Blake Shelton’s fans have a lot to be excited about.
Earlier this morning (Sept. 21), girlfriend Gwen Stefani revealed the title and artwork of her upcoming Christmas album along with a sample of the title track, âYou Make It Feel Like Christmas,â which features vocals from Blake.
About 2 hours later, Blake posted the cover art and title of his upcoming 11th studio album, Texoma Shore.
“Lake Texoma has always been a place of great memories, new and old,â said Blake in a statement. âI literally recorded this album on its shore so itâs full circle for me to take the love of this place and my love of country music.
“When you listen to the record, it will go from something traditional to something that will make your head spin back to something even more traditional. Thatâs just what you can expect from one of my albums. At this point in my career, itâs always good for me to try something different, with different sounds, and I think you’ll hear hints of that on this record. I’ve explored about every part of country music you can explore and it seems like I always keep coming back to my roots, which is traditional country music. I love great songs and there are so many talented writers in Nashville, but I do have a song on the album that I wrote and I’m very proud of it.â
Fans following Blake on Twitter were not completely surprised by the news. On Sept. 20, Blake teased that he had something to share and posted four hints about the forthcoming announcement.
The new album, Texoma Shore, will be released on Nov. 3 and will be available for pre-order on Friday (Sept. 22). Check out the series of hints and album cover art below.
I got something to tell yâall but I aint making it easy this time!! Gonna have to figure this one out yourselves todayâŚ
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee takes on UMass on Saturday at Neyland Stadium. The game will feature a noon ET kickoff on SEC Network.
Tennessee (2-1) is coming off a 26-20 road loss to Florida on Sept. 16. Junior running back John Kelly set career highs with 141 rushing yards and 96 receiving yards and played a major role in the Vols’ second half rally before the Gators took the win on a Hail Mary with time expiring.
UMass is coming off a 29-21 loss against Temple on Sept. 15 in Philadelphia. The Minutemen posted 458 yards of offense in the loss. Redshirt junior quarterback Andrew Ford led the team offensively, completing 23 of 37 passes for 377 yards and two scores. Ford also rushed for one touchdown.
The Vols is receiving votes in the Week 4 Amway Coaches Poll (three votes) and AP Top 25 (six votes).
First-Ever Game Between Tennessee and UMass
Saturday’s game will mark the first-ever meeting between Tennessee and UMass. The Vols are 9-6-1 all-time against current FBS independent teams.
Saturday’s contest will be UT’s first game against an FBS independent team since a 41-21 loss to Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana, on Nov. 5, 2005.
Both schools won their last football national championship in 1998. Tennessee defeated Florida State for the 1998 BCS title while UMass claimed the FCS (then Division I-AA) championship with a win over Georgia Southern.
Tennessee’s last game against a school from the state of Massachusetts was back in the 1993 Hall of Fame Bowl. The Vols defeated Boston College, 38-23, in Philip Fulmer’s first official game as head coach.
1967 National Champions To Be Honored Saturday
The 1967 National Champion Tennessee football team will be honored at the end of the first quarter on Saturday as part of the 50th anniversary reunion weekend for the team. The 1967 Volunteers fell to UCLA in the season opener before winning nine straight, including victories over Alabama, Auburn, LSU and Ole Miss. UT finished No. 2 in the final polls and was selected as the national champion by Litkenhous. Led by Head Coach Dough Dickey, the Vols earned a berth in the Orange Bowl and also won the SEC Championship with a perfect 6-0 mark in conference.
Vols Teaming Up with Curing Kids Cancer
For the third year in a row, the Tennessee Volunteers will team up with Curing Kids Cancer to promote that September is National Childhood Cancer Awareness Month during their game on September 23 against the University of Massachusetts Minutemen.
Teams from across the country will wear helmet stickers and wristbands while coaches wear wristbands, gold whistles and lanyards to represent their support for pediatric cancer awareness. Many of these teams are not only spreading awareness, they are helping their local children’s hospital receive funds to better provide innovative treatment at its pediatric cancer center.
The campaign is becoming a staple for many of the teams as all of this year’s teams have participated before. Each team gives back on a national and local level by promoting childhood cancer awareness.
With support from ESPN GameDay commentator Lee Corso, “Mr. College Football” Tony Barnhart from the SEC Network and the “Head Ball Coach” Steve Spurrier the campaign has continued to grow.
