63-yd TD pass on final play, missed FGs and redzone offense doom Vols in 26-20 loss to Gators

63-yd TD pass on final play, missed FGs and redzone offense doom Vols in 26-20 loss to Gators

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

Watch Morgan Evans Perform First Love Song He Wrote for Fiancée Kelsea Ballerini: “Dance With Me”

Watch Morgan Evans Perform First Love Song He Wrote for Fiancée Kelsea Ballerini: “Dance With Me”

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 song—“Dance With Me”—he wrote for his fiancée, 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 ‘Dance With Me.’”

Watch Morgan perform “Dance With Me” at the NASH campus.

photo by Jason Simanek

Craig Morgan Talks Hunting Bears, Performing for the Troops, Opening His New Gallery, Upcoming Tour & More

Craig Morgan Talks Hunting Bears, Performing for the Troops, Opening His New Gallery, Upcoming Tour & More

Jim Casey talks with Craig Morgan about his family’s new business (Gallery at Morgan Farms in Dickson, Tenn.), his upcoming American Stories Tour sponsored by Operation Finally Home, performing for the troops, hunting bears on the eighth season of Craig Morgan All Access Outdoors, and more.

Show Participants

  • Craig Morgan
  • Jim Casey, NCD director of editorial

Show Notes & Links

The Writers Room, Ep. 114, 16 minutes
photo by Jason Simanek

Luke Bryan Announces Supporting Acts for His 9th Annual Farm Tour

Luke Bryan Announces Supporting Acts for His 9th Annual Farm Tour

Today (Sept. 15), Luke Bryan announced the full list of performers for his ninth annual Farm Tour. In addition to previously announced guests Jon Pardi and Adam Craig, Luke will be joined by the Peach Pickers (Rhett Akins, Dallas Davidson and Ben Hayslip), Jon Langston and DJ Rock.

Luke’s upcoming Farm Tour will make stops at farms in Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa, Indiana, Illinois and Missouri between Sept. 28–Oct. 7.

Over the years, Luke has awarded 50 college scholarships to local students from farming families within the communities the tour has played.

Luke Bryan Farm Tour 2017

Sept. 28
Lincoln, Neb.
Benes Farm

Sept. 29
Baldwin City, Kan.
Don-Ale Farms

Sept. 30
Boone, Iowa
Ziel Farm

Oct. 5
Fort Wayne, Ind.
Spangler Farms West

Oct. 6
Edinburg, Ill.
Ayers Family Farm

Oct. 7
Centralia, Mo.
Stowers Farm

photo by Jason Simanek

Jimmy’s blog: UT must run ball, beat press coverage, protect QB to win

Jimmy’s blog: UT must run ball, beat press coverage, protect QB to win

As if losing 11 in a row to a hated rival wasn’t enough, Tennessee trailed Florida 21-0 late in the first half at Neyland Stadium last season.

The hometown fans weren’t just restless, they were booing.

But in a remarkable about face, the Vols rallied for a 38-28 victory – scoring 38 unanswered points — to snap the skid and spark a celebration.

Surely, that will give the Vols added confidence heading to Florida this Saturday.

Or maybe not.

“I think we’ve always had confidence playing Florida,’’ said redshirt sophomore defensive end Kyle Phillips. “We’ve had tough times at the end of the game, which we corrected last year.’’

Indeed. In 2014, the Vols led 9-0 in the fourth quarter before Treon Harris – not to be confused with Tim Tebow – did just enough to help the Gators pull out a 10-9 victory at Neyland Stadium.

In 2015, the Vols led by 13 points with about 10 minutes left in the game before the Gators rallied for a 28-27 win.

“We always expect to beat them,’’ Phillips said. “But to get that breakthrough win and actually beat them, that was really exciting.’’

Does that result in a confidence carryover?

“I don’t know if it’s confidence,’’ Tennessee defensive coordinator Bob Shoop said, “but there is a sense of urgency. The practice (Monday) was the best practice of the year. They were spirited. They were excited.

“I think the players are excited for this opportunity. I think they respect Florida and their offensive scheme and their offensive coaches a lot. But they’re looking forward to this challenge.’’

Tennessee senior center Jashon Robertson would agree.

“Everybody has high expectations going into the game,’’ he said. “You have two quality opponents going at it with a lot of confidence and a lot of energy. I’m sure it’s going to be a great game.’’

