second all-time at UT in a season in free throws made (169) and 10th in free throws attempted (206), while standing fifth in career free throws made (429) and fifth in career free throw percentage (.827). Her scoring average of 16.7 is the eighth-highest all-time of any Lady Vol senior and her career point total of 1,460 ranks No. 26 on UT’s scoring list.
She was named AP and WBCA Honorable Mention All-America, WBCA All-Region, All-SEC First Team by the coaches and second team by the media, MVP of the Cancun Challenge and a finalist for the Cheryl Miller Award. She also was named USBWA Ann Meyers Drysdale National Player of the Week, a two-time SEC Player of the Week, a two time College Sports Madness National Player of the Week and a three-time College Sports Madness SEC Player of the Week.
The WNBA will tip off its 22nd season Friday, May 18, and feature eight games on opening weekend. The highlight of WNBA Tip-Off 2018 presented by Verizon is #WNBAAllDay on Sunday, May 20, when all 12 teams will be in action. The complete 2018 schedule is available at http://www.wnba.com/schedule/.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee football head coach Jeremy Pruitt stressed the importance of details following spring practice No. 11 on Thursday at Haslam Field.
The Vols, who donned full pads on a sunny evening in the mid-70s, will hold their second scrimmage of the spring on Saturday night in Neyland Stadium, and the first-year head coach wants his team to improve the little things.
“There’s a lot of little things that have nothing to do with ability, just details and execution,” Pruitt said. “You have to do it when things aren’t going well. It’s not always going to go your way, so you have to find some way to kind of turn it around. So, again, that’s being in adverse situations and we have to figure out if some of our guys are going to do a better job responding Saturday.”
Redshirt junior Quart’e Sapp and sophomore Will Ignont have received the bulk of the reps at inside linebacker in the Vols’ new 3-4 scheme, but Tennessee has seen veterans Darrin Kirkland, Jr., and Daniel Bituli see increased practice time as they return from injuries.
“Daniel is starting to advance,” Pruitt said. “He participated today, he practiced today. I’ve said we’ve got a lot of guys that are getting close, and if we practiced another week, we’d almost have everybody back. He’s one of the guys that’s out there. Darrin took the next step. He’ll probably be back next week, so it will be possible to get these guys some reps as we move forward.”
While Pruitt did not say if the duo would be available for the DISH Orange and White Game next Saturday, the pair returning to health will hopefully give Tennessee some depth and experience at the position this fall.
“It’s probably too early to tell,” Pruitt said. “I would have to see where we’re at by next Tuesday to get an idea. So, we’ll see, but it will be close, which is a good thing. Those guys (Kirkland and Bituli) are kind of anxious to get out there.”
Kirkland, a redshirt junior, missed all of last season with a knee injury, but he captured All-SEC Freshman honors as UT’s starting middle linebacker in 2015. Kirkland started 16 games in 2015-16 and has totaled 111 tackles in his career.
Bituli, a junior, led the Vols with 90 tackles in 2017, including 23 in the season-opener against Georgia Tech. Sapp finished fourth on UT with 78 stops a year ago, while Ignont showed flashed in six games as a true freshman.
Give a Hand to the Running Backs
While he didn’t name a frontrunner for the starting position among the group, Pruitt said he liked the hands of all of the running backs on the Vols’ the roster, including sophomores Ty Chandler, Tim Jordan and Trey Coleman, and redshirt freshman Princeton Fant – a converted tight end/wide receiver.
“All of those guys, you put them out there and they’ve all got good hands,” Pruitt said. “They have pretty good vision. They’ve got good enough speed. So, I think it’s too early to single any of them out. You can take Ty, you can take Tim, you can take Trey, you can take Princeton, you put them all in that one group, and they have good days and they have bad days. So, we have to find a little more consistency in all of them.”
Chandler saw the most action last season, totaling 305 yards rushing, while making 10 receptions for 108 yards as a backup.
Jordan played in all 12 games in 2017, but only had 11 carries. He did make eight catches for 65 yards, however.
