Hoops Preview: #12/13 Lady Vols vs. #14/12 Texas A&M

Hoops Preview: #12/13 Lady Vols vs. #14/12 Texas A&M

Evina Westbrook – Lady Vols Guard / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — No. 12/13 Tennessee (17-4, 5-3 SEC) will try to get back on the winning track when it plays host to #14/12 Texas A&M (17-5/6-2) on Thursday. An early tipoff time of 6:32 p.m. is on tap at Thompson-Boling Arena.

This will mark the second meeting this season between these teams. The (then) #17/16 Aggies held serve at Reed Arena on Jan. 11, turning back the (then) #6/6 Lady Vols in overtime, 79-76. That setback ended a 15-0 start for Tennessee. Including that contest, the Big Orange women have gone 2-4 since opening the season in perfect fashion.

The Lady Vols are coming off a loss on Sunday, falling at unranked LSU, 70-59. That marked UT’s first setback to an unranked team this season and ended a run of 14 straight victories over unranked foes, dating back to an NCAA Tournament First Round triumph over Dayton last March.

Texas A&M comes to town having won three of four since knocking off the Lady Vols. The Aggies won their third straight game on Sunday, cruising past Vanderbilt in Nashville, 91-67.

Broadcast Information

  • Pam Ward (play-by-play) and Gail Goestenkors (analyst) will describe the action for the UT-Texas A&M TV broadcast on the SEC Network.
  • Mickey Dearstone is handling the call for IMG College/Lady Vol Network radio/online broadcasts for the 19th season. A link to the live audio stream can be found on each game’s Hoops Central page or the Lady Vol schedule on UTSports.com.
  • Air time for games on the Lady Vol Radio Network generally occurs 30 minutes prior to tip-off.

Game Promotions

  • Post-game autographs with Kortney Dunbar at section 116 on the concourse.
  • High-five tunnel for the first 50 kids every game! Pick up a wristband for the tunnel at section 113 on the concourse.
  • Free parking & shuttle service from UT’s Ag Campus.
  • Halftime performance by Mutts Gone Nutts.

UT’s Upcoming Schedule

  • Tennessee is in a stretch where it is playing three out of four games on the road, with the A&M game being the only home date.
  • After Thursday night, UT will pack its bags to play at Vanderbilt at 1 p.m. CT (2 ET) on Feb. 4 and at Arkansas at 7 p.m. CT (8 ET) on Feb. 8. Those games will be carried by ESPNU and SECN+, respectively.
  • UT is back at home on Feb. 11, when Georgia comes to Rocky Top for the annual “Live Pink, Bleed Orange” game at 3 p.m. ET on the SEC Network.
  •  In another scheduling note, UT’s Feb. 18 game at Missouri has been set for 1 p.m. CT (2 ET) on ESPNU.

RPI Watch

  • Tennessee ranks No. 10 in the NCAA Women’s Basketball RPI, as of the Jan. 30 report.
  • Below are 19 teams (21 games when UT meets Texas A&M and South Carolina for the  second time) on UT’s schedule this season that are ranked in the top 100. The teams the Lady Vols already have played are underlined.
  • 1. Notre Dame (L), 3. Mississippi State (L), 11. Texas (W), 12. Missouri, 14. Texas A&M (L), 16. Georgia, 17. South Carolina (W), 20. Marquette (W), 27. Stanford (W), 35. LSU (L), 63. Oklahoma State (W), 74. South Dakota (W), 85. Alabama, 90. James Madison (W), 93. Arkansas, 95. Kentucky (W), 96. Central Arkansas (W), 99. Auburn (W), 100. Ole Miss (W).

Bracketology Says…

  • ESPN’s Charlie Creme has Tennessee projected for a No. 4 seed in the NCAA Tournament and slotted in the Spokane Regional.
  • Creme has the Lady Vols hosting a first round game vs. No. 13 Mercer and meeting either No. 5 Green Bay or No. 12 Gonzaga in the second round.

