Sporting News Names Hyatt to All-America First Team

Sporting News Names Hyatt to All-America First Team

CHARLOTTE – Marking his sixth All-America honor of the year, and fourth by one of the NCAA-recognized outlets, Jalin Hyatt was selected to the All-America First Team Tuesday morning by Sporting News.

A commonplace the last four weekdays has been Hyatt’s recognition for an excellent 2022 season with All-America honors. It started with Walter Camp last Thursday, followed by the Football Writers Association of America last Friday and the Associated Press yesterday. Today was just another feather in the cap of the 2022 Biletnikoff Award winner.

Hyatt dazzled every time he stepped out onto the field, averaging 105.6 receiving yards per game and 1.25 touchdown receptions per game. All this while making 5.6 receptions per game and posting a 18.9 yards per reception average. The speedy wideout made a habit of blowing past defenders and racing through the open field with not a defender in sight as he dashed to the end zone, making 15 plays of 30+ yards, 11 plays of 40+ yards, seven plays of 50+ yards and five plays of 60+ yards – all leading the nation in those respective categories.

The junior’s 2022 regular season concluded with 67 catches for 1,267 yards and 15 touchdowns. He was a midseason All-American by ESPN, the AP, The Athletic and Pro Football Focus, and continued his push towards the acclaim through the back half of the season, becoming the first Tennessee Volunteer since Eric Berry in 2008 and 2009 to be named to four different outlets’ All-America first team lists.

Later Tuesday afternoon, Hyatt picked up All-America First Team recognition from ESPN.com, his seventh of the season. Their All-America selections can be found by clicking here.

The full Sporting News All-America teams, along with all postseason honors earned by Tennessee Volunteers, can be found below.

The Sporting News All-America Teams

FIRST TEAM
Offense 

QB Caleb Williams, USC
RB Blake Corum, Michigan 
RB Bijan Robinson, Texas
WR Marvin Harrison Jr., Ohio State 
WR Jalin Hyatt, Tennessee 
TE Michael Mayer, Notre Dame 
T Peter Skoronski, Northwestern 
G Cooper Beebe, Kansas State 
C Olusegun Oluwatimi, Michigan 
G O’Cyrus Torrence, Florida 
T Alex Palczewski, Illinois 
ATH Deuce Vaughn, Kansas State 

Defense 
DL Tuli Tuipulotu, USC
DL Jalen Carter, Georgia 
DL Calijah Kancey, Pitt 
EDGE Will Anderson, Alabama 
LB Jack Campbell, Iowa 
LB Jamon Dumas-Johnson, Georgia 
LB Ivan Pace, Cincinnati 
CB Tre’vius Hodges-Tomlinson, TCU 
CB Clark Phillips, Utah 
S Kamren Kinchens, Miami 
S Christopher Smith, Georgia 

Specialists
K Joshua Karty, Stanford 
P Adam Korsak, Rutgers 
RET Anthony Gould, Oregon State

SECOND TEAM
Offense 

QB Max Duggan, TCU
RB DeWayne McBride, UAB
RB Chase Brown, Illinois
WR Nathaniel Dell, Houston
WR Charlie Jones, Purdue
TE Brock Bowers, Georgia
OL Dawand Jones, Ohio State
OL Andrew Vorhees, USC
C Brett Neilon, USC
OL Christian Haynes, UConn
OL Joe Alt, Notre Dame
ATH Zach Charbonnet, UCLA

Defense
DL Isaiah Foskey, Notre Dame
DL Jose Ramirez, Eastern Michigan
DL Viliami Fehoko, San Jose State
EDGE Bralen Trice, Washington
LB Drew Sanders, Arkansas
LB Tommy Eichenberg, Ohio State
LB Cedric Gray, North Carolina
CB Emmanuel Forbes, Mississippi State
CB Kool-Aid McKinstry, Alabama
S Jordan Battle, Alabama
S Kaevon Merriweather, Iowa

Specialists
K Christopher Dunn, NC State
P Bryce Baringer, Michigan State
RET Lideatrick Griffin, Mississippi State

2022 Tennessee Football Postseason Honors

HC Josh Heupel
SEC Coach of the Year – AP 
 
OC Alex Golesh

Frank Broyles Award Finalist 
 
QB Hendon Hooker

Walter Camp Player of the Year Award Finalist 
Maxwell Award Finalist 
Manning Award Finalist 
Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award Finalist 
All-America Second Team – CBSSports.com/247Sports
All-America Third Team – Associated Press
SEC Offensive Player of the Year – Associated PressCoachesUSA Today
All-SEC First Team – APCoachesUSA Today
 
WR Jalin Hyatt 
Biletnikoff Award Winner
All-America First Team – Walter CampFWAAAssociated PressSporting NewsThe AthleticCBSSports.com/247SportsESPN.com
All-SEC First Team – APCoachesUSA Today
 
TE Jacob Warren 

2022 SEC Community Service Team 
 
OL Darnell Wright  

All-SEC First Team – APCoachesUSA Today
 
DE Byron Young 

All-SEC First Team – Coaches
All-SEC Second Team – AP

-UT Athletics

Vols WR Jalin Hyatt / Credit: UT Athletics
Hyatt Adds AP All-America First Team Recognition

Hyatt Adds AP All-America First Team Recognition

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Adding to his list of impressive honors for the 2022 season, Jalin Hyatt earned Associated Press All-America First Team acclaim Monday afternoon.

Much like he did throughout the regular season, Hyatt continues to reel in the accolades like they are long passes from Hendon Hooker or Joe Milton III. The 2022 Biletnikoff Award winner earned his third first team All-America recognition of the year after being tabbed to the Walter Camp and FWAA teams last week.

Hyatt’s impressive season saw the junior collect the triple crown for receiving in the Southeastern Conference, leading the way in receptions (67), receiving yards (1,267) and touchdowns (15). He currently stands just 33 receiving yards away from becoming the first wideout in Tennessee history to compile 1,300 or more yards in a single season. The success has been spread throughout the season as the speedster racked up over 100 yards receiving in five different games this season, tying for sixth in single-season 100-yard outputs with his teammate Cedric Tillman, who accomplished the feat in 2021, and Tim McGee, who did so in 1985 on the way to consensus All-America recognition.

