Vols to Face Maryland at 2022 Hall of Fame Invitational in Brooklyn

Vols to Face Maryland at 2022 Hall of Fame Invitational in Brooklyn

The Tennessee basketball team will face Maryland this coming season as part of the Hall of Fame Invitational at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.

The matchup, scheduled for Sunday, Dec. 11, is part of a four-game lineup for the event, which also features Oklahoma State vs. Virginia Tech, Iona vs. St. Bonaventure and UMass vs. Hofstra.

Ticket information, game times and television details and will be released at a later date.

“We’re excited to play in another Hall of Fame event,” Tennessee head coach Rick Barnes said. “This will be our fourth in five years, and Tennessee fans have always traveled well to see us play really strong opponents in big-time cities and venues. I’ve got great respect for Maryland’s basketball tradition as well as Kevin Willard and his staff. And playing in New York City is always a special opportunity.”
 
The Volunteers own a 2-2 record against Maryland, and the programs have not met since the 1984-85 season. Three of the previous meetings have taken place at neutral sites. Tennessee won the first two clashes, in Knoxville in 1949 and in Blacksburg, Virginia, in 1963. The Terrapins won the two most recent meetings, in Greensboro, North Carolina, in 1980 and in Anchorage, Alaska, in 1984.

Tennessee is 24-37 all-time against current members of the Big Ten Conference. 

Maryland enters the 2022-23 campaign under a new coaching staff, led by Kevin Willard, who transitioned from Seton Hall to College Park in March. 

Rising Tennessee senior Olivier Nkamhoua attended high school in Maryland, graduating from Bishop Walsh School in Cumberland, Maryland, in 2019.
 
The Hall of Fame Invitational also will mark a homecoming opportunity for UT rising sophomore Zakai Zeigler, who grew up on nearby Long Island. 

This marks the fourth time in the last five seasons that Tennessee has been invited to participate in a neutral-site event administered by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. The Vols defeated top-ranked Gonzaga in the 2018 Jerry Colangelo Classic, beat 20th-ranked Washington in the 2019 James Naismith Classic in Toronto and most recently fell to fifth-ranked Villanova before defeating then-18th-ranked and eventual national runner-up North Carolina at the 2021 Hall of Fame Tip-Off in Connecticut. 

About the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame
Located in Springfield, Massachusetts, the city where basketball was born, the Naismith Memorial  Basketball Hall of Fame is an independent non-profit 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to promoting,  preserving and celebrating the game of basketball at every level – men and women, amateur and  professional players, coaches and contributors, both domestically and internationally. The Hall of Fame  museum is home to more than 400 inductees and over 40,000 square feet of basketball  history. Nearly 200,000 people visit the Hall of Fame museum each year to learn about the game,  experience the interactive exhibits and test their skills on the Jerry Colangelo “Court of  Dreams.” Best known for its annual marquee Enshrinement Ceremony honoring the game’s elite,  the Hall of Fame also operates more than 70 high school and collegiate competitions annually  throughout the country and abroad. For more information on the Basketball Hall of Fame  organization, its museum and events, visit www.hoophall.com, follow @hoophall or call 1-877-4HOOPLA.

-UT Athletics

UT vs. Maryland / Credit: UT Athletics
Vols to Face Maryland at 2022 Hall of Fame Invitational in Brooklyn

Vols to Face Maryland at 2022 Hall of Fame Invitational in Brooklyn

The Tennessee basketball team will face Maryland this coming season as part of the Hall of Fame Invitational at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.

The matchup, scheduled for Sunday, Dec. 11, is part of a four-game lineup for the event, which also features Oklahoma State vs. Virginia Tech, Iona vs. St. Bonaventure and UMass vs. Hofstra.

Ticket information, game times and television details and will be released at a later date.

“We’re excited to play in another Hall of Fame event,” Tennessee head coach Rick Barnes said. “This will be our fourth in five years, and Tennessee fans have always traveled well to see us play really strong opponents in big-time cities and venues. I’ve got great respect for Maryland’s basketball tradition as well as Kevin Willard and his staff. And playing in New York City is always a special opportunity.”
 