Tennessee Notes vs. Texas A&M

  • Tennessee holds a 7-4 all-time record vs. Texas A&M, dating back to Dec. 19, 1997.
  • UT is 2-1 in Knoxville, 1-2 in College Station and 4-1 at neutral sites vs. the Aggies.
  • The Big Orange women are 5-4 vs. A&M since the Aggies joined the SEC.
  • A&M is 2-0 in overtime games vs. UT, defeating the Lady Vols in an extra frame the past two times these squads met in College Station.
  •  Mercedes Russell has posted double-doubles in her past two games vs. the Aggies, notching a 21/10 outing on Jan. 11, 2018, and a 17/11 output on Feb. 12, 2017.
  •  Kortney Dunbar hit three treys in the 2016 game in College Station, all in the first quarter.
  •  In the initial meeting between these teams in Knoxville, on Feb. 28, 2013, Tennessee defeated A&M, 82-72, on Senior Day to give Holly Warlick an SEC regular-season championship on the Lady Vols’ home court in her first season as head coach. Her squad had been picked to finish as low as fifth and returned no starters.
  •  Tennessee made its first-ever women’s basketball appearance in College Station on Jan. 26, 2014, and the (then) #11/12 Lady Vols picked up a key victory over the (then) #17/15 Aggies, 76-55. A&M was the SEC leader at the time of that defeat.
  •  UT has met A&M in other tournaments, including one regular-season and one postseason event.
  • After both of those tourney wins over the Aggies, the Lady Vols would advance to, and win, the NCAA Final Four in 1997-98 and 2007-08.
  • In the first meeting, the #1/1 Lady Vols rolled to a 105-81 victory over the Aggies at the Northern Lights Invitational in Alaska in game two of a three-game stay.
  • The famed “Three Meeks” dazzled #8/9 A&M in that contest, as Chamique Holdsclaw tallied 29, Semeka Randall tossed in 23 and Tamika Catchings added a double-double of 21 points and 12 rebounds for #1/1 UT in the high-scoring affair.
  • In 2008, Candace Parker scored 26 points and Alexis Hornbuckle chipped in 14, as the Lady Vols defeated Texas A&M, 53-45, in the Oklahoma City Regional Final to advance to the Final Four in Tampa.

Last Meeting Between UT And A&M

  • Danni Williams made three free throws with 7.8 seconds remaining in overtime to put No. 17/16 Texas A&M ahead and help hand No. 6/6 Tennessee its first loss of the season, 79-76, on Jan. 11 at Reed Arena.
  • Mercedes Russell recorded 21 points and 10 rebounds to lead the Lady Vols (15-1, 3-1 SEC). The loss marked the first time Tennessee dropped a game since being eliminated from last year’s NCAA tournament on March 20.
  • Khaalia Hillsman led the Aggies (14-4, 3-1 SEC) with 22 points on 8-of-9 shooting from the floor and added 11 boards. Williams chipped in 22 of her own while going 3-for-7 from 3-point range. Texas A&M has won its past two match-ups with the Lady Vols and the last two meetings in College Station, both in overtime.
  • Jaime Nared added 18 points for the Lady Vols, including four 3-pointers. Rennia Davis and Cheridene Green netted 12 each, and Evina Westbrook put up nine points while dishing out seven assists.

Last Time In Knoxville

  • Texas A&M’s Khaalia Hillsman scored the game-winning putback with four seconds left as No. 24/25 Tennessee fell to the Aggies, 61-59, on Feb. 12, 2017, at Thompson-Boling Arena.
  • Mercedes Russell led the Lady Vols (16-9, 7-5 SEC) with 17 points and 11 rebounds for her 14th double-double of the season. Texas A&M (19-6, 9-3 SEC) outscored UT 14-5 in the fourth quarter to maintain third place in the conference standings.
  • Alexa Middleton scored 14 points and recorded four assists, and Jaime Nared added nine points and seven rebounds. Danni Williams led the Aggies with 18 points. Hillsman logged a double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds, while Curtyce Knox notched a double-double of her own, finishing with 10 points and 10 assists.
  • After holding a 20-15 advantage following the first quarter, Tennessee opened the second quarter with a 12-6 run over the first three minutes to build an 11-point lead. Texas A&M kept the score close as the Lady Vols went into the half ahead, 38-32.

Texas A&M Reset

  • Texas A&M enters having won its last three and six of its last seven. The Aggies are 5-1 on the road.
  • A&M has four players scoring in double figures, including Chennedy Carter (21.1), Khaalia Hillsman (15.8), Danni Williams (14.8) and Anriel Howard (11.6). Howard makes it a double-double, averaging 12.4 rebounds per game.
  • The Aggies’ SEC losses were at South Carolina (61-59) and vs. Georgia (92-84, OT).
  • A&M, picked fifth by the coaches and fourth by the media in the preseason polls, returned four starters from last season’s 22-12 squad that finished 9-7 (6th) in the SEC and advanced to the NCAA Second Round.
  • Legendary coach Gary Blair is in his 15th year at the helm of the Aggies, owning a 348-146 record there. He is 756-309 overall in 33 seasons as a college coach, having led programs at Stephen F. Austin and Arkansas before arriving in College Station.
  • Blair led the Aggies to the 2011 NCAA title.