For Tennessee to win, it must accomplish several things:

  1. Run the ball effectively. Since 1990, the team that has rushed for the most yards in 24-3 in this series. Tennessee outrushed Florida 179-106 last year. At Florida, Jim McElwain is 14-0 when the Gators outrush their opponent.

Running effectively can keep the Vols out of second- or third-and-long situations. If UT gets behind the chains, it would allow the Gators to tee off against a UT offensive line that hasn’t proven it can pass protect against a solid group of rushers.

2. Beat press coverage. Florida has always had a solid secondary, it seems. And the Gators have been superb in stymieing UT receivers with a bump-and-run scheme.

UT has only one receiver that played in The Swamp two years ago and this young group of wideouts hasn’t faced cornerbacks like Florida has. If UT’s receivers struggle to get open, that puts more pressure on quarterback Quinten Dormady to either throw darts against tight coverage or scramble to safety.

3. Feed running back John Kelly. Kelly is the only SEC player who leads his team in rushing (208) and receptions (10). His four rushing touchdowns against Georgia Tech were the most by a Vol since 1994.

You can save Kelly for UMass, next week’s opponent. But he has to have a huge game for UT to have a chance against Florida.

4. Run the quarterback in the zone read. Dormady isn’t Josh Dobbs, but he can’t be Justin Worley, who rarely ran in the zone read when he was at the helm. Dormady must run at least four to six times a game in the zone read to keep the Gators defense off balance.

5. First down defense. UT must find a way to keep Florida’s quarterback uncomfortable. You have a chance to do that if it’s constantly second-and-9 or third-and-8. But if Florida is productive on first down, it puts play-caller Doug Nussmeier in position to keep the Vols’ defense guessing.

6. Neutralize Florida’s special teams. Florida has a slight edge at punter with Johnny Townsend (54.7) over UT’s Trevor Daniel (47.3). UT has a slight edge in the return game despite likely not having the nation’s best kick returner, Evan Berry, questionable with an injury. The big edge for Florida is at place kicker, where Eddy Pineiro has a cannon for a leg and is a threat to boot 55-yard field goals. UT is considering going with a long-distance kicker and a short-distance kicker.

7. Win the line of scrimmage. Or, perhaps, don’t lose the line of scrimmage. Neither offensive line has been impressive thus far. Florida looked down right awful against Michigan’s front seven. But UT’s front seven doesn’t remind anyone of the 1985 Chicago Bears. Florida’s front seven has a better chance of whipping UT’s o-line than UT’s front seven has of kicking butt against Florida’s o-line.


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Alabama Set to Release First Christmas Album in 21 Years

Alabama Set to Release First Christmas Album in 21 Years

Alabama will release a new holiday album, American Christmas, on Oct. 6. The new 15-song offering marks the group’s first holiday album since 1996’s Alabama Christmas Vol. II.

Recorded at Sound Emporium in Nashville, American Christmas features holiday staples such as “Away in a Manger,” “Silent Night” and “Jingle Bells,” as well as four new songs contributed by the band. The album also includes an updated version of Alabama’s holiday classic, “Christmas in Dixie,” which will celebrates its 35th anniversary this year.

“To all our fans: Christmas is a special time for Alabama. We hope it is for you. From our hearts to you, we give you this Christmas gift. Thank you for the love and support, all these years,” said Alabama’s Jeff Cook, Teddy Gentry and Randy Owen in a collective statement.

American Christmas Track List

  1. “Ain’t Santa Cool”
  2. “Go Tell It On the Mountain”
  3. “Silent Night”
  4. “Why Can’t Christmas Day Last All Year Long”
  5. “Away In a Manger”
  6. “Christmas Joy”
  7. “First Christmas Without Daddy”
  8. “Winter Wonderland”
  9. “Greatest Gift”
  10. “Jingle Bells”
  11. “Remember Me”
  12. “(I Wanna) Rock N Roll Guitar”
  13. “Christmas in Dixie”
  14. “Sure Could Use Some Christmas Around Here”
  15. “Auld Lang Syne”

photo by Ed Rode

Jimmy’s blog: Vols make it clear: They don’t like Gators

Jimmy’s blog: Vols make it clear: They don’t like Gators

By Jimmy Hyams

Last year, the disdain among Tennessee and Florida players surfaced on
twitter.