Phillips Emerging as a Leader
Senior defensive end Kyle Phillips has been a leader off the field for the Vols since he arrived in Knoxville from Nashville. Phillips was inducted into the Omicron Delta Kappa Leadership Society last fall and has been a member of the SEC Academic Honor Roll in addition to traveling to Vietnam last summer as a member of the VOLeaders Academy. The fourth-year player has the potential to emerge as a leader on the field, too.
“I think that he has been willing to do anything that we ask him to do,” Pruitt said. “He makes very good grades. Every week on the academic report, I see all ‘A’s’. He is a very good student and a good kid. He’s been very willing to do whatever we ask him to do since I have been here.”
Phillips started seven games in 2017 and made 35 tackles, including 4.5 TFLs. He has played in 29 games in his career with eight starts.
American Idol Winner to Perform at DISH Orange & White Game
Nashville country music sensation Trent Harmon (Big Machine Records) will perform at the Toyota Volunteer Village in Lot 9 prior to the DISH Orange & White Game. Harmon won the 15th season of American Idol in April of 2016. His hit song, “There’s A Girl” is currently being played throughout the nation. Trent Harmon – There’s A Girl Video
Head Coach Jeremy Pruitt Press Conference Transcript – April 12
Opening Statement:
“Today we worked a lot of special teams situations. It’s one thing we’ve really tried to concentrate on. We’ve done a lot of drill work all spring. We’ve just now started doing some team stuff, just trying to learn some fundamentals and getting exactly what we want to get done. So, doing the team settings, it was new for some of the guys and we have to continue to do that and work on it the next few weeks. A couple of situations we worked today, I thought our offense performed a little better than they did on Tuesday. Defense, really both sides of the ball, are inconsistent. You have to be consistent, have to put it all together. So, we have to continue to work on that. I’m hoping to see that some Saturday at the scrimmage, see how some of these guys respond. We corrected a lot of things from last Saturday and hopefully we’ll see some improvement.” On what areas he hopes to see improvement in since last Saturday’s scrimmage:
“Ball security. Huddle organization on offense, making sure that we get the correct splits at wide receiver, we’ve got the right alignments at tight end, the running backs are protecting the right guy, we’re identifying the right mike, where we’re throwing the football. There’s a lot of little things that have nothing to do with ability, just details and execution. Defensive side, we have to tackle, we have to strike blockers up front, we have to be consistent, have to learn to strain. It’s easy to do it when things are going well. You have to do it when things aren’t going well. It’s not always going to go your way, so you have to find some way to kind of turn it around. So, again, that’s being in adverse situations and we have to figure out if some of our guys are going to do a better job responding Saturday.”
On if there are certain players he is looking at as potential kick returners:
“That’s one thing about the return game. Lots of times we get all caught up in the scheme, but to me, over the years, the returners kind of make the return. You get a guy that’s dynamic back there that sometimes, you hardly have to block anybody, they just go. We’re still searching through it trying to get an idea. There is some guys that have experience from doing it before, but we’re really early in it. We’re repping a lot of guys in specialty, so we’ll see. It’s a little easier to tell out there when we scrimmage, so we’ll see a little more on Saturday.”
On status of linebackers Darrin Kirkland Jr. and Daniel Bituli:
“Daniel is starting to advance. He participated today, he practiced today. I’ve said we’ve got a lot of guys that are getting close, and if we practiced another week, we’d almost have everybody back. He’s one of the guys that’s out there. Darrin took the next step. He’ll probably be back next week, so it will be possible to get these guys some reps as we move forward.
On the possibility of Darrin Kirkland or Daniel Bituli playing in the spring game:
“It’s probably too early to tell. I would have to see where we’re at by next Tuesday to get an idea. So, we’ll see, but it will be close, which is a good thing. Those guys are kind of anxious to get out there.”
On team captain philosophy:
“Well, everywhere that I’ve ever been, and when I was growing up, the teams that I played on, the captains were selected by their teammates at the end of the year, which I think is a huge honor for guys to get selected by their teammates. It says a lot about them. So, I’m sure we’ll probably have captains by the week, based off of who we think are good leaders and who gives us the best chance to have success. Towards the end of the year, when the season is over with, we’ll let the team vote on it.”