A&M Last Time Out (A&M 91, VU 67)

  • No. 15 Texas A&M picked up its third straight win, defeating Vanderbilt 91-67 at Memorial Gym in Nashville on Sunday. Chennedy Carter led the Aggies with 28 points.
  • Texas A&M (17-5, 6-2) had four players score in double figures for the third time in four games, led by Carter, who has scored 20+ points in all six of her road games. Danni Williams added 18, and now is just 13 points away from 1,000 in her career, Khaalia Hillsman had 16 and Anriel Howard scored 12.
  • Texas A&M (17-5, 6-2 SEC) led 42-28 at the half, steadily increasing its lead throughout the game. The 91 points tied for the most for the Aggies in an SEC game all-time, matching the point total against Alabama on January 3, 2013, A&M’s first conference game as a member of the SEC.

Tenn. Last Time Out  (LSU 70, UT 59)

  • Mercedes Russell scored 14 points and added 10 rebounds, but No. 10/10 Tennessee could not overcome a 44-point second half by LSU in a 70-59 loss on Sunday at the Pete Maravich Assembly Center in Baton Rouge.
  • The Lady Vols (17-4, 5-3 SEC) shot 9-for-30 from the field over the final 20 minutes, and saw a five-point halftime lead slip away in their fourth loss of the season. UT was also faced with foul trouble in the second half, as six players picked up at least three personal fouls.
  • LSU (13-6, 5-3 SEC) was fueled by a dominant effort on the glass, including 23 offensive rebounds. Chloe Jackson led the Lady Tigers with 21 points and nine boards, while Raigyne Louis added 18 points.
  • Meme Jackson recorded 13 points and three 3-pointers, while Evina Westbrook dished out seven assists to go along with 10 points for UT.

UT Athletics

Luke Bryan Adds More Than a Dozen Stadium/Ballpark Dates to His “What Makes You Country Tour”

Luke Bryan Adds More Than a Dozen Stadium/Ballpark Dates to His “What Makes You Country Tour”

Luke Bryan has expanded his What Makes You Country Tour with more than a dozen dates at stadiums and ballparks.

The new dates include stops in Toronto, Denver, L.A., Chicago, Detroit and more.

Kip Moore, The Cadillac Three, Brothers Osborne, Granger Smith, Carly Pearce, Morgan Wallen and Sam Hunt will join Luke for select dates on his What Makes You Country Tour.

“My excitement to play these iconic sports stadiums is truly uncontainable,” said Luke. “Playing my music live is the reason I do what I do and the energy of the fans is what pushes me year after year to deliver a bigger and better experience. I’m so thankful to be in these venues and cities with some of the brightest names in country music. This lineup fires me up and I can’t wait to get this tour started!”

What Makes You Country Stadium and Ballpark Tour Dates

May 31
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Rogers Centre

June 2
East Rutherford, N.J
MetLife Stadium

June 16
Cincinnati, Ohio
Great American Ball Park

June 23
Tampa, Fla.
Raymond James Stadium

June 30
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Heinz Field

July 5-6
Boston, Mass.
Fenway Park

July 21
Minneapolis, Minn.
Target Field

July 28
Los Angeles, Calif.
Dodger Stadium

Aug. 4
Denver, Colo.
Mile High Stadium

Aug. 25
St. Louis, Mo.
Busch Stadium

Sept. 1
Chicago, Ill.
Wrigley Field

Oct. 13
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
BC Place Stadium

Oct. 26
Detroit, Mich.
Ford Field

photo by Jason Simanek

Listen to Brett Young’s New Stripped-Down Single, “Mercy”

Listen to Brett Young’s New Stripped-Down Single, “Mercy”

Following back-to-back-to-back No. 1 singles “Sleep Without You,” “In Case You Didn’t Know” and “Like I Loved You” from his 2017 self-titled debut album, Brett Young will try to make it four in a row by releasing “Mercy” to country radio on Feb. 20.

The breakup ballad, which was co-penned by Brett and Sean McConnell, features simple piano accompaniment with Brett’s stripped-down vocals that beckon his love interest to end their relationship with “mercy.”

“Falling in love or falling out of love—those are the easiest songs to write because it’s just straight from personal experience,” says Brett to Nash Country Daily. “I think everybody’s felt both of those. Everybody’s been in love, everybody’s had heartbreak. We noticed that when we put together the 12 songs that would make the [self-titled debut] record, there was not a party song on this record. I’ve written a ton of party songs and not that there’s anything wrong with that. I think, in trying to tell my story and let people get to know me, it seemed like we should talk about things that I’ve lived.”

Listen to “Mercy” below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=snmbYH_LLjQ

photo by AFF-USA.com

Hoops Preview: #18 Tennessee vs. LSU

Hoops Preview: #18 Tennessee vs. LSU

Jalen Johnson – Vols Guard / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Riding a three-game winning streak, 18th-ranked Tennessee will look to continue its recent success again on Wednesday, as LSU comes to Thompson-Boling Arena for a 6:30 p.m. tip. The game will be televised live on SEC Network and streamed online via WatchESPN.