Florida cornerback Jalen Tabor basically said the only Jalen that matters in
the game is him.

Tennessee running back Jalen Hurd and linebacker Jalen Reeves-Maybin took
offense.

There hasn’t been much taunting prior to this season’s game. Much of the
focus has been on Hurricane Irma, the victims in Florida and where the game
will be played.

Tennessee redshirt sophomore defensive end Kyle Phillips said he didn’t pay
attention to the twitter war between the Jalens a year ago.

“No, I’m never one to talk,’’ Phillips said. “I just play.’’

But when Phillips was asked what he thinks of Florida, he was candid.

“I hate Florida,’’ he said with a smile.

When did that feeling set in?

“Growing up,’’ said the Nashville native, “I really didn’t pay any
attention to Florida that much. When I got here, I just knew how sharp of a
rivalry it is and how much they hate us. So I hate them, too.’’

Tennessee senior defensive tackle Kendal Vickers was asked if the Vols are
ready for Florida.

“Oh yeah, we’ll be ready,’’ Vickers said. “The season is really just
starting now. We know the rivalry between Florida and us. We don’t like them.
They don’t like us.

“They’re going to give us their best shot. We’re going to give them our
best shot. We’ll be ready for it.’’

Last year, Tennessee finally stopped Florida’s 11-game losing streak – it
seemed like 111 to some Tennessee fans – as the Vols rallied from a 21-point
deficit to win 38-28. It set off a wild celebration in Neyland Stadium.

But the year before, the Vols blew a 13-point fourth quarter led and lost to
Florida on a 63-yard fourth down pass, 28-27. That set off a wild celebration
for the Gators.

Blowing that game still sticks in the craw of many a Vol player.

“As a competitor,’’ said linebacker Cortez McDowell, “you never forget
that — the awful feeling that you had with a game like that. For myself and a
lot of older guys that took that trip down to Gainesville, you remember … the
emotion we felt after that game.

“It will help us bring that extra drive, extra fire to practice this
week.’’

Phillips shook his head when asked about that defeat to Florida in 2015.

“It was rough,’’ he said. “It was rough.’’


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Jimmy’s blog: Vols need QB to run to make zone-read effective

Jimmy’s blog: Vols need QB to run to make zone-read effective

By Jimmy Hyams

In general, zone-read option teams need a mobile quarterback to have an efficient offense.

Pocket passers won’t get it done.

Tennessee’s Butch Jones has been an advocate of the spread option since he became a head coach a decade ago.

Four times, a quarterback has led his team in rushing – Josh Dobbs at Tennessee last year, Dan LeFevour for three seasons at Central Michigan (2007-09).

During most of Jones’ first two seasons at Tennessee, he had a non-running quarterback at the helm – Justin Worley. And the Vols offense struggled against Power 5 schools as UT went 2-7 against such opponents in 2013.

In 2014, the Vols started 0-5 against the Power 5 until Dobbs took over as the starter in Game 7. He led the Vols to a 4-1 finish.

The next two seasons, with Dobbs setting UT records for rushing yards and rushing touchdowns by a quarterback, Tennessee won nine games in back-to-back seasons. And last season, Tennessee led the SEC in offensive touchdowns (59) and scored more points than only one other team in school history.

Tennessee’s quarterback this season is junior Quinten Dormady, a decent athlete with a good arm. He can run, but he hasn’t. At least, not through two games. He has carried three times on zone reads thus far.

That won’t cut it against the better teams on Tennessee’s schedule. It certainly won’t cut it against Florida on Saturday.

If a quarterback isn’t a threat to run, then the offense can’t keep the defense honest. It allows a defense to stack the line and focus on the running backs. That was the case when Worley started for the Vols.

Nobody knows that better than Jones.

“To be successful, you have to be able to run the quarterback a little bit,’’ Jones said. “And he has to be able to make plays with his legs, particularly in this game (against Florida) because of their speed defensively.’’

Jones wants his quarterback to make efficient runs, that being a 4-yard gain or more.

Dormady knows he can’t be a reluctant runner for the offense to work at maximum efficiency.

“It’s just kind of taking what the defense gives you,’’ Dormady said. “I think, overall, I haven’t had to run as much this year. But if it presents itself, I’ll have to do so.’’

