Vols sophomore wide receiver Marquez Callaway talked to the media on Monday about the loss to Florida ahead of this week’s game with UMass.

Vols sophomore wide receiver Marquez Callaway talked to the media on Monday about the loss to Florida ahead of this week’s game with UMass.
Here’s Vols senior defensive lineman Kendal Vickers on Monday discussing UT’s loss to Florida ahead of Saturday’s game with UMass.
Kelsea Ballerini celebrated the upcoming end to her single days by traveling to Las Vegas over the weekend for her bachelorette party.
According to a few posts on Instagram, Kelsea’s jet-setting crew attended Jennifer Lopez’s All I Have residency at the AXIS auditorium at Planet Hollywood Resort & Casino, hit the town in a stretch limo, hung by the pool and played some Top Golf.
Kelsea and her fiancé Morgan Evans will tie the knot later this year.
“I think meeting each other and falling super in love with each other was a big surprise for both of us,â said Kelsea to NCD earlier this year. âAnd I think weâre kinda like . . . weâre so stoked to get married, but the actual wedding part isnât really what we care about . . . Itâs at the end of the year, and weâre both gonna keep, you know, sprinting until then and then get married and take December off.”
Take a look at the pics below from Kelsea’s Vegas weekend.
photo by Jason Simanek
Chris Stapleton, Brantley Gilbert, Brett Eldredge and Zac Brown Band came close to scoring No. 1 albums on the all-genre Billboard 200 chart this year. But “close” only counts in horseshoes, hand grenades and . . . sometimes . . . slow dancing.
Thomas Rhett is dancing!
TR’s new album, Life Changes, hit No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart this week, selling 123,000 equivalent albums, according to Nielsen Music.
Life Changes becomes the first album by a country artist to top the Billboard 200 in 2017. Life Changes is also the first country album to top the chart since Jason Aldean’s 2016 album, They Don’t Know.
2017 albums from Chris Stapleton, Brantley Gilbert, Brett Eldredge and Zac Brown Band all debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 chart.
Additionally, both Dustin Lynch and Kip Moore’s new albums landed in the Top 10 on the Billboard 200. Kip’s Slowheart tallied 29,000 equivalent album sales and debuted at No. 10 on the chart, while Dustin’s Current Mood notched 36,000 equivalent album sales and reached No. 7 on the chart, according to Nielsen Music.
TR’s Life Changes (123,000) is the third biggest country debut in 2017, following Chris Stapleton’s From A Room: Volume 1 (202,000) and Zac Brown Band’s Welcome Home (139,000).
After being tragically killed in a helicopter crash on Sept. 8, the life of Montgomery Gentry’s Troy Gentry was celebrated at the Grand Ole Opry on Sept. 14.
In addition to performances from Vince Gill, Charlie Daniels, Trace Adkins and more, the service featured a recording of Troy singing a new song, “Better Me,” which was recently recorded for an upcoming Montgomery Gentry album.
After the tragedy, the touching tune takes on a new meaning as Troy croons, “I might cuss and fight, tell a few lies / Break a few rules making promises I canât keep / But Iâve turned a page on wilder days / Iâm writing all this down hoping youâll see / I ainât saying Iâm perfect, but Iâm working on a better me.”
Listen to the new song below.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kS32oC-vRyY
photo via Average Joes Media
Two teenage brothers, whose home in St. John was destroyed by Hurricane Irma, got a flight to the U.S. mainland thanks to Kenny Chesney, according to CNN.
Jah-Haile Bruce and Jahbioseh Bruce huddled in a bathroom with their grandfather as their home in St. John was destroyed by Hurricane Irma two weeks ago. The brothers were evacuated via boat to St. Croix, but they had no way to get to Philadelphia, where their mother lives.
Kenny Chesney, who lives in St. John and also lost his island home in the storm, heard about the brothers’ predicament and, according to CNN, anonymously donated the use of his private jet to take the brothers to Philadelphia.
Watch the CNN video below.
The 69th Emmy Awards got more than a little country flavor last night as Dolly Parton, Keith Urban and Jennifer Nettles made appearances.
Dolly and Jennifer were in the house as their made-for-TV movie, Christmas of Many Colors: Circle of Love, was nominated for Outstanding Television Movie. The holiday television special, which starred Jennifer, Ricky Schroder, Gerald McRaney and Alyvia Alyn Lind, was bested by Netflix’s Black Mirror: San Junipero.
