Stats/Story: Dollander’s Pitching, Burke’s Homers Lift #1 Vols to Series-Opening Win Over #22 Georgia

Stats/Story: Dollander’s Pitching, Burke’s Homers Lift #1 Vols to Series-Opening Win Over #22 Georgia

Box Score (PDF)

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – A stellar start on the mound from Chase Dollander and three total Tennessee home runs—including two from freshman Blake Burke—led the top-ranked Vols to a 5-2 win over No. 22/NR Georgia in the series opener Thursday night at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.
 
Dollander earned his first series-opening start of the season and stifled the Bulldog offense in 6.0 innings of work—giving up one run on three hits and striking out six. The sophomore right-hander, who was making his first start of any kind since April 16, was credited with the win, improving his record to 7-0.
 
Redmond Walsh earned his sixth save of the season, retiring all four batters he faced.
 
Coming out of the bullpen for the first time this season was Chase Burns, who replaced Dollander and struck out three batters in 1.2 innings.
 
Burke’s two home runs—and three hits overall—led the way offensively for Tennessee. Seth Stephenson was the only other Vol to record multiple hits, registering a double, single and run scored.
 
Tennessee (44-6, 21-4 SEC) scored one run apiece in the second, third and fourth innings to take control of the game early—kickstarted by a Trey Lipscomb solo home run to left-center field.
 
Georgia (32-17, 13-12) quickly answered with its own solo home run in the top of the third inning from Cole Tate, but the Vols again tacked on one run in the bottom of the third on a Jordan Beck RBI groundout that scored Stephenson.
 
Burke continued the scoring with the first of his two home runs in the bottom of the fourth inning to extend Tennessee’s lead to 3-1, and three innings later added his second solo shot of the night—a blast over the right field wall that put the Vols in front by three runs.
 
Georgia narrowed its deficit to two runs at 4-2 in the top of the eighth inning, but Walsh entered the game and recorded a strikeout against the first batter he faced—stranding a runner at third base.
 
Tennessee added an insurance run in the bottom of the eighth, with Evan Russell’s single through the right side driving home a run from Drew Gilbert to give the Vols a three-run cushion heading into the ninth inning.
 
UP NEXT: The Vols and Bulldogs are back in action at Lindsey Nelson Stadium for game two of the weekend series on Friday at 5:30 p.m. Tickets are sold out, but standing room only tickets will be on sale starting 90 minutes before first pitch. The game will be televised on SEC Network.

NOTABLE

LIPSCOMB REACHES 20: With his second-inning home run, Trey Lipscomb reached 20 home runs on the season—becoming the first Vol to hit 20 or more homers in a single season since Cody Hawn had 22 in 2009.
 
POWER-HITTING FRESHMAN DUO: With his two-homer performance on Thursday, Blake Burke now has nine home runs this season—equaling fellow freshman Christian Moore’s season-long home run total. Burke and Moore’s nine home runs are the most in a single season by a Tennessee freshman since 2008, when Kentrail Davis had 13 home runs.
 
WALSH NEARING TOP OF SAVES LIST: Thursday marked Redmond Walsh’s sixth save of the season and 22nd of his Tennessee career. Walsh is now just one save away from tying Todd Helton for the lead on Tennessee’s all-time career saves list.
 
ANOTHER PACKED HOUSE: Attendance for Thursday’s series opener was 4,580—tied for the eighth-largest single-game crowd in Lindsey Nelson Stadium history. Of the top 10 highest attended home games in program history, eight have come this season.