The Vols (15-5, 5-3 SEC) are coming off a road win at Iowa State as part of the Big 12/SEC Challenge last Saturday. UT cruised to a 68-45 victory behind lockdown defense and a 20-point performance from Lamonté Turner, who is the team’s third-leading scorer this season with 10.4 ppg. Turner, who is averaging 30 minutes of action during the last three games, is currently riding a streak of 79+ minutes without a turnover.

LSU (12-8, 3-5 SEC) enters the contest on the heels of a tough 95-70 road loss at Auburn on Saturday. Despite shooting 43 percent from the field, LSU couldn’t keep pace with Auburn’s 14 threes. Tremont Waters has fueled the Tigers on both ends of the court this season, leading the team in scoring (15.2 ppg), assists (5.8 apg) and steals (2.3 spg) in nearly 33 minutes of action per game.

After Wednesday’s matchup, the Vols remain at home for a game against Ole Miss on Saturday that tips at 6 p.m. ET and will air on SEC Network. After that, Tennessee prepares for its toughest stretch for the rest of the regular season, with roads games against Kentucky (Feb. 6) and Alabama (Feb. 10) next week.

THE SERIES
• Overall: UT leads, 64-46
• In Knoxville: UT leads, 30-17
• In Baton Rouge: UT leads, 26-25
• Neutral Sites: UT leads, 8-4
• Current Streak: LSU has won two straight
• Last Meeting: LSU won, 92-82, in Baton Rouge, 3/1/17
• Rick Barnes vs. LSU: 3-4
• Rick Barnes vs. Will Wade: No meetings

RIGHT NOW
• Tennessee has held its last five opponents to an average of 58.2 points per game.
• Per KenPom.com, Tennessee rates in the national top 30 in both offensive (29th) and defensive (11th) efficiency.
• The Vols are rated No. 13 in the NCAA RPI and own the nation’s top-rated SOS, per KenPom.com.
• Tennessee ranks eighth nationally in average home attendance, having drawn 16,003 fans through 10 home games at Thompson-Boling Arena. An increase in average of 500 fans could push the Vols into the top six.

A WIN WOULD…
• Give Tennessee a four-game overall win streak (tying for its longest of the season) and a three-game win streak in SEC play.
• Extend the Vols’ home win streak to four games.
• Improve Tennessee’s record as a ranked team to 10-4 this season.
• Match Tennessee’s wins total from a season ago (16).

ABOUT LSU
• Head coach Will Wade is in his first year at the helm in Baton Rouge, where LSU (12-8), like the Vols, have outperformed their preseason expectations so far.
•  The Tigers, who were picked to finish last in the SEC by the media, are currently in ninth and boast a pair of wins over Texas A&M and a road victory against Arkansas. LSU went 9-3 in its non-conference slate, with wins over Michigan, Houston and Memphis.
• LSU is one of the best offensive teams in the SEC, ranking fourth in scoring with 78.8 ppg and second in field-goal percentage at 48.6 percent. On the defensive end, the Tigers are the best team in the conference at taking the ball away, averaging 7.8 steals per game.
• Tremont Waters has fueled LSU on both ends of the court this season, leading the team in scoring (15.2 ppg), assists (5.8 apg) and steals (2.3 spg) in nearly 33 minutes of action per game. The freshman guard leads the SEC in steals and ranks second in assists.
• Senior forward Duop Reath is the league’s most accurate shooter, converting 57.6 percent of his shots from the floor, while averaging 14.1 ppg. He’s joined by sophomore guard Skylar Mays, who’s posting 11.2 ppg, 4.0 rpg and 1.4 spg, to round out LSU’s double-digit scorers.
• The Tigers enter Wednesday’s contest coming off a tough 95-70 road loss at Auburn on Saturday. Despite shooting 43 percent from the field, LSU couldn’t keep pace with Auburn’s 14 threes. Reath led the Tigers with 18 points on 7-of-12 shooting.

LOUISIANA LETTERMEN RARE
• In 108 seasons of varsity basketball, Tennessee has had only one letterman from the state of Louisiana: forward Maurice Robertson (New Orleans) in 1996.

MEMORABLE VOL PERFORMANCES AGAINST LSU
• Knoxville native Doug Roth blocked a school-record six shots vs. LSU on Jan. 11, 1989, lifting UT to a 100-96 win over the Tigers in Knoxville.
• Anthony Richardson went 14-for-14 from the free-throw line, the best charity-stripe performance in school history, at LSU on Jan. 12, 1985. But the Vols fell that day by a score of 75-65.
• Ron Widby set UT’s single-game scoring record, which stood for 20 years, against LSU on March 4, 1967, scoring 50 points on 19-of-39 shooting (both also single-game records) and 12-of-14 from the charity strip. UT won 87-60 in Knoxville.

