Here is Tennessee’s postgame with coach Holly Warlick, swing Jaime Nared and C Mercedes Russell after UT’s 66-59 loss to Oregon State in Knoxville in the 2nd Round of the NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament.
Here is Tennessee’s postgame with coach Holly Warlick, swing Jaime Nared and C Mercedes Russell after UT’s 66-59 loss to Oregon State in Knoxville in the 2nd Round of the NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament.
DALLAS — No. 3 seed Tennessee’s season came to an end on Saturday night, as the Vols suffered a heartbreaking loss to 11th-seeded Loyola-Chicago, 63-62, in the second round of the NCAA Tournament.
The Vols (26-9) made one last push at the end of the game, using an 8-0 run to take a 62-61 lead with 20 seconds remaining in the game, capped off by a three-point play from SEC Player of the Year Grant Williams.
But Loyola’s Clayton Custer knocked down a 10-foot jumper with 3.6 seconds left on the clock to regain the lead. Without no timeouts remaining, UT point guard Jordan Bone caught the ball near midcourt, sprinted to the 3-point arc and launched a contested three in heavy traffic that bounced off the rim as time expired.
The Big Orange had four players score in double-digits, as All-SEC wing Admiral Schofield led the way with 14 points on 5-of-10 shooting. Williams finished 14 points, while Bone chipped in 13 and SEC Co-Sixth Man of the Year Lamonte Turner finished with 10.
Tennessee was hot out of the gates, opening the game on a 15-6 run that was capped off by a steal from Schofield, who took it the length of the court for a dunk. He had 11 of the points during the early run that concluded at the 15:37 mark as the Ramblers were forced to call a timeout.
Loyola-Chicago responded with a 23-10 swing after that timeout to take a 29-25 lead into halftime. UT struggled to connect on the offensive end of the floor during the opening 20 minutes, hitting only four of its final 18 shots in the half.
Schofield was forced to sit out a significant portion of the first half after picking up two fouls early in the frame and was unable to be a factor during Loyola’s run.
Tennessee was unable to consistently stop the Ramblers (30-5) on the offensive end of the floor, as LUC shot 50 percent (22-of-44) from the field in the game.
-UT Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — No. 12/13 Tennessee (25-7), the No. 3 seed in the Lexington Regional, has advanced to the NCAA Second Round and will host No. 6 seed and No. 13/12-ranked Oregon State (24-7) on Sunday at 2 p.m. ET in Thompson-Boling Arena.
UT moved on after beating No. 14 seed Liberty, 100-60, on Friday afternoon. OSU advanced with an 82-58 victory over No. 11 seed Western Kentucky in Friday’s first game in Knoxville.
The winner of Sunday’s game will advance to the Sweet 16 in Lexington, Ky., on March 23 and 25 at Rupp Arena.
The Lady Vols are trying to reach their 35th Sweet 16 in the 37-year history of the tournament and their fifth under Holly Warlick.
No. 1 Louisville, No. 2 Baylor, No. 3 Tennessee and No. 4 Stanford are the top four seeds in the Lexington Regional.
BROADCAST INFORMATION
OREGON-TENNESSEE CONNECTIONS
UT’S NCAA TOURNEY HISTORY
UT IN THE FIRST & SECOND ROUNDS
57-GAME HOME NCAA STREAK
LADY VOL NCAA EXPERIENCE
UT POSTS 35TH 25-WIN SEASON!
THE LATEST ON TENNESSEE
TENNESSEE NOTES VS. OREGON STATE
LAST MEETING BETWEEN UT & OSU
LAST MEETING IN KNOXVILLE
OSU LAST TIME OUT (OSU 82, WKU 58)
ABOUT THE BEAVERS
TENN. LAST TIME OUT (UT 100, LU 60)
UT Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Head Coach Holly Warlick and Oregon natives senior Jaime Nared and freshman Evina Westbrook took questions from the media at Saturday’s news conference, as the No. 3 seed Lady Vols (25-7) prepare to face No. 6 seed Oregon State (24-7) in the second round of the NCAA Tournament at Thompson-Boling Arena.
The #12/13-ranked Lady Vols will take on the #13/12-ranked Beavers at approximately 2 p.m. ET on Sunday. The game will be broadcast on ESPN2. Tennessee is 28-1 all-time in NCAA Second Round contests and 22-0 in Knoxville.
Tickets: Great seats are available at AllVols.com. Youth pricing (high school ages and younger) is available in-person at the ticket office windows during normal business hours or on game day. For more information, call the Tennessee Ticket Office at 865-656-1200.
Ag Campus Parking (Free): Free parking and shuttle service is available on UT’s Ag Campus. Shuttle service begins two hours prior to tip-off and will end one hour following the game.
Arena Parking ($10): Parking is available closer to the Arena in lots designated on game day. The charge for those lots is $10.