-UT Athletics

Vols RHP Chase Dollander / Credit: UT Athletics
Stats/Story: Rogers’ 13-Inning Shutout Books Tennessee’s Trip To SEC Semifinals

Stats/Story: Rogers’ 13-Inning Shutout Books Tennessee’s Trip To SEC Semifinals

Box Score (PDF) | Updated Season Stats (PDF) | SEC Tournament Bracket

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — In the longest game in Tennessee softball and SEC Tournament history, Lady Vol senior right-hander Ashley Rogers spun a 13-inning, complete-game shutout for the Big Orange as third-seeded UT earned the 1-0 victory over No. 11 seed Mississippi State in the SEC quarterfinals Thursday afternoon at Katie Seashole Pressly Stadium. The Athens, Tennessee, native used 161 total pitches in the marathon outing, going the distance with no runs and three hits allowed while recording seven strikeouts on the afternoon.

Three hours and 58 minutes after first pitch fired, freshman designated player Lair Beautae ended the game with a walk-off RBI single in the bottom of the 13th. Facing a 2-2 count, she delivered a base hit to right center that allowed sophomore Rylie West to score the winning run from second and send Tennessee to the SEC semifinals for the second-straight year.

Rogers’ outing was the longest in Tennessee history, topping the previous record of 11.0 innings held by former greats Ellen Renfroe (three times), Monica Abbott and current UT pitching coach Megan Rhodes Smith. The 13-inning contest was also the longest in program annals, breaking the record from UT’s 12-inning game vs. Oklahoma in the championship series opener at the 2013 Women’s College World Series.

Tennessee (39-15) out-hit the Bulldogs 11-3 on the afternoon, with all 11 hits going down as singles. Junior outfielder Kiki Milloy reached base five times and led the Big Orange at the plate, batting 3-for-5 on the day for her 18th multi-hit and second three-hit performance of the season. Sophomore infielder Zaida Puni also logged a multi-hit effort, going 2-for-5 on the day.

Rogers sat down nine of her first 10 batters faced against Mississippi State (33-24) before surrendering a leadoff walk to Bulldog catcher Mia Davidson in the top of the fourth. The 5-10 righty entered cruise control and proceeded to retire 17 consecutive batters before Davidson was walked again in the 9th inning. Two base runners reached in the 11th and 13th innings for MSU, but Rogers was able to escape the threats with a popup and a 5-6-4 double play, respectively.

Super senior shortstop Ivy Davis put on a defensive clinic on Thursday, recording a season-high seven fielding assists and four putouts for the game. She combined with Puni and Anna Fox for the 13th-inning double play that prevented Mississippi State from advancing the go-ahead run into scoring position.

Thursday’s performance comes exactly one year after Rogers threw a previous career-high 9.0 innings against Texas A&M in the opening round of the 2021 SEC Tournament. Davis walked that game off with a two-run double to propel the Lady Vols to a 3-2 victory.

With the win over Mississippi State, Tennessee has advanced the SEC semifinal round for the 17th time in program history and the third time in the last four conference tournaments.

UP NEXT: No. 3 seed Tennessee will take on seventh-seeded Missouri on national television with a trip to the SEC Championship Game on the line. The Lady Vols and Tigers will square off Friday afternoon at 3 p.m. on ESPN2.

-UT Athletics

Ashley Rogers – Lady Vols / Credit: UT Athletics
508 SEC players on NFL rosters; Listings by NFL teams and SEC schools plus teams with most players from one school

508 SEC players on NFL rosters; Listings by NFL teams and SEC schools plus teams with most players from one school

By Vince Ferrara / @VinceSports

As we enter most of the rookie mini-camps in the NFL, I decided to dive into each team’s roster.

Below is a ranking of SEC players for each NFL team, as well as the 14 SEC teams listed based on number of players on active rosters. I also list the teams that have the most players from any college team on their current roster, which is an interesting group.

Obviously, there are roster changes daily and not every team shows players the same way on rosters at the same time in the off-season of expanded rosters.

I included undrafted free agents that were added to rosters. I did not include players on reserve lists, exclusive rights free agents or unrestricted free agents.