LAST MEETING WITH LSU
• The Tennessee offense went cold after halftime at the Pete Maravich Assembly Center, allowing LSU to hand the Vols their third consecutive loss, 92-82, on March 1, 2017.
• It marked the Volunteers’ first loss to the Tigers in Baton Rouge since 2006. UT had previously won five consecutive road games at LSU.
• Shembari Phillips and Grant Williams led the way for the Vols, scoring 16 points apiece. For Phillips, that scoring output matched his season-high while Williams added a season-high 14 rebounds to post his third double-double of the season. Lamonté Turner scored 10 points in the second half, knocking down a couple of late threes, to finish with 14 points.
• Despite holding LSU leading scorer Antonio Blakeney (17.9 ppg entering the game) to just six points, four Tigers finished in double figures, including two 20-point scorers. Brandon Sampson finished with 24 points while Jalyn Patterson finished with 22 off the bench.
• Tennessee took a 46-42 lead into the intermission after shooting 57 percent over the first 20 minutes.
• LSU also displayed some offensive efficiency in the first half, shooting 50 percent overall to keep pace with Tennessee’s best offensive half in the last three games.
• After halftime, though, the Vols went cold. UT made only three field goals over the first 16 minutes of the second half, ultimately shooting 27.3 percent (9-of-33) in the final period. Meanwhile, LSU kept up its sharp shooting from the first half, going 14-of-28 from the field and 19-of-26 (.731) at the foul line en route to 50 second-half points.

NASHVILLE NATIVE WILL WADE HAS TIES TO BARNES’ COACHING TREE
• First-year LSU head coach Will Wade is a Nashville native and graduate of Franklin Road Academy.
• Wade got his footing in the collegiate coaching ranks as a student manager at Clemson under former Rick Barnes assistant Larry Shyatt.
• Wade, 35, got his first head coaching job at Chattanooga in 2013. In two seasons, he led the Mocs to a 40-25 record and was named the 2014 Southern Conference Coach of the Year.
• After his two years at Chattanooga, Wade won 51 games in two seasons as head coach at VCU before accepting the LSU job last spring.

VOLS REP SEC, ROUT IOWA STATE
• Tennessee posted a dominant road win at Iowa State Saturday as part of the Big 12/SEC Challenge.
• Visiting a notoriously tough venue in which to play, the Vols recorded a 68-45 victory to help the SEC win the Challenge for the first time in the five-year history of the event.
• The 23-point drubbing was Iowa State’s largest margin of defeat at home since 1959.
• It also snapped the Cyclones’ streak of five consecutive home wins over ranked opponents. Just one week earlier, Iowa State posted a 70-52 home win over then-eighth-ranked Texas Tech.

TRENDING NOW
• In SEC play, Tennessee leads the league in assists per game (14.6) while ranking second in rebounding defense (33.0 rapg) field-goal percentage (.456) and third in scoring offense (76.5), scoring margin (+3.5) and free-throw percentage (.773).
• Tennessee has held each of its last two opponents to fewer than 20 points in the first half. Last Tuesday, Vanderbilt scored just 15 before the break. And Saturday at Iowa State, the Cyclones managed only 19 first-half points.
• Sophomore guard Lamonté Turner has made 17 consecutive free throws dating to Tennessee’s Jan. 6 win over Kentucky. In SEC play, his .944 free-throw percentage (34-of-36) leads the league.
• Junior forward Kyle Alexander has 12 blocks over UT’s last five games. He is also shooting .882 (15-of-17) from the field during that span.

TURNER PROVIDES HIGH-POWERED SCORING PUNCH OFF THE BENCH
• Vols sophomore Lamonté Turner has come off the bench to score 15 or more points six times this season, and he has scored 20 or more in two of UT;s last three games.
• He is the team’s third-leading scorer both overall (10.4 ppg) and in SEC play (11.8 ppg).
• Turner made a season-high six 3-pointers in Saturday’s win at Iowa State while finishing with a team-high 20 points. It was the fifth time this season that he’s led the Vols in scoring.
• In addition to his hot shooting of late, he also is riding a streak of 79 consecutive minutes played without committing a turnover, dating to the first half at South Carolina on Jan. 20.

MORE MINUTES FOR WALKER
• True freshman forward Derrick Walker has significantly bolstered the Vols’ frontcourt depth over the last four games, playing an average of 15 minutes per game off the bench during that span.
• The Kansas, City, Missouri, native is averaging 4.8 points and 2.8 rebounds while shooting .889 (8-of-9) from the field during that span.
• In Tennessee’s win at South Carolina on Jan. 20, Walker was 5-for-5 while finishing with a season-high 10 points, four rebounds and a block in a season-high 25 minutes.

