During Chris Janson’s sold-out show at the Ryman Auditorium on Feb. 5, Keith Urban surprised the “Buy Me a Boat” singer with an official invitation to join the Grand Ole Opry. Since making his debut in 2013, Chris has racked up close to 200 Opry performances.
Keith initially joined Chris onstage to team up for a performance of John Michael Montgomery’s hit, “Sold,” before making the surprise announcement.
“To have a sold-out show at the Ryman, Chris, that’s amazing,” said Keith. “And it’s fitting it should be at the Ryman because it is, or course, one of the many homes of the Grand Ole Opry, which I am a member . . . and I remember the feeling the night that I got invited [to join]. It’s an incredible feeling and I think it’s about time you feel that way too, Chris. I would like to invite you, Chris Janson, to become the newest member of that family at the Grand Ole Opry.”
“I do not know what to say,” said Chris. “I am 100 percent speechless. So I am going to do what I do best, and I’m going to dig way back in my repertoire and I’m going to sing you the kind of music right now that I always dreamt about and studied . . . I’m gonna play you a Haggard song right now and I cannot believe I just got invited to join the Grand Ole Opry.”
Chris’ formal Opry induction will be scheduled for later this spring.
Jaime Nared – Lady Vols Forward / Credit: UT Athetics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee women’s basketball standout Jaime Nared has been named the College Sports Madness National & SEC Player of the Week for her performances vs. Texas A&M and Vanderbilt.
This marks the second time the 6-foot-2 senior from Portland, Ore., has earned national accolades and the third occasion she was selected as the SEC honoree by College Sports Madness. She was named the CSM National Player of the Week for the first time on Dec. 11 and picked up the organization’s SEC nod on that date as well as on Dec. 26.
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The forward averaged 26.5 points and 10.0 rebounds per game in two contests last week, helping the #11/13 Lady Vols improve to 19-4 overall and 7-3 in SEC play with victories over #14/12 Texas A&M (82-67) and Vanderbilt (74-64). She shot 51.7 percent from the field (15-of-29) and 84.0 percent from the free throw line (21-of-25) and also averaged 2.5 assists.
Nared tallied 23 points, six rebounds and four assists in the win over the Aggies, connecting on 8 of 15 tries from the field and 6-of-8 opportunities from the charity stripe. Against Vandy, Nared matched her career high in scoring, firing in 30 and pulling down 14 rebounds for her ninth double-double of the season and the 18th of her career. She tied for the fourth most free throws ever made in a game by a Lady Vol, hitting 15-of -17, including 10-of-10 in the final five minutes.
A top-10 candidate for the Cheryl Miller Award, Nared has scored 20 or more points in nine games this season and 18 times in her career.
Tennessee next sees action on Feb. 8 in Fayetteville, Ark., as the Lady Vols take on the Arkansas Razorbacks at 7 p.m. CT (8 ET) at Bud Walton Arena. The game will be streamed online via SECN+.
Kyle Alexander / Vols Forward / Credit: UT Athletics
LEXINGTON, Ky. — Playing its best ball of the season, 15th-ranked Tennessee heads to Rupp Arena on Tuesday night for a showdown with rival Kentucky. The game is set to tip at 7 p.m. ET and will be televised on ESPN for “Super Tuesday.”
The Vols (17-5, 7-3 SEC) enter the contest as winners of their last five games and eight of the last nine. During the stretch, defense has been the key for UT’s success. Tennessee has held its opponents to under 65 points in each of the last seven outings and now ranks 6th in defensive efficiency in the KenPom rankings.
UT is coming off a 94-61 drubbing at home against Ole Miss. Despite five scorers in double figures and blazing-hot shooting in the second half, the defense stole the show, forcing 17 turnovers by the Rebels behind 11 steals and seven blocks. In the second period, the Vols shot 71 percent (20-of-28) from the floor, including 10 treys, to blow past Ole Miss.