Most SEC Players On The NFL Rosters (508)
Alabama 71 (28 teams)
LSU 68 (27 teams)
Georgia 58 (28 teams)
Florida 43 (25 teams)
Auburn 36 (24 teams)
Texas A&M 34 (23 teams)
Tennessee 31 (17 teams)
Ole Miss 28 (19 teams)
South Carolina 27 (18 teams)
Mississippi State 27 (15 teams)
Missouri 24 (18 teams)
Kentucky 23 (15 teams)
Arkansas 23 (14 teams)
Vanderbilt 15 (12 teams)

NFL Teams With SEC Players (508)
Tennessee Titans 23
Cleveland Browns 22
Jacksonville Jaguars 21
New England Patriots 21
Carolina Panthers 20
Las Vegas Raiders 20
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 20
Green Bay Packers 19
Miami Dolphins 19
Pittsburgh Steelers 19
Baltimore Ravens 18
New York Jets 18
Detroit Lions 17
New Orleans Saints 17
Houston Texans 16
Kansas City Chiefs 16
Minnesota Vikings 16
Cincinnati Bengals 15
Washington Commanders 15
Atlanta Falcons 14
Denver Broncos 14
Philadelphia Eagles 14
Dallas Cowboys 13
New York Giants 13
Seattle Seahawks 13
Arizona Cardinals 12
Los Angeles Chargers 12
Los Angeles Rams 12
San Francisco 49ers 11
Buffalo Bills 10
Chicago Bears 9
Indianapolis Colts 9

Colleges Most Represented On NFL Teams
7 Players
Notre Dame (Lions)

6 Players
Tennessee (Saints)
Ohio State (Saints)
Alabama (Patriots)
Michigan (Patriots)
LSU (Buccaneers)

5 Players
Alabama (Steelers)
Texas A&M (Steelers)
Michigan (Steelers)
Alabama (Raiders)
UCLA (Raiders)
LSU (Bengals)
Ohio State (Bengals)
Washington (Seahawks)
Miami (Seahawks)
LSU (Browns)
Alabama (Commanders)
UCLA (Packers)

With NFL teams allowed to carry as many as 90 players on their off-season active rosters (appx. 2,880 players,) the SEC (508 players,) makes up approximately 17.6 % of the league right now. On average, each team has 16 (15.9) SEC players per team.

You can theorize that the numbers of SEC players in the NFL are simply inflated because of expanded rosters. However, in my years of tracking SEC players in the National Football League, the percentages will be very similar once teams get down to the final 53 or even when you included practice squads.

College football’s most successful, talent-laden conference continues to make-up the biggest chunk of the NFL. It’s no different this season, and likely won’t be different any time soon.

Find more of my broadcasting work at VinceSports.net

Las Vegas, NV – November 21, 2021 – Allegiant Stadium: Joe Burrow (9) of the Cincinnati Bengals during a regular season game. (Photo by Al Powers / ESPN Images)
509 SEC players on NFL rosters; Listings by NFL teams and SEC schools plus teams with most players from one school

509 SEC players on NFL rosters; Listings by NFL teams and SEC schools plus teams with most players from one school

By Vince Ferrara / @VinceSports

Updated 5/13/22 – The Titans added a 24th player from Texas A&M to their official roster and the Lions released two players from Notre Dame that I had previously noted.

As we enter most of the rookie mini-camps in the NFL, I decided to dive into each team’s roster.

Below is a ranking of SEC players for each NFL team, as well as the 14 SEC teams listed based on number of players on active rosters. I also list the teams that have the most players from any college team on their current roster, which is an interesting group.

Obviously, there are roster changes daily and not every team shows players the same way on rosters at the same time in the off-season of expanded rosters. Rosters from team websites were used.

I included undrafted free agents that were added to rosters. I did not include players on reserve lists, exclusive rights free agents or unrestricted free agents.

