Jason Aldean Surprises Fans With Unannounced Show Outside the Hall of Fame [Photo Gallery]

Jason Aldean Surprises Fans With Unannounced Show Outside the Hall of Fame [Photo Gallery]

As the CMT Music Awards were ending last night (June 8) at 9:30 p.m. CT, two-time ACM Entertainer of the Year Jason Aldean decided it was the perfect time for an impromptu show outside the Country Music Hall of Fame.

Thousands of fans swarmed the lawn at Walk of Fame Park to hear Jason play his pop-up set, including fan-favorites “Dirt Road Anthem,” “She’s Country” and current single, “They Don’t Know.” Jason’s show, which was in honor of his new Asphalt Cowboy exhibit at the Hall of Fame, was capped off with a fireworks display.

Check out some of the photos below.

Photos by Jason Simanek, unless otherwise noted

Jimmy’s Blog: Football coaches’ behavior under scrutiny

Jimmy’s Blog: Football coaches’ behavior under scrutiny

By Jimmy Hyams

College football coaches who like to throw temper tantrums might get thrown out of games before the contest ends.

The NCAA has adopted a rule saying coaches can’t leave the sideline to argue with officials, unless given permission by the official.

It seems unlikely a ref would invite a coach onto the field to get a butt chewing.

Thus, any offending coach will be assessed a 15-yard unsportsmanlike penalty. Getting two in the same game will result in ejection.

“It’s designed to curb coaches behavior,’’ said SEC coordinator of officials Steve Shaw, who conducted a seminar for media at the annual SEC Spring Meetings last week.

Coaches are allowed to go onto the field during a timeout or to assess an injury to a player. A coach might also step onto the field to call plays.

But not rip into a ref.

What is the reaction of the coaches?

“I don’t think anybody loves it,’’ Shaw said, “but they don’t want to be the first one ejected.’’

Among the leading coaching candidates to get flagged: Alabama’s Nick Saban, South Carolina’s Will Muschamp and Tennessee’s Butch Jones.

How quickly coaches conform will make for an interesting study this season.

Another rule change regards the uniform. Players are required to wear knee pads and pants that cover the knees. A player that cuts his pants a few inches above the knee will be asked to leave the field for one play or until his uniform conforms. A player may be allowed to stay in the game and not miss a play if his team calls a timeout.

While this rule isn’t supposed to go into affect until 2018, if a player is in clear violation of the rule – for example, cutting the pants to 3-6 inches above the knee – the player will be sent to the sideline.

Shaw said this can be policed by officials before a game — letting the players and the coaches know what complies to the rule.

“The medical community says we need knee pads for football,’’ Shaw said.

Shaw said the targeting rule has not changed but player behavior has. He said it’s apparent more players are avoiding helmet-to-helmet contact and not leading with the crown of their helmet.

Shaw said five targeting fouls were called from the SEC collaborative replay headquarters in Birmingham; last year was the first time replay officials could call targeting. He said the SEC had two more targeting calls than the year before.

Shaw also said forcible contact to the neck or head by a helmet or shoulder hit on a defenseless player is a 15-yard penalty. Many cases of a defenseless player occur on returns – punts, kickoffs, interceptions, fumbles — when the would-be tackler doesn’t see the blocker coming.

The NCAA has enacted many rules aimed at player safety in the past half decade.

Because of the emphasis on safety, Shaw said: “The game is safer than it’s ever been in the history of football.’’

In other topics:

*Players can no longer leap or hurdle over the snapper to block a field goal or extra point attempt. In the past, a player could leap or hurdle as long as he didn’t touch another player. However, Shaw said a player standing within a yard of the line of scrimmage is allowed to jump over the snapper to block a kick provided he doesn’t make contact with another player. Finding such an athletic player would be difficult.

*The horse-collar rule has been expanded to say if a tackler grabs a ballcarrier by the back of the shoulder pads OR near the name plate area and immediately pulls the runner down, that is a foul.

*Last year, the length of an SEC game was 3 hours, 26 minutes, ranking near the middle of all conferences. Two games lasted less than three hours, four went over four hours (two were overtime games). Shaw said he doesn’t have a time limit in mind since so many college offenses vary from a triple-option to a pass-every-down spread, but he thinks officials can cut about 5-6 minutes out of a game. How? By “keeping the game moving’’ and slicing a couple minutes out of halftime. While halftime lasts 20 minutes, officials used to start the halftime clock when both teams had exited the field. Now that clock will start when the last play of the first half ends.

*Shaw said collaborative replay is used in some form by all Power 5 conferences. He said the average length of replay in the SEC was 1:26. It was about 1:45 the first two weeks of the season as officials adjusted to collaborative replay. Shaw said collaborative replay resulted in 8 percent improvement on getting calls correct.