Dolly also reunited with her 9 to 5 cohorts Lily Tomlin and Jane Fonda to present the Emmy for Best Supporting Actor.
“If it hadnât been for good support,â Dolly said, referencing her breasts, âShock and Awe here would be more like Flopsy and Droopy.”
Keith Urban was in attendance to support his wife, Nicole Kidman, who took home the trophy for Best Lead Actress for her role in Big Little Lies.
“I have a huge artistic family who have supported me throughout all my ups and downs,â said Nicole, in part, during her acceptance speech. âYou have been so loyal to me throughout my whole life, thank you for that.
âI also am a mother and a wife. I have two little girls, Sunnie and Faith. And my darling Keith, who I asked to help me pursue this artistic path. And they have to sacrifice so much for it.
âSo this is yours.”
Check out some pics of Keith, Dolly and Jennifer from the red carpet and pre-parties, courtesy of photographer Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com.
photos by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com
By Jimmy Hyams
There are gut-wrenching losses.
Then there is the way Tennessee fell to Florida on Saturday.
The Vols fought back from a 10-point deficit in the fourth quarter in a hostile environment against a good defense, only to allow the Gators to complete a 63-yard touchdown pass on the last play of the game to lose 26-20.
Tennessee had plenty of chances to win but shot itself in the foot. The Vols couldnât score from just inside the 1-yard line with first-and-goal in the third quarter. They missed three field goals. They threw three interceptions. They dropped what could have been a game-winning touchdown pass in the final minute.
Despite all those miscues, Tennessee could have determined its fate in overtime against Florida.
Until the bomb from redshirt freshman Feleipe Franks to Tyrie Cleveland spoiled things for the Big Orange.
Florida coach Jim McElwain seemed content to run out the clock when he allowed over 20 seconds to tick off in the final stages. But with nine seconds left and the Gators 30 yards from field goal range, he dialed up a desperation heave.
Rather than rush three and drop eight into coverage, UT defensive coordinator Bob Shoop had seven men within 20 yards of the line of scrimmage when Franks fired.
Cleveland ran past safety Micah Abernathy and caught the well-thrown ball in the end zone, over Abernathyâs head.
Abernathy should have never let Cleveland get behind him, but he also should have had help. He didnât.
It was a poorly designed scheme by Shoop.
So for the fourth year in a row, Tennessee outplayed Florida. Somehow, the Gator have won three of those games.
The Vols blew a 9-0 fourth-quarter lead in 2014. Squandered a 13-point lead in the final 10 minutes in 2015. Then let this one slip away on the last play.
Some have compared this Tennessee loss to the Vols win at Georgia on a last-play Hail Mary. The difference is, Georgia had at least five defenders in the end zone trying to bat the ball down. UT didnât.
The play did remind me, however, of UT surrendering a 47-yard touchdown pass to Georgia a year ago with 10 seconds left while in a Cover Two defense. That allowed a Bulldog receiver to get behind UTâs secondary.
“Iâm really proud of players,ââ Tennessee coach Butch Jones said after the loss at Florida. “Our players battled back and showed resolve and resiliency.
“But you canât have penalties in the red zone (UT had at least three on illegal procedure). You canât turn the ball over (three times). You canât have pre-snap penalties. Those are catastrophic.
“But itâs a long football season. We have to come back from it and be better for it.ââ
Yep, itâs a long season, made longer by an inexcusable way of losing to a rival.
Florida has never been more vulnerable. The Gators were playing without nine suspended players due to a debit-card caper. A starting linebacker was out of the game. A starting safety suffered a season-ending injury in August. Hurricane Irma had been a distraction to so many players and their families. It also disrupted Florida practice schedule.
Yet, Tennessee couldnât take advantage.
Tennessee had plenty of chances to win at Florida Field for the first time since 2003.
The Vols had the ball just inside the 1 early in the third quarter and threw a fade route that was nearly intercepted. A Florida penalty then put the ball at the half-yard line, first and goal.
Illegal procedure put the ball just outside the 5, and the Vols threw two incompletions before throwing an interception.
On UTâs final possession â set up by a Rashaan Gaulden interception â John Kelly dropped a middle screen inside the 5 and probably would have scored with about one minute left. Two more incompletions led to a game-tying field goal.
It was one of the few bad moments for Kelly, who was otherwise brilliant. He rushed for 141 yards and one touchdown and had 96 yards on six catches.
After his score, he made his second crucial mistake â he did the Gator Chomp, costing UT a 15-yard penalty on the ensuing kickoff and setting up Florida in good field position for a touchdown.