SEC Players On NFL Rosters (509)
Alabama 71 (28 teams)
LSU 68 (27 teams)
Georgia 58 (28 teams)
Florida 43 (25 teams)
Auburn 36 (24 teams)
Texas A&M 35 (23 teams)
Tennessee 31 (17 teams)
Ole Miss 28 (19 teams)
South Carolina 27 (18 teams)
Mississippi State 27 (15 teams)
Missouri 24 (18 teams)
Kentucky 23 (15 teams)
Arkansas 23 (14 teams)
Vanderbilt 15 (12 teams)

NFL Teams With SEC Players (509)
Tennessee Titans 24
Cleveland Browns 22
Jacksonville Jaguars 21
New England Patriots 21
Carolina Panthers 20
Las Vegas Raiders 20
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 20
Green Bay Packers 19
Miami Dolphins 19
Pittsburgh Steelers 19
Baltimore Ravens 18
New York Jets 18
Detroit Lions 17
New Orleans Saints 17
Houston Texans 16
Kansas City Chiefs 16
Minnesota Vikings 16
Cincinnati Bengals 15
Washington Commanders 15
Atlanta Falcons 14
Denver Broncos 14
Philadelphia Eagles 14
Dallas Cowboys 13
New York Giants 13
Seattle Seahawks 13
Arizona Cardinals 12
Los Angeles Chargers 12
Los Angeles Rams 12
San Francisco 49ers 11
Buffalo Bills 10
Chicago Bears 9
Indianapolis Colts 9

Colleges Most Represented On NFL Teams
6 Players
Tennessee (Saints)
Ohio State (Saints)
Alabama (Patriots)
Michigan (Patriots)
LSU (Buccaneers)

5 Players
Alabama (Steelers)
Texas A&M (Steelers)
Michigan (Steelers)
Alabama (Raiders)
UCLA (Raiders)
LSU (Bengals)
Ohio State (Bengals)
Washington (Seahawks)
Miami (Seahawks)
LSU (Browns)
Alabama (Commanders)
UCLA (Packers)
Notre Dame (Lions)

With NFL teams allowed to carry as many as 90 players on their off-season active rosters (appx. 2,880 players,) the SEC (508 players,) makes up approximately 17.6 % of the league right now. On average, each team has 16 (15.9) SEC players per team.

You can theorize that the numbers of SEC players in the NFL are simply inflated because of expanded rosters. However, in my years of tracking SEC players in the National Football League, the percentages will be very similar once teams get down to the final 53 or even when you included practice squads.

College football’s most successful, talent-laden conference continues to make-up the biggest chunk of the NFL. It’s no different this season, and likely won’t be different any time soon.

Find more of my broadcasting work at VinceSports.net

Las Vegas, NV – November 21, 2021 – Allegiant Stadium: Joe Burrow (9) of the Cincinnati Bengals during a regular season game. (Photo by Al Powers / ESPN Images)
Baseball Preview: #1 Tennessee Caps SEC Home Slate with #22 Georgia

Baseball Preview: #1 Tennessee Caps SEC Home Slate with #22 Georgia

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Playing its final regular season series at Lindsey Nelson Stadium, the top-ranked Tennessee Volunteers welcome No. 22/NR Georgia to Rocky Top for a weekend set, beginning Thursday night at 7 p.m. ET.

The Vols are looking for their 11th series victory of the season after dropping their first three-game set of the year last weekend at Kentucky.

GAMEDAY INFORMATION

For the most updated gameday information related to Tennessee baseball, please visit our Gameday Central page by clicking HERE. The baseball Gameday Central page contains info in regard to tickets, parking, stadium policies and more.

TICKET INFORMATION

Season and single-game tickets for all remaining home contests are SOLD OUT. Limited standing room only tickets will go on sale for all games 90 minutes prior to first pitch at the Lindsey Nelson Stadium ticket office.

Single-game tickets for all games can also be purchased through Vivid Seats, the exclusive resale marketplace for Tennessee Athletics, by clicking HERE.