Regarding replay, Shaw said: “It gives the coach a second level of confidence; it gives me a second level of confidence that we will get it right.’’


Big Kahuna Wings: The wings that changed it all

Check Out 76 of Our Favorite Red Carpet Photos From the 2017 CMT Music Awards

Check Out 76 of Our Favorite Red Carpet Photos From the 2017 CMT Music Awards

Before the trophies were dished out at the 2017 CMT Music Awards last night (June 7), the stars walked the red carpet in their best duds and dresses. From Carrie Underwood and Keith Urban to Little Big Town and Lady Antebellum—and everyone in between—check out 99 of our favorite photos courtesy of Tammie Arroyo/AFF-USA.

photos by Tammie Arroyo/AFF-USA. 

Video: The Big 3 with Heather and Will – Show 10 (Stoops/Dubs/Ex-Husband Drama)

Video: The Big 3 with Heather and Will – Show 10 (Stoops/Dubs/Ex-Husband Drama)

Check out show 10 of the SportsRadioWNML.com exclusive weekly video podcast “The Big 3 with Heather & Will.”

Sports Radio WNML hosts Heather Harrington and Will West discuss and debate current local and national sports topics including the Tennessee Volunteers.

This week they talk about Bob Stoops retiring, are the Warriors the best NBA team of all-time and if the Predators will win the Stanley Cup. Plus, a bonus question for the magic eight ball with the Power T!

Watch the latest show below and find out more about the weekly feature HERE.

 

After Going a Combined 0/14 at the Past Year’s ACM, Grammy & CMA Awards, Keith Urban Wins the Night With 4 CMT Music Awards

After Going a Combined 0/14 at the Past Year’s ACM, Grammy & CMA Awards, Keith Urban Wins the Night With 4 CMT Music Awards

Over the past eight months, Keith Urban has been nominated for seven ACM Awards, two Grammys and five CMA Awards.

How many did he win? Zero, zip, zilch, nada. When it came time to vote, the industry decided that Keith’s Ripcord album, multiple singles like “Blue Ain’t Your Color,” and entertainment prowess weren’t numero uno. Time and time again, Keith heard someone else’s name called. Eric Church, Jason Aldean, Maren Morris, Thomas Rhett, Garth Brooks . . . and on and on it went until Keith was left with an 0/14 stat line.

However, when the vote was put in the hands—or click finger—of the fans via the CMT Music Awards, Keith reigned supreme. The superstar came home with four trophies last night (June 7), including Video of the Year, Male Video of the Year, Collaborative Video of the Year and Social Superstar.

“This award is for everyone watching that voted for this, everyone in the room tonight,” said Keith after winning the night’s top honor, Video of the Year for “Blue Ain’t Your Color.” “This award is for all you guys, everybody outside that couldn’t get in, everybody that comes to see us play in concert. I wish God’s blessing for all of you and your families. I love making music, I love making videos, I love making records, I love writing songs, I love touring, I love what I get to do, maybe more that ever. You guys allow me to do that and when you support this music and connect with it the way you do, cause that’s all I’m trying to do, I’m just trying to make a connection, so God bless every one of you.”

Watch Keith’s “Blue Ain’t Your Color” video below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SoIKv3xxuMA

photo courtesy CMT Music Awards

Rocky Top Traditions: Gene McEver and General Neyland’s Grave

Rocky Top Traditions: Gene McEver and General Neyland’s Grave

Rocky Top Traditions / Credit: WNML

By WNML Staff

We have a really neat new feature exclusively here at SportsRadioWNML.com! It’s called Rocky Top Traditions. It’s presented by People’s Home Equity.

This week’s Rocky Top Traditions (3 & 4) bring you back to the accomplishments of Gene McEver and looks at General Neyland’s Grave. Listen to those in this post below.

A VOL for Life. Why does University of Tennessee sports mean so much to so many? For some it’s cherished memories of afternoons in Neyland Stadium beating Bama or Florida. For others it’s being huddled around a radio with family pulling for our beloved teams. Through the years we tell our friends and family about these games, people and victories. We’re proud to be Tennessee Vols!

Sports Radio WNML, the flagship station of the Vol Network, and John Wilkerson are proud to bring these moments to life in a new series called “Rocky Top Traditions.” John is a Knoxville native, the co-host of Tennessee’s longest running sports show and the voice of Tennessee baseball. His knowledge of the history of all Tennessee sports is unmatched, and he has the rare ability to bring a story to life.

Check back soon for the next two exclusive presentations of Rocky Top Traditions presented by People’s Home Equity!

Gene McEver / Credit: WNML
Gene McEver / Credit: WNML
Coleman’s collegiate record highlights Day 1 of NCAA Championship

Coleman’s collegiate record highlights Day 1 of NCAA Championship

Christian Coleman – UT / Credit: UT Athletics

EUGENE, Oregon – Tennessee junior Christian Coleman set a collegiate record in the 100m and advanced to the finals in both the 100m and 200m dashes on day one of the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championship at Historic Hayward Field on Wednesday.

Coleman’s time of 9.82 seconds broke Ngoni Makusha’s collegiate record of 9.89. Coleman surpassed that mark by .07 seconds, which is the same amount of time between Makusha’s mark and the ninth-best time in collegiate history. Coleman’s mark also ranks as the best 100m time in the world during the 2017 year. The wind-legal time also ties Coleman for ninth place on the all-time world list and makes him the fourth fastest American in history, trailing only Tyson Gay, #VFL Justin Gatlin and Maurice Greene. Coleman also set a school record and a NCAA Championship record.

Coleman now ranks in the top two in collegiate history in all four sprinting events. His times of 6.45 seconds in the 60m and 20.11 in the 200m at the NCAA Indoor Championship are tied for first and second, respectively. At the NCAA East Prelims, Coleman recorded a 200m time of 19.85 which ranks as the second-fastest time in collegiate history.

Coleman also booked his spot in the 200m final as he cruised to a time of 20.21. The Atlanta native slowed up over the final steps with his place in the final secure. He will be the third time-qualifier for Friday’s final.

Two Vols were competing in their event final as senior Cameron Brown and sophomore Seth Whitener took 12th and 15th in the hammer throw competition. Brown recorded a throw of 68.55m (224-11) on his second attempt, the second-best mark in school history. His throw was one inch from Whitener’s school-best mark. However, the two Tennessee throwers were competing against the greatest hammer throw fields in NCAA history. By the end of the prelims, eight throwers had surpassed the 70.00m mark. In NCAA Championship history, no other hammer final has had more than five throwers cross that threshold.

Prior to this season, Wes Boudreau had held the school record at 67.84m (222-7) for the past 21 years, but Whitener and Brown have combined to surpass that mark three times this year. Whitener posted the best mark with a 68.59m (225-0) mark at the NCAA East Prelims. Brown passed the mark for the first time at the SEC Relays with a throw of 68.19m and then set a personal best in his final NCAA competition representing Tennessee today.

Junior Nathan Strother finished the 400m dash with a time of 45.53 in his lap around the track. The ninth place finish was one spot out of qualification for Friday’s final. The time was the fourth-fastest of the 22 400m races that Strother has run during his Tennessee career.

The men’s 4x100m relay team of Darryl HarrisMustaqeem WilliamsMalik Elion and Coleman finished in 18th place as they finished in 39.57. The team had trouble on the second exchange costing them precious time as they took sixth in their heat and failed to qualify for the final.

The men’s 4x400m relay team of Williams, Ari Cogdell, Elion and Strother finished in 14th place. The foursome crossed the line in 3:06.00, which was fourth place in their heat.

The attendance for day one of the NCAA Track & Field Championship was 9,917. The Vols start day two tomorrow at 2 p.m. PT/5 p.m. ET as Stamatia Scarvelis goes for the hammer throw national championship. Cassie Wertman will compete in the shot put final and Chelsea Blaase will compete in the 10,000m final. Shania Collins will try to qualify for the final of the 200m. All the events will be shown on the ESPN family of networks.

NCAA Championship Schedule & Results

Wednesday’s Results
100m Semifinal: 1. Christian Coleman, 9.82 (+1.3)
200m Semifinal: 3. Christian Coleman, 20.21
400m Semifinal: 9. Nathan Strother, 45.53 (+1.6)
4x100m Relay Semifinal: 18. Tennessee (Darryl HarrisMustaqeem WilliamsMalik ElionChristian Coleman), 39.57
4x400m Relay Semifinal: 14. Tennessee (Mustaqeem WilliamsAri CogdellMalik ElionNathan Strother), 3:06.00
Hammer: 12. Cameron Brown, 68.55m (224-11); 15. Seth Whitener, 66.14m (217-0)

Thursday’s Schedule
200m Semifinal: Shania Collins
10,000m Final: Chelsea Blaase
Shot Put Final: Cassie Wertman
Hammer Throw Final: Stamatia Scarvelis

Friday’s Schedule
100m Final: Christian Coleman
200m Final: Christian Coleman
5000m Final: Zach Long
Discus: Matthew Zajac

Saturday’s Schedule
200m Final: Shania Collins

-UT Athletics

 

2017 CMT Awards Nominees & Winners

2017 CMT Awards Nominees & Winners

Hosted by Charles Esten, the CMT Music Awards will feature performances from Luke Bryan, Blake Shelton, Miranda Lambert, Thomas Rhett, Brett Eldredge and more.

The awards show takes place live from Nashville on June 7 at 7 p.m. CT.

Check out all of the nominees below. Winners will be indicated as they are announced!

Video of the Year – Fan-voted 7 Finalists

  • WINNER: “Blue Ain’t Your Color” – Keith Urban
  • “Forever Country” – Artists of Then, Now & Forever
  • “Church Bells” – Carrie Underwood,
  • “Middle of a Memory” – Cole Swindell
  • “H.O.L.Y.” – Florida Georgia Line
  • “Huntin’, Fishin,’ and Lovin’ Every Day” – Luke Bryan
  • “Vice” – Miranda Lambert

Female Video of the Year

  • WINNER: “Church Bells” – Carrie Underwood
  • “Peter Pan” – Kelsea Ballerini
  • “Road Less Traveled” – Lauren Alaina
  • “’80s Mercedes” – Maren Morris
  • “Vice” – Miranda Lambert
  • “Back to God” – Reba McEntire

Male Video of the Year

  • WINNER: “Blue Ain’t Your Color” – Keith Urban
  • “Came Here to Forget” – Blake Shelton
  • “Record Year” – Eric Church
  • “Lights Come On” – Jason Aldean
  • “Huntin’, Fishin’, and Lovin’ Every Day” – Luke Bryan
  • “Star of the Show” – Thomas Rhett

Duo Video of the Year

  • WINNER: “H.O.L.Y.” – Florida Georgia Line
  • “Lovin’ Lately” – Big & Rich feat. Tim McGraw
  • “21 Summer” – Brothers Osborne
  • “How Not To” – Dan + Shay
  • “I Know Somebody” – LOCASH

Group Video of the Year 

  • WINNER: “Better Man” – Little Big Town
  • “Saltwater Gospel” – Eli Young Band
  • “You Look Good” – Lady Antebellum
  • “Drinkin’ Problem” – Midland
  • “Song For Another Time” – Old Dominion

Breakthrough Video of the Year

  • WINNER: “Road Less Traveled” – Lauren Alaina
  • “In Case You Didn’t Know” – Brett Young
  • “Dirt on My Boots” – Jon Pardi
  • “Used to Love You Sober” – Kane Brown
  • “Hurricane” – Luke Combs
  • “Love Triangle” – RaeLynn

Collaborative Video of the Year

  • WINNER: “The Fighter” – Keith Urban feat. Carrie Underwood
  • “Forever Country” – Artists Then, Now & Forever
  • “Sober Saturday Night” – Chris Young feat. Vince Gill
  • “Different for Girls” – Dierks Bentley feat. Elle King
  • “May We All” – Florida Georgia Line feat. Tim McGraw
  • “Setting the World on Fire” – Kenny Chesney feat. Pink

CMT Performance of the Year

  • WINNER: “Want to Want Me” (CMT Crossroads) – Jason Derulo and Luke Bryan
  • “Hicktown” (CMT Concert of the Summer) – Jason Aldean
  • “Pink Houses” (CMT Crossroads) – John Mellencamp and Darius Rucker
  • “’80s Mercedes” (CMT Crossroads) – Alicia Keys and Maren Morris
  • “You’re Still the One/Any Man of Mine/Man, I Feel Like a Woman” (CMT Artists of the Year) – Meghan Trainor, Jill Scott and Kelsea Ballerini
  • “Close” (CMT Crossroads) – Nick Jonas and Thomas Rhett

Social Superstar

  • WINNER: Keith Urban
  • Brett Eldredge
  • Jake Owen
  • Kelsea Ballerini
  • Lauren Alaina
  • Thomas Rhett

photos courtesy CMT

Watch Thomas Rhett’s New Budweiser Commercial

Watch Thomas Rhett’s New Budweiser Commercial

This Bud’s for you, Thomas Rhett.

The reigning ACM Male Vocalist of the Year has teamed with Budweiser for a new commercial that features footage from his current Home Team Tour.

“Budweiser has some of the most iconic commercials of all time, so it’s pretty awesome to actually be in one,” says Thomas Rhett. “It’s cool that we get to toast America together with all the fans this summer and fall on our Home Team Tour.”

Watch TR’s new Bud commercial below.

Watch Thomas Rhett’s New Budweiser Commercial

Watch Thomas Rhett’s New Budweiser Commercial

This Bud’s for you, Thomas Rhett.

The reigning ACM Male Vocalist of the Year has teamed with Budweiser for a new commercial that features footage from his current Home Team Tour.

“Budweiser has some of the most iconic commercials of all time, so it’s pretty awesome to actually be in one,” says Thomas Rhett. “It’s cool that we get to toast America together with all the fans this summer and fall on our Home Team Tour.”

Watch TR’s new Bud commercial below.

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