Vols new head coach won’t forget his roots

Vols new head coach won’t forget his roots

Vols coach Jeremy Pruitt / Credit: UT Athletics

By Rhiannon Potkey, special to UTsports.com

KNOXVILLE — He is still the guy that taught them how to play kickball and officiated their dodgeball games. He’s still the guy that wore a Fort Payne Wildcats football T-shirt to class every day and carried them over his shoulder across the playground if they got hurt.

Before he rose to prominence as a college football coach, Jeremy Pruitt was a PE teacher at Wills Valley Elementary School in Fort Payne, Alabama.
The pride of DeKalb County, Pruitt has never forgotten his roots.

Many of his former students followed with great interest last week when Pruitt was introduced as the 26th head coach in Tennessee football history by athletic director Phillip Fulmer.

“It’s crazy to think he was my kindergarten teacher and watched me tumble outside on the playground and now he’s the head coach at a major SEC school,” said Presley Hawkins, a Wills Valley graduate. “I think that’s really cool and really encouraging because it shows that even being from a small town you can still reach your goals and be something in life.”

Jeremy Pruitt is a Southern-bred football coach cut from central casting.

He’s a coach’s son from Rainsville, Alabama. He’s a grinder, a lifer, a country boy comfortable in his own skin.

He prefers wearing sweats over suits and isn’t ashamed of a drawl that caused “aight” to go viral minutes after his introductory press conference.

He flies on private jets not to impress, but to get places faster so he can spend more time working on football.

“Jeremy is a ball coach. That is the bottom line, and that is why I think him and Coach Fulmer are so much alike,” said Pruitt’s father, Dale. “They are just ball coaches, and if you are a ball coach you can coach the offensive line, the secondary or whatever. Because if you are going to be very good, you have to learn all of it.”

Jeremy Pruitt began wearing a full football uniform around the house by age 3.

He grew up in a fieldhouse, and his babysitters were the coaches and players surrounding him.

While many kids were watching Saturday morning cartoons, Pruitt was breaking down film from a Friday night game with his dad’s staff.

Pruitt wasn’t obsessed with being on the fast track in coaching. His feet were always been planted wherever he was, his focus always on achieving greatness in the moment.

Pruitt made stops at Fort Payne High, Plainview High and storied Hoover High before ascending to the college ranks. He’s been on the staffs of four national championship teams, winning three at Alabama and one at Florida State.

“I knew what I wanted to do, I wanted to be like my dad. I wanted to have a positive impact on the people in our community. I wanted to be a high school football coach,” Pruitt said. “The one thing I have always done, I’ve had an opportunity to work for good people. We’ve had success. I’m a believer that if you do your job, keep working and don’t worry about the next job and do a good job at the job you’ve got, good things happen.”

During his interview with Tennessee Chancellor Beverly Davenport, Pruitt told her about teaching kindergarten through third grade PE classes. He said he taught every child in Fort Payne how to tie their shoes from 2001-2004.

“I also told her that I started suggesting Velcro,” Pruitt quipped.

Layton Powell, 21, was in Pruitt’s classes at Wills Valley from kindergarten through the second grade.

Powell and his friends still laugh at some of the stories from those days. Like the time Pruitt pretended Powell was in trouble after kicking a soccer ball into the rafters and threatened to call his mom, sending Powell crying into the corner. Or the different twist Pruitt put on dodgeball by having no boundaries and calling it “Demolition Ball.”

“He would just sit over on his chair yelling in his Southern drawl with a bunch of kids running around the gym like crazy,” Powell said. “He was always playing around with us and having fun. We always had a blast. We were just little kids, but we loved those classes.”

As the boys begged to play football or basketball, Hawkins always wanted to show Pruitt her latest cheerleading moves. Her mom, Vicki Dodd, was the PE teacher and cheerleading coach at Fort Payne High, and Hawkins wanted to be just like the older girls.

“Coach Pruitt was always so encouraging and let me tumble outside on the playground. He just let me be me. He didn’t look down on me wanting to be a cheerleader like some coaches would,” said Hawkins, 24, who is now a kindergarten teacher in the Atlanta area. “He just embraced it and let me do it. He just wanted everyone to play and have fun. I remember he would cut up and laugh with us. He was great.”

Hawkins comes from an SEC-conflicted household. Her mom was a cheerleader at Alabama, her stepfather, David Dodd, played football at Tennessee from 1984-88 and she graduated from Auburn.