Gate Opening Times: Arena gates will open one hour prior to tip-off .
Arena Dining Closed: The Thompson-Boling Arena dining facility will not be open to the general public during NCAA First and Second Round games.
Clear Bag Policy: A clear bag policy is in effect for visitors to Thompson-Boling Arena. For more information regarding UT’s clear bag policy, please go to //utsports.com/clearbag.
Travel Advisory: Fans traveling to and from Thompson-Boling Arena via I-40 should be alert for lane closures that will have a significant impact on travel times until Monday at 6 a.m.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — The NCAA has announced that Sunday’s second round women’s basketball tournament game at Thompson-Boling Arena between No. 3 seed Tennessee (25-7) and No. 6 seed Oregon State (24-7) will tip at 2 p.m. Eastern time. ESPN2 will have the telecast.
The No. 12/13-ranked Lady Vols and No. 13/12-ranked Beavers will meet for the fifth time in series history. Their first-ever postseason contest will be for the right to advance to the NCAA Sweet 16 in Lexington, Ky. on March 23 and 25.
A No. 14/16 UT squad upset a No. 7/7 OSU team, 53-50, in the last meeting on Dec. 19, 2015. Tennessee won the last tilt in Knoxville on Dec. 28, 2014, 74-63, in a match-up of (then) No. 8/11 UT and No. 10/12 OSU teams.
Tickets: Tickets are on sale at AllVols.com. Youth pricing (high school ages and younger) is available in-person at the ticket office windows during normal business hours or on game day. For more information, call the Tennessee Ticket Office at 865-656-1200.
Ag Campus Parking (Free): Free parking and shuttle service is available on UT’s Ag Campus. Shuttle service begins two hours prior to the tip-off time of the first game of each round and will end one hour following the final game.
Arena Parking ($10): Parking is available closer to the Arena in lots designated on game day. The charge for those lots is $10.
Gate Opening Times: Arena gates will open one hour prior to tip-off.
Arena Dining Closed: The Thompson-Boling Arena dining facility will not be open to the general public during NCAA First and Second Round games.
Clear Bag Policy: A clear bag policy is in effect for visitors to Thompson-Boling Arena. For more information regarding UT’s clear bag policy, please go to //utsports.com/clearbag.
Travel Advisory: Fans travelling to Thompson-Boling Arena via I-40 should be alert for lane closures that will have a significant impact on travel times on Sunday. Please allow plenty of time.
UT Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — No. 12/13-ranked Tennessee soared past Liberty, 100-60, as the No. 3 seed Lady Vols scored their highest point total in an NCAA Tournament game since 2006 when they defeated Army, 102-54.
Rennia Davis led UT (25-7) with 18 points and 11 rebounds, marking her ninth career double-double and tying her with Tamika Catchings for the fifth most double-doubles ever recorded by a UT freshman. Redshirt junior Cheridene Green also posted a double-double, the second of her career, with 15 points and 12 rebounds.
No. 14 seed Liberty (24-10), which hadn’t surrendered 100 points in a game since the Lady Vols defeated them 102-58 in the 1998 NCAA First Round, was led in scoring by Lela Sellers and Ola Makurat, each with 13 points.
Tennessee began the game by winning the tip and finding Jaime Nared, who converted on a 10-foot jumper. UT forced five turnovers in the opening seven minutes but struggled to convert on the offensive end, trailing 7-6 at the 3:15 mark. With 2:57 to play in the quarter, Cheridene Green set off an 11-0 run for Tennessee that put the Lady Vols up 17-7 before Makurat hit a three for Liberty. The Lady Vols ended the quarter up 20-10.
The Lady Flames came out firing in the second quarter, going 3-of-3 in the opening minutes with two of those shots coming from behind the arc. Tennessee was up 28-22 at the midway point of the second quarter, but a Sellers three and free throw cut it to 28-26 with 4:12 left in the half. With 1:55 to play, Green set off another run for Tennessee, and UT closed the half by outscoring Liberty 6-0 to take a 36-28 lead into the break.
Nared converted on a three-point play to start the second half, giving the Lady Vols a 39-28 lead, their largest of the game at that point. Tennessee went on to outscore Liberty 11-5 in the opening three minutes, leading 47-33 with seven minutes to play in the period. Tennessee forced seven turnovers and rode a sizzling .813 shooting percentage to a 74-48 lead by the end of the quarter.
Tennessee continued its high powered offense in the fourth quarter, shooting 78.6 percent from the field to pour in another 26 points and close out the game with a 100-60 victory over Liberty.
Up Next: The Lady Vols advance to face No. 13/12-ranked Oregon State (24-7) in the second round on Saturday in Knoxville. The time has not been announced. Tennessee has a 4-0 series advantage on the Beavers, including 2-0 during the Holly Warlick era. UT beat OSU, 53-50, in Corvallis the last time these teams met on Dec. 19, 2015.