No. 24 Kentucky (17-6, 6-4 SEC) is coming off a recent victory at No. 7 West Virginia, 83-76, as part of the Big 12/SEC Challenge. Freshman Kevin Knox, the team’s leading scorer on the season at 15.1 ppg, led the charge vs. West Virginia, with a career-high 34 points on 11-of-17 shooting. On Saturday, the Wildcats fell on the road at Missouri, 69-60. UK struggled to connect from beyond the arc, converting on just two of its 20 attempts from three.
After the matchup, the Vols head to Alabama for a game against the streaking Crimson Tide on Saturday at 6 p.m. ET. After that, UT returns home to face South Carolina in a 9 p.m. tip next Tuesday for one of three remaining games in Thompson-Boling Arena this season.
THE SERIES
Overall: Kentucky leads, 153-70
In Knoxville: UK leads, 52-50
In Lexington: UK leads, 90-16
Neutral Sites: UK leads, 11-4
Current Streak: UT has won one
Last Meeting: Tennessee won, 76-65, in Knoxville, 1/6/18 Rick Barnes vs. Kentucky: 4-4 Rick Barnes vs. John Calipari: Barnes leads, 5-4
RIGHT NOW
During its five-game win streak, Tennessee is allowing an just 58.5 ppg while boasting a +18.2 scoring margin.
Per KenPom.com, Tennessee rates in the national top 30 in both offensive (22nd) and defensive (6th) efficiency.
The Vols are rated No. 13 in the NCAA RPI and own the nation’s third-rated SOS, per KenPom.com.
A WIN WOULD…
Give Tennessee a six-game overall win streak (its longest since February 2013) and a five-game win streak in SEC play.
Stand as Tennessee’s fifth all-time victory over Kentucky at Rupp Arena.
Give the Vols their first season sweep of Kentucky since the 1998-99 campaign.
ABOUT KENTUCKY
• John Calipari once again heads a strong Kentucky team, which was picked to win the SEC this year by the media during the preseason.
• The Wildcats currently rank 16th in the latest RPI standings. With a 17-6 record entering the matchup, UK holds wins over ETSU, Harvard, Virginia Tech, Louisville, Georgia and at West Virginia this season.
• After losing two of its previous three, Kentucky fought back from a 15-point halftime deficit on the road at No. 7 WVU to beat the Mountaineers, 83-76, as part of the Big 12/SEC Challenge on Jan. 27.
• Freshman Kevin Knox, the team’s leading scorer on the season at 15.1 ppg, led the charge vs. West Virginia, with a career-high 34 points on 11-of-17 shooting.
• Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is arguably Kentucky’s most versatile player, averaging 12.7 ppg, 4.4 apg, 3.6 rpg and 1.7 spg in 31 minutes of action per game.
• Preseason first-team All-SEC guard Hamidou Diallo (12.0 ppg, 4.3 rpg) and PJ Washington (10.3 ppg, 5.1 rpg) round out UK’s double-digit scorers.
• The Wildcats enter Tuesday’s matchup coming off a loss at Missouri, 69-60. Kentucky struggled to connect from beyond the arc, converting on just two of its 20 attempts from three. Gilgeous-Alexander led the Wildcats with 15 points and six assists.
SERIES NOTES
• The Kentucky series is UT’s oldest and most-played among SEC opponents. The Vols and Wildcats first met on Feb. 5, 1910, and have clashed 223 times over the years.
• It has been 10 years since the last time Tennessee came to Rupp Arena ranked higher than Kentucky. The third-ranked Vols lost to the unranked Wildcats, 72-66, at Rupp on Jan 22, 2008.
• No program in college basketball has logged more wins over Kentucky than Tennessee (70).
• Kentucky is one of only four SEC schools (along with Alabama, Arkansas and Missouri) to lead its all-time series against the Volunteers.
• Four Tennessee All-Americans were Kentucky natives: Allan Houston, Chris Lofton, Danny Schultz and Paul “Lefty” Walther.
• Tennessee has 14 all-time wins over the Wildcats at Thompson-Boling Arena, including three straight.