NINE STRAIGHT WEEKS IN TOP 25
• Tennessee on Dec. 4 made its first appearance in the AP top-25 poll since 2010—nearly seven full years. The Vols landed at No. 24 in that week’s AP poll.
• Prior to that week, the last time UT appeared in the top 25 was Dec. 20, 2010 (19th AP, 18th coaches).
• This week, UT stands at No. 18 in the AP poll and No. 19 in the coaches poll (both season-bests).
• The Vols are riding a streak of nine straight weeks in the top 25. As a ranked team, Tennessee is 9-4 this season.

Kip Moore Announces Second Leg of “Plead the Fifth Tour” With Drake White & Fairground Saints

Kip Moore Announces Second Leg of “Plead the Fifth Tour” With Drake White & Fairground Saints

Following the fall 2017 run of his Plead the Fifth Tour, Kip Moore announced the second leg will kick off in the spring.

The majority of Kip’s 15-date trek will take place in Canada, including visits to Toronto, Vancouver, Winnipeg and more. U.S. stops include Charlotte, N.C., and Myrtle Beach, S.C.

Drake White and Fairground Saints will serve as openers. Tickets go on sale on Feb. 2 at 10 a.m. CT.

Plead the Fifth Tour

March 22
Kingston, ON
Rogers K-Rock Centre

March 23
Barrie, ON
Mavericks Music Hall

March 24
Toronto, ON
Danforth Music Hall

March 25
Toronto, ON
Danforth Music Hall

March 27
Sault Ste Marie
The Machine Shop

March 29
Ottawa, ON
Algonquin Commons

March 30
London, ON
London Music Hall

April 5
Charlotte, NC
Fillmore

April 6
Myrte Beach, SC
House of Blues

May 10
Vancouver, BC
Vogue Theater

May 11
Vancouver, BC
Vogue Theater

May 12
Penticton, BC
South Okanagan Events Centre

May 14
Medicine Hat, AB
Esplanade Theatre

May 15
Prince Albert, SK
EA Rawlinson Centre for the Arts

May 17
Winnipeg, MB
Club Regent Event Centre

photo by Jason Simanek

Little Big Town, Chris Stapleton & More Feel the Grammy Sales Boost

Little Big Town, Chris Stapleton & More Feel the Grammy Sales Boost

Many performers and winners at the 60th Grammy Awards on Jan. 28 got a coveted “Grammy Sales Boost,” including Little Big Town and Chris Stapleton.

According to Nielsen Music, songs performed (and original versions of songs performed) sold 74,000 downloads on Jan. 28, an increase of 58,000 downloads from the previous day.

Check out some of the country “Grammy Sales Boost” numbers, courtesy of Nielsen Music.

  • Little Big Town performed “Better Man,” which won the Grammy for Best Country Duo/Group Performance. Sales of the song increased by nearly 7,000 units over the previous day.
  • Chris Stapleton, who won three Grammys for Best Country Album (From A Room: Vol. 1), Best Country Song (“Broken Halo”) and Best Country Solo Performance (“Either Way”), felt an increase on all fronts. From A Room: Vol. 1 sold more than 1,000 units, while “Either Way” (+200 units) and “Broken Halos” (+1,000 units) also experienced gains.
  • Eric Church, Maren Morris and Brothers Osborne performed Eric Clapton’s “Tears in Heaven” as a tribute to the victims of the Las Vegas shootings. Sales of Clapton’s original version increased by 1,200 units.
  • The In Memoriam segment was opened by Chris Stapleton and Emmylou Harris performing Tom Petty’s “Wildflowers,” which saw a spike of nearly 400 units.

In addition, there were 41.5 million interactions across Facebook (15%), Instagram (59%) and Twitter (26%) about the Grammy Awards, according to Nielsen Social Content Ratings.

The biggest social moment on Twitter occurred at 9:47 p.m. ET with 42,000 interactions as fans Tweeted during Kesha’s performance of “Praying.”

photo by AFF-USA

Jimmy’s blog: Fulmer wants to serve as AD five to six years

Jimmy’s blog: Fulmer wants to serve as AD five to six years

By Jimmy Hyams

When Phillip Fulmer was hired Dec. 1 as Tennessee’s acting athletic director, it was reported he would be on board for two years.

But his contract left it open-ended.

I asked Fulmer recently if he would serve as UT’s athletic director for only two years.

“You know, my wife (Vicki) asked me the same question,’’ Fulmer said in a recent interview on Sports Radio WNML. “I don’t know about a two-year deal. Maybe I did sign something. But I don’t think so.’’