Standout Vols Through First Quarter of 2017
Kelly leads the SEC and ranks 11th in the nation with 349 rushing yards. His five rushing touchdowns are tied for the most in the SEC and fifth in the nation. Kelly, who also leads Tennessee with 16 receptions, also ranks first in the SEC and sixth nationally with 540 all-purpose yards.
Redshirt senior Trevor Daniel stands as one of the nation’s top punters, ranking eight nationally with a 46.8 average in 2017. Daniel’s 45.2 career average also ranks third among all active NCAA punters, regardless of division.
Sophomore linebacker Daniel Bituli is tied for 15th in the nation and ranks second in the SEC with 33 total tackles. His 11.0 tackles-per-game average is tied for 10th nationally
Tennessee athletic director John Currie
hurt after the Volsâ last-play loss at Florida.
But if he has any intention of conducting a coaching search at the end of
the season, he has given no indication.
He has said all along he likes the direction of the football program.
He saw many bright spots in the gut-wrenching loss in The Swamp.
He sees no reason to examine his coachesâ buyout.
That could change in six or seven weeks. It might change sooner, depending
on how Tennessee
performs in the next two games and how fans respond at the turnstile.
What does Currie see now when he looks at his football program?
“I see a football program that is one play away from a miraculous 10-point
comeback in the fourth quarter (at Florida) and being 3-0,ââ Currie said this
week. “The margin of victory in this league is really, really small. Almost
like the NFL.ââ
Currie raved about the play UT cornerback Justin Martin made the fourth
quarter, chasing down Florida running back Malik
Davis from behind, making up about 5-6 yards to cause a fumble just before Davis crossed the goal line.
The result was a touchback and Tennessee
marched downfield to score to cut the gap to 13-10.
A Florida touchdown there would have spelled doom for the Vols.
“To me (that play) epitomizes this team,ââ Currie said.
Still, it was a seventh consecutive loss at Florida and put the Vols behind the
eight-ball in the SEC East Division race.
“Itâs a long season,ââ Currie said. “Weâve got a lot of work to do,
obviously. But I appreciate the effort and work that all of our coaches and
student-athletes are putting into it.ââ
Some Vols fans have thrown in the towel on Jones, even some who supported
him before the Florida game. They argue he seldom wins close games. They argue he doesnât manage a game well. They argue he canât get UT where it wants to go â which is an East
title and eventually an SEC championship.
You canât argue that Jones has done a very good job building UT into being
relevant in the East after the Vols had back-to-back 1-7 SEC records before
Jones arrived.
Jones has upgraded the won-loss record, the talent, the academic
achievements, the community service hours, the off-the-field behavior.
But he has yet to win the East Division.
It doesnât help that Floridaâs
Jim McElwain, with a subpar offense the past two years, has captured two East
titles in his first two seasons.
For the record, Jonesâ buyout is $2 million per year for every year left on
his contract, plus prorated pay for any months before Feb. 28. Jones has three
years left after this season.
Also, UTâs defensive coordinator makes over $1.1 million a year. And the
other nine assistants combine to make about $4 million. Total buyout for the nine
assistants and the strength and conditioning coach: $5 million
Purging the entire staff would run the bill up to over $11 million.
Then there is the issue of trying to hire a big-name coach ($5 million?),
paying his buyout ($3 million-plus?), hiring a new staff ($5-6 million?).
The price tag for firing your current coach and hiring a new one and his
staff with potential buyouts could exceed $25 million.
Iâm convinced Currie doesnât want that to happen.
I donât think Currie is fond of the idea of pursuing a football coach nine
months after taking over as UTâs athletic director.
For one, he would have the unenviable task of trying to hire a football
coach.
Secondly, if Currie fires his football coach, the clock starts ticking on
Currie, because, right or wrong, his tenure would then be judged on how his
football hire performs.
As weâve seen at a variety of high profile programs (re: LSU, Oregon, Florida)
itâs not as easy as many think to hire a canât-miss coach, or even a proven
coach.
And while youâre giving Alabama
credit for hiring Nick Saban, remember, the Tide had hired Rich Rodriguez, who
then turned it down, opening the door for Saban.
Gwen Stefani is releasing a new holiday album, You Make It Feel Like Christmas, on Oct. 6.
The new 12-song offering includes yuletide classics like “Jingle Bells,” “Let It Snow,” “Santa Baby” and more, as well as the title track that features vocals from Gwen’s boyfriend, Blake Shelton.