Another 25-Win Season: The victory over Liberty marked Tennessee’s 25th win of the season, making this the 35th time the Lady Vols have had 25 or more wins in a season. It was the fourth time during the Holly Warlick era.
NCAA Records of Note: The win moves the Lady Vols to 57-0 all-time at home in NCAA Tournament games, including 23-0 in first round contests. UT is 30-1 all-time in first round games at all sites. Holly Warlick improved to 13-5 in tournament play, including 6-0 in the first round.
Sharp Shooting: Tennessee connected on 61.7 percent from the field on the day, the highest percentage UT has mustered all season and the best it has ever shot in any NCAA Tournament game (UT now has played 153 of them over 37 years). The previous best was .609 vs. Tennessee Tech on March 15, 1987, in the second round. UT
Piling Up Points: The Lady Vols’ 38-third quarter points tied for their second-most all-time in any quarter (behind 44 vs. Troy earlier this season), and their 64 second-half points tied for ninth all-time.
A Team Affair: The Lady Vols had seven players in double figures, and all 10 UT players scored at least two points. The last time Tennessee had seven players score 10+ points or more was against Troy earlier this season.
Nared Moves Up Free Throw Lists: Jaime Nared went 4-of-4 from the free throw line and now has 168 this season and 428 for her career. She moved past Tamika Catchings (165, 1997-98), Chamique Holdsclaw (16, 1997-98) and Candace Parker (166, 2006-07) into second-most in a season behind Parker (201, 2007-08). The stands sixth at UT for career free throws made.
Big Time Blockers: Mercedes Russell got her 100th career start and recorded her 194th block, tying Michelle Snow for the fifth-most blocks in Tennessee history.
UT Athletics
DALLAS — Tennessee will look to advance to its eighth Sweet Sixteen in program history on Saturday, as the Vols face Loyola-Chicago in a second-round matchup at American Airlines Center. The game tips at 6:10 p.m. ET and will be televised live on TNT.
The No. 3 seeded Volunteers (26-8) claimed a share of the SEC Regular-Season Championship after being picked to finish 13th by select media during the preseason. This year’s squad is one of only four Tennessee teams to ever win 25 games in a single season is the 21st UT team to represent the Vols in the Big Dance.
All-SEC wing Admiral Schofield is playing his best basketball of the season right now, averaging 17.0 points and 8.3 rebounds in last week’s SEC Tournament en route to All-Tournament Team honors. He posted his second double-double in as many games, with 15 points and 12 rebounds to go along with a pair of blocks in UT’s opening round win over Wright State.
Grant Williams was the focus point of every defense during the SEC Tournament, being double-teamed and sometimes triple-teamed every time he got the ball in the post. That didn’t stop the SEC Player of the Year from posting 12.3 ppg, 8.3 rpg, 2.7 apg and 1.0 spg during the tournament. He just missed out on a double-double, recording 14 points on 6-of-10 shooting and hauling down nine boards in the Vols’ win against Wright State.
On Thursday, a trio of double-digit scorers fueled No. 3-seeded Tennessee to a dominant 73-47 win over #13 seed Wright State. SEC Co-Sixth Man of the Year Lamonte Turner led all players with 19 points and a career-high nine assists off the bench. UT was active on the defensive end of the court, finishing with six blocks and six steals to hold the Raiders (25-10) to a season-low for scoring and the fewest points allowed ever in program history during the NCAA Tournament.
The Big Orange has never faced the Ramblers on the hardwood. Loyola (29-5) is in its first tournament since 1985 after winning the Missouri Valley Conference Tournament. Donte Ingram knocked down a three-pointer with only 0.3 seconds remaining in regulation to vault the 11th-seeded Ramblers past sixth-seeded Miami by a final score of 64-62 in the opening round of the tournament.
THE OPPONENT
• Tennessee has never faced Loyola-Chicago on the collegiate hardwood.
• The Ramblers were the 1963 national champions. This year’s squad has tied that 1963 team with a program-record 29 wins.
• Sixth-seeded Loyola-Chicago is riding an 11-game win streak.
• The Ramblers shoot .506 as a team and defeated Florida, 65-59, in Gainesville this season.
RIGHT NOW
• In Tennessee’s 41 all-time NCAA Tournament games, the 47 points it gave up Thursday was a program-best.
• SEC Co-Sixth Man of the Year Lamonté Turner’s nine assists Thursday vs. Wright State were a career-high (previous was six).
• The All-SEC duo of Admiral Schofield (a native of Zion, Illinois) and Grant Williams is averaging 32.4 points and 15.4 rebounds over the last five games.