Another perplexing move by Tennessee was the play calling near the goal line.
The Vols started four possessions in the red zone. They ran 12 plays. Two were runs.
When youâve got a horse like Kelly, ride him.
I didnât have any qualms with throwing to Kelly from the 10 with 66 seconds left.
Some argue UT should have run the ball there to consume some clock. But what if Kelly scores on the first run? That negates that strategy.
And in that situation, Iâm doing all I can to score a touchdown.
But there were others moments where Tennesseeâs strategy wasnât sound.
And on the last play of the game, it cost them dearly.
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GAINESVILLE, Fla. — No. 23 Tennessee fought back from a 10-point deficit in the fourth quarter to tie the game, but No. 24/25 Florida’s Hail Mary pass gave the Gators a 26-20 win on Saturday night at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium.
Tennessee (2-1, 0-1 SEC) entered the second half trailing, 6-3, and fell behind by as much as 10 points before tying the game up with less than a minute to play. Florida’s final offensive drive resulted in a game-winning Hail Mary for the Gators.
Dormady completed 21-of-39 passes for 259 yards and three interceptions while John Kelly rushed for 141 yards and caught six passes for 96 yards. Kelly averaged 7.4 yards per carry and 16 yards per reception.
Florida quarterback Feleipe Franks finished 18-of-28 for 212 yards, two touchdowns and one interception.
Florida wasted no time getting on the scoreboard as the Gators went 65 yards down the field in 15 plays, but were held to a 27-yard field goal by Tennessee’s defense.
The SEC rivals exchanged punts the remainder of the first quarter and for the first two drives of the second before Florida settled for another field goal to move ahead, 6-0.
On the ensuing possession, the Vols answered with a 51-yard field goal by freshman Brent Cimaglia to pull within three points and close out the first half. It marked Cimaglia’s first career field goal and the longest by a Tennessee kicker since Michael Palardy made a 51-yarder at Missouri in 2013.
Sophomore defensive back Nigel Warrior then forced a fumble that was recovered by Darrell Taylor on Florida’s first drive of the second half. Tennessee went 43 yards on 12 plays, including a 22-yard pass from Dormady to Callaway, but an interception at the one-yard line ended the Vols’ possession.
Following the turnover, UT’s defense forced a three-and-out punt which Callaway returned for 39 yards to the UF-36. Tennessee then attempted its second 51-yard field of the night, but Cimaglia missed wide right.
The Gators scored the first touchdown of the game in the fourth quarter on a pick-six by CJ Henderson, furthering their advantage to 13-3.
Justin Martin then forced a fumble at the goal line that resulted in a touchback and kick started Tennessee’s scoring drive. Dormady directed a five-play, 80-yard possession that ended with a 34-yard touchdown run by John Kelly. After an extra point, the Vols cut Florida’s lead to 13-10.
With 5:13 left in the game, UF’s Franks threw a five-yard pass for a touchdown, giving the Gator’s a 20-10 edge.
On the next drive, Dormady found Kelly for a 52-yard pass before connecting with Ethan Wolf for a 28-yard touchdown. Aaron Medley‘s PAT pulled the Vols within three, 20-17.
Medley then made a 27-yard field goal to tie the game up, 20-20, with less than a minute to play.
As time expired, Florida’s Franks hurled a 63-yard, Hail Mary pass to Tyrie Cleveland for a touchdown, sealing the Gators’ 26-20 victory.
-UT Athletics
Armed with his guitar and a loop pedal setup, Morgan Evans stopped by the NASH campus today (Sept. 15) to perform a four-song set.
In addition to playing his current single, “Kiss Somebody,” the Australian native treated guests to the first love songââDance With Meââhe wrote for his fiancĂ©e, Kelsea Ballerini.
“I met a girl last year and on Christmas Day we got engaged,” said Morgan from the stage. “I’ve written a lot of love songs in my life, but this is my favorite one I’ve ever written. It’s my favorite one for a lot of reasons, it’s the first one I wrote for [Kelsea] . . . I wrote it one morning on a Tuesday at 9 o’clock in the morning. I was waiting for her to come on the TV. She was singing on the morning show. And the morning show was, like, talking about gossip or something like that, and it was the worse thing I’d ever seen so I couldn’t watch it. So I put it on mute, and I picked up the guitar and I just started playing this. This first verse and chorus came out in 20 minutes. It’s called âDance With Me.ââ
Watch Morgan perform “Dance With Me” at the NASH campus.
photo by Jason Simanek