No one expects Dormady to run as much as Dobbs, who averaged 142 carries per year the past two seasons. Dobbs ran 104 times in 2014 in only five starts.

While some of Dobbs’ carries were sacks, more than 95 percent were off zone reads or designed runs.

Dormady doesn’t have Dobbs’ wheels. He won’t outrun defensive backs. He won’t break a slew of tackles. He’s not as slithery of a runner. Heck, Dobbs is one of the best running quarterbacks college football has seen in the past decade.

Dobbs had seven games in his career in which he rushed for 100 yards.

Dormady won’t have any.

But if Dormady – and Tennessee – wants Jones’ offense to work, the quarterback has to carry at least four to six times a game against decent competition.

And that starts with Florida.

Otherwise, you’ll get the same result as if you’re trying to put a square peg in a round hole.

It won’t fit.


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Sam Hunt’s “Body Like a Back Road” Earns Inaugural CMT Song of the Year

Sam Hunt’s “Body Like a Back Road” Earns Inaugural CMT Song of the Year

Sam Hunt’s “Body Like a Back Road” has cruised to another award: CMT Song of the Year.

The inaugural award will be presented to Sam and co-writers Zach Crowell, Shane McAnally and Josh Osborne at the CMT Artists of the Year ceremony on Oct. 18.

Sam’s “Body Like a Back Road” has been “doin’ 15 in a 30” for 31 straight weeks atop Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart, which shattered the 24-week record set by Florida Georgia Line’s “Cruise” in 2013.

Since its release in February, “Body Like a Back Road” has garnered 335 million on-demand streams and 1.6 million digital track sales, according to Nielsen Music.

“I wrote ‘Body Like a Back Road’ with my producer Zach Crowell, Josh Osborne and Shane McAnally,” said Sam to Nash Country Daily. “I connect music to the emotions that come from relationships, so most of the songs that I write are inspired by those circumstances, emotions, feelings, all that kind of stuff. ‘Body Like a Back Road’ is a lighthearted song that was a lot of fun to write. It sort of swings, and hopefully it’s easy to listen to and will put a smile on some folks’ faces.”

Billboard’s Hot Country Songs Chart All-Time Record

1. “Body Like a Back Road” – Sam Hunt — 31 weeks (2017)
2. “Cruise” – Florida Georgia Line – 24 weeks (2012)
3. “Walk On By” – Leroy Van Dyke – 19 weeks (1961)
4. “H.O.L.Y.” – Florida Georgia Line – 18 weeks (2016)
5. “Die a Happy Man” – Thomas Rhett 17 weeks – (2015)

At the upcoming ceremony, CMT will also honor its 2017 Artists of the Year: Jason Aldean, Luke Bryan, Florida Georgia Line, Chris Stapleton and Keith Urban.

The artists will be honored on Oct. 18 at Nashville’s Schermerhorn Symphony Center in a televised special, CMT Artists of the Year. In addition to paying tribute to the honorees with live performances from other artists—including those from outside the country genre—the 90-minute TV special will also “honor the unwavering spirit of those impacted by Hurricane Harvey and Hurricane Irma and champion the many volunteers contributing to the ongoing rescue and recovery efforts.”

CMT Artists of the Year airs live from Nashville on Wednesday, Oct. 18 at 8 p.m. ET.

photo by Jason Simanek

Watch Dustin Lynch Perform New Song, “I’d Be Jealous Too,” on “Jimmy Kimmel Live”

Watch Dustin Lynch Perform New Song, “I’d Be Jealous Too,” on “Jimmy Kimmel Live”

Dustin Lynch has had plenty of reasons to celebrate this week. The Tullahoma, Tenn., native recently scored his fifth consecutive No. 1 single as “Small Town Boy” ascended to the top of the Billboard Country Airplay chart, and he released his third album, Current Mood, on Sept. 8.

“This week has truly been one of the most amazing and humbling of my career,” said Dustin. “This album is incredibly personal . . . I can’t think of a better way to welcome Current Mood than with ‘Small Town Boy’ being in the top spot.”

Last night (Sept. 14), Dustin kept the celebration going as he performed on Jimmy Kimmel Live’s outdoor stage.

Watch Dustin sing “I’d Be Jealous Too,” a new track from Current Mood that he co-penned with Ross Copperman and Jon Nite.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q6z_Jmeg5Zw

video via Jimmy Kimmel Live‘s YouTube

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