For his career, the Irmo, South Carolina, native has hauled in 19 receiving touchdowns and 1,769 yards. He currently ranks tied for fourth in program history for career touchdown catches, sitting even with VFL Peerless Price who did so from 1995-98.

The full Associated Press All-America First Team, along with all postseason honors earned by Tennessee Volunteers, can be found below.

Associated Press All-America First Team

Offense
QB Caleb Williams, USC
RB Bijan Robinson, Texas
RB Blake Corum, Michigan
OT Peter Skoronski, Northwestern
OT Joe Alt, Notre Dame
OG O’Cyrus Torrence, Florida
OG Andrew Vorhees, USC
C John Michael Schmitz, Minnesota
TE Michael Mayer, Notre Dame
WR Jalin Hyatt, Tennessee
WR Marvin Harrison Jr., Ohio State
WR Xavier Hutchinson, Iowa State
AP Deuce Vaughn, Kansas State
K Christopher Dunn, NC State

Defense
EDGE Will Anderson Jr., Alabama
EDGE Tuli Tuipulotu, USC
DT Jalen Carter, Georgia
DT Calijah Kancey, Pittsburgh
LB Ivan Pace Jr., Cincinnati
LB Jack Campbell, Iowa
LB Drew Sanders, Arkansas
CB Clark Phillips III, Utah
CB Devon Weatherspoon, Illinois
S Kamren Kinchen, Miami
S Christopher Smith, Georgia
DB Tre’Vius Hodges-Tomlinson, TCU
P Bryce Baringer, Michigan State

2022 Tennessee Football Postseason Honors

HC Josh Heupel
SEC Coach of the Year – AP 
 
OC Alex Golesh
Frank Broyles Award Finalist 
 
QB Hendon Hooker
Walter Camp Player of the Year Award Finalist 
Maxwell Award Finalist 
Manning Award Finalist 
Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award Finalist 
All-America Second Team – CBSSports.com/247Sports
SEC Offensive Player of the Year – APCoachesUSA Today
All-SEC First Team – APCoachesUSA Today
 
WR Jalin Hyatt 
Biletnikoff Award Winner
All-America First Team – Walter CampFWAAAssociated PressThe AthleticCBSSports.com/247Sports
All-SEC First Team – APCoachesUSA Today
 
TE Jacob Warren 
2022 SEC Community Service Team 
 
OL Darnell Wright  
All-SEC First Team – APCoachesUSA Today
 
DE Byron Young 
All-SEC First Team – Coaches
All-SEC Second Team – AP

-UT Athletics

Vols WR Jalin Hyatt / Credit: UT Athletics
Josh Heupel Named 2022 Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach of the Year Award Finalist

Josh Heupel Named 2022 Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach of the Year Award Finalist

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – After guiding Tennessee to a 10-win regular season and a No. 6 final position in the College Football Playoff rankings, head coach Josh Heupel has been tabbed as a finalist for the American Heart Association’s 2022 Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach of the Year Award, the organization announced on Tuesday.

Heupel is one of six finalists for the award, which recognizes the country’s top college football coaches for their contributions both on and off the field, making the sport better for athletes and fans alike by demonstrating grit, integrity and a winning approach to coaching and life. He joins TCU’s Sonny Dykes, Tulane’s Willie Fritz, Michigan’s Jim Harbaugh, Georgia’s Kirby Smart and UTSA’s Jeff Traylor.

Heupel was also a finalist for the award in 2018 after leading UCF to a perfect 11-0 regular season in his first season with the Knights.

Heupel has lifted the Volunteers to national prominence in his two seasons, compiling a 17-8 record with the nation’s No. 1 offense that has set numerous school records. This season, saw the Vols climb to No. 1 in the College Football Playoff rankings for the first time via victories over Florida, LSU and Alabama.

Heupel became just the third UT head coach in the last 60 years to lead the Vols to 10 or more wins in his first or second season, joining Phillip Fulmer and Bill Battle. After being picked to finish third in the SEC East in the preseason, Tennessee secured second place and its first Orange Bowl appearance in 25 years. Heupel also tutored quarterback Hendon Hooker, who finished fifth in the Heisman Trophy voting—the highest by a Volunteer since Peyton Manning in 1997.

Heupel and the Vols aim for their first 11-win campaign since 2001 when they take on No. 7 Clemson in the Capital One Orange Bowl at 8 p.m. ET on Dec. 30 in Miami.

The Bryant Coach of the Year Award is voted on by the National Sports Media Association, current NCAA College football coaches, former Coach of the Year Award winners, the Bryant Awards’ Executive Leadership Team and the Bryant family. Now in its 37th year, the Bryant Coach of the Year award winner will be announced from Houston’s Post Oak Hotel on Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2023, during an awards ceremony.

-UT Athletics

Kirk Herbstreit and Josh Heupel / Credit: UT Athletics
Josh Heupel Named 2022 Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach of the Year Award Finalist

Josh Heupel Named 2022 Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach of the Year Award Finalist

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – After guiding Tennessee to a 10-win regular season and a No. 6 final position in the College Football Playoff rankings, head coach Josh Heupel has been tabbed as a finalist for the American Heart Association’s 2022 Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach of the Year Award, the organization announced on Tuesday.

Heupel is one of six finalists for the award, which recognizes the country’s top college football coaches for their contributions both on and off the field, making the sport better for athletes and fans alike by demonstrating grit, integrity and a winning approach to coaching and life. He joins TCU’s Sonny Dykes, Tulane’s Willie Fritz, Michigan’s Jim Harbaugh, Georgia’s Kirby Smart and UTSA’s Jeff Traylor.

Heupel was also a finalist for the award in 2018 after leading UCF to a perfect 11-0 regular season in his first season with the Knights.

Heupel has lifted the Volunteers to national prominence in his two seasons, compiling a 17-8 record with the nation’s No. 1 offense that has set numerous school records. This season, saw the Vols climb to No. 1 in the College Football Playoff rankings for the first time via victories over Florida, LSU and Alabama.

Heupel became just the third UT head coach in the last 60 years to lead the Vols to 10 or more wins in his first or second season, joining Phillip Fulmer and Bill Battle. After being picked to finish third in the SEC East in the preseason, Tennessee secured second place and its first Orange Bowl appearance in 25 years. Heupel also tutored quarterback Hendon Hooker, who finished fifth in the Heisman Trophy voting—the highest by a Volunteer since Peyton Manning in 1997.

