John Currie: UT Carefully Interviewed, Vetted Greg Schiano

John Currie: UT Carefully Interviewed, Vetted Greg Schiano

Tennessee athletic director John Currie released a statement Monday morning to address what occurred Sunday when the Vols pursued Greg Schiano to be their new football coach.

Here’s the full statement from Currie:

“As we began our search for our next head football coach earlier this month, I promised that I would pour all my energy and effort into this process.

I have followed Coach Schiano’s accomplishments throughout his career and have been fortunate to get to know him and his family over the last several years. As reported by the media, he was a leading candidate for our position. Among the most respected professional and college football coaches, he is widely regarded as an outstanding leader who develops tough, competitive teams and cares deeply about his student-athletes.

We carefully interviewed and vetted him, as we do candidates for all positions. He received the highest recommendations for character, family values and commitment to academic achievement and student-athlete welfare from his current and former athletics directors, players, coaching colleagues and experienced media figures.

Coach Schiano worked at Penn State from 1990-1995. Consequently, we, of course, carefully reviewed the 2012 investigation report by Louis Freeh. Coach Schiano is not mentioned in the Freeh report and was not one of the more than 400 people interviewed in the investigation. We also confirmed that Coach Schiano was never deposed and never asked to testify in any criminal or civil matter. And, we conferred with our colleagues at The Ohio State University, who had conducted a similar inquiry after the 2016 release of testimony. I know that Coach Schiano will continue to have great success in his coaching career and wish him and his family well.

I am grateful for your patience as our search for the next leader for the Tennessee football program continues, and I look forward to making that introduction soon.”

-UT Athletics

 

Jimmy’s blog: Tennessee bungles deal with Schiano

By Jimmy Hyams

After the Greg Schiano fiasco and the fan backlash, Tennessee is back to the drawing board trying to find a coach to replace Butch Jones.

I’ve never seen anything quite like what transpired Sunday afternoon.

When word was leaked that Schiano was going to be hired by Tennessee, fans and social media ripped the decision on twitter and facebook and every where else they could.

Protestors painted The Rock on campus and lined up outside Neyland Stadium and other campus spots to voice their displeasure over hiring a man who might or might not have seen Jerry Sandusky molest a young boy at Penn State.

In documents released in the summer of 2016, Schiano says he didn’t. Whistle blower Mike McQueary said he was told Schiano did. Another assistant, Tom Bradley, said he wasn’t aware of Schiano seeing anything regarding Sandusky.

Schiano has worked at Ohio State as defensive coordinator since December 2015 – hired before the report as published.

I don’t recall any backlash at Ohio State when the story was reported, but there is now – some protestors have lined up to say Schiano should be fired.

Unfortunately in our society, you are now guilty until proven innocent.

If Schiano is innocent, his treatment by fans and media and politicians is abhorrent. His reputation has been ruined. And for people on emotional rants to call him a child molester is absurd and irresponsible.

If Schiano did know about Sandusky and didn’t report it, shame on Schiano. But there is no proof of this.

Problem is, I don’t know the truth. And most people don’t either.

Even not knowing the truth for sure, I wouldn’t have hired Schiano. He wasn’t on my list. Not because he can’t coach. Because you don’t roll the dice on a hire like this. I expected some backlash, but nothing like this.

Some have argued that Currie didn’t vet Schiano and should have hired a search firm.

I disagree. I have no doubt Currie vetted Schiano – and he said so in a statement. He didn’t need a search firm to research Schiano’s past and read the article that appeared about 16 months ago.

What he needed was better judgment.

He’s not the only one. I have no doubt Peyton Manning and Jimmy Haslam signed off on the hiring of Schiano. Haslam, owner of the Cleveland Browns, wanted to hire Schiano at Cleveland several years ago but was talked out of it by others in the front office, according to one article I read.

Manning was surely on board. He texted a number of former Vols asking for their support of Schiano.

Heath Shuler texted his support for Schiano and got about 500 negative responses.