Gwen shared a snippet of the title track, which she co-penned with Blake, Justin Tranter and busbee, on Instagram today (Sept. 21) with the caption: “#YouMakeItFeelLikeChristmas out Oct 6th!! Preorder starting tonight & get the first single feat @BlakeShelton đđđgx.”
Check out the sample of “You Make It Feel Like Christmas” below.
Jim Casey talks with Midland about celebrating their No. 1 debut single, âDrinkinâ Problem,â how Dwight Yoakam contributed to the origin of their band name, the best Dwight Yoakam songs, the importance of a good Al Pacino impression, the joy of making timeless songs with talented songwriters, the Sept. 22 release of their debut album, On the Rocks, and more.
Fresh off of the announcement that Little Big Town, Kacey Musgraves and Midland will embark on a 26-date Breakers Tour in 2018, the eight artists stopped by the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon last night (Sept. 20) to perform a medley of hits.
Midland kicked things off by performing their 2017 debut single, “Drinkin’ Problem,” and Kacey Musgraves followed with her 2012 Top 10 hit, “Merry Go âRound.”
To close the gig, Little Big Town joined Kacey and Midland onstage for a rockin’ rendition of “Don’t Bring Me Down,” a tune Electric Light Orchestra scored a hit with in 1979.
Songwriters Ron McNeill and Georgia Lyons are claiming they pitched a song titled “Something in the Water” to Carrie’s producer, Mark Bright, in 2014. The lawsuit contends that the songwriters never heard back from Carrie’s camp, but that Carrie recorded the song in 2014.
“Something in the Water” hit No. 1 on both Billboardâs Hot Country Songs chart and Hot Christian Songs chart and won the Grammy for Best Country Solo Performance.
Carrie’s co-writers on the tuneâChris DeStefano and Brett Jamesâtheir publishing companies and Sony Music Nashville are also named as defendants in the suit.
“The hook on the infringing work, as released on the album, is structurally and lyrically identical, and substantially similar melodically to plaintiffs’ composition of the same title,” McNeill and Lyons argue in their lawsuit, according to The Tennessean.
A spokesperson for Carrie denied the song theft and said that she expects “Carrie, Brett and Chris will be vindicated in the courts.”
Darius Ruckerâs new single, âFor the First Time,â is all about taking chances and doing new things. Tonight (Sept. 20), Darius is planning to celebrate two important firsts in his life: meeting Vince Gill 25 years ago and being inducted into the Grande Ole Opry by Vince five years ago.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. â Tennessee head coach Butch Jones met with the media on Wednesday in the Ray and Lucy Hand Digital Studio for the final time this week before the Volunteers take on the UMass Minutemen on Saturday.
Jones said he is impressed with UMass’ efficiency on offense.
“We know that they can throw the football,” Jones said. “They have a very controlled passing game. (Andrew) Ford, their quarterback, is outstanding in the way he manages the game.”
Jones also commented on the Minutemen’s defensive schemes and ability to blitz while talking about UT’s mental preparedness.
“These are things we have to be prepared for mentally,” Jones said. “I thought we had a good start of the week, but today is critical in the evolution in getting ready for Saturday at 12:01 in Neyland Stadium.”
The game will be aired on SEC Network with Taylor Zarzour, Andre Ware and Olivia Harlan providing game coverage.
Vols Moving Forward, Looking Ahead to Saturday
As preparation continues for Saturday, Tennessee is relying on experience and leadership to help Team 121 grow, mature and learn from last week’s loss at Florida.
“It’s unfortunate, but you have to move on and you have to forget about it,” Jones said. “I liked our approach on Monday. You have to let it motivate you and we’re playing a good football team whose record is no indication of how good they are.”
UMass enters this weekend’s matchup with an 0-4 record while Tennessee is 2-1.
“When you’re at Tennessee, it doesn’t matter who your opponent is, you’re going to get their best effort,” Jones added. “I believe in our football team and I love our players. We have to get the small details corrected, and that has been ongoing this week.”
1967 National Champions To Be HonoredÂ
The 1967 National Champion Tennessee football team will be honored at the end of the first quarter on Saturday as part of the 50th anniversary reunion weekend for the team. The 1967 Volunteers fell to UCLA in the season opener before winning nine straight, including victories over Alabama, Auburn, LSU and Ole Miss. UT finished No. 2 in the final polls and was selected as the national champion by Litkenhous. Led by Head Coach Dough Dickey, the Vols earned a berth in the Orange Bowl and also won the SEC Championship with a perfect 6-0 mark in conference.