• The Vols have beaten the Wildcats just four times at Rupp Arena, posting victories in 1977, 1979, 1999 and 2006.
LAST MEETING KENTUCKY
• Admiral Schofield scored 20 points and recorded nine rebounds to lead the 23rd-ranked Tennessee Volunteers to a 76-65 victory over No. 17 Kentucky on Jan. 6, 2018, at a sold out Thompson-Boling Arena.
• The Vols shot 54 percent from the field in the second half while using a strong defensive effort to outscore the Wildcats in the final period, 47-28, and earn their first conference victory of the season.
• Grant Williams stepped up offensively down the stretch, scoring 16 of his 18 points in the second half on 7-for-9 shooting.
• UT was also fueled by great team play, as it recorded 23 assists on 25 made field goals, led by six assists from James Daniel III.
• After going into halftime trailing by nine, the Vols went on multiple runs in the second half, including a 10-0 burst that lasted more than three minutes, to reclaim the lead and defeat Kentucky for the third consecutive year at Thompson-Boling Arena.
• Kentucky was efficient throughout the first half, shooting 55 percent from the field and 4-for-8 from behind the 3-point arc. PJ Washington knocked down his first four shots and finished the period with 11 points to lead the Wildcats to a 37-29 advantage at the intermission.
• UT stormed out of the gate in the second half, going on a quick 6-0 run highlighted by a Schofield breakaway dunk. The outburst continued with a Lamonté Turner 3-pointer three minutes in that put the Vols ahead for the first time since the 16:00 mark of the first half.
MEMORABLE VOL PERFORMANCES AGAINST KENTUCKY
• Kevin Punter Jr.’s 27 points were the most scored by a Vol against the Kentucky in 10 years as Tennessee defeated the Wildcats, 84-77, Feb. 2, 2016, in Knoxville. The senior point guard made three 3-pointers and was 11-of-12 at the free-throw line.
• Chris Lofton reeled off 31 points, Major Wingate scored 12 and current Orlando Magic guard C.J. Watson added 10 as No. 11 Tennessee beat Kentucky 75-67 at Rupp Arena on Feb. 7, 2006.
• Beating the Wildcats was three times as nice during the 1978-79 season. UT notched program win No. 900 in Lexington on Jan. 20, 66-55, before topping UK 101-84 in Knoxville on Feb. 17. Then the Vols won the 1979 SEC Tournament with a 75-69 win over UK in Birmingham, Alabama, on March 3. Current Vol Network radio analyst Bert Bertelkamp was a junior on that Tennessee team.
• As Bernard King walked off the court at Memorial Gym after a deflating 88-82 loss on Jan. 13, 1975, a Kentucky fan flipped a lit cigarette into the Tennessee legend’s hair. Outraged, King vowed he would never lose to Kentucky again. He vigorously carried out that promise, finishing his career 5-1 against the Wildcats.
BARNES & CALIPARI: 1,300+ WINS
• Saturday’s game features the two winningest coaches (total career Division I wins) in the SEC.
• John Calipari is the league’s active leader in career wins, with 669. Rick Barnes is a close second with 652 victories to his credit.
• Among all active Division I head coaches, Calipari and Barnes rank fifth and seventh, respectively, in total head coaching wins.
• Barnes and Calipari became friends while working a Pitt basketball camp in the late 1970s. The star player at that camp? Current Arizona head coach Sean Miller.
CALIPARI AMONG TENNESSEE’S MOST-FACED HEAD COACHES
• On Tuesday, John Calipari will coach his 23rd career game against the Vols. Among active college coaches, that stands as the third-most career meetings against Tennessee.
COACH MEETINGS UT’s RECORD vs.
Kevin Stallings 37 21-16
Tubby Smith 26 7-19
John Calipari 21 8-14
Andy Kennedy 16 8-8
Mark Fox 13 4-9
VOLS HAVE SEVEN WINS vs. CALIPARI
• Since UK coach John Calipari returned to the college game in 2000-01, Tennessee has dealt him seven losses. No team has more wins over Calipari-coached teams during that span.