In order to keep Lindsey Nelson Stadium as full as possible, we are encouraging season ticket holders who are unable to use their tickets for a game(s) to either transfer your tickets to someone else (Instructions HERE).

BROADCAST INFO

Thursday’s game will be broadcast live on the ESPNU with Dave Neal (PxP) and Kyle Peterson (analyst) on the call. Friday’s contest will feature the same crew and will be broadcast live on SEC Network. Saturday’s series finale will be streamed live on SEC Network+ and the ESPN app with Andy Brock (PxP) and VFL Cody Hawn (analyst) providing commentary.

The online broadcasts can be accessed on any mobile device through WatchESPN. WatchESPN can be accessed through the ESPN App, or online at espn.com/watch.

Fans can also listen to the Voice of Tennessee Baseball John Wilkerson and Vince Ferrara call the game on the Vol Network (FM 99.1/AM 990) as well as UTSports.com and the Tennessee Athletics App.

New Vol Network Radio Affiliates

The Vol Network had added multiple radio affiliates to broadcast remaining Tennessee baseball SEC games this season. The complete list of new affiliates is below. Please check your local listings prior to each weekend to see which games will be broadcast on each station.

Chattanooga: WFLI (FM 97.7, FM 100.3, AM 1070)
Cleveland: The Buzz (FM 101.3)
Lawrenceburg: WWLX (FM 106.1, FM 93.1, AM 590)
Muscle Shoals, AL: WSBM (FM 97.9, AM 1340)
Nashville: The Zone (FM 104.5)
Oneida: WBNT (FM 105.5)
Pulaski: WKSR (FM 107.7, FM 100.9, AM 1420)

WEEKEND SCHEDULE/PROJECTED STARTING PITCHERS

Game 1 – Thursday, May 12 (7 p.m.)
RHP Chase Dollander (6-0, 2.66 ERA) vs. RHP Nolan Crisp (1-3, 5.17 ERA)

Game 2 – Friday, May 13 (5:30 p.m.)
RHP Blade Tidwell (1-1, 3.18 ERA) vs. RHP Jonathan Cannon (9-1, 2.38 ERA)

Game 3 – Saturday, May 14 (1 p.m.)
TBD vs. LHP Liam Sullivan (3-3, 4.91 ERA)

SERIES HISTORY

Overall: Series tied, 124-118
in Knoxville: Tennessee leads, 69-49
in Athens: Georgia leads, 69-52
at Neutral Sites: Tennessee leads, 3-0
Last Meetings: W, 4-1, in Athens

Tennessee has won the last two series against the Bulldogs and is 5-4 against Georgia since head coach Tony Vitello took over at UT.

NOTABLE

Success vs. Ranked Foes
Tennessee has played some of its best baseball when facing top 25 teams, posting an 10-3 record against ranked opponents this season, including a pair of sweeps over top 10 foes Ole Miss and Vanderbilt, while taking the series at the end of April against Auburn. Since Tony Vitello took over as head coach in 2018, the Vols have posted 43 wins over ranked foes, including 20 victories over teams ranked in the top 10 and six wins over top-ranked teams – Ole Miss (x3) in 2022, Arkansas in 2021, Texas Tech in 2020 and Florida in 2018.
 
Vitello’s record against ranked teams at UT is 43-41 and UT has won 13 series over ranked teams during his tenure.
 
Phenoms In the Pen
Tennessee’s loaded bullpen has posted a 2.19 season ERA with 218.0 innings pitched and 273 strikeouts. In total the Vols have 13 relievers who own a sub-3.00 ERA.
 
Tennessee has six relievers who have made 19 or more appearances, each one has a sub-2.60 ERA, led by Ben Joyce with a 1.23 ERA. As a unit, 12 of the 17 arms that have come out of the UT bull[1]pen this year are averaging more than one strikeout per inning.
 