Fulmer was sure about one thing: “It won’t be 20 years, I can tell you that.’’

He added: “I want to do this as long as I am being helpful and if I had to put a number on it, which I don’t have to, I would say five years, six years, something like that.’’

Fulmer said it wouldn’t be fair to new football coach Jeremy Pruitt to leave after two years.

“If I was going to do that,’’ Fulmer said, “I wouldn’t have (taken the job) to be honest with you. I’m committed to being here’’ as long as he’s healthy and productive.

“As I have told you,’’ Fulmer said, “this has invigorated me very, very much and it’s a lot of fun to do this job because I care about the people here and the University.’’

Since the firing of Fulmer in October 2008, UT has hired four football coaches three athletic directors.

“I think it’s crucial that we have stability all around us,’’ Fulmer said.

Fulmer said he thinks UT is in a “real good place,’’ with Dr. Joe DiPietro as president and Dr. Beverly Davenport as chancellor.

Fulmer said he benefited from having a former football coach, Doug Dickey, as his athletic director from 1992-2002.

“He was a football guy that understood the big picture,’’ Fulmer said. “I’m going to try to emulate what he did here and create stability and support all of our teams.

“Obviously, football drives the train financially and publicly and perception wise … but between the guidance I have received and my own experiences, I think I am more than capable of doing that.’’


Sponsored by Big Kahuna Wings: The wings that changed it all

Lady Antebellum’s Hillary Scott & Husband Chris Tyrell Welcome Twin Girls

Lady Antebellum’s Hillary Scott & Husband Chris Tyrell Welcome Twin Girls

Lady Antebellum’s Hillary Scott and husband Chris Tyrell welcomed twins girls to their family on Jan. 29.

Although Hillary did not reveal the names of the twins, she shared a photo of two baby hats on Instagram, saying: “Our family is thankful and proud to announce the arrival of our precious baby girls. They were born in the early hours of January 29th, 2018 and we can’t wait to share more about them in the days to come. Thank you to everyone who prayed and prayed for these little ladies, and thank you Lord for healthy babies. #twins.”

The twins join older sister Eisele, 4, in the Tyrell/Scott household.

Congrats to Hillary and Chris.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BejwNV4AcIR/?taken-by=hillaryscottla

photo by Jason Simanek

Kenny Chesney Adds 21 Amphitheater Shows to His “Trip Around the Sun Tour”

Kenny Chesney Adds 21 Amphitheater Shows to His “Trip Around the Sun Tour”

From sold-out stadiums to intimate amphitheaters, Kenny Chesney will be mixing it up on his upcoming Trip Around the Sun Tour.

After announcing the stadium tour in October, Kenny has added 21 dates to the trek—all amphitheater shows.

Kenny’s 2018 Trip Around the Sun Tour will kick off in April and visit 18 major stadiums through August, including stops in Atlanta, Denver, Chicago, Seattle, Nashville and more. Thomas Rhett, Old Dominion and Brandon Lay will hit the road with Kenny during the tour.

Amphitheater performances include stops in Virginia Beach, West Palm Beach, Syracuse, Toronto and more. Old Dominion will serve as support for the amphitheater shows.

“Nothing’s like the energy of a stadium show,” Kenny says. “But there’s also something about the amphitheaters, where the people are all so close. It’s like being with your friends somewhere back home, singing songs and hanging out, and having the best party of the year. For us, it feels like the people are so right there, and the songs are driving the night. It’s an experience we know No Shoes Nation loves and misses when we don’t do it, so this year, we’re going to make sure there are plenty of opportunities to see us under the pavilion or out on the lawn.”

Trip Around the Sun Tour (new Amphitheater dates in bold)