It made for some interesting Saturdays.

The one thing they can all agree on? They are all huge fans of Jeremy Pruitt.

“He remembers he started here and this is where he came from. I think that is admirable for anybody that makes it that big and reaches that level,” Vicki Dodd said. “He is a good old homeboy and hasn’t forgotten the people he started out with. All these young boys here look up to that and think maybe one day they can do that too.”

Dale Pruitt says his son’s down-home nature is genuine and helps him relate to the players he’s recruiting.

“He doesn’t try to be somebody for somebody,” Dale Pruitt said. “He talks country and he doesn’t try to change the way he speaks. He is who he is. The bottom line is he cares about kids and they respect him for that. Jeremy can get into a kid real hard when he’s coaching and the kid will be in his office the next day laughing or wanting to learn more from him.”

Powell is the same age as Jeremy Pruitt’s oldest son, Jayse, and they played on a summer baseball team in middle school coached by Pruitt. Once Pruitt began coaching in college, Powell figured they would never cross paths again unless they were both in Fort Payne.
But they reconnected at Alabama, where Powell has been working as a student manager for Pruitt.

“It’s kind of funny how it all worked out,” Powell said. “Jeremy is just a good all-around guy. He cares for you and cares for his players. That is why he is coming back to Alabama to help out for the playoffs, and that is why he is going to do as much as he can for Tennessee to help those players. They are going to really like him at Tennessee.”

Pruitt gained a reputation for sleeping on a cot in his office from the time he started coaching high school. The apple doesn’t fall very far from the tree.

The Pruitt family has picked a random day to celebrate Christmas in December the last few years because Alabama has always been preparing for the College Football Playoff.

“Before last year’s game against Washington, everyone was gathered together and I was in the kitchen hiding from everybody watching film,” Dale Pruitt said. “My wife said, ‘Dale, really?’ But that is what we do.”

Football and family have always gone together for Jeremy Pruitt and guided many of his major life decisions.

“Three years ago, Michigan, USC and Alabama called him and he had the opportunity to go to three pretty good jobs in pretty much different places in the country,” Dale Pruitt said. “But he is a Southern guy and he likes the South and he likes to be close to family and that all fits with Tennessee. It’s a great fit.”

After Pruitt’s introductory press conference, his wife and parents went looking for him in his new office. He wasn’t there. He was already conducting meetings.

He appeared for a few minutes while everyone was eating cake to celebrate his son’s birthday and then disappeared again.

“He had work to get done,” Dale Pruitt said. “He is kind of like Coach Fulmer said, he is not pretty. He don’t want to be pretty. He just wants to win.”

-UT Athletics

 

“Boom” Goes Walker Hayes

“Boom” Goes Walker Hayes

Riding the momentum of his RIAA-certified gold single, “You Broke Up With Me,” Walker Hayes released his new album, Boom, on Dec. 8.

As you may be able to glean from some of the song titles on the 10-tune offering—including “Shut Up Kenny,” “Dollar Store” and “Prescriptions”—Walker’s album is just as unorthodox as his lead single.

The father of six children—with number seven on the way—sat down with Kix Brooks of American Country Countdown to talk about his new album, which is the fulfillment of his dream since moving to Nashville 12 years ago.

“Sonically, it’s all about beats,” says Walker. “Every single song—deep or, you know, shallow like ‘You Broke Up with Me’–they all are infectious. And I love that about it. But they’re all just really intimate stories from my life, like things that I would say in real life, like ‘you broke up with me.’ They’re all quirky, for lack of a better term. You can tell that by just the titles. They’re pretty random. But it gets very deep and it gets very fun, so there’s a little bit for everybody.”

Walker will launch his 13-city Good as Gold Tour on Feb. 1 in Uncasville, Conn. Walker will makes stops in Boston, Chicago, Indianapolis, Detroit and more before capping the tour on April 27 in San Martin, Calif.

Boom Track List and Songwriters

  1. “Beautiful” (Walker Hayes)
  2. “Shut Up Kenny” (Walker Hayes, Pete Good, AJ Babcock)
  3. “You Broke Up With Me” (Walker Hayes, Thomas Archer, Kylie Sackley)
  4. “Halloween” feat. Nicolle Galyon (Walker Hayes, Nicolle Galyon)
  5. “Dollar Store” (Walker Hayes, Scott Stepakoff)
  6. “Beer In The Fridge” (Walker Hayes, Shane McAnally, Matt Jenkins, Scot Sherrod)
  7. “Beckett” (Walker Hayes, Shane McAnally)
  8. “Mind Candy” (Walker Hayes, Thomas Archer)
  9. “Prescriptions” (Walker Hayes, Matt McGinn)
  10. “Craig” (Walker Hayes)
Morgan Evans Drops New Single, “I Do” [Listen]

Morgan Evans Drops New Single, “I Do” [Listen]

After signing a record contract with Warner Music Nashville in May, Morgan Evans has released his second single, “I Do,” while he continues to work on his major-label debut album.