The Boys Are Raking
Tennessee’s four hitters with the most home runs, Trey Lipscomb (19), Jordan Beck (13), Jorel Ortega (11) and Luc Lipcius (11) have combined for 54 home runs. That total ranks more than 217 teams in Division I.

OPPONENT SCOUT

#22/NR Georgia Bulldogs

  • Record: 32-16 (13-11 SEC)
  • 2021 Postseason: N/A
  • 2022 SEC Preseason Poll: 3rd in East
  • Head Coach: Scott Stricklin (9th year)
  • Preseason Conference Honors:
    • SP Jonathan Cannon (2nd Team)
    • RP Jaden Woods (2nd Team)
  • Stat Leaders:
    • Batting Avg: Connor Tate (.354)
    • Runs: Ben Anderson (47)
    • Hits: Connor Tate (63)
    • Home Runs: Corey Collins (10)
    • RBI: Connor Tate (49)
    • Stolen Bases: Ben Anderson (9)
    • Wins: Jonathan Cannon (9)
    • Saves: Jack Gowen (10)
    • ERA (min. 20 IP): Jack Gowen (1.88)
    • WHIP (min. 20 IP): Jonathan Cannon (0.76)
    • Innings Pitched: Jonathan Cannon (64.1)

GAME PROMOTIONS

Gameday promotions for all Tennessee athletics home events can be found on the UT Fan Experience page by clicking HERE.

Fans are encouraged to download the My All App for their phones and devices this season. The app is available on the Google Play Store and Apple App Store and will allow fans to participate in in-game trivia, the custom filter selfie cam and more throughout the year.

The first 1,000 fans in attendance at Thursday’s series opener will receive free 1951 replica ‘shirseys.’

FRIDAY SEC BLOCK PARTIES

Friday SEC Block Parties will take place for ticketed fans on Pat Head Summitt Street for every Friday SEC contest (weather permitting). The area will only be accessible for fans with tickets to Friday’s game. This Friday’s block party will open at 3:30 p.m.

Friday’s SEC Block Parties will feature music, giveaways, face painting, food/beverage options, VolShop sales locations and Vol Network sponsor activations. Additionally, VFL Sterl the Pearl will join various SEC weekend games to add to the electricity in Lindsey Nelson Stadium.

Food, drink, and anything else acquired at the block party can be brought inside the stadium. Gates 10A and 11 will be open for fans to use to enter the stadium. Fans may come and go from stadium to the block party as they please.

ON DECK

Tennessee caps its five-game homestand with a midweek matchup against Belmont on Tuesday, May 17 at 6 p.m.

-UT Athletics

Vols RHP Chase Dollander / Credit: UT Athletics
Softball Preview: #10 Lady Vols vs. Mississippi State (SEC Quarterfinals)

Softball Preview: #10 Lady Vols vs. Mississippi State (SEC Quarterfinals)

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — The 10th-ranked and No. 3 seed Tennessee Lady Vols will begin postseason play Thursday afternoon at the SEC Softball Tournament in Gainesville, Florida. UT will take on No. 11 seed Mississippi State in the league quarterfinals, with first pitch slotted for noon ET at Katie Seashole Pressly Stadium.
 
Thursday’s action will be televised on SEC Network with Kevin Brown (PxP), Amanda Scarborough (analyst) and former Lady Vol basketball standout Andraya Carter (reporter) on the broadcast. Voice of the Lady Vol softball team Brian Rice will be on hand for an audio broadcast, available for listening on UTSports.com, the Tennessee Athletics app and locally in Knoxville on AM 990.

DOUBLE-BYE SECURED: Rounding out the regular season with a three-game sweep over No. 16 Auburn, the Lady Vols locked up the three-seed in this week’s SEC Tournament. UT finished the regular season with a 15-8 record in conference play, winning five of eight series against league foes under the leadership of head coach Karen Weekly. Since 2014, the Lady Vols have finished top-four in the conference on six occasions.
 
