Tennessee guard Jordan Bowden after UNC defeated Tennessee 78-73 in Knoxville.
Tennessee guard Jordan Bowden after UNC defeated Tennessee 78-73 in Knoxville.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee freshman offensive lineman Trey Smith has been named to the 247Sports True Freshman All-American Team, as announced by 247Sports on Wednesday.
Earlier this month, Smith was named to the AP All-SEC Second Team, Coaches All-SEC Second Team, SEC All-Freshman Team and Phil Steele’s All-SEC Second Team.
The Jackson, Tennessee, native was the only Tennessee offensive lineman to start all 12 games for the Vols in 2017. He had eight starts at right guard, three at left tackle and one at left guard. Smith led the Vols in pancakes and was UT’s second-highest rated offensive lineman behind only senior Jashon Robertson. Smith became the first Tennessee true freshman to start at left tackle in at least 30 years.
Smith made several highlight reels with his physical blocking style and showed the poise of a veteran player despite 2017 being his first year of college football. Smith’s blocking helped pave the way for career-best seasons by running backs John Kelly(778 rushing yards), Chandler (305 yards) and Carlin Fils-aime (215 yards).
Smith, who is also a candidate for Freshman All-America honors, was the No. 1 overall rated player in the nation in 2017 recruiting according to ESPN.com.
-UT Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — The University of Tennessee celebrated 22 student-athletes expected to walk during Fall Commencement on Friday with a pre-graduation reception at the Thornton Athletics Student Life Center.
Director of Athletics Phillip Fulmer and Senior Associate Athletics Director and Assistant Provost Joe Scogin congratulated the graduates and their families on successful academic careers and their contributions to the University.
“I am continually impressed by our student-athletes for their resilience and their commitment to the highest levels of success athletically and academically,” said Scogin. “They take great pride in representing Tennessee in all that they do and this day is an opportunity for us to celebrate alongside them and their families.”
This year’s graduates include five former student-athletes, Max Bartlett, Ashlee Boles, Andrew Lee, Bryan Morgado and Hannah Pietila, who returned to campus and completed their degree requirements through the Thornton Center’s Renewing Academic Commitment (RAC) program. The program assists former student-athletes by providing advice on remaining degree requirements, course scheduling, tutoring, employment and internship opportunities, as well as use of the Thornton Center for their everyday needs.
Below is a list of Tennessee’s 2017 December graduates:
Football
Soccer
Softball
Swimming & Diving
Track & Field
Renewing Academic Commitment (RAC)
-UT Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee redshirt junior specialist Parker Henry was named to the Academic All-America Second Team, as selected by the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) on Thursday. Henry is a finance and political science major with a 4.0 grade-point average.
The Hendersonville, Tennessee, native is the fifth Volunteer to earn the distinction and the first since James Wilhoit was named a second-team All-American in 2006.
An SEC Academic Honor Roll selection in 2015 and 2016 and the recipient of the 2017 East Tennessee Outstanding Finance Award, Henry is a two-year starter for the Big Orange. In November, he was named to the CoSIDA Academic All-District squad for the second straight year. Henry is only the second Tennessee player to receive CoSIDA All-District honors in back-to-back seasons and became the first Vol to accomplish the feat since Peyton Manning did so during the 1996 and 1997 campaigns. Overall, Henry is just the third Vol to earn the recognition two times and the first since Daniel Lincoln was named to the All-District team in 2007 and 2009.
During his Tennessee career, Henry appeared in 24 games as the Vols’ primary holder. The former Beech Senior High School quarterback plans to continue his education and pursue a master’s degree after graduating from the University of Tennessee with honors this May.
The CoSIDA Academic All-America program is administered by the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA). Top student-athletes, who have already earned Academic All-District first-team honors, are eligible for inclusion on the Academic All-America team. Student-athletes must have reached sophomore athletic and academic standing at their current institutions, have a grade-point average above 3.30 (4.0 scale) and have outstanding athletic credentials. The Academic All-America ballot is voted on by a committee of CoSIDA members. Since the program’s inception in 1952, CoSIDA has bestowed Academic All-America honors on more than 20,000 student-athletes in NCAA Divisions I, II, III and NAIA, covering all NCAA championship sports.