April 21, Tampa, Florida, Raymond James Stadium
April 28, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Miller Park
May 5, Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S. Bank Stadium
May 10, Virginia Beach, Virginia, Farm Bureau Live at Virginia Beach
May 11, Charlotte, North Carolina, PNC Music Pavilion
May 12, Raleigh, North Carolina, Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek
May 16, Del Valle, Texas, Austin360 Amphitheater
May 17, The Woodlands, Texas, Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
May 19, Arlington, Texas, AT&T Stadium
May 24, West Palm Beach, Florida, Coral Sky Amphitheatre
May 26, Atlanta, Georgia, Mercedes-Benz Stadium
May 31, Noblesville, Indiana, The Ruoff Home Mortgage Music Center
June 2, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Heinz Field
June 6, Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, Blossom Music Center
June 7, Syracuse, New York, Lakeview Amphitheater
June 9, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Lincoln Financial Field
June 15, Bristow, Virginia, Jiffy Lube Live
June 16, Columbus, Ohio, MAPFRE Stadium
June 20, Mountain View, California, Shoreline Amphitheatre
June 21, Chula Vista, California, Mattress Firm Amphitheatre
June 23, Phoenix, Arizona, Chase Field
June 28, West Valley City, Utah, USANA Amphitheatre
June 30, Denver, Colorado, Sports Authority Field at Mile High
July 3, Stateline, Nevada, Harveys Lake Tahoe Casino
July 5, Nampa, Idaho, Ford Idaho Center
July 7, Seattle, Washington, CenturyLink Field
July 12, Rogers, Arkansas, Walmart Arkansas Music Pavilion
July 14, Kansas City, Missouri, Arrowhead Stadium
July 19, Southaven, Mississippi, BankPlus Amphitheater
July 21, St. Louis, Missouri, Busch Stadium
July 26, Cincinnati, Ohio, Riverbend Music Center
July 28, Chicago, Illinois, Soldier Field
August 2, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Molson Canadian Amphitheatre
August 4, Detroit, Michigan, Ford Field
August 11, Nashville, Tennessee, Nissan Stadium
August 16, Bangor, Maine, Darling’s Waterfront Pavilion
August 18, East Rutherford, New Jersey, MetLife Stadium
August 22, Columbia, Maryland, Merriweather Post Pavilion
August 24, Foxborough, Massachusetts, Gillette Stadium
August 25, Foxborough, Massachusetts, Gillette, Stadium

photo courtesy of Allister Ann/EB Media

Margo Price Adds 14 Dates to Her “Nowhere Fast Tour”

Margo Price Adds 14 Dates to Her “Nowhere Fast Tour”

Margo Price extended her Nowhere Fast Tour by adding 14 dates in April. New stops include Chicago, Milwaukee, Toronto, Detroit, Boston and more.

Margo’s tour, which kicked off on Jan. 20, runs through July with openers Paul Cauthen, Particle Kid, Blank Range, Blackfoot Gypsies and Aaron Lee Tasjan on select dates.

Nowhere Fast Tour

Jan. 30 – Emo’s – Austin, TX *
Jan. 31 – The Heights Theater – Houston, TX *
Feb. 1 – Manship Theatre – Baton Rouge, LA *
Feb. 4-11 – Cayamo Cruise – New Orleans, LA
Feb. 2 – The Orpheum Theater – New Orleans (w/ John Prine)
Feb. 18 – The Crescent Ballroom – Phoenix, AZ ^
Feb. 20 – Fox Theatre – Boulder, CO ^
Feb. 21 – Bluebird Theater – Denver, CO $ SOLD OUT
Feb. 23 – The State Room – Salt Lake City, UT $ SOLD OUT
Feb. 24 – The Olympic – Boise, ID $
Feb. 25 – Neptune – Seattle, WA $
Feb. 26 – Revolution Hall – Portland, OR $ SOLD OUT
Feb. 28 – The Independent – San Francisco, CA $ SOLD OUT
March 1 – The Fonda Theatre – Los Angeles, CA $
March 2 – Belly Up – Solana Beach, CA $ SOLD OUT
March 3 – Pappy & Harriet’s – Pioneertown, CA $ SOLD OUT
March 9 – C2C Country 2 Country – Glasgow, UK
March 10 – C2C Country 2 Country – Dublin, Ireland
March 11 – C2C Country 2 Country – London, UK
April 11 – The Vogue – Indianapolis, IN #
April 12 – Thalia Hall – Chicago, IL #
April 13 – Thalia Hall – Chicago, IL #
April 14 – First Avenue – Minneapolis, MN #
April 15 – Turner Hall Ballroom – Milwaukee, WI #
April 17 – El Club – Detroit, MI #
April 18 – Horseshoe Tavern – Toronto, ON #
April 20 – Del Lago Resort & Casino – Waterloo, NY
April 21 – Wolf Den at Mohegan Sun – Uncasville, CT
April 22 – Higher Ground Ballroom – South Burlington, VT !
April 24 – Port City Music Hall – Portland, ME !
April 25 – Paradise Rock Club – Boston, MA !
April 27 – Club AE – Pittsburgh, PA
April 28 – Jefferson Theater – Charlottesville, VA
May 19 – Ryman Auditorium – Nashville, TN SOLD OUT
May 20 – Ryman Auditorium – Nashville, TN SOLD OUT
May 21 – Ryman Auditorium – Nashville, TN
June 3 – Governors Ball Music Festival – New York, NY
June 14 – Blue Ox Music Festival – Eau Claire, WI
July 13 – Forecastle Festival – Louisville, KY
July 14 – Sloss Music & Arts Festival – Birmingham, AL

* Paul Cauthen
^ Particle Kid
$ Blank Range
# Blackfoot Gypsies
! Aaron Lee Tasjan

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