Morgan, who married Kelsea Ballerini on Dec. 2, said via Instagram that he wrote the new tune “about his girlfriend, recorded it about my fiancée, releasing it about my wife.” 

Morgan’s previous single, “Kiss Somebody,” peaked at No. 57 on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart.

Listen to “I Do” below.

Charles Kelley, Lee Ann Womack, Steve Earle, Emmylou Harris, Hayes Carll & More to Play 9th Annual 30A Songwriters Festival

Charles Kelley, Lee Ann Womack, Steve Earle, Emmylou Harris, Hayes Carll & More to Play 9th Annual 30A Songwriters Festival

Highway 30A stretches for 28.5 miles through the Florida Panhandle, hugging the Gulf of Mexico as it intersects picturesque beach communities like Sandestin, WaterColor, Seaside and Rosemary Beach. In January, the sugary white beaches and 60-plus-degree weather of 30A make it an ideal respite from the harsh winter temperatures in the majority of the country. And for three days, more than 170 singer/songwriters get added to the not-so-wintry mix during the 30A Songwriters Festival.

Hayes Carll performs at the 30A Songwriters Festival in 2016.

For the ninth year, music lovers will pack more than 25 venues along the scenic highway from January 12–15 for intimate solo sessions, writers’ rounds and outdoor concerts on the Grand Boulevard. This year’s lineup includes Emmylou Harris, Steve Earle, The Zombies, North Mississippi Allstars, Lee Ann Womack, Lady Antebellum’s Charles Kelley, Patty Griffin, Emily Saliers of Indigo Girls, Ann Wilson of Heart, Paul Thorn, Kathy Mattea, Aaron Lee Tasjan, James McMurtry, Hayes Carll and many more.

If the rowdy spring-break experience isn’t your cup of beer anymore, graduate to 30A this year for friendly songwriters’ sessions, artist Q&As, respectful listening rooms and outdoor shows where a picnic blanket and a nice bottle of wine are the norm. Tickets are on sale now.

main image by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Marshall Tucker Band: 2018 Juke Jammin’ Tour

Marshall Tucker Band: 2018 Juke Jammin’ Tour

2018 Juke Jammin’ Tour

Jan 20-25
Tampa, FL
The Southern Rock Cruise

Feb 16
Raleigh, NC
The Ritz

Feb 17
Charlotte, NC
The Fillmore

Feb 23
Verona, NY
Turning Stone Resort Casino

Feb 24
Wilmington, DE
The Queen

March 1
Lexington, KY
Manchester Music Hall

March 2
Rosemont, IL
Joe’s Live

March 3
Shipshewana, IN
Blue Gate Theatre

March 4
Akron, OH
The Tangier

March 9
St. Augustine, FL
St. Augustine Amphitheatre (Southern Uprising w/ The Charlie Daniels Band & Travis Tritt)

March 17
Beverly, MA
The Cabot Theater

March 23
Newberry, SC
Newberry Opera House

April 13
Wendover, NV
Peppermill Concert Hall

April 15
Santa Clarita, CA
The Canyon

April 16
El Cajon, CA
Sycuan Casino

April 26
Augusta, GA
The Miller Theatre

May 11
Newkirk, OH
Country Bluff Events Center (First Council Casino)

June 22
Manhattan, KS
Tuttle Creek State Park

June 30
Stratton, VT
Stratton Mountain Resort

July 19
Belmont, OH
Jamboree In The Hills (Southern Uprising w/ The Charlie Daniels Band, Travis Tritt & The Outlaws)

July 28
Kettering, OH
Fraze Pavilion for the Performing Arts (Southern Uprising w/ The Charlie Daniels Band, Travis Tritt & The Outlaws)

photo courtesy of Absolute Publicity, Inc.