Vols Teaming Up with Curing Kids Cancer
For the third year in a row, the Tennessee Volunteers will team up with Curing Kids Cancer to promote that September is National Childhood Cancer Awareness Month during their game on Saturday.
Teams from across the country will wear helmet stickers and wristbands while coaches wear wristbands, gold whistles and lanyards to represent their support for pediatric cancer awareness. Many of these teams are not only spreading awareness, they are helping their local children’s hospital receive funds to better provide innovative treatment at its pediatric cancer center.
Additional Quotes
Butch Jones, Head Coach
(Opening Statement)
âIâll start off from an injury standpoint. The individuals that will be out for this game will be Evan Berry, Latrell Williams and Austin Smith. We got some great news today, Baylen Buchanan is going to be available. Baylen has done a really good job at getting himself back and ready to go. We will see how he looks today in practice. I really liked the way he ran around and did things yesterday in practice, so we are excited to get him going. Those will be the three individuals that will be out for this coming game.
âThe more video that I watch on UMass, the more impressed I am. They are very efficient on offense. We know that they can throw the football. They have a very controlled passing game. (Andrew) Ford, their quarterback, is outstanding in the way he manages the game. He has a quick release. He is a NFL prospect and it shows. They have some really good wideouts. Their tight end is a very talented football player. They have a corner that will be one of the fastest corners we will face all year. Defensively, they pose many issues for opponents in terms of blitzes and schemes. These are things we have to be prepared for mentally. I thought we had a good start of the week, but today is critical in the evolution in getting ready for Saturday at 12:01 in Neyland Stadium.â
(On Todd Kelly Jr.âs injury status and the possibility of a redshirt)
âWe are taking it one step at a time. Todd and I have spoken a lot and we would welcome him back with open arms into our football program. He has meant so much to us not only on the field, but also off the field. He has been a great representative of Tennessee football.â
(On Todd Kellyâs injury, possibly being season ending)
âAs of right now, itâs ongoing with getting the second opinion and all of that stuff. I donât want to speak too soon. Itâs possible he could come back for a bowl game, so I donât want to speak too early. With Cortez McDowell, we found out he could possibly return for the later part of the season or bowl game.â
(On coaching decisions affecting one possession games)
âThere are a lot of variables that go into it with decisions, such as going for or it or focusing on field position and execution. I think it is a combination of a lot of different elements. We tell our team that a football game can come down to two or three plays. Unfortunately, no one knows what plays those will be. A season can come down to four to six plays, you just never know. I donât believe that there are one or two plays that can cost you a football game, I think it is more of an accumulation of repetitions, whether is two to three or four to five that might be key turning points to the game. We always tell our players that we must play every play like it stands alone. You must have the mentality that this play could be the difference in winning or losing. There are no reset buttons; itâs not Madden out here. You have to take that approach to a play and we also take that approach to every situation in a game as well.â
(On the sledge hammer and how it is awarded)
âWe need Trey to go back and earn that sledge hammer. That is something that has been a tradition here for a long time. It is awarded to the offensive lineman that meets certain criteria on the offensive front. I know that Trey was very proud to earn that. I did hear that he carried it around. What happens is, the playerâs name goes on the sledge hammer then he has to bring it in the next week and try to earn it again. Thatâs something that has been going on in Tennessee football for many years. It has been one of our traditions.â
(On performance of the receiver group through three weeks)
âI really like their attitude and their mentality. I think that drive to get better each and every day is there. They communicate very well. They come out and they practice and they attack the day. I can see them progressing, and theyâre all youngsters. Theyâre learning through trial and error, understanding what it is to play at an elite level and how you prepare yourself through the course of a week. Thereâs been so much that has gone into that. It is a very young room but a very talented room and I see a steady pace of confidence being born. Iâve really liked the way that group has progressed, but we canât let youth be a crutch. Nobody cares about that. It comes down to the mental effort and the mental intensity, and you canât beat yourself. It starts with missed splits and missed assignments. Playing receiver is one of the most difficult positions on the football field. Everyone thinks you just line up and go out there, and you run a rout and you catch a football. So much goes into it with pre-snap checklists and identifying the coverage. Is it free access cloud (coverage)? Is it bump and run? Whatâs my split in the run game? Whatâs my assignment in the pass game? Now I have to work a release at the line of scrimmage, or a second level release. Now I have to work a five-step slant or a 12-yard curl. Then I have to win in transition, then I have to catch the ball and then I have to turn into a runner after the catch. Thereâs so many things that go into the development of playing winning football at the receiver position. Itâs really the ability to do two or three things at once.â