This is the seventh year of the expanded Academic All-America program, with separate teams comprising NCAA Division I, NCAA Division II and NCAA Division III participants, along with a College Division team of NAIA, Canadian and two-year schools. First-team Academic All-District members advance to the Academic All-America ballot, voted on by a committee of CoSIDA members.
-UT Athletics
KNOXVILLE, TENN. — No. 7/7 Tennessee (10-0) is in the midst of an eight-day West Coast trip, beginning with a Sunday contest vs. Long Beach State (2-7) at Walter Pyramid in Long Beach, Calif. Tip time is slated for 2 p.m. PT (5 ET).
The Lady Vols returned to the top 10 in both the AP and USA TODAY Coaches Polls this week, rising to No. 7/7 from No. 11/13 last week after knocking off No. 2/4 Texas last Sunday in Knoxville, 82-75.
The Big Orange women are back in the top 10 for the first time since the third poll of the 2015-16 season, when the Lady Vols were rated No. 4/5 on Nov. 23. The triumph over Texas was Tennessee’s seventh at home this season and ninth in a row at Thompson-Boling Arena after closing out the 2016-17 with a pair of victories on the Summitt.
The Lady Vols will be aiming to go 11-0 for only the eighth occasion in school history and for the first time during the Holly Warlick era. The last time Tennessee began a season 11-0, the Lady Vols extended the streak to 18 games before finally falling during the 2005-06 season en route to a 31-5 overall record.
Long Beach comes into the game after edging Grand Canyon on the road, 65-63, on Dec. 7. The 49ers’ only other victory came against Arizona in Tucson on Nov. 28, by a score of 80-72. That win brought an end to a five-game season-opening losing streak.
-UT Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — For the first time since 2010, a pair of AP Top-25 Teams will clash in Thompson-Boling Arena this Sunday, as the 20th-ranked Volunteers host No. 7 North Carolina. The game will tip at 3 p.m. and will be televised live on ESPN and streamed online via WatchESPN.
Tennessee announced plans earlier in the week to “checker” Thompson-Boling Arena for next Sunday’s highly anticipated game against the defending national champion Tar Heels. Fans planning to attend the sold-out showdown, which tips off at 3 p.m. ET on ESPN, are encouraged to visit CheckerTBA.com to learn whether their seats are in a section designated to wear orange or white. VolShop locations are offering t-shirts in both colors; the shirts feature the state outline filled in with a checkerboard.
Doug Sherman (play-by-play) and Jay Bilas (analyst) are on the call for Sunday’s matchup for ESPN. Fans can also listen live on their local Vol Network affiliate to catch Bob Keslingand Bert Bertelkamp describing the action. The contest is officially sold out, but tickets for upcoming games can be purchased at AllVols.com.
The Volunteers (7-1) have begun the season on a hot streak, earning their best starting record since 2010-11, when they opened with seven straight wins. UT was recently rewarded for its strong play, making its first appearance in the AP top-25 poll since December of 2010. After a win over Lipscomb last Saturday, Tennessee moved up to 20th in the polls and are now in search of its second consecutive win over an AP Top-10 at home. Grant Williams has stepped up his game across the board this season, posting 16.1 ppg, 7.3 rpg, 2.6 apg and 1.9 bpg for the Vols.
North Carolina (9-1) has double-digit wins over “Power 5” foes in Stanford, Arkansas and Michigan this season and enters Sunday’s contest riding a four-game winning streak, during which the Tar Heels have averaged 93.0 ppg while holding their opponents to 73.0 ppg. Junior forward Luke Maye leads the charge for UNC, averaging a double-double with 19.6 ppg and 10.5 rpg.
THE SERIES
• Overall: UNC leads, 9-1
• In Knoxville: Series tied, 1-1
• In Chapel Hill: UNC leads, 3-0
• Neutral Sites: UNC leads, 5-0
• Current Streak: UNC has won four straight
• Last Meeting: UNC won, 73-71, in Chapel Hill, 12/11/16
• Rick Barnes vs. UNC: 6-11
• Rick Barnes vs. Roy Williams: Tied, 6-6
RIGHT NOW
• UNC is the third of four ACC opponents on Tennessee’s schedule during a 30-day span.
• The Vols are rated No. 7 in the ESPN InsideRPI, with the nation’s 24th-rated SOS.
• At 7-1, the Volunteers are off to their best start since the 2010-11 season, when they went 7-1 though their first eight games.
• Tennessee leads the SEC in assists per game (19.1) and 3-point percentage (.412).
A WIN WOULD…
• Extend Tennessee’s home winning streak against non-conference opponents to 11 games. That streak dates to last season’s win over Appalachian State on Nov. 15, 2016
• Give the Vols six straight home wins over teams that are the defending national champion, dating to 1999
• Give the Volunteers a 17-game home winning streak during the month of December
ABOUT NORTH CAROLINA
• North Carolina, the defending NCAA champions, visit Knoxville as the Vols and Tar Heels close out a two-game, home-and-home series, which began last season.
• Under the direction of head coach Roy Williams, the Tar Heels are 9-1 this season (lone loss came against No. 4 Michigan State in the PK80 Tournament) and are ranked No. 7 by the AP and coaches.
• The Tar Heels received a huge boost in the offseason when Joel Berry II, the Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four, withdrew his name from the NBA Draft and announced he would return for another season in Chapel Hill. In nine games, he’s averaging 16.0 ppg, 3.7 apg and 2.4 rpg.
• North Carolina is bolstered by Luke Maye, who won UNC’s Danny Green Award as the team’s most improved player and was named the Most Outstanding Player in the NCAA South Regional during the team’s title run last season. The junior has become one of the Tar Heels’ best players after starting only one game in his career prior to this season.
• This year, Maye has started all 10 games and is averaging a double-double behind 19.9 ppg and 10.5 rpg, both of which are team highs. The 6-8 forward is shooting 57 percent (80-140) from the field and has the ability to knock down shots from beyond the arc, connecting on 48 percent (13-27) of his attempts from deep.
• Kenny Williams (13.4 ppg, 3.6 rpg, 2.1 apg, 1.4 spg) and Theo Pinson (9.4 ppg, 5.1 rpg, 4.4 apg) have stepped up as two do-it-all guys for UNC this season.
• The Tar Heels have double-digit wins over “Power 5” foes in Stanford, Arkansas and Michigan this season and enter Sunday’s contest riding a four-game winning streak, during which UNC has averaged 93.0 ppg while holding its opponents to 73.0 ppg.
UNC CONNECTIONS
• Tennessee head coach Rick Barnes and Senior Executive Associate AD/Chief Operating Officer Reid Sigmon (who serves as UT’s men’s basketball administrator) both attended college in North Carolina. Barnes attended Lenoir-Rhyne University in Hickory; he and his wife, Candy, both are Hickory natives, and his mother and brothers still reside there. Sigmon went to Wake Forest.
• Hickory is approximately 150 miles west of Chapel Hill.
• Two current Vols are North Carolina natives: Jalen Johnson (Durham) and Grant Williams (Charlotte). Another current Vol, John Fulkerson, played his high school ball at The Christ School in Arden, North Carolina, near Asheville.
• Third-year UT assistant coach Desmond Oliver spent five seasons as an assistant at Charlotte from 2010-15.
• Tennessee Video Coordinator Riley Davis was a Regional Advance Scout for the Charlotte NBA franchise during the 2013-14 season.
• A former UNC standout used to hold the head coaching reins on Rocky Top. Asheville native Buzz Peterson was UT’s head coach from 2001-05. He and his close friend, Michael Jordan, both played on UNC’s 1982 National Championship Team.
• Peterson’s predecessor at UT, Jerry Green (1997-2001), was an assistant at Kansas for four years under current UNC head coach Roy Williams, before taking the head job at Oregon and later Tennessee.
LAST MEETING WITH UNC
• Tennessee led No. 7 North Carolina by five with just 4:32 remaining in regulation on Dec. 11, 2016, at the Dean E. Smith Center, but the upset bid came up short as the Tar Heels outscored UT 10-5 over the decisive stretch, handing the Vols a 73-71 loss.
• Tennessee was led by senior Robert Hubbs III, who scored a game-high 21 points on 9-of-11 shooting. He also had a team-high six rebounds. Freshman Jordan Bowden added 12 points with five boards.
• After leading by as many as 15 in the first half, the Vols successfully fended off North Carolina’s comeback attempts for much of the second half. Vols freshman Grant Williams—a North Carolina native—knocked down a short jumper in the lane to give UT a 68-63 lead with just over 4:30 to play, but a 7-1 run gave the Tar Heels their first lead since the 15:34 mark in the first half. The rally was capped by a driving layup from Carolina’s leading scorer, Justin Jackson, which gave the Tar Heels a 70-69 lead with 2:14 left in the game.
• The Vols hung around, trailing 73-71 with nine seconds left. Lamonté Turner drove the length of the court and into the lane, but his potential game-tying shot attempt was blocked with just two seconds remaining.
• Turner finished with nine points. Williams turned in a nice outing in his home state, posting seven points, six rebounds and four blocks.
• After UNC scored the first four points of the game, the Vols went on a 27-9 run—at one point scoring on 10 consecutive possessions. The Big Orange shot 65 percent as a team in the first half and were 3-of-6 from beyond the 3-point arc.
• Tennessee’s first half field-goal percentage of .654 was the fourth-highest ever recorded by a UNC opponent in a half at the Dean Smith Center, which opened in 1986.
RANKED TEAMS COLLIDE IN KNOX
• Sunday’s game marks the first time two ranked men’s teams have collided at Thompson-Boling Arena since Feb. 27, 2010, when the 19th-ranked Vols upset second-ranked Kentucky, 74-65. That Wildcats squad was led by current NBA stars John Wall, Eric Bledsoe and DeMarcus Cousins.
• That game also is the last time Tennessee faced a top-10 opponent at home when the Vols were ranked as well.
• Tennessee went on to advance to the Elite Eight, its deepest-ever run in the NCAA Tournament.
SUNDAY’S GAME A SELLOUT
• Sunday’s game was officially announced as a sellout several weeks ago. It is Tennessee’s first sellout at Thompson-Boling Arena since Feb. 17, 2015.
VOLS’ SCHEDULE IS ACC HEAVY
• Tennessee’s 2017-18 schedule features four games against ACC opposition in a 30-day span: Nov. 24 vs. NC State, Dec. 3 at Georgia Tech, Dec. 17 vs. North Carolina, Dec. 23 at Wake Forest.
• The Vols defeated NC State, 67-58, at the Battle 4 Atlantis. Then, in its first true road game of the season, Tennessee toppled Georgia Tech, 77-70, in Atlanta.
• Additionally, Tennessee traveled to Clemson for a charity exhibition on Nov. 5. The Vols defeated the Tigers, 71-67.
VOLS HAVE WON LAST FIVE AT HOME vs. DEFENDING NAT’L CHAMPS
• Tennessee has won five straight home games against the defending national champion, dating to 1998-99. UT possesses an overall record of 7-4 at home against the defending national champion.
• Only one of those games came against a non-conference opponent: Tennessee’s 60-57 win over then-Big East member UConn on Jan. 21, 2012.
DEFENDING CHAMP DATE RESULT
#25 Kentucky Feb. 16, 2013 W, 88-58
#13 UConn Jan. 21, 2012 W, 60-57
Florida Feb. 5, 2008 W, 104-82
#5 Florida Feb. 27, 2007 W, 86-76
#13 Kentucky Feb. 28, 1999 W, 68-61
#3 Kentucky Feb. 25, 1997 L, 74-64
Kentucky Feb. 17, 1979 W, 101-84
#1 Kentucky Feb. 28, 1959 L, 69-56
#3 Kentucky Jan. 19, 1952 L, 65-56
#2 Kentucky Jan. 14, 1950 W, 66-53
Kentucky Jan. 15, 1949 L, 66-51
BARNES VS. THE TAR HEELS
• Vols coach Rick Barnes, a native of Hickory, North Carolina, owns a 6-11 career record against UNC and a 6-6 career head-to-head record against current UNC coach Roy Williams.
• Barnes has led his teams to one win over UNC when the Tar Heels were ranked in the AP top 10, leading Texas to a 103-90 victory in Arlington, Texas, Dec. 19, 2009, when UNC was ranked 10th in both polls.
• Barnes never faced the Tar Heels during his tenure at Providence from 1988-94. He went 1-9 vs. UNC while he was the head coach at Clemson from 1994-98.
• As the head coach at Texas from 1998-2015, Barnes led his Longhorns teams to a 5-1 record against UNC. Here is a breakdown of those six meetings:
DATE SITE UNC RANK RESULT
March 20, 2004 Denver #18 W, 78-75
Dec. 19, 2009 Arlington #10 W, 103-90
Dec. 18, 2010 Greensboro NR W, 78-76
Dec. 21, 2011 Chapel Hill #5 L, 82-63
Dec. 19, 2012 Austin #23 W, 85-67
Dec. 18, 2013 Chapel Hill #14 W, 86-83
VOLS CLIMB INTO TOP 20
• 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 Tennessee appeared in the top 25 was Dec. 20, 2010 (19th AP, 18th coaches).
• This week, UT stands at No. 20 both major polls.
UT IN RARE RANKED COMPANY
• Tennessee is one of seven schools whose men’s and women’s basketball teams are both ranked in the latest Associated Press top-25 poll.
• The Vols are ranked 20th, and the unbeaten Lady Vols are ranked seventh under coach Holly Warlick.
• Other schools with two ranked hoops squads (AP poll) are Baylor, Duke, Florida State, Texas A&M, Villanova and West Virginia
-UT Athletics
On July 4, Rodney Atkins and wife Rose Falcon shared some fireworks of their own by announcing that they were expecting their first child together.
And now he’s here.
Rodney and Rose, who were married in November 2013, welcomed son, Ryder Falcon Atkins, into the world on Dec. 14.
In an Instagram post on Rose’s account, she said, in part, that baby Ryder “looks exactly like Dad!”
Congrats to the happy couple.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BcutIwjnAFL/?taken-by=rosefalcon
photo by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com
As this year comes to a close, we thought it would be an apropos time to comb our photo archives and pick 17 of our favorite pics from red carpet events in 2017, including the Grammys, ACM Awards, CMT Awards, ACM Honors Ceremony, CMA Awards and BMI Awards. Take a look at some of country brightest stars, including Tim McGraw, Faith Hill, Jason Aldean, Carrie Underwood, Little Big Town, Chris Young, Garth Brooks and more.
main photo of Carrie Underwood by Jason Simanek
Dustin Lynch took his Ride or Die Tour to Los Angeles on Friday night (Dec. 8). In addition to treating the crowd to his catalogue of hits, he helped a firefighter named Tony Cresta propose to his girlfriend, Taylor Hill.
Watch Dustin welcome Tony onstage to make his move.
photo by Jason Simanek
By Jimmy Hyams
The city of New Orleans is below sea level, but Alvin Kamara is playing in rarified air.
Kamara is one of only four NFL rookies in history to have at least 600 rushing and 600 receiving yards in their first season.
The former Tennessee Vol has been an explosive toy in the tool box of coach Sean Payton.
NFL draft analyst Mike DeTillier, who has covered the Saints for over 30 years, is blown away by Kamara’s performance.
“If you didn’t say it was shocking,’’ DeTillier said, “you’d be lying.’’
DeTillier said Payton discovered Kamara’s abilities when Payton went to Knoxville to work out former UT quarterback Josh Dobbs. Kamara volunteered to run routes, Payton gave Kamara some complex patterns and Kamara handled them with ease.
So when it came draft time, the Saints moved up in the third round by trading two picks to select the native of Norcross, Ga., even through the Saints had foolishly acquired Adrian Peterson, who didn’t fit New Orleans’ system.
Peterson was traded and Kamara traded places with Peterson in the lineup.
The results have been spectacular.
Despite suffering a concussion in the Saints most recent game, Kamara has 608 yards rushing and 639 receiving. Only Charley Taylor, Billy Sims and Herschel Walker have achieved those numbers right out of college.
Kamara is averaging 7.0 yards per carry and has had five 60-yard games. He is averaging 10.3 yards per catch and has had seven 50-yard games.
“I knew he was a good fit for what Sean Payton wants to do here in New Orleans,’’ DeTillier said. “But to see him excel at this level, I don’t think anyone thought that this would happen.’’
DeTillier has covered the NFL for 33 years, He’s seen some great ones. And he puts Kamara in elite company.
“He is the best open-field, make-you-miss runner I have seen hit the league as a rookie since Marshall Faulk,’’ DeTillier said. “He is stunning the way he runs with the football, so effortlessly – almost like when you watch Usain Bolt run. You’re like, `It doesn’t look like he’s running fast until you are on the track with him.’’’
Kamara’s ability to make the first man miss is “tremendous,’’ DeTillier said.
An NFL study revealed that Kamara makes the first man miss about 26% of the time, the most of anyone in the NFL.
Kamara and the veteran Mark Ingram might be the best 1-2 running back duo in the NFL. Kamara has 1,247 yards from scrimmage and 11 touchdowns. Ingram has 1,296 yards from scrimmage and nine touchdowns. That’s over 2,500 yards from scrimmage and 20 scores.
They are known as Thunder and Lightning in the Saints backfield.
DeTillier said Kamara and Ingram go together like Dean Martina and Jerry Lewis, or like Cheech and Chong – minus the bong.
Saints quarterback Drew Brees told DeTillier a few days into practice that Kamara has the “wow’’ factor. According to DeTillier, Brees never said that about Ingram or receiver Michael Thomas or tight end Jimmy Graham.
When Payton worked out Kamara in Knoxville, the coach gave the running back some intricate routes to run, testing Kamara’s football IQ.
After successfully negotiating Payton’s challenge, Kamara was “almost yelling at him, like, what else you got, coach? Throw it at me.’ He won over Payton pretty quickly.’’
DeTillier said on Day 2 of the most recent NFL draft, Saints fans were livid that the team drafted Kamara after acquiring Peterson.
DeTillier said nine out of 10 callers said, `What in the world is Sean Payton doing trading a second and a seventh-round pick for a running back when you got Adrian Peterson and Mark Ingram?’ Now I can’t find any of those people to call back.’’
DeTillier would give them a pass, but he also notes that Kamara has been “a fantastic football player for the Saints and an electrifying guy.’’
With the help of Kamara, the Saints offense has been much more efficient on the ground and relied less on Brees to pile up gaudy passing numbers.
DeTillier said the Saints, under Payton, are 47-4 when rushing at least 30 times in a game and they win 15% of the time when Brees throws at least 45 passes.
“I didn’t go to MIT or Cornell or Yale or Harvard,’’ DeTillier said, “but I can figure out that if your running game gets cranked up early and you can finish a game off with a running attack, you can win a lot of games in this league.’’
Kamara’s value to the Saints was underscored in a recent 20-17 loss to Atlanta, when Kamara suffered a first quarter concussion and the offense bogged down.
Payton said recently the only person that could keep Kamara from winning NFL offensive rookie of the year was Payton.
Payton might be right.
“Alvin Kamara is built like a sports car,’’ DeTillier said. “And when he gets that thing in high gear, all you see is the back of his heals.’’
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