On how you Coach Improvement in body language:
“I think you’ve got to hold them accountable. It’s interesting, you’ve got some guys when they make a good play their whole chest swells up and they kind of get that walk about them, but the same guy two plays later, whether he misses a tackle, throws an interception, drops a ball, misses a block, you look out there and he’s got his hands down. So, either you’re the guy with your chest swollen up all the time, or you’re the other way. So, you’ve got to learn to fight through it. It’s not always going to go perfect. So, you’ve got to play the next play. The best players are not perfect. They’re going to make mistakes, they all have, everybody does. So, you’ve got to learn to play the next play.”
On if this teaching is from experience or from putting players in adverse situations:
“I think you’ve got to address them. When it happens, you’ve got to tell them, and that’s what we try to do. “
On Princeton Fant being back at running back today:
“Well we saw enough with him at linebacker to know that he could do it if we had an emergency situation. With these other guys coming back and being able to take more reps, I wanted to make sure we had our best players on the field to compete against each other. I saw enough out of Princeton to know that if we got in to a situation where we had an emergency, we could train him to play that position, but I feel like he would have more success on offense, so we moved him back.
On Princeton Fant playing running back:
“Well, he’s learning the position. I think he played wide receiver in high school. He was recruited here to play tight end. We originally moved him to running back because of lack of numbers for the position. Watching in winter conditioning, he’s kind of had some athletic ability about him, and I like the fact that he weighs 225 pounds. I like big backs. I know from a defensive side, those big backs, over the course of time, they fall forward a bunch of times, and they can handle a lot more licks. So, he’s doing fine over there.
On what he’s seen out of Ty Chandler:
“All of those guys, you put them out there and they’ve all got good hands. They have pretty good vision. They’ve got good enough speed. So, I think it’s too early to single any of them out. You can take Ty, you can take Tim, you can take Trey , you can take Princeton, you put them all in that one group, and they have good days and they have bad days. So, we have to find a little more consistency in all of them.
On using tight ends and full backs:
“We have to figure out what our best personnel is. Once we figure out what our best personnel is, that is what we need to put on the field. We are trying to figure out if we have any tight ends. I’m talking about tight ends that can block, not line up out there and run pass patterns. If we are going to run pass patterns, I would rather put wide receivers out there. How many wide receivers do we have that are hard to guard? I wouldn’t say that there are a lot of full back on our team. We still have to figure out personnel and figure out who we are going to be.”
On Kyle Phillips:
“I think that he has been willing to do anything that we ask him to do. He makes very good grades. Every week on the academic report, I see all “A’s”. He is a very good student and a good kid. Very willing to do whatever we ask him to do since I have been here.”
On Alontae Taylor’s progress at corner:
“I think Alontae can play a lot of positions. He was a high school quarterback. He returned kicks. He’s not going to play quarterback here, so every position is new. He is going to be learning all of them. I think he has a little more experience playing wide receiver because he played more of that in high school, but he also played some defensive back. I think he has a lot of ability. It’s probably not fair to him because the kid met one day and we put him out there with the ones so we could see him guard the best guys. We did that to figure out if he can or can’t. he really don’t know what to do. That’s not his fault. He has really good ability. I think we are going to do it one more day and let him scrimmage with the defense and go from there. It’s one of these deals to build depth down the road. He told me today that he thinks if he does it for a few more days he will have it down and if we need him in the fall he can come help. You look back over the years, there has been sometimes when it’s late in the game and you have a jump ball situation, you want the guy with the best ball skills back there. If you want t throw the ball into the end zone, do you want a five-eight defensive back, back there jumping or do you want the guy that can go up and get the ball. It’s good for him to learn. I think he is probably the best wide receiver to learn how to play defensive back. We are going to decide after the scrimmage whether he needs to move back or wait.”
On whether or not he is looking for anything different in the second scrimmage compared to the first one:
“No. We are playing football. We are looking for the offense to take it and score and the defense to keep them from doing it.”