The Volunteers own a 2-2 record against Maryland, and the programs have not met since the 1984-85 season. Three of the previous meetings have taken place at neutral sites. Tennessee won the first two clashes, in Knoxville in 1949 and in Blacksburg, Virginia, in 1963. The Terrapins won the two most recent meetings, in Greensboro, North Carolina, in 1980 and in Anchorage, Alaska, in 1984.

Tennessee is 24-37 all-time against current members of the Big Ten Conference. 

Maryland enters the 2022-23 campaign under a new coaching staff, led by Kevin Willard, who transitioned from Seton Hall to College Park in March. 

Rising Tennessee senior Olivier Nkamhoua attended high school in Maryland, graduating from Bishop Walsh School in Cumberland, Maryland, in 2019.
 
The Hall of Fame Invitational also will mark a homecoming opportunity for UT rising sophomore Zakai Zeigler, who grew up on nearby Long Island. 

This marks the fourth time in the last five seasons that Tennessee has been invited to participate in a neutral-site event administered by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. The Vols defeated top-ranked Gonzaga in the 2018 Jerry Colangelo Classic, beat 20th-ranked Washington in the 2019 James Naismith Classic in Toronto and most recently fell to fifth-ranked Villanova before defeating then-18th-ranked and eventual national runner-up North Carolina at the 2021 Hall of Fame Tip-Off in Connecticut. 

About the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame
Located in Springfield, Massachusetts, the city where basketball was born, the Naismith Memorial  Basketball Hall of Fame is an independent non-profit 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to promoting,  preserving and celebrating the game of basketball at every level – men and women, amateur and  professional players, coaches and contributors, both domestically and internationally. The Hall of Fame  museum is home to more than 400 inductees and over 40,000 square feet of basketball  history. Nearly 200,000 people visit the Hall of Fame museum each year to learn about the game,  experience the interactive exhibits and test their skills on the Jerry Colangelo “Court of  Dreams.” Best known for its annual marquee Enshrinement Ceremony honoring the game’s elite,  the Hall of Fame also operates more than 70 high school and collegiate competitions annually  throughout the country and abroad. For more information on the Basketball Hall of Fame  organization, its museum and events, visit www.hoophall.com, follow @hoophall or call 1-877-4HOOPLA.

-UT Athletics

UT vs. Maryland / Credit: UT Athletics
Summitt Selected For U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Hall of Fame

Summitt Selected For U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Hall of Fame

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colorado – The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee today announced the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Hall of Fame, Class of 2022, which includes basketball legend Pat SummittSummitt is the first woman inducted in the coaching category.

The late Summitt, who passed away in June 2016, was involved with USA Basketball for more than a decade (1973-84) as both a player and a coach, becoming the first U.S. basketball Olympic medalist to lead the USA to Olympic gold as a head coach.

At 24, Summitt, who served as team co-captain, was the oldest member of the silver medal-winning 1976 U.S. Olympic Women’s Basketball Team in the inaugural Olympic women’s tournament. Eight years later, Summitt helped lead the U.S. women’s team to gold at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.

As a USA Basketball coach (head and assistant), she helped the USA to a 46-5 record and won six gold medals, including a pair of World Championships in 1979 and 1983. She compiled a 24-8 record as an athlete, winning two gold and two silver medals.

During her tenure as the women’s basketball head coach at the University of Tennessee from 1974-2012, Summitt led the squad to eight NCAA championships and compiled more wins (1,098) than any other Division I college basketball coach in NCAA history, a record that stood until 2020, and never missed the NCAA tournament in 38 years.

“Pat Summitt is extremely deserving of this honor as a pioneer in women’s basketball,” said Jim Tooley, USA Basketball CEO. “Her commitment to USA Basketball was extraordinary, both as a coach and an athlete. Pat left an indelible mark on not only our game but all of sport.”  

The Class of 2022 is made up of eight individuals, two teams, two legends, one coach and one special contributor, who will be honored in a ceremony held Friday, June 24, at the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Museum in Colorado Springs.

The distinguished Class of 2022 also includes Natalie Coughlin (swimming), Muffy Davis (Para alpine skiing and Para-cycling), Mia Hamm (soccer), David Kiley (Para alpine skiing, Para track and field, and wheelchair basketball), Michelle Kwan (figure skating), Michael Phelps (swimming), Lindsey Vonn (alpine skiing), Trischa Zorn-Hudson (Para swimming), the 1976 Women’s 4×100 Freestyle Relay Swimming Team, the 2002 Paralympic Sled Hockey Team, Gretchen Fraser (legend: alpine skiing), Roger Kingdom (legend: track and field) and Billie Jean King (special contributor).