TEAM WINS
TENNESSEE 7
Florida 7
Louisville 7
Cincinnati 5
Ole Miss 4
Southern Miss 4
JANUARY KENTUCKY WIN SPARKED HOT STREAK FOR SCHOFIELD
• Tennessee head coach Rick Barnes said that junior wing Admiral Schofield had his best game as Vol when UT defeated Kentucky on Jan. 6. That win started a streak of stellar play for Schofield.
• Over the last nine contests, Schofield is averaging 12.8 points, 7.6 rebounds, 2.1 assists and 1.6 steals per game. He is shooting .467 overall and .442 from 3-point range during that span.
• In this year’s first meeting with Kentucky, Schofield totaled 20 points, nine rebounds, four assists, four steals and a block.
• In five career games vs. Kentucky, Schofield averages 13.4 points, 6.8 rebounds and 1.4 assists while shooting .500 from the field.
UT HAS EXCEEDED 2016-17 WINS TOTAL
• Tennessee has already exceeded last season’s total of 16 wins, and the Vols have eight regular-season games remaining.
TRENDING NOW
• In SEC play, Tennessee leads the league in assists per game (16.8) and assist/turnover ratio (1.5) while ranking second in scoring offense (79.0 ppg), scoring margin (+8.4), field-goal percentage (.474), 3-point percentage (.401) and rebounding defense (33.1 rapg).
• The school record for 3-point percentage is .3912, set during the 1989-90 season (Allan Houston era). Tennessee’s current 3-point percentage is .398.
• Excluding any postseason games, UT is on pace to total 533 assists during the regular season. That would stand as the fourth-highest single-season total in school history.
• The Vols also are on pace to finish the regular season with 155 blocked shots. That would rank as the sixth-highest single-season total in school history.
• During SEC play, junior wing Admiral Schofield ranks second in the league in 3-point percentage (.458) and fifth in rebounding (7.4 rpg) and tied for seventh in steals per game (1.4 spg).
• Sophomore guard Lamonté Turner has made 20 consecutive free throws dating to Tennessee’s Jan. 6 win over Kentucky. In SEC play, his .949 free-throw percentage (37-of-39) leads the league.
• Junior forward Kyle Alexander has 19 blocks over UT’s last seven games (2.7 bpg).
VOLS COMING OFF BEST HALF OF BASKETBALL THIS SEASON
• Tennessee put on a clinic during the second half of its 94-61 rout of Ole Miss on Saturday.
• The Vols scored 59 points in the half, during which they missed their first two field goals before making 20 of their last 26 attempts from the floor.
• The Vols shot .714 as a team during the half.
• The 59 points were UT’s most in a half since scoring 60 in the first half of a 114-75 season-opening win over Chattanooga on Nov. 25, 2008.
• Tennessee had 17 assists and just one turnovers during the half.
• UT’s 33-point margin of victory was its largest in a regular-season SEC game since beating Vanderbilt, 76-38, on March 1, 2014, by 38 points (in postseason play, UT beat Auburn by 38 points [97-59] in the first round of the 2016 SEC Tournament).
• During the final 20 minutes vs. Ole Miss Saturday, the Vols averaged 1.84 points per possession.
Luke Bryan took down a monster buck with an arrow in a new video posted on the Facebook page of Buck Commander, a TV show focused on hunting that features “Buckmen” such as Luke, Jason Aldean, Willie Robertson and more.
In the new clip, Luke’s enthusiastic reaction is shown after shooting the arrow and striking the deer.
“The reaction you get from [Luke] is that excitement you see, and that’s not something he just turns on for the camera,” says Jason Aldean in the video. “That is legit, that is what you get with Luke.
“I think it just goes to show you what a passion he has for hunting and how excited he gets even all these years later. No matter how many times you’ve had big deer out in front of you, or you shot deer, he still has that same passion for it as he did when he was first getting started, and I think you can see that in his reaction.”
Watch the video below to see Luke’s reaction, but be warned, it features footage of a deer getting shot.
Lady Antebellum’s Hillary Scott shared the first photo of her twin girls in an Instagram post today (Feb. 5). Hillary also revealed the names of the twins: Betsy Mack and Emory JoAnn.
Hillary and husband Chris Tyrell welcomed the twins on Jan. 29 around 2 a.m.
“Our identical little ladies Betsy Mack and Emory JoAnn were born January 29th around 2am, 5.5lbs each and 17 inches long,” said Hillary in the Instagram post. “Their Daddy took this picture when they were two days old napping on Mama. Their favorite place to be, other than on me, is nose to nose and cheek to cheek. Big Sister Eisele’s heart is full of love for her sisters and she is already such an incredible little helper. One week in and we are definitely seeing double! Double the blessing, double the tired, double the laundry, but double the love! ~Tyrrell Party of Five 👨🏻👩🏻👧🏼👶🏼👶🏼 💕💕💕💕💕.”
The twins join older sister Eisele, 4, in the Tyrell/Scott household.
Big Sister Eisele’s heart is full of love for her sisters—she is already such an incredible little helper. One week in and we are definitely seeing double!
Double the blessing, double the tired, double the laundry, but double the love! ~Tyrrell Party of Five
👨🏻👩🏻👧🏼👶🏼👶🏼 pic.twitter.com/c93OlNs7cL
Chris Young scored the 10th No. 1 single of his career as “Losing Sleep” ascended to the top of both the Billboard Country Airplay chart and Mediabase chart.
“Losing Sleep,” which was co-penned by Chris, Josh Hoge and Chris DeStefanois, is the lead single and title track from Chris’ seventh studio album that was released in October 2017.
“I’m at a loss for words,” said Chris. “This last year has brought so many milestones and now to be celebrating my 10th number one single at country radio is beyond amazing. Thank you to everyone who has spun and streamed ‘Losing Sleep’ and come out to see the tour and I can’t wait to see everyone on the road soon.”
Justin Timberlake’s halftime performance during the Super Bowl may have been a solo affair, but he enlisted the help of Chris Stapleton as soon as the game ended.
Justin and Chris appeared on the live post-game broadcast of The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon from Minneapolis’ Orpheum Theatre. The tandem traded vocals and guitar licks on their new duet, “Say Something,” a tune from JT’s new album, Man of the Woods.
Jon Pardi put his pipes on Tom T. Hall’s “I Like Beer” for a new Michelob Ultra commercial that aired during the Super Bowl on Feb. 4.
The new ad spot features actor Chris Pratt, golfer Brooks Koepka, surfer Kelly Slater and runner Shalane Flanagan singing the song together. The commercial, which Jon did not appear in, is part of Michelob’s “You Can Do Both” campaign.
“This past year has been filled with so many milestones and bucket list items, and when Michelob Ultra reached out with an opportunity to be part of this Super Bowl commercial, I was all in,” said Jon. “It was such a fun experience to record this version of the song and it’s awesome to be a part of it.”
Tom T. Hall’s recording of the tune, which he wrote and released in 1975, reached No. 4 on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart.
Carrie Underwood opened Super Bowl 52 on Feb. 4 with the premiere of her new video for “The Champion,” a tune she co-wrote with Brett James, Chris DeStefano and Ludacris, whose vocals are also featured on the song.
“When we were writing ‘The Champion,’ our main focus was to celebrate athletes at the top of their game, but we also wanted the song to resonate with people in their everyday lives,” says Carrie. “We hope the lyrics will inspire people to push themselves beyond their limits to conquer anything they are trying to accomplish or overcome. There’s a champion in every single one of us!”
The video for the anthemic tune was filmed last year and features Super Bowl moments with cameos from some of the NFL’s greats. NBC will also incorporate “The Champion” into its coverage of the 2018 Olympic Winter Games, which will begin on Feb. 9.
Watch the new video for “The Champion” below.
.@carrieunderwood kicks us off on the biggest Sunday Night of them all.