• Thursday’s first-round win over Wright State was Rick Barnes‘ 100th game as Tennessee’s head coach.
A WIN WOULD…
• Mark the eighth time Tennessee advanced to the Sweet Sixteen.
• Give Rick Barnes his seventh career Sweet Sixteen appearance as a head coach.
• Give UT 27 total victories, which would stand as the third-most in a season in program history.
• Give the Vols 14 total victories away from home this season, the program’s most since 2007-08 (15).
VOLS WON LAST CLASH WITH 11 SEED
• Tennessee is 2-0 against No. 11 seeds in the NCAA Tournament. The Vols most recently defeated Iowa, 78-65, in overtime during a First Four game in Dayton in 2014. UT went on to reach the Sweet Sixteen.
• The other game came in the Round of 64 in a 62-59 win over San Diego State in 2010, when the Big Orange marched all the way to the Elite Eight.
VOLS-RAMBLERS CONNECTIONS
• Vols assistant coach Desmond Oliver and Loyola head coach Porter Moser worked together as assistants on the Texas A&M coaching staff under head coach Tony Barone during the 1997-98 season.
• Loyola-Chicago junior guard Adarius Avery is a native of Arlington, Tennessee (West Tennessee) and graduated from Arlington High School, where he was an All-State performer. The junior College transfer has appeared in 12 games off the bench in his first season with the Ramblers.
• Tennessee All-SEC wing Admiral Schofield is from Zion, Illinois, which is about 45 miles north of the LUC campus. Schofield was recruited by some members of the Ramblers’ staff and played against some of the Loyola players in high school.
ALEXANDER ASCENDING SINGLE-SEASON BLOCKS LIST
• Junior forward Kyle Alexander now ranks fourth on UT’s single-season block list, as he has swatted 57 shots on the year.
• He had a pair of blocks Thursday against Wright State.
THREE VOLUNTEERS HAVE MADE 50+ 3-POINTERS
• This Tennessee team boasts three players with 50 or more made 3-pointers for the first time since the 1999-2000 season.
• Lamonté Turner already has 68 made triples, while Admiral Schofield has made 60, and Jordan Bowden has 50.
• In 1999-2000, the three Vols who accomplished that feat were: Tony Harris (73), Jon Higgins (53) and Vincent Yarbrough (53).
• That 1999-2000 squad finished with a 26-7 (12-4 SEC) record, won a share of the SEC regular-season championship and advanced to the Sweet Sixteen before falling to North Carolina in Austin, Texas.
26 WINS AND COUNTING
• This is one of only four Tennessee teams to win at least 26 games in a single season (see chart below).
• Tennessee has logged its 26th all-time 20-win season and its first since 2013-14, when the Vols finished with 24 victories and advanced to their seventh Sweet Sixteen.
• Tennessee also recorded 23 regular-season victories for the first time since 2009-10 (23).
• In 31 seasons as a Division I head coach, Rick Barnes has now led his teams to 20 or more wins 21 times.
RANK SEASON RECORD POSTSEASON
1 2007-08 31-5 NCAA Sweet Sixteen
2 2009-10 28-9 NCAA Elite Eight
3 1999-2000 26-7 NCAA Sweet Sixteen
4 2017-18 26-8 TBD
UT Athletics
Craig Campbell is returning to country radio for the first time in two years with the release of his new single, “See You Try.”
Craig dropped a new lyric video for the uptempo tune—which was penned by James McNair, Jordan Schmidt and FGL’s Tyler Hubbard—that features his wife of 13 years, Mindy.
“I feel like it was well worth the wait on my end, and I’m hoping the fans will feel the same way,” says Craig. “I believe in divine providence and I feel like this song was meant for me, so I’m excited, and I feel like this is a game-changer.”
Watch Craig’s new video below.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jI2woJMTHHw
photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com
Jim Casey talks with Trent Harmon about:
Show Participants:
Jason Aldean revealed the track listing and songwriters on his upcoming album, Rearview Town, which will drop on April 13.
The 15-track offering, which is available for pre-order now, was helmed by longtime producer Michael Knox and features a number of well-known songwriters, including Casey Beathard, Dallas Davidson, Jessi Alexander, David Lee Murphy and more.
The track listing also reveals a duet with Miranda Lambert on “Drowns the Whiskey.”
“I think [the album] is going to sound a little familiar, but it’s not going to be the same,” said Jason to NCD. “I think that obviously what got me to this point was recording the kind of music I like, and over the years we created our thing . . . the way I’ve tried to describe this record is, on a lot of the albums before . . . you hear like a heavy rock influence, and on some it may be a little bit more of an R&B or hip-hop or whatever. And you’ve seen those scattered on a lot of the different records, and I think on this album, we kind of took all those and put them into one record.”
Rearview Town Track Listing & Songwriters
photo by JPA/AFF-USA