Shuler said didn’t know about Schiano’s possible knowledge of the Sandusky situation when he sent the text.

I am convinced some of the backlash is not just about Schiano’s background but about UT not hiring Jon Gruden.

So many fans were so invested – like they were in 2012 – that hiring anyone else but Curry would be a disappointment.

Gruden didn’t feel the need to announce he wasn’t a candidate because he never made it known he was a candidate.

Currie probably liked the attention from fans and media diverted to Gruden so he could conduct his search in private.

Currie might regret that decision now – just as he must regret hiring Schiano, then being forced to nullify the deal by the Tennessee administration.

Schiano signed a memorandum of understanding. I’m sure Currie did, too. I don’t know if UT’s chancellor or president did. Did that document need the signatures of UT’s chancellor and president to make it valid? Maybe they did.

If so, what does UT owe Schiano to negate the deal?

I don’t know that answer – yet. But it could millions.

I also don’t know where Currie looks next.

I have no doubt the pool of candidates has been limited based on the Schiano disaster.

I do know that former LSU coach Les Miles called a prominent UT booster Sunday night to inquire about the LSU job.

My top two candidates are David Cutcliffe and Kevin Steele.

I don’t know if Cutcliffe would leave Duke, where going 6-6 and making a bowl game is acceptable. He did a terrific job as offensive coordinator at Tennessee and coached both the Mannings – Peyton and Eli.

And Steele, as defensive coordinator at Auburn, just beat Alabama, whipped Georgia and has the Tigers in contention for the SEC Championship and the College Football Playoff.

Steele is a former player and assistant at Tennessee. He also has worked for five coaches who have won a national championship.

UT could do a lot worse.

It already has.


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Check Out How Some of Your Favorite Country Stars Spent Thanksgiving

Check Out How Some of Your Favorite Country Stars Spent Thanksgiving

From Luke Bryan and Blake Shelton to Maren Morris and Miranda Lambert, check out how some of your favorite country artists celebrated Thanksgiving via Instagram.

We all hope you have a great #thanksgivingdinner . We miss you Jordan & Kris.

A post shared by Luke Bryan Official (@lukebryan) on

Happy Thanksgiving 🦃

A post shared by Chris Janson (@thechrisjanson) on

Had the best thanksgiving ❤️gx

A post shared by Gwen Stefani (@gwenstefani) on

I’m thankful for you because you put up with me, @ryanhurd . ✨✨✨

A post shared by Maren Morris (@marenmorris) on

my 2 favs every holiday 😍🍷 #happythanksgiving y'all!

A post shared by c a r l y p e a r c e (@carlypearce) on

Them: Are you excited to be a part of the #MacysParade? Me:

A post shared by Lauren Alaina (@laurenalaina) on

Full belly. Full heart. More thankful than ever. Happy Thanksgiving to all my American friends and family!

A post shared by Morgan Evans (@morganevansmusic) on

Family GO-KART race for the Turkey🦃

A post shared by Brett Eldredge (@bretteldredge) on

Things to be thankful for… a hot husband and baby goats. 🦃🐐#hebthanksgivingdayparade

A post shared by R A E L Y N N (@raelynnofficial) on

Sure have a lot to be thankful for and most of it is because of you guys! #HappyThanksgiving!!

A post shared by Cole Swindell (@coleswindell) on

Dear 🦃… I love you #happythanksgiving

A post shared by Chris Young (@chrisyoungmusic) on

Ghosty’s 1st Thanksgiving in a home! 👻

A post shared by Dan Smyers (@dansmyers) on

Happy Thanksgiving! #macysthanksgivingdayparade

A post shared by Dustin Lynch (@dustinlynchmusic) on

Thankful.

A post shared by Granger Smith (@grangersmith) on

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bb2jmFflf3i/?taken-by=kanebrown_music

photo by Jason Simanek

John Currie: UT Carefully Interviewed, Vetted Greg Schiano

John Currie: UT Carefully Interviewed, Vetted Greg Schiano

Tennessee Athletic Director John Currie released a statement Monday morning to address what occurred Sunday when the Vols pursued Greg Schiano to be their new football coach.

Here’s the full statement from Currie:

“As we began our search for our next head football coach earlier this month, I promised that I would pour all my energy and effort into this process.

I have followed Coach Schiano’s accomplishments throughout his career and have been fortunate to get to know him and his family over the last several years. As reported by the media, he was a leading candidate for our position. Among the most respected professional and college football coaches, he is widely regarded as an outstanding leader who develops tough, competitive teams and cares deeply about his student-athletes.

We carefully interviewed and vetted him, as we do candidates for all positions. He received the highest recommendations for character, family values and commitment to academic achievement and student-athlete welfare from his current and former athletics directors, players, coaching colleagues and experienced media figures.

Coach Schiano worked at Penn State from 1990-1995. Consequently, we, of course, carefully reviewed the 2012 investigation report by Louis Freeh. Coach Schiano is not mentioned in the Freeh report and was not one of the more than 400 people interviewed in the investigation. We also confirmed that Coach Schiano was never deposed and never asked to testify in any criminal or civil matter. And, we conferred with our colleagues at The Ohio State University, who had conducted a similar inquiry after the 2016 release of testimony. I know that Coach Schiano will continue to have great success in his coaching career and wish him and his family well.

I am grateful for your patience as our search for the next leader for the Tennessee football program continues, and I look forward to making that introduction soon.”

Cole Swindell to Launch 1st Major Headlining Tour in 2018 With Lauren Alaina & Chris Janson

Cole Swindell to Launch 1st Major Headlining Tour in 2018 With Lauren Alaina & Chris Janson

Fresh off of the release of his Down Home Sessions IV EP on Nov. 24, Cole Swindell has announced a new Reason to Drink Tour.

The tour, which will be Cole’s first major headlining gig, will kick off on Feb. 15 with openers Chris Janson and Lauren Alaina.

“I am excited to be able to take everything I have learned while on the road the last four years watching all that Luke [Bryan], Jason [Aldean], Kenny [Chesney], Dierks [Bentley] and [Florida Georgia Line] did as headliners,” said Cole. “Everything from how they treat their fans and their high-energy performances, to how they treated everyone on the tour. They were great examples of how much work it takes for a successful tour. I can honestly say I’ve learned from the very best in the business. I’m ready to get out there with two of my friends, Chris Janson and Lauren Alaina. Start to finish, it’s going to be an amazing show and we’re ready to share it with you all.”

Pre-sale tickets go on sale on Nov. 28. Tickets go on sale to the public in most markets on Dec. 1.

Reason to Drink Tour

February 15
Allentown, PA
PPL Center

February 16
Manchester, NH
SNHU Arena

February 17
Uncasville, CT
Mohegan Sun Arena

*February 22
Brookings, SD
Swiftel Center

February 23
Madison, WI
The Coliseum at Alliant Energy Center

*February 24
Columbia, MO
Mizzou Arena

March 2
Hershey, PA
Giant Center

March 3
Kingston, RI
Ryan Center

*March 8
Asheville, NC
Asheville Civic Center

*March 9
Fayetteville, NC
Crown Coliseum

*March 10
Columbia, SC
Colonial Life Arena

March 15
Saginaw, MI
Dow Event Center

March 16
Kalamazoo, MI
Wings Event Center

*March 17
Bloomington, IL
Grossinger Motors Arena

March 22
Huntington, WV
The Big Sandy Superstore Arena

March 23
Roanoke, VA
Berglund Center

March 24
Corbin, KY
The Arena

April 6
Temecula, CA
The Summit at Pechango Casino

April 7
Los Angeles, CA
Greek Theater

* tickets on sale Dec. 8

photo by Jason Simanek

Florida Georgia Line’s Tyler Hubbard Recovering After Back Surgery

Florida Georgia Line’s Tyler Hubbard Recovering After Back Surgery

Florida Georgia Line’s Tyler Hubbard used his Thanksgiving break—excuse the pun—to undergo back surgery.

Tyler’s wife, Hayley, posted a pic of Tyler on Instagram following surgery with the caption: “In addition to all the countless people and things I‘m grateful for, I’m So super grateful for this turkey and that he’s safely out of back surgery. Thankful for all of our friends and family that have been sending love and prayers 🙏🏻 we’re feeling beyond blessed! Wish I had the video of him coming out of surgery entertaining the nurses by singing Michael Jackson 😂

“Hope everyone had a happy happy thanksgiving! Now who’s ready to start decorating for Christmas!!🙋🏼‍♀️”

Tyler also posted a video on his Instagram account that depicted him “waking up” as the anesthesia began to wear off. It’s safe to say that T-Hubb was feeling no pain at the time.

“Here’s some morning laughs for yall. Ya boy was feeling like I just drank a whole bottle of @oldcampwhiskey … the hospital had that good stuff. On a real note I am so thankful to have my back fixed and on its way to being 100% again.. I’ve been dealing with this for years and tried everything to avoid surgery but I’m so glad It’s over incase you can’t tell by the smile on my face. Now I start the hardest part for me…. laying around the house and trying to be still until recovery is over. #bored.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bb4gOvDHzVW/?taken-by=thubbmusic

photo by Jason Simanek

Funeral & Visitation for Mel Tillis to Take Place Today (Nov. 27)

Funeral & Visitation for Mel Tillis to Take Place Today (Nov. 27)

Funeral arrangements and visitation for Mel Tillis, who passed away on Nov. 19 at the age of 85, have been announced.

Visitation for Mel will be held on Nov. 27 from 11a.m. to 2 p.m. at Sykes Funeral Home (424 Franklin St.) in Clarksville, Tenn. A public funeral service will begin at 3 p.m. at Mount Hermon Baptist Church (2204 Jarrell Ridge Rd.), with a private burial to follow. Out of respect for the family, attendees are asked to refrain from photographing, filming or live streaming the service.

A preceding service took place at the Ocklawaha Bridge Baptist Church in Silver Springs, Fla., on Nov. 25.

Additionally, the Tillis family is planning a January public memorial service that will be open to fans and the music industry. The event will be held in Nashville with details to be announced in the coming weeks.

Mel, who recorded No. 1 hits “Good Woman Blues,” “Heart Healer” and “Coca Cola Cowboy,” was one of country music’s most versatile artists. He won the CMA Entertainer of the Year award in 1976 and was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2007.

photo courtesy Mel Tillis Enterprises

Everything You Need to Know About Tonight’s “CMA Country Christmas” Television Special

Everything You Need to Know About Tonight’s “CMA Country Christmas” Television Special

After seven years with Jennifer Nettles as the emcee, CMA Country Christmas will turn to Reba McEntire to host its eighth annual showcase. The two-hour holiday music celebration, which was taped at Nashville’s Grand Ole Opry House on Nov. 14, airs tonight (Nov. 27).

Here’s everything you need to know, including times, channel, performers, highlights, photos and more.

CMA Country Christmas

Date: Nov. 27
Time: 8 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. CT
Channel: ABC
Venue: Grand Ole Opry
Host: Reba McEntire
Performers: Reba, Kelsea Ballerini, Luke Bryan, CB30, Dan + Shay, Brett Eldredge, Alan Jackson, Lady Antebellum, Little Big Town, Dustin Lynch, CeCe Winans, Trisha Yearwood and Chris Young
Highlights: Reba’s “Holly Jolly Christmas,” Kelsea’s “White Christmas,” Luke’s “O Holy Night,” Dan + Shay’s “Do You Hear What I Hear,” Brett’s “Winter Wonderland,” Lady Antebellum’s “Silver Bells,” Trisha’s “Hard Candy Christmas” and more
Quote Worthy: “Christmas is such a special time. It reminds me of growing up in Oklahoma and singing carols with my family. I’m just tickled to join a group of some of my best country buddies onstage to celebrate the holiday season. This is where my love of music began.” — Reba McEntire
Photo Gallery (courtesy of Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com):

Photos by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Jimmy’s blog: Vandy win caps one of UT’s worst-ever seasons

Jimmy’s blog: Vandy win caps one of UT’s worst-ever seasons

By Jimmy Hyams

Jarrett Guarantano was visibly frustrated after Tennessee’s embarrassing and historic 42-24 loss Saturday to Vanderbilt before a sparse crowd at Neyland Stadium.

Tennessee’s redshirt freshman quarterback was frustrated with the way the offense bogged down after the first two possessions of the game.

He was frustrated by a season that saw the Vols lose eight games for the first time ever and go winless in the SEC for the first time in program history.

And he sounded frustrated at some of his teammates.

“Things are going to change. The culture’s gonna change,’’ Guarantano declared from the post-game podium, looking at times like he was fighting back tears.

“We’re going to be working our tails off every single day. We’re just going to have to get things done, no matter who likes it. If they don’t like it, they can leave. That’s just how things are going to be from now on.’’

It wasn’t the only time Guarantano invited teammates depart if they didn’t buy in.

“This is not how I planned things,’’ he said. “It’s not how we planned things. …

“Myself and Trey (Smith, offensive lineman) have already talked about it. It’s just going to be different. We’re going to set the tone and if nobody likes it, then they can just leave.’’

Guarantano didn’t give specific examples, but he was clearly agitated.

He also offered this: “This wasn’t a fun place to be around.’’

It wasn’t a fun place to be after an 18-point loss to a Vanderbilt team that was 0-7 in the SEC and had allowed 46 points per game to conference competition. Not many UT fans endured the defeat: estimated actual attendance was between 50-to-55,000 – the smallest I can remember when weather wasn’t a factor in my 33 years of covering UT football

Perhaps it wasn’t a fun place to be because there was a lack of leadership among players and coaches.

Perhaps it wasn’t fun to be around when Nigel Warrior sucker punched teammate Shy Tuttle then was not suspended; when Darrell Taylor stomped on Smith’s face and was suspended two games; when Jauan Jennings went AWOL for about 10 weeks after an apparent season-ending wrist injury, showed up, got suspended, then walked off the practice field when he wasn’t allowed to play quarterback, then dived into a profanity-laced tirade that correctly caused Tennessee to dismiss him from the team.

Smith, a cinch for Freshman All-American honors and one of the best young offensive linemen Tennessee has had in years, was also upset about the outcomes.

Smith said that in the postgame locker room, players remembered the moments.

“We’re not allowing this to happen again,’’ Smith said. “We’re gonna be great leaders in the locker room, have a lot of control.’’

Will the 4-8 season motivate Smith?

“Every day,’’ he said. “Every day. Point blank. Period.’’

Guarantano delivered the same message.

“I’m not going to forget this and I’m going to let it drive me,’’ he said. “And I think that has to be the team mindset. We wound up going 4-8. It feels terrible and we’re going to let it feel terrible for every single practice and workout going forth.’’

So what led to this terrible season and terrible feeling?

“I think the coaches lost the locker room and lost it early,’’ said former Vol great Tim Irwin, an analyst on Sunday Sports Soundoff radio show on WNML and WIVK.

Irwin was also critical of both Tennessee coordinators: Bob Shoop on defense, Larry Scott on offense.

Shoop was thought to be a home-run hire after doing a good job at Vanderbilt and Penn State.  He was pried away from the Nittany Lions for over $1.1 million a year.

Shoop’s defense last year was terrible, but much of that could be blamed on injuries. The defense this year was also awful, allowing Georgia Tech to rush for 535 yards and giving up over 250 rushing yards per game on the season.

Scott didn’t fare much better. He was hired to run an offense for the first time in over 12 years when he was a high school coach in Florida.

Injuries certainly had an impact on this team, but so did coaching and lack of player development and bad luck.

Still, it shouldn’t have added up to a 4-8 season.

As for next season?

“We’re going to come back better,’’ Smith said. “I promise that.’’

Time will tell.


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