(On how he will handle UMassâs quick passing offense)
âIt starts with the ability to challenge routs. Whether youâre in off coverage or press coverage, you have to have the ability to challenge routs. Thatâs something that weâve worked very hard on this week. Obviously, it comes down to eye discipline. It comes down to your break and drive. Itâs really going back and relying on your fundamentals and details. Thatâs an area that we have to improve upon. Then, your eye (discipline) is because double moves occur off of that. You have to have the ability to read splits of wideouts and read the hips or the hints that they give you that you study throughout the course of the week with your game study. Thereâs a lot that goes into it, but thatâs an area that we have to take tremendous strides from last week to this week.â
(On decision not to use Ty Chandler on kickoff returns vs. Florida)
âFlorida has not had one kick returned against them yet. We knew going into the game that they had a very talented kicker. I believe theyâre No. 1 in the country in kickoff coverage because they havenât had to cover a kick. We knew that he would kick it deep, so there were some things that went into that decision. He has gained valuable repetitions again this week. We have a number of guys that we feel very confident about in doing some different things in the return game.â
(On if Jarrett Guarantano will play against UMass)
âI think he has earned the right to play some. Every game is a mentality when youâre the No. 2 quarterback right now, but youâre one snap away from playing. It takes so much in preparation when you go into the game and youâre the No. 2 for that game because you have to have a startersâ mindset. You have to be mentally tough and you have to be ready because the difference is you never know when youâll have to go into the game. Jarrett has worked very hard with that, but we need to get him involved in the offense this week. We would like to be able to have that opportunity to do that. Jarrett has had a very good week of preparation, and Quinten and I have been very proud of the way Jarrett has attacked this week.â
(On the team moving forward after the Florida loss Saturday)
âFirst of all, itâs a consistency in your approach. And I think that approach with everyone started in the locker room in Gainesville. You could see the hurt and you could see the disappointment, but you have to move on. Itâs part of life and itâs unfortunate. Like I told you, weâre hurt. We suffered every emotion that you can. But you know what? Itâs time to go, itâs go time. Thatâs what makes football. We live in a week-to-week season. We live in a week-to-week life. Every week is different, and I think whatâs challenged in todayâs world is the clutter and distractions of whatâs out there. So when they come to the building, we have to make sure that theyâre locked in and focused. You have to rely on the leadership of your older players and what they have experienced. Itâs part of the growth and maturity of a long football season. There are natural adversities that occur. Itâs unfortunate, but you have to move on and you have to forget about it. I liked our approach on Monday. You have to let it motivate you and we’re playing a good football team whose record is no indication of how good they are. And again, itâs respecting your opponent and understanding that when youâre at Tennessee, it doesnât matter who your opponent is, youâre going to get their best effort. Thatâs part of your maturity of your football team as well. I believe in our football team and I love our players. We have to get the small details corrected, and that has been ongoing this week. If youâre a competitor, I canât wait for 12:01 p.m. in Neyland Stadium on Saturday.â
(On the kickersâ confidence and knowing when who will play)
âI think itâs them trying to have a clearly defined and articulated job description as possible. We ask everyone else in our football program to compete, and our kickers are no different. Itâs a body of work throughout the course of August and September, but also through your consistency in practice every single day. Youâre earning the trust of your teammates. Youâre earning the trust of your coaches by the way you produce in practice which obviously leads to being successful on game day. I think we have two very, very talented kickers. So Iâll sit down and meet with them at the end of the week and say, âThis is kind of what weâre thinking.â Every time weâre getting in scoring range I want them to have the mentality that theyâre kicking. I think the competitive aspect has helped both of those individuals.â
Jason Aldean announced that his annual Concert for the Cure will take place during his They Don’t Know Tour stop on Oct. 20 at KFC YUM Center in Louisville, Ky.
Jason will donate a portion of all ticket sales garnered throughout the year to Komen Kentucky. Since 2004, Jason has helped raise more than $3 million to benefit Susan G. Komen chapters across the country. Susan G. Komen organizations fund more breast cancer research than any other nonprofit, while providing real-time help to those facing the disease.
âAs long as I have the chance, I will do my part and raise awareness for this cause,â said Jason. âMy fans keep fighting the battle with this terrible disease along with us, and our dream is that nobody has to fight the disease anymore.â
Chris Young, Kane Brown and Dee Jay Silver will join Jason onstage for the Concert for the Cure on Oct. 20.