Sugarland Is Back in the Studio Working on a New Album, With Lead Single, “Still the Same,” Dropping on Dec. 21

Sugarland Is Back in the Studio Working on a New Album, With Lead Single, “Still the Same,” Dropping on Dec. 21

After a five-year hiatus, Jennifer Nettles and Kristian Bush of Sugarland surprised the country music-loving world by reuniting at the CMA Awards on Nov. 8 to present the trophy for Duo of the Year to Brothers Osborne.

Now, a month later, the duo has some definitive plans for the remainder of 2017 and into 2018, including a new soaring single, “Still the Same,” which will drop on Dec. 21.

“The first time we were in a room together in almost six years, ‘Still the Same’ is the first song we wrote,” said Jennifer to Nash Country Daily. “This song is quintessential Sugarland, sound and message-wise.”

“Normally, it takes 100 songs to write three good ones, but it’s different if you’re working with Jennifer,” says Kristian to NCD. “It takes one song to write one good one. That’s cool. You can’t ever underestimate the power of that.”

Other projects in the works include recording a full-length album, hammering out new tour dates, making an appearance on Dick Clark’s New Years Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest on Dec. 31 and performing at the Country to Country (C2C) Festival on March 9–11 in Dublin, London and Glasgow.

“We’ve played C2C individually, but never together as Sugarland,” says Jennifer.

“C2C is going to be so much fun—2018 is going to be so much fun,” adds Kristian.

#11 Lady Vols upset #2 Texas at home 82-75, stay undefeated

#11 Lady Vols upset #2 Texas at home 82-75, stay undefeated

Evina Westbrook – Lady Vols / Credit: UT Athletics

Knoxville, Tenn. — Senior Jaime Nared scored 23 points and recorded 13 rebounds to lead No. 11/13 Tennessee to a signature win over No. 2/4 Texas in front of a crowd of 9,651 on Sunday afternoon at Thompson-Boling Arena.

After another strong start in front of their home fans, the Lady Vols (10-0) never trailed during the game and held the Longhorns (7-1) to 36 percent shooting. Fueled by clutch rebounding and aggressive defense, Tennessee answered every Texas run to hang on down the stretch and earn its first home win over a top-two ranked opponent since beating No. 2 Stanford in 2010. It also halted a three-game losing skid to the Longhorns.

The Lady Vols opened the game on a 6-0 run and limited Texas to two points through the opening seven minutes of the game. The Longhorns were also held to just four field goals, as Tennessee finished the quarter ahead, 16-11. The 11 points were the fewest Texas has scored in a quarter this season. Mercedes Russell led the Big Orange offensively, shooting 3-for-6 for six points.

The Longhorns’ defense turned it on in the second quarter, holding Tennessee to 13 points on 27 percent shooting from the field. Texas used a 6-0 spurt of its own in the last five minutes of the half to claw its way back. Thanks to nine points from Evina Westbrook and eight from Nared, however, the Lady Vols went into the intermission leading, 29-27. Jatarie White led Texas in the first half with seven points and five rebounds.

Tennessee came out of the locker room ready in the second half, going on a 7-0 run in the early stages of the third quarter. The Lady Vols remained efficient offensively throughout the quarter, shooting 7-for-15 from the field for 19 points. Westbrook hit two 3-pointers for six points as the Big Orange took a 48-44 edge into the final 10 minutes.

The fourth quarter proved to be a high-scoring, back-and-forth affair, as both teams traded baskets in the closing minutes. As the clock wore down, Tennessee’s guards were continuously met by an aggressive full-court press. Forward Cheridene Green emerged as a force in the post, scoring six of her eight points and bringing down three crucial offensive rebounds to provide the Lady Vols second chances on key possessions.

After trailing by as many as 10 points in the game, a layup by Texas’ Lashann Higgs cut the score to 74-73 with one minute remaining. Tennessee, however, was able to ice the game from the free-throw line over the final moments, including four from Nared.

Russell finished with 15 points and 12 rebounds for her fourth double-double of the season and 34th over her career. Westbrook added a career-high 15 points of her own on 5-for-11 shooting in the winning effort. Ariel Atkins led the Longhorns offensively, shooting 6-for-14 with 21 points.

Up Next: Tennessee will take its 10-0 record on the road for the team’s first two true road games of the season. The Lady Vols face Long Beach State on Dec. 17 at 2 p.m. PT (5 p.m. ET) and then face a test at #18/18 Stanford at 6 p.m. PT (9 p.m. ET) on Dec. 21. The Long Beach State game will be streamed on Beach Vision, and the Stanford contest will be televised by the Pac-12 Networks.