SEC TOURNAMENT HISTORY: Tennessee has a 29-25 all-time record in the SEC Tournament with two titles coming in 2006 and 2011. UT last made the tournament final in 2015, falling to Auburn 6-5 in nine innings.
 
Last year, Tennessee reached the semifinal round of the 2021 SEC Tournament behind a pair of one-run victories over Texas A&M (3-2) and Arkansas (1-0). The Lady Vols walked off against the Aggies in nine innings thanks to a two-run double from shortstop Ivy Davis, then Ashley Rogers dealt a one-hit shutout for the Big Orange to top the Razorbacks and advance to the semis for the 16th time in program history.
 
LAST TIME OUT: The Big Orange closed out the regular season with a three-game sweep vs. No. 16 Auburn, its first sweep of a top-25 opponent since 2017. Dominant pitching was on display as the Lady Vols posted a 2.33 ERA with 14 strikeouts to one walk over the course of the series.
 
Super senior Ivy Davis continued her hot streak with a pair of homers in UT’s first two wins over the Tigers and led UT with a 1.842 OPS for the series. Zaida Puni also shined for Tennessee, mashing two home runs and four RBIs across the three games to add to her team lead in both categories at 14 and 50, respectively.
 
THE CASE FOR TOP 8: The Lady Vols find themselves in a solid position to earn a top-8 seed for the NCAA Tournament and receive valuable hosting privileges for the Regional and Super Regional rounds. UT checks in at No. 8 in the most recent NCAA RPI and holds the nation’s No. 1 strength of schedule at the end of the regular season.
 
Tennessee has eight victories over RPI Top 25 teams this season and 19 wins over opponents currently in the RPI Top 50. The Lady Vols also cracked the top-10 in the national rankings for the first time this season, coming in at No. 10 in Tuesday’s ESPN.com/USA Softball poll.
 
TOP-NOTCH OFFENSE: First-year hitting coach Chris Malveaux guided UT to impressive numbers in league play, as Tennessee boasted the SEC’s third-best scoring offense with 140 runs scored in conference games. The Lady Vols also ranked second in the league in doubles (39), slugging percentage (.540), on-base percentage (.398), and stolen bases (22) in SEC action while finishing third in home runs (38).
 
LOVIN’ THE LONG BALL: With six home runs last weekend vs. Auburn, the Lady Vols have hit 88 homers this year for the second-highest total in a single season in program history. It’s the most for UT since hitting a school record 100 dingers in 2015.
 
UT’s 1.66 home runs per game this year rank third in the SEC and 9th in the country. The Lady Vols have hit two or more homers in 23 games, touting a 21-2 record in those contests.
 
Tennessee has five players with 10 or more homers for the first time since 2015. Kiki Milloy (14), Zaida Puni (14), Ivy Davis (13), McKenna Gibson (10) and Ashley Morgan (10) have mashed double-digit homers for the Big Orange during the 2022 campaign.
 
FREE BASES: The Lady Vols lead the SEC with a program-record 87 hit by pitch this season, led by career record holder Ashley Morgan who ranks third in the league with 18 HBP. Ivy Davis (16), Kiki Milloy (13) and McKenna Gibson (11) each sit inside the conference’s top 10 in HBP this season, and UT is the only program in the country with four players sporting 10-plus HBP in 2022.
 
Despite not having a single player in the conference’s top 10 in walks, Tennessee ranks fourth in the league with 187 free passes awarded this spring. Due in part to its significant number of hit by pitch and walks this season, the Lady Vols rank third in the SEC with a .402 team on-base percentage.
 
NOTING THE OPPOSITION: Mississippi State topped sixth-seeded and 18th-ranked LSU 7-4 in nine innings on Wednesday afternoon to advance to the SEC quarterfinals. Tennessee took two of three games against the Bulldogs earlier this season, mashing eight home runs between the two victories while Ashley Rogers earned both wins in the circle.