Heupel and the Vols aim for their first 11-win campaign since 2001 when they take on No. 7 Clemson in the Capital One Orange Bowl at 8 p.m. ET on Dec. 30 in Miami.

The Bryant Coach of the Year Award is voted on by the National Sports Media Association, current NCAA College football coaches, former Coach of the Year Award winners, the Bryant Awards’ Executive Leadership Team and the Bryant family. Now in its 37th year, the Bryant Coach of the Year award winner will be announced from Houston’s Post Oak Hotel on Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2023, during an awards ceremony.

-UT Athletics

Kirk Herbstreit and Josh Heupel / Credit: UT Athletics
Vols Announce Home-and-Home Hoops Series With Illinois

Vols Announce Home-and-Home Hoops Series With Illinois

The Tennessee basketball program has finalized a home-and-home series with Illinois, beginning with a meeting at Thompson-Boling Arena next season on Dec. 9, 2023.
 
The Vols make a return trip to Champaign, Illinois, during the 2024-25 season on Dec. 14, 2024.
 
The Volunteers currently own a 2-1 all-time record against Illinois, but the programs have not met since Jan. 17, 1988—a 103-79 win by the Fighting Illini in Champaign. Tennessee won the first two meetings—a 54-51 triumph over 10th-ranked Illinois on Dec. 10, 1985, in Knoxville and a 66-42 victory on Dec. 15, 1967, in Knoxville at the Volunteer Classic.
 
Tennessee head coach Rick Barnes also owns a 2-1 career record vs. Illinois.
 
In his sixth season at the helm of the Fighting Illini basketball program, head coach Brad Underwood has posted a 101-69 record and has led Illinois to back-to-back NCAA Tournament appearances.
 
Currently riding a 7-3 record, the Illini are ranked No. 18 in this week’s AP Top 25 and defeated then-No. 2-ranked Texas last week.
 
Last season, Illinois won a share of the regular-season Big Ten title, earned a No. 4 seed in the NCAA Tournament and advanced to the Round of 32.
 
The home contest against Illinois marks the second addition to Tennessee’s 2023-24 non-conference schedule. This past April, the eight-team field for the 2023 Maui Jim Maui Invitational was revealed, with Tennessee set to make its fourth all-time appearance at the event from Nov. 20-22, 2023, joining Gonzaga, Kansas, Marquette, Purdue, Syracuse, UCLA and Chaminade.
 
This new series with Illinois marks the latest of several multi-game series scheduled between Tennessee and a major-conference opponent since Barnes took the reins of the program prior to the 2015-16 season—previous series featured the likes of Georgia Tech, North Carolina, Wake Forest, Wisconsin, Colorado and Arizona. The Vols under Barnes also completed a two-game neutral-site series with perennial power Gonzaga and a home-and-home series vs. Cincinnati.
 
Seven previous Tennessee lettermen hailed from the state of Illinois, including current Orlando Magic wing Admiral Schofield (Zion, Ill.).
 
While Tennessee and Illinois have never met in football, the Vols and Lady Vols are a combined 43-15 (.741) against Illinois in head-to-head team sports—7-0 in women’s basketball, 4-0 in softball, 1-0 in soccer, 16-1 in women’s tennis, 11-4 in men’s tennis, 2-1 in men’s basketball, 2-6 in volleyball and 0-3 in baseball.

-UT Athletics

UT vs. Illinois / Credit: UT Athletics
Hoops Preview: Lady Vols vs. UCF

Hoops Preview: Lady Vols vs. UCF

Tennessee (6-5) will put a two-game winning streak on the line Wednesday, as UCF (6-2) comes to Thompson-Boling Arena for a 6:32 p.m. ET contest that closes out a six-game home stand for the Big Orange.

UT, though, remains in a stretch of playing nine out of 11 games on The Summitt between Nov. 25 and Jan. 5.

Coach Kellie Harper‘s squad enters the battle with the Golden Knights having won four of its last five contests, defeating Wright State the last time out on Sunday afternoon, 96-57, on The Summitt. The Lady Vols went into that match-up knowing they’d be without senior center Tamari Key for the rest of the season, after it was announced on Dec. 8 that testing revealed blood clots in her lungs. 

They did, however, see two other key players return to the lineup, as senior forward and leading scorer Rickea Jackson returned from missing two games due to coach’s decision and graduate forward Jasmine Franklin was back in action after being in concussion protocol in successive contests.

Tennessee continues to work its way back above .500 after a treacherous opening schedule featuring No. 3 Ohio State, No. 4 Indiana, No. 6 Virginia Tech, Nov. 10 UCLA and Nov. 23 Gonzaga gave it all it could handle while dealing with unavailable players that have resulted in six different starting lineup combinations and 10 total missed games.  

After opening the year at 6-0, UCF has dropped its last two contests, falling 86-46 at Auburn on Dec. 3 and 63-56 to Seton Hall on Dec. 11. The Golden Knights are under the direction of Sytia Messer, a long-time member of Kim Mulkey’s staff at Baylor and then LSU. Messer came onboard in Orlando after Katie Abrahamson-Henderson departed to take over at Georgia.

UCF and UT face off for only the second time after meeting in Orlando last season on Nov. 12 in a game the Lady Vols claimed by a 49-41 count.

Game Promotions

  • Weekday Family 4 Pack: Get four tickets & four $10 concessions vouchers starting at $48 (plus tax/fees).
  • The autograph player of the game is Jessie Rennie.
  • Tickets are available at AllVols.com.

Broadcast Information

  • The game will be streamed on SECN+, with Andy Brock (PxP), Kamera Harris (Analyst) and Sarah Detwiler (Reporter) on the broadcast.
  • All of the games included in the ESPN package (ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU) will be available through WatchESPN, accessible online at WatchESPN.com, on smartphones and tablets via the WatchESPN app, and streamed on televisions through Amazon Fire TV, Apple TV, Chromecast, Roku, Xbox 360 or Xbox One to fans who receive their video subscription from an affiliated provider.
  • The contest also can be heard on Lady Vol Network stations and by audio stream, with Brian Rice on the call and Andy Brock serving as studio host.  
  • A link to the live audio stream can be found on the Hoops Central page or the schedule on UTSports.com. 
  • For a list of Lady Vol Network affiliates, please click on the Fans tab at the top of UTSports.com, select Vol Network and then click on the Vol Network Affiliates tab.
  • Air time for games on the Lady Vol Radio Network generally occurs 30 minutes prior to tip-off.
  • The Lady Vol Network broadcast also can be heard on satellite radio via SiriusXM channel 380, and via channel 970 on the SXM App.

Lady Vol Trending Topics

  • Tennessee has a chance to extend its winning streak to three games on Wednesday night. That’s something the Lady Vols last did when they put together a nine-game streak from Dec. 20, 2021, to Jan. 23, 2022.
  • On Sunday, the Lady Vols posted three Kellie Harper era bests, including a tie for fewest turnovers (9), fewest rebounds allowed (15) and highest field goal percentage (59.4).
  • The rebound tally was second only to the 13 grabbed by Puerto Rico-Mayaguez on 11/29/02 and tied the 15 by Ole Miss on 2/24/11.
  • The 59.4 percent shooting effort was Tennessee’s best since hitting at a 61.7 clip vs. Liberty on 3/16/18 in the NCAA First Round.
  • UT recorded a school-record 84.6 shooting percentage for a quarter in the third frame vs. Wright State.
  • Over the past five games, Tennessee has limited its foes to shooting 38 percent or lower.
  • The Lady Vols have held seven of their past eight opponents under 40 percent shooting, with UCLA’s 43.5 effort serving as the exception.
  • Through three contests, UT was barely out-rebounding opponents (39.3-38.0). They’ve now opened that margin up to +10.2 (42.1-31.9) after out-boarding Wright State, 45-15 (+30), on Sunday.
  • Tennessee has climbed to No. 24 nationally in rebound margin with that number vs. WSU.
  • Jordan Horston and Rickea Jackson have both scored in double figures the past eight games they’ve played, with Jackson hitting for 10+ in every game but the first and Horston having done so in each game she played except for the UMass contest in which she was knocked out by an injury in the second quarter.
  • A trio of inside players are all hitting above 60 percent from the field, including Jasmine Franklin (.667), Jillian Hollingshead (.636) and Karoline Striplin (.609).
  • UT’s team shooting percentage of 46.1, if it held up, would rate as the highest by the club from Rocky Top since 2010-11. 
  • Over the past four games, Tennessee has a +25.0 scoring margin over foes, defeating them by an average score of 81.5 to 56.5.
  • Over the past five contests, the Lady Vols have out-rebounded opponents 45.8 to 27.4 for a +18.4 margin.
  • UT is outscoring teams 79.0 to 55.4 during that span for a 23.6 scoring margin.
  • The Big Orange’s top three scorers by average the last five games have been Jordan Horston (18.2), Rickea Jackson (17.3) and Jillian Hollingshead (8.8). 
  • That same trio is top three on the glass for Kellie Harper‘s squad with 6.8, 6.0 and 5.8, respectively.
  • Tennessee has held foes to single digits in seven separate quarters over the past six games, including vs. five different opponents.
  • The Lady Vols had a run of three straight quarters where they held opponents below 10 in the final quarter vs. No. 9 Virginia Tech (8) and the first two frames vs. Chattanooga (8, 7).
  • Jordan Horston and Rickea Jackson have combined for six 20+ scoring games. Horston filled the nets with 20+ vs. Ohio State in the opener (20) and vs. Colorado (23) and Virginia Tech (26). Jackson has carded three 20+ scoring games, including 26 vs. Rutgers, 24 vs. UMass and 20 vs. Colorado.

What Doesn’t Kill You Makes You Stronger

  • Tennessee has already played five top-25 opponents, including four teams that currently reside in the top 10 and three amongst the top 6.
  • The Lady Vols met No. 3 Ohio State in the opener, No. 4 Indiana in game three, No. 10 UCLA in game five, No. 23 Gonzaga in game six and No. 6 Virginia Tech in game nine.
  • UT also has battles on the schedule vs. No. 1 South Carolina, No. 2 Stanford, No. 9 UConn, No. 11 LSU and No. 21 Arkansas.
  • The Big Orange women are set to face three teams from the 2022 NCAA Final Four (South Carolina, Stanford, UConn) and missed the opportunity to potentially meet a fourth (Louisville) in the Battle 4 Atlantis.

UT/UCF Ties

  • Greg Brown, associate head coach for the Golden Knights, was a graduate assistant for Pat Summitt in 2002-03 and served as an assistant coach at Tennessee in 2003-04.
  • Tennessee Director of Athletics and Vice Chancellor Danny White was the A.D. at UCF from 2015-21.
  • Vols head football coach Josh Heupel led the program at UCF from 2018 to 2020 before coming to Knoxville to take over UT’s program in 2021. 
  • He has his program in its second straight bowl game after a 10-2 season, earning a trip to the Capital One Orange Bowl and a date with Clemson (11-2) in Miami Gardens, Fla., on Dec. 30 at 8 p.m. ET (ESPN).

What’s Next?

  • The Lady Vols fly to California on Friday afternoon to continue preparations for Sunday’s 3 p.m. ET (Noon PT) matinee vs. No. 2/2 Stanford at Maples Pavilion. 
  • The contest, which will mark only the second true road game on the season for the Big Orange, will be televised nationally on ABC.
  • This will mark UT’s first appearance at Stanford since Dec. 18, 2019. Later that season, “COVID” brought an immediate end to the campaign after the SEC Tournament. The pandemic eventually led to Stanford postponing its scheduled 2020 trip to Knoxville until 2021 and UT’s next journey to California to December 2022.
  • Interestingly enough, the Lady Vols and Cardinal will meet on the Dec. 18 date for the fourth consecutive time and the fifth occasion in the past six clashes.

Looking Back At The Wright State Game

  • The Lady Vols shot 59 percent from the floor to take a commanding 96-57 victory over Wright State in Thompson-Boling Arena on Sunday.
  • Four players were in double figures for Tennessee (6-5), with senior Rickea Jackson leading the charge with a 17-point effort on 6-of-9 shooting from the floor and a perfect 5-of-5 mark from the free-throw line. 
  • Sophomore Sara Puckett turned in a season-high 16 points, and senior Jordan Horston and graduate Jasmine Franklin each tallied 14.  Franklin’s total also was a season best, coming after missing the past two contests due to injury.
  • WSU (1-8) was led by Emily Chapman, who managed a game-high 18 points.

A Look At The Golden Knights

  • UCF got off to a 6-0 start but has dropped its last two games to enter Wednesday at 6-2.
  • Destiny Thomas, a 6-foot-2 senior forward, paces the Golden Knights with a double-double average of 13.1 points and 12.4 rebounds.
  • Laila Jewett, a 5-10 sophomore guard tallies 10.5 ppg. and leads UCF with 14 three-pointers (.341).
  • The Golden Knights allow only 58.1 points per game and 33.5 percent shooting from opponents. 
  • They out-rebound their foes, 44.0 to 37.9.
  • Head coach Sytia Messer is in her first season leading the program after serving as an assistant under Kim Mulkey at Baylor from 2014-21 and as associate head coach at LSU last season.

UCF’s Last Game

  • Despite a historic display by senior forward Destiny Thomas, the UCF Knights fell just short of their comeback bid Sunday afternoon, dropping their second straight game and their first at home, 63-56, to the Seton Hall Pirates at Addition Financial Arena.
  • Thomas was a force to be reckoned with on the glass throughout the contest, grabbing a career-high and program-record-tying 24 rebounds that aided the Knights in almost erasing a Pirates (8-3)  lead that grew to 15 points in the third quarter.
  • The UCF star added 16 points on 6-of-10 shooting from the field for her fifth double-double of the young campaign.
  • Mya Burns was the only other Golden Knight scoring in double figures with 15. 

UT/UCF Notes

  • UT is 1-0 vs. UCF, and Kellie Harper‘s career record vs. the school mirrors that. 
  • The Lady Vols are 36-4 vs. schools currently in the American Athletic Conference (AAC)
  • UT went 2-0 vs. the league last season in defeating UCF and South Florida.
  • Both head coaches are SEC products who played from 1995-99, with Kellie Harper at Tennessee and Sytia Messer at Arkansas. UCF assistant Tennille Adams also played at Arkansas.
  • In addition to SEC play, the players met in the 1998 NCAA Final Four semifinal, with Tennessee dominating, 86-58.
  • Harper finished with 11 points on 5-of-7 shooting, five assists and three rebounds, while Messer had seven points, six rebounds for UA, and Adams had eight points, three rebounds.
  • Sytia Messer was 54-41 in a stint as head coach at Tennessee Tech from 2009-12.

The Last UT/UCF Meeting

  • No. 15/12 Tennessee came out on top, 49-41, in a hard-fought battle on the road against UCF at Addition Financial Arena on Nov. 12, 2021.
  • Jordan Horston returned to the lineup after missing the season opener and did not disappoint. The junior guard finished with her second-career double-double, recording 14 points, 11 rebounds, three assists, one block and one steal in 30 minutes of action.
  • Thanks to a stifling defensive effort, UT (2-0) held its second-straight opponent under 50 points. The Lady Vols allowed the Knights (1-1) to shoot just 27 percent from the field and 3-of-13 beyond the arc while also forcing 24 turnovers.

-UT Athletics

Lady Vols / Credit: UT Athletics
Hoops Preview: Lady Vols vs. UCF

Hoops Preview: Lady Vols vs. UCF

Tennessee (6-5) will put a two-game winning streak on the line Wednesday, as UCF (6-2) comes to Thompson-Boling Arena for a 6:32 p.m. ET contest that closes out a six-game home stand for the Big Orange.

UT, though, remains in a stretch of playing nine out of 11 games on The Summitt between Nov. 25 and Jan. 5.

Coach Kellie Harper‘s squad enters the battle with the Golden Knights having won four of its last five contests, defeating Wright State the last time out on Sunday afternoon, 96-57, on The Summitt. The Lady Vols went into that match-up knowing they’d be without senior center Tamari Key for the rest of the season, after it was announced on Dec. 8 that testing revealed blood clots in her lungs. 

They did, however, see two other key players return to the lineup, as senior forward and leading scorer Rickea Jackson returned from missing two games due to coach’s decision and graduate forward Jasmine Franklin was back in action after being in concussion protocol in successive contests.

Tennessee continues to work its way back above .500 after a treacherous opening schedule featuring No. 3 Ohio State, No. 4 Indiana, No. 6 Virginia Tech, Nov. 10 UCLA and Nov. 23 Gonzaga gave it all it could handle while dealing with unavailable players that have resulted in six different starting lineup combinations and 10 total missed games.  

After opening the year at 6-0, UCF has dropped its last two contests, falling 86-46 at Auburn on Dec. 3 and 63-56 to Seton Hall on Dec. 11. The Golden Knights are under the direction of Sytia Messer, a long-time member of Kim Mulkey’s staff at Baylor and then LSU. Messer came onboard in Orlando after Katie Abrahamson-Henderson departed to take over at Georgia.

UCF and UT face off for only the second time after meeting in Orlando last season on Nov. 12 in a game the Lady Vols claimed by a 49-41 count.

Game Promotions

  • Weekday Family 4 Pack: Get four tickets & four $10 concessions vouchers starting at $48 (plus tax/fees).
  • The autograph player of the game is Jessie Rennie.
  • Tickets are available at AllVols.com.

Broadcast Information

  • The game will be streamed on SECN+, with Andy Brock (PxP), Kamera Harris (Analyst) and Sarah Detwiler (Reporter) on the broadcast.
  • All of the games included in the ESPN package (ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU) will be available through WatchESPN, accessible online at WatchESPN.com, on smartphones and tablets via the WatchESPN app, and streamed on televisions through Amazon Fire TV, Apple TV, Chromecast, Roku, Xbox 360 or Xbox One to fans who receive their video subscription from an affiliated provider.
  • The contest also can be heard on Lady Vol Network stations and by audio stream, with Brian Rice on the call and Andy Brock serving as studio host.  
  • A link to the live audio stream can be found on the Hoops Central page or the schedule on UTSports.com. 
  • For a list of Lady Vol Network affiliates, please click on the Fans tab at the top of UTSports.com, select Vol Network and then click on the Vol Network Affiliates tab.
  • Air time for games on the Lady Vol Radio Network generally occurs 30 minutes prior to tip-off.
  • The Lady Vol Network broadcast also can be heard on satellite radio via SiriusXM channel 380, and via channel 970 on the SXM App.

Lady Vol Trending Topics

  • Tennessee has a chance to extend its winning streak to three games on Wednesday night. That’s something the Lady Vols last did when they put together a nine-game streak from Dec. 20, 2021, to Jan. 23, 2022.
  • On Sunday, the Lady Vols posted three Kellie Harper era bests, including a tie for fewest turnovers (9), fewest rebounds allowed (15) and highest field goal percentage (59.4).
  • The rebound tally was second only to the 13 grabbed by Puerto Rico-Mayaguez on 11/29/02 and tied the 15 by Ole Miss on 2/24/11.
  • The 59.4 percent shooting effort was Tennessee’s best since hitting at a 61.7 clip vs. Liberty on 3/16/18 in the NCAA First Round.
  • UT recorded a school-record 84.6 shooting percentage for a quarter in the third frame vs. Wright State.
  • Over the past five games, Tennessee has limited its foes to shooting 38 percent or lower.
  • The Lady Vols have held seven of their past eight opponents under 40 percent shooting, with UCLA’s 43.5 effort serving as the exception.
  • Through three contests, UT was barely out-rebounding opponents (39.3-38.0). They’ve now opened that margin up to +10.2 (42.1-31.9) after out-boarding Wright State, 45-15 (+30), on Sunday.
  • Tennessee has climbed to No. 24 nationally in rebound margin with that number vs. WSU.
  • Jordan Horston and Rickea Jackson have both scored in double figures the past eight games they’ve played, with Jackson hitting for 10+ in every game but the first and Horston having done so in each game she played except for the UMass contest in which she was knocked out by an injury in the second quarter.
  • A trio of inside players are all hitting above 60 percent from the field, including Jasmine Franklin (.667), Jillian Hollingshead (.636) and Karoline Striplin (.609).
  • UT’s team shooting percentage of 46.1, if it held up, would rate as the highest by the club from Rocky Top since 2010-11. 
  • Over the past four games, Tennessee has a +25.0 scoring margin over foes, defeating them by an average score of 81.5 to 56.5.
  • Over the past five contests, the Lady Vols have out-rebounded opponents 45.8 to 27.4 for a +18.4 margin.
  • UT is outscoring teams 79.0 to 55.4 during that span for a 23.6 scoring margin.
  • The Big Orange’s top three scorers by average the last five games have been Jordan Horston (18.2), Rickea Jackson (17.3) and Jillian Hollingshead (8.8). 
  • That same trio is top three on the glass for Kellie Harper‘s squad with 6.8, 6.0 and 5.8, respectively.
  • Tennessee has held foes to single digits in seven separate quarters over the past six games, including vs. five different opponents.
  • The Lady Vols had a run of three straight quarters where they held opponents below 10 in the final quarter vs. No. 9 Virginia Tech (8) and the first two frames vs. Chattanooga (8, 7).
  • Jordan Horston and Rickea Jackson have combined for six 20+ scoring games. Horston filled the nets with 20+ vs. Ohio State in the opener (20) and vs. Colorado (23) and Virginia Tech (26). Jackson has carded three 20+ scoring games, including 26 vs. Rutgers, 24 vs. UMass and 20 vs. Colorado.

What Doesn’t Kill You Makes You Stronger

  • Tennessee has already played five top-25 opponents, including four teams that currently reside in the top 10 and three amongst the top 6.
  • The Lady Vols met No. 3 Ohio State in the opener, No. 4 Indiana in game three, No. 10 UCLA in game five, No. 23 Gonzaga in game six and No. 6 Virginia Tech in game nine.
  • UT also has battles on the schedule vs. No. 1 South Carolina, No. 2 Stanford, No. 9 UConn, No. 11 LSU and No. 21 Arkansas.
  • The Big Orange women are set to face three teams from the 2022 NCAA Final Four (South Carolina, Stanford, UConn) and missed the opportunity to potentially meet a fourth (Louisville) in the Battle 4 Atlantis.

UT/UCF Ties

  • Greg Brown, associate head coach for the Golden Knights, was a graduate assistant for Pat Summitt in 2002-03 and served as an assistant coach at Tennessee in 2003-04.
  • Tennessee Director of Athletics and Vice Chancellor Danny White was the A.D. at UCF from 2015-21.
  • Vols head football coach Josh Heupel led the program at UCF from 2018 to 2020 before coming to Knoxville to take over UT’s program in 2021. 
  • He has his program in its second straight bowl game after a 10-2 season, earning a trip to the Capital One Orange Bowl and a date with Clemson (11-2) in Miami Gardens, Fla., on Dec. 30 at 8 p.m. ET (ESPN).

What’s Next?

  • The Lady Vols fly to California on Friday afternoon to continue preparations for Sunday’s 3 p.m. ET (Noon PT) matinee vs. No. 2/2 Stanford at Maples Pavilion. 
  • The contest, which will mark only the second true road game on the season for the Big Orange, will be televised nationally on ABC.
  • This will mark UT’s first appearance at Stanford since Dec. 18, 2019. Later that season, “COVID” brought an immediate end to the campaign after the SEC Tournament. The pandemic eventually led to Stanford postponing its scheduled 2020 trip to Knoxville until 2021 and UT’s next journey to California to December 2022.
  • Interestingly enough, the Lady Vols and Cardinal will meet on the Dec. 18 date for the fourth consecutive time and the fifth occasion in the past six clashes.

Looking Back At The Wright State Game

  • The Lady Vols shot 59 percent from the floor to take a commanding 96-57 victory over Wright State in Thompson-Boling Arena on Sunday.
  • Four players were in double figures for Tennessee (6-5), with senior Rickea Jackson leading the charge with a 17-point effort on 6-of-9 shooting from the floor and a perfect 5-of-5 mark from the free-throw line. 
  • Sophomore Sara Puckett turned in a season-high 16 points, and senior Jordan Horston and graduate Jasmine Franklin each tallied 14.  Franklin’s total also was a season best, coming after missing the past two contests due to injury.
  • WSU (1-8) was led by Emily Chapman, who managed a game-high 18 points.

A Look At The Golden Knights

  • UCF got off to a 6-0 start but has dropped its last two games to enter Wednesday at 6-2.
  • Destiny Thomas, a 6-foot-2 senior forward, paces the Golden Knights with a double-double average of 13.1 points and 12.4 rebounds.
  • Laila Jewett, a 5-10 sophomore guard tallies 10.5 ppg. and leads UCF with 14 three-pointers (.341).
  • The Golden Knights allow only 58.1 points per game and 33.5 percent shooting from opponents. 
  • They out-rebound their foes, 44.0 to 37.9.
  • Head coach Sytia Messer is in her first season leading the program after serving as an assistant under Kim Mulkey at Baylor from 2014-21 and as associate head coach at LSU last season.

UCF’s Last Game

  • Despite a historic display by senior forward Destiny Thomas, the UCF Knights fell just short of their comeback bid Sunday afternoon, dropping their second straight game and their first at home, 63-56, to the Seton Hall Pirates at Addition Financial Arena.
  • Thomas was a force to be reckoned with on the glass throughout the contest, grabbing a career-high and program-record-tying 24 rebounds that aided the Knights in almost erasing a Pirates (8-3)  lead that grew to 15 points in the third quarter.
  • The UCF star added 16 points on 6-of-10 shooting from the field for her fifth double-double of the young campaign.
  • Mya Burns was the only other Golden Knight scoring in double figures with 15. 

UT/UCF Notes

  • UT is 1-0 vs. UCF, and Kellie Harper‘s career record vs. the school mirrors that. 
  • The Lady Vols are 36-4 vs. schools currently in the American Athletic Conference (AAC)
  • UT went 2-0 vs. the league last season in defeating UCF and South Florida.
  • Both head coaches are SEC products who played from 1995-99, with Kellie Harper at Tennessee and Sytia Messer at Arkansas. UCF assistant Tennille Adams also played at Arkansas.
  • In addition to SEC play, the players met in the 1998 NCAA Final Four semifinal, with Tennessee dominating, 86-58.
  • Harper finished with 11 points on 5-of-7 shooting, five assists and three rebounds, while Messer had seven points, six rebounds for UA, and Adams had eight points, three rebounds.
  • Sytia Messer was 54-41 in a stint as head coach at Tennessee Tech from 2009-12.

The Last UT/UCF Meeting

  • No. 15/12 Tennessee came out on top, 49-41, in a hard-fought battle on the road against UCF at Addition Financial Arena on Nov. 12, 2021.
  • Jordan Horston returned to the lineup after missing the season opener and did not disappoint. The junior guard finished with her second-career double-double, recording 14 points, 11 rebounds, three assists, one block and one steal in 30 minutes of action.
  • Thanks to a stifling defensive effort, UT (2-0) held its second-straight opponent under 50 points. The Lady Vols allowed the Knights (1-1) to shoot just 27 percent from the field and 3-of-13 beyond the arc while also forcing 24 turnovers.

-UT Athletics

Lady Vols / Credit: UT Athletics
An Oliver Springs man is arrested and charged in murder of his wife.

An Oliver Springs man is arrested and charged in murder of his wife.

An Oliver Springs man is arrested and charged in murder of his wife.

Oliver Springs Police Department said they responded to a domestic situation that had the potential to get violent at a home.

TBI said that domestic situation resulted in Nathan Newport arrested and charged with first degree murder in the killing of his wife, Janice Newport, who was found dead in the home.

TBI said Newport is being held in the Anderson County jail without bond.

Photo courtesy of WVLT
Highlights/Postgame/Stats/Story: No. 7 Vols hold on to defeat No. 13 Maryland, 56-53

Highlights/Postgame/Stats/Story: No. 7 Vols hold on to defeat No. 13 Maryland, 56-53

BOX SCORE  |  HIGHLIGHTS  |  BARNES POSTGAME  | ZEIGLER & AWAKA POSTGAME

BROOKLYN, N.Y. – Despite struggles on the offensive end, No. 7 Tennessee’s stifling effort on the defensive end was enough to get by No. 13 Maryland Sunday at the Basketball Hall of Fame Invitational in Barclays Center, 56-53.
 
Two New York natives played massive roles in the win for the Vols. Sophomore Zakai Zeigler (Long Island) had a team-high 12 points and was named the Basketball Hall of Fame Invitational Game MVP, while true freshman Tobe Awaka (Hyde Park) scored seven points and had eight rebounds in 17 minutes—his first extended action of the season.
 
Tyreke Key was the Vols’ second-leading scorer with nine points and hit a free throw to extend Tennessee’s lead to three points in the closing seconds.
 
Defensively, Tennessee (9-1) held Maryland to 33 percent shooting for the game, including 13 percent in the first half. The Terrapins also shot just eight percent from 3-point range for the game (2-for-24).
 
After Tennessee led by 17 points at halftime and by as many as 21 points in the first half, Maryland cut the Vols’ lead all the way down to two points at 48-46 with 5:11 remaining and again at 51-49 with 3:31 on the clock.
 
Both times, the Vols answered with huge 3-pointers—first from Jahmai Mashack and the later from Zeigler—to give Tennessee breathing room.
 
Maryland (8-2) made one final push in the game’s final minute, again cutting the Vols’ lead to two with 24.6 seconds remaining. The Terrapins fouled Zeigler on the other end, but Zeigler missed the front end of the 1-and-1, giving Maryland the ball trailing by two points with just under 20 seconds to go.
 
On the other end, the Vols forced a missed jumper by Maryland’s Jahmir Young, and Olivier Nkamhoua snatched up a clutch rebound. With 7.7 seconds remaining, Key converted on one of two free throws on the other end, and Maryland’s final 3-point attempt fell short.
 
Despite shooting just 28 percent from the field in the first half, Tennessee took a 34-17 lead into the halftime break. Of Maryland’s 17 first-half points, nine came at the free-throw line.
 
The Vols were stifling on the defensive end to open the game—forcing Maryland to miss 18 of its first 20 field-goal attempts. The Terrapins made just three field goals during the first half as a whole, shooting just 13 percent (3-for-24).
 
Tennessee steadily built its lead over the course of the first half, outscoring Maryland 17-5 in the opening 10 minutes of play.
 
UP NEXT: Tennessee is back on the road for one final time in non-conference play, heading west to take on Arizona in Tucson on Saturday. Tipoff is set for 10:30 p.m. ET / 8:30 p.m. MT on ESPN2.
 
VOLS RACK UP ANOTHER RANKED WIN: With Sunday’s win over No. 13 Maryland, Tennessee now has two wins over ranked opponents this season—having also defeated No. 3 Kansas on Nov. 25. It marks the first time since 2010 that the Vols have defeated two ranked opponents before Christmas.
 
DEFENSE TRAVELS: Tennessee entered Sunday having held three straight opponents to under 30 percent shooting from the field and nearly accomplished the feat again against Maryland—holding the Terrapins to 32.7 percent shooting (17-for-52).
 
The Vols have now held their opponents under 33 percent shooting eight times this season.
 
LOCKDOWN DEFENSE: Tennessee has now held its opponent under the 1.000 points-per-possession mark in nine of 10 games this season, going undefeated when doing so. The Vols held Maryland to .828 ppp on Sunday.

-UT Athletics

Zakai Zeigler – Vols G / Credit: UT Athletics
Highlights/Photos/Postgame/Stats/Story: Lady Vols handle Wright State, 96-57

Highlights/Photos/Postgame/Stats/Story: Lady Vols handle Wright State, 96-57

Box Score (PDF) | Highlights | Photo Gallery | Postgame Quotes | Harper Postgame Presser | Puckett Postgame Presser | Franklin/Horston Postgame Presser 

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – The Lady Vols shot 59 percent from the floor to take a commanding 96-57 victory over Wright State in Thompson-Boling Arena on Sunday.
 
Four players were in double figures for Tennessee (6-5), with senior Rickea Jackson leading the charge with a 17-point effort on 6-of-9 shooting from the floor and a perfect 5-of-5 mark from the free-throw line. Sophomore Sara Puckett turned in a season-high 16 points, and senior Jordan Horston and graduate Jasmine Franklin each tallied 14.  Franklin’s total also was a season best, coming after missing the past two contests due to injury.

WSU (1-8) was led by Emily Chapman, who managed a game-high 18 points.
 
Karoline Striplin kicked off the scoring, netting a 10-foot jumper on UT’s first possession, and Horston followed it up with a driving layup a minute later to give the Lady Vols a 4-0 advantage early. Makiya Miller got the Raiders on the board with an old-fashioned three-point play two minutes into the game, and the teams traded baskets until a trey by Isabelle Bolender tied the game at 12-all at the 5:07 mark.  Tennessee responded with a 6-0 run over the next two minutes that put the Lady Vols ahead 18-12 with just under three minutes left in the first quarter. Chapman knocked down a three on Wright State’s next possession, pulling the Raiders within three, a margin that would hold as the game went into the second period with UT leading 20-17.   
 
The teams swapped buckets through the media timeout of the second quarter, with Tennessee stretching its lead to five on four occasions only to have WSU trim it back to two on the next play. With 4:58 left in the half, Tess Darby drained a three to set off a 10-3 Lady Vol run that moved the score to 40-30 by the 2:12 mark.  Bryce Nixon hit a trey on the Raiders’ next possession to cut it back to single digits, but Puckett closed out the half with four straight points to set the halftime score at 44-33.
 
UT came out with a hot hand in the third, shooting a scorching 84.6 percent on 11-of-13 shooting for the quarter. Horston scored the first basket of the half, and Darby followed it up with a three to extend the Lady Vol lead to 16 by the 8:14 mark. Bolender responded with a jumper for WSU, but Jordan Walker and Horston combined for five quick points to put the Lady Vols up by 19 a minute and a half later. The Raiders cut it back to 17 twice before Horston hit a layup to set off an 8-0 Big Orange run that stretched the advantage to 64-39 with 2:39 left in the quarter. Bolender ended the Wright State drought with a three-point play, but the Lady Vols strung together seven straight points to close out the period, capped off by a Franklin layup at the buzzer that sent the game into the final stanza with UT leading 71-42.
 
Franklin and Jackson combined for six straight points to extend the run to 13-0 and stretch Tennessee’s lead to 35 points with 8:33 to play. The Raiders battled back with a 10-4 run fueled by back-to-back treys, but the Lady Vol reserves outscored WSU 10-3 over the final three minutes to coast to a 39-point victory.
 
UP NEXT: Tennessee will close out a six-game home stand with a midweek matchup against UCF on Wednesday night. Tipoff is set for 6:30 p.m., and the contest will be streamed on SECN+.
 
SNIPING IN THE THIRD: The Lady Vols shot a red-hot program-best 84.6 percent in the third quarter on 11-of-13 from the floor. Previously, the highest single-quarter field goal percentage was 81.8 percent recorded on two occasions, most recently in the second quarter against Tennessee Tech on Dec. 1, 2021, vs. Tennessee Tech, and during the 2016-2017 season in the second stanza against Navy on Nov. 13, 2016.
 
STRONG SHOOTING FOR THE GAME: Tennessee finished the afternoon 38 of 64 from the field for a season-best 59.4 percent accuracy. That mark stands as the best by the Lady Vols since hitting 61.7 percent vs. Liberty on March 16, 2018, in the NCAA First Round in Knoxville.
 
BALANCED ATTACK: Thirteen of 14 active Lady Vols logged at least one bucket against WSU, with seven players tallying six or more points and four reaching in double digits. It’s the third time this season UT has had four or more players in double figures.
 
SETTING NEW HIGHS: Sophomore Sara Puckett and graduate Jasmine Franklin each logged new season highs against the Raiders on Sunday, with 16 and 14 points, respectively. Franklin tallied those points on a perfect 6-of-6 from the floor. The freshmen also got in on the action with Edie Darby hitting her first collegiate bucket and Justine Pissott dishing out a career-high four assists.
 
DARBY FROM DISTANCETess Darby knocked down two treys on four attempts against Wright State, marking the fifth game this season in which she’s hit multiple 3-pointers. She has logged 16 threes this season and is shooting 41 percent from beyond the arc.

OWNING THE BOARDS: Tennessee pounded Wright State on the glass, winning that battle in a season-best margin of 30, 45-15.  The 15 rebounds by WSU tied for the second-fewest ever by a Lady Vol opponent, matching the 15 they allowed Ole Miss on Feb. 24, 2011.  The record low is 13, posted by Puerto Rico-Mayaguez on Nov. 29, 2002. UT now has prevailed on the glass in eight of 11 contests, including the last five games, and out-rebounded foes by double digits on six occasions.

-UT Athletics

Sara Puckett – Lady Vols / Credit: UT Athletics

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