Playing Up To The Competition: The Lady Vols are 2-0 this season versus ranked opponents (101-99 over No. 20/20 Marquette on Nov. 23 and 82-75 over No. 2/4 Texas on Dec. 10). Sunday’s win was the program’s first victory over a top-two opponent at home since defeating No. 3/2 Stanford in overtime, 82-72, on Dec. 19, 2010.

Orange Out: This is just the fourth time Tennessee has worn orange at home. The win moves the Lady Vols’ record to 3-1 when wearing orange at home. Their only home loss when wearing orange came against Notre Dame in 2013.

Seniors Lead The Way: Jaime Nared and Mercedes Russell led the team in scoring and rebounding, combining for 38 points and half of Tennessee’s 50 rebounds. Each had a double-double on the night, with Nared posting 23 points and 13 rebounds and Russell logging 15 points and 12 rebounds.

Balanced Offense: Tennessee had three players in double figures (Nared, Russell, Westbrook), and everyone who entered the game for the Lady Vols contributed at least four points. Tennessee has had at least three players score in double digits every game this season.

-UT Athletics

 

Vols Prepare to “Checker TBA” for Dec. 17 UNC Showdown

Vols Prepare to “Checker TBA” for Dec. 17 UNC Showdown

Checker TBA / Credit: UT Athletics

Tennessee has announced plans to “checker” Thompson-Boling Arena for next Sunday’s highly anticipated men’s basketball game against defending national champion North Carolina.

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.

“First, we’re excited about the opportunity to play a great team like North Carolina at home in front of a sold-out crowd,” Vols junior Admiral Schofield said. “But to envision playing that game in front of a human checkerboard of more than 21,000 fans… we can’t wait to see it. I know Thompson-Boling Arena is going to be electric.”

Tennessee football has created stunning visuals with “Checker Neyland” games in recent years at Neyland Stadium, but UT’s very first attempt to “checker” the crowd at one of its athletic events was a men’s basketball game. Thompson-Boling Arena’s lower bowl was impressively transformed into a human, orange and white checkerboard when the Vols hosted rival Kentucky on March 1, 2006.

-UT Athletics

 

Vols Defeat Lipscomb at Home, 81-71; UNC at home is next

Vols Defeat Lipscomb at Home, 81-71; UNC at home is next

UT G Chris Darrington / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Four scorers in double digits helped No. 24 Tennessee to an 81-71 win over Lipscomb on Saturday at Thompson-Boling Arena.

Grants Williams led the way for UT, dropping 19 points on 6-of-11 shooting to go along with eight boards and three blocks in 27 minutes of action. Admiral Schofield pitched in an additional 13 points and six rebounds. James Daniel III and Chris Darrington were the other Vols to score in double figures, tallying 12 and 11, respectively.

Darrington enjoyed his most productive game at Tennessee, as 11 points, five assists and three rebounds were all season-highs for the junior guard.

Garrison Mathews led the way for the Bisons, totaling a game-high 22 points and six rebounds.

Lipscomb never stopped fighting despite a double-digit deficit at intermission, pulling within three of UT in the second period, but Tennessee’s 20-of-24 performance from the charity stripe in the half kept the Vols in the lead.

Williams scored 15 of his 19 points in the second half to fuel UT’s offense, which shot 42 percent (25-59) from the field in the contest.
The Vols jumped out to a 17-7 lead early in the first half behind a pair of treys from Schofield, but a 12-5 run by the Bisons made it a 22-19 game with 6:24 left in the half.

Tennessee would pull away in the final minutes of the frame, using an 18-8 run and knocking down its last six shots to go into halftime up, 40-27. Schofield and Daniel paced the Vols with nine points each in the half.

TEAM EFFORT: The Vols have scored 20 or more bench points in each of their games this season, and scored 30 in the win against Lipscomb today.

HOT FIRST HALF: Tennessee has scored 30 or more points in the first half of all games this season and scored 40 in the first half today.

DARRINGTON GETTING IT DONE: Junior guard Chris Darrington recorded a season-high with 11 points, five assists and three rebounds in the win on Saturday.

UP NEXT: Tennessee will stay home to welcome No. 10/11 North Carolina to Thompson-Boling Arena Sunday, Dec. 17 at 3 p.m. ET (ESPN). The game is a sellout, and fans planning to attend are encouraged to visit CheckerTBA.com to see what color shirt their section is designated to wear.

-UT Athletics

 

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