The class of 2022 has represented the United States as athletes at a combined 27 Olympic and Paralympic Games, tallying 129 medals, including 86 golds.

National Governing Bodies, alumni, current athletes and additional members of the Olympic and Paralympic community were invited to submit nominations. From there, a nominating committee comprised of individuals from the Olympic and Paralympic movements narrowed it down to a set of finalists. The class of 2022 was determined by a voting process that includes Olympians and Paralympians, members of the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic family, and an online vote open to fans. The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Hall of Fame was one of the first national sports halls of fame to include fan voting as part of its selection process, and this year, more than 432,000 votes were cast across all platforms.

This will be the 17th class inducted into the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Hall of Fame, bringing the total to 168 inductees (individuals and teams). The first class was inducted in 1983 and the most recent class was inducted in 2019.

For more information, visit teamusa.org.

-UT Athletics

Pat Summitt / Credit: UT Athletics
Summitt Selected For U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Hall of Fame

Summitt Selected For U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Hall of Fame

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colorado – The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee today announced the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Hall of Fame, Class of 2022, which includes basketball legend Pat SummittSummitt is the first woman inducted in the coaching category.

The late Summitt, who passed away in June 2016, was involved with USA Basketball for more than a decade (1973-84) as both a player and a coach, becoming the first U.S. basketball Olympic medalist to lead the USA to Olympic gold as a head coach.

At 24, Summitt, who served as team co-captain, was the oldest member of the silver medal-winning 1976 U.S. Olympic Women’s Basketball Team in the inaugural Olympic women’s tournament. Eight years later, Summitt helped lead the U.S. women’s team to gold at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.

As a USA Basketball coach (head and assistant), she helped the USA to a 46-5 record and won six gold medals, including a pair of World Championships in 1979 and 1983. She compiled a 24-8 record as an athlete, winning two gold and two silver medals.

During her tenure as the women’s basketball head coach at the University of Tennessee from 1974-2012, Summitt led the squad to eight NCAA championships and compiled more wins (1,098) than any other Division I college basketball coach in NCAA history, a record that stood until 2020, and never missed the NCAA tournament in 38 years.

“Pat Summitt is extremely deserving of this honor as a pioneer in women’s basketball,” said Jim Tooley, USA Basketball CEO. “Her commitment to USA Basketball was extraordinary, both as a coach and an athlete. Pat left an indelible mark on not only our game but all of sport.”  

The Class of 2022 is made up of eight individuals, two teams, two legends, one coach and one special contributor, who will be honored in a ceremony held Friday, June 24, at the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Museum in Colorado Springs.

The distinguished Class of 2022 also includes Natalie Coughlin (swimming), Muffy Davis (Para alpine skiing and Para-cycling), Mia Hamm (soccer), David Kiley (Para alpine skiing, Para track and field, and wheelchair basketball), Michelle Kwan (figure skating), Michael Phelps (swimming), Lindsey Vonn (alpine skiing), Trischa Zorn-Hudson (Para swimming), the 1976 Women’s 4×100 Freestyle Relay Swimming Team, the 2002 Paralympic Sled Hockey Team, Gretchen Fraser (legend: alpine skiing), Roger Kingdom (legend: track and field) and Billie Jean King (special contributor).

The class of 2022 has represented the United States as athletes at a combined 27 Olympic and Paralympic Games, tallying 129 medals, including 86 golds.

National Governing Bodies, alumni, current athletes and additional members of the Olympic and Paralympic community were invited to submit nominations. From there, a nominating committee comprised of individuals from the Olympic and Paralympic movements narrowed it down to a set of finalists. The class of 2022 was determined by a voting process that includes Olympians and Paralympians, members of the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic family, and an online vote open to fans. The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Hall of Fame was one of the first national sports halls of fame to include fan voting as part of its selection process, and this year, more than 432,000 votes were cast across all platforms.

This will be the 17th class inducted into the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Hall of Fame, bringing the total to 168 inductees (individuals and teams). The first class was inducted in 1983 and the most recent class was inducted in 2019.

For more information, visit teamusa.org.

-UT Athletics

Pat Summitt / Credit: UT Athletics
Stats/Story: #1 Vols Storm Back to Defeat Georgia Tech & Advance to Super Regional

Stats/Story: #1 Vols Storm Back to Defeat Georgia Tech & Advance to Super Regional

Box Score (PDF) | Regional Stats (PDF) | Regional Central Page

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – A six-run ninth inning capped an incredible comeback victory for top-ranked Tennessee in Sunday’s regional final against Georgia Tech as the Volunteers punched their ticket to their second-straight NCAA Super Regional with a 9-6 win at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.

Five Vols drove in runs in that eventful ninth inning as the first eight batters of the inning reached base. Jordan Beck tied the game with an RBI double before Trey LipscombChristian MooreEvan Russell and Cortland Lawson all followed with at-bats the produced runs to give the Big Orange a 9-4 lead heading into the bottom of the ninth.

For the second straight game, UT had to erase a four-run deficit after falling behind in the early going. The Yellow Jackets (36-24) struck first with a pair of unearned runs in the bottom of the third inning due a two-out throwing error by Lawson that allowed both runs to score.

Tech added to its lead with two more runs in the bottom of the fourth when Stephen Reid sent a 3-1 pitch over the wall in left center to make it a 4-0 game.

Junior lefty Will Mabrey was able to calm the waters and keep the Vols within striking distance with 3.2 shutout innings of relief, striking out five batters while scattering five hits.

A defensive miscue from the Yellow Jackets helped UT get on the board in the fifth as Russell scored from second on a fielding error by first baseman Andrew Jenkins. Lawson scored one batter later on an RBI groundout by Beck to cut the deficit to 4-2.

The Vols continued to chip away with another run on the top of the seventh when Lipscomb singled to drive in Luc Lipcius, who led off the inning with a double. UT had a chance to tie or take the lead with runners on the corners, but Yellow Jackets’ reliever Dawson Brown was able to get Jorel Ortega to bounce into a double play to end the inning.

Entering the ninth trailing by a run, its was pinch hitter Jared Dickey who got the rally started with a single up the middle. The next seven batters proceeded to reach base as the Big Orange scored six runs on four hits and an error to take a five-run lead.

Georgia Tech didn’t go away without a fight in the bottom of the ninth, scoring a pair of runs on three hits to cut the lead to three. The Jackets had the bases loaded with two outs, but Redmond Walsh struck out Colin Hall looking on a 3-2 pitch to end the threat and send the Vols to supers.

NOTABLE

FEELING SUPER: Tennessee will host its second consecutive super regional in Knoxville next weekend as it hosts Notre Dame, who won the Statesboro Regional on Sunday with a win over Texas Tech. Next weekend’s super will mark the fourth in program history. UT is a perfect 6-0 in its other three super regional appearances with wins over East Carolina (2001), Georgia Tech (2005) and LSU (2021).

COMEBACK KIDS: For the second straight game, the Big Orange battled out of a four-run hole to pull out the win. Tennessee has posted three wins this season in which they went down 4-0: March 5 vs. Baylor, June 4 vs. Campbell and June 5 vs. Georgia Tech.

Entering Sunday’s contest, UT was 1-5 in games it trailed after the eighth inning with its only win in such contests coming in the series finale against Florida in Gainesville on April 24.

ALL-REGIONAL TEAM: Tennessee had four players make the NCAA Knoxville All-Regional Team, led by Jorel Ortega, who was also named the regional’s Most Outstanding Player after leading the team in batting average (.500) and total bases (14), while scoring four runs and totaling five RBIs.

UT’s all-regional team selections were:
Trey Lipscomb – 3B
Drew Gilbert – OF
Jorel Ortega – DH
Blade Tidwell – SP

-UT Athletics

WATCH: Tennessee postgame after 9-6 win over Georgia Tech to advance to Super Regionals

WATCH: Tennessee postgame after 9-6 win over Georgia Tech to advance to Super Regionals

Tennessee head coach Tony Vitello, right fielder Jordan Beck and left hand pitcher Will Mabrey reviewed the 1-seed Vols thrilling 9-6 comeback win over the 2-seed Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets in Game 6 of the Knoxville Regional to advance to the Super Regionals vs. Notre Dame.

Vols HC Tony Vitello, OF Jordan Beck & LHP Will Mabrey / Credit: UT Athletics
Tenille Arts Recaps, Unwraps and Sends Out Congrats all with Video Updates

Tenille Arts Recaps, Unwraps and Sends Out Congrats all with Video Updates

Tenille Arts is great about sharing her life with fans on social media, and at the end of every month she compiles a recap of the previous month in one second clips called 1 Second Everyday.

Here’s how her look back on May came out…

Something that might make the June recap is when Tenille got to open her shipment of vinyl for her latest album Girl To Girl.

Tenille shared “I present to you: the many phases of receiving my first-ever vinyl.”

With the school year ending Tenille also had something special for the graduates of 2022.

Arts shared, “To celebrate graduation season, wanted to release the lyric video for ‘High School Sweetheart.’ Congratulations to all of the ’22 grads… can’t wait to see you all change the world.
P.S. Don’t worry if you break up with your high school sweetheart this summer. It happens.”

A few students might be also find Tenille Arts’ current single at country radio very appropriate now too…check out the music video for “Back Then, Right Now.”

Photo Courtesy of Tenille Arts

Thomas Rhett & Riley Green Have All the Fun With “Half Of Me”

Thomas Rhett & Riley Green Have All the Fun With “Half Of Me”

Following up the success of his song “Slow Down Summer” – Thomas Rhett is turning to his buddy Riley Green for “Half Of Me.”

“Half Of Me” is the latest single from Thomas’ album Where We Started.

Sharing the story behind the song, Rhett says, “I think I knew from the very first moment we wrote this song, I wrote it with my dad (Rhett Akins), Josh Thompson and Will Bundy, we wrote it on the bus in Cincinnati, Ohio, and the first time I heard this song I just kept seeing Riley Green being a part of this song, and I’ve gotten to know Riley pretty good over the last couple years, we’ve became good hunting buddies and just a good friend to know, and he drove up from Alabama and put his vocal on this song and we had a good time cracking up about vocals, and I think he nailed this thing in like three takes. He got to sing it with me one night in Ohio, and I think this is going to be really special going into the summertime, to release just a simple song about drinking beer this summer, and I think it was a really cool fit having Riley Green on this song.

Riley Green recalls Thomas reaching out to him about being on the track, “So, when Thomas called me about doing ‘Half Of Me’ I remember the first time I heard the song I thought it was an awesome summer song, a beer drinkin’ song, I was kind of sold from the first moment at Duck camp hearing about a song of maybe wanting to drink a beer instead of doing work, I think that was kind of the story of my childhood- probably most of us.” 

Fans will get to hear Thomas singing “Half Of Me” when his Bring The Bar To You tour – with Parker McCollum and Conner Smith – starts on June 17th in New Hampshire, “I can’t wait to play this song this summer on the road.”

Thomas teases that there might be some chances for fans to see the two sing “Half Of Me” together this summer, “Hopefully Riley makes an appearance somewhere or maybe I can make an appearance with you.”

To which Green responds “Let’s go!”

Check out “Half Of Me” from Thomas Rhett and Riley Green…

Photo Courtesy of Thomas Rhett & Riley Green

WATCH: Tennessee postgame after 12-7 win over Campbell

WATCH: Tennessee postgame after 12-7 win over Campbell

Tennessee head coach Tony Vitello, winning pitcher Kirby Connell and center fielder Drew Gilbert reviewed the 1-seed Vols thrilling 12-7 comeback win over the 3-seed Campbell Fighting Camels in Game 4 of the Knoxville Regional.

Vols HC Tony Vitello. CF Drew Gilbert & LHP Kirby Connell / Credit: UT Athletics
WATCH: Tennessee postgame after 12-7 win over Campbell

WATCH: Tennessee postgame after 12-7 win over Campbell

Tennessee head coach Tony Vitello, winning pitcher Kirby Connell and center fielder Drew Gilbert reviewed the 1-seed Vols thrilling 12-7 comeback win over the 3-seed Campbell Fighting Camels in Game 4 of the Knoxville Regional.

Vols HC Tony Vitello. CF Drew Gilbert & LHP Kirby Connell / Credit: UT Athletics

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