  • Head Coach: Samantha Ricketts (Record at MSU: 93-51)
  • 2022 Record: 33-23 (10-14 SEC)
  • Last 10 Games: 4-6
  • Series Record: Tennessee leads 44-21
  • Last Meeting: The 11th-ranked Lady Vols crushed a season-high five homers in a 10-1 six-inning run-rule victory over Mississippi State on April 3, 2022. Ashley Morgan led the attack with two homers and four RBIs for the Big Orange.
  • Key Player/Stat: Fifth-year senior Mia Davidson is the stalwart for the Bulldogs offensively, leading MSU and the SEC with 21 homers and a .935 slugging percentage this season.

UP NEXT: The winner of Thursday’s game will advance to an SEC semifinal matchup on Friday at 3 p.m. that will be televised nationally on ESPN2.

-UT Athletics

Ivy Davis – Lady Vols / Credit: UT Athletics
Softball Preview: #10 Lady Vols vs. Mississippi State (SEC Quarterfinals)

Softball Preview: #10 Lady Vols vs. Mississippi State (SEC Quarterfinals)

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — The 10th-ranked and No. 3 seed Tennessee Lady Vols will begin postseason play Thursday afternoon at the SEC Softball Tournament in Gainesville, Florida. UT will take on No. 11 seed Mississippi State in the league quarterfinals, with first pitch slotted for noon ET at Katie Seashole Pressly Stadium.
 
Thursday’s action will be televised on SEC Network with Kevin Brown (PxP), Amanda Scarborough (analyst) and former Lady Vol basketball standout Andraya Carter (reporter) on the broadcast. Voice of the Lady Vol softball team Brian Rice will be on hand for an audio broadcast, available for listening on UTSports.com, the Tennessee Athletics app and locally in Knoxville on AM 990.

DOUBLE-BYE SECURED: Rounding out the regular season with a three-game sweep over No. 16 Auburn, the Lady Vols locked up the three-seed in this week’s SEC Tournament. UT finished the regular season with a 15-8 record in conference play, winning five of eight series against league foes under the leadership of head coach Karen Weekly. Since 2014, the Lady Vols have finished top-four in the conference on six occasions.
 
SEC TOURNAMENT HISTORY: Tennessee has a 29-25 all-time record in the SEC Tournament with two titles coming in 2006 and 2011. UT last made the tournament final in 2015, falling to Auburn 6-5 in nine innings.
 
Last year, Tennessee reached the semifinal round of the 2021 SEC Tournament behind a pair of one-run victories over Texas A&M (3-2) and Arkansas (1-0). The Lady Vols walked off against the Aggies in nine innings thanks to a two-run double from shortstop Ivy Davis, then Ashley Rogers dealt a one-hit shutout for the Big Orange to top the Razorbacks and advance to the semis for the 16th time in program history.
 
LAST TIME OUT: The Big Orange closed out the regular season with a three-game sweep vs. No. 16 Auburn, its first sweep of a top-25 opponent since 2017. Dominant pitching was on display as the Lady Vols posted a 2.33 ERA with 14 strikeouts to one walk over the course of the series.
 
Super senior Ivy Davis continued her hot streak with a pair of homers in UT’s first two wins over the Tigers and led UT with a 1.842 OPS for the series. Zaida Puni also shined for Tennessee, mashing two home runs and four RBIs across the three games to add to her team lead in both categories at 14 and 50, respectively.
 
THE CASE FOR TOP 8: The Lady Vols find themselves in a solid position to earn a top-8 seed for the NCAA Tournament and receive valuable hosting privileges for the Regional and Super Regional rounds. UT checks in at No. 8 in the most recent NCAA RPI and holds the nation’s No. 1 strength of schedule at the end of the regular season.
 
Tennessee has eight victories over RPI Top 25 teams this season and 19 wins over opponents currently in the RPI Top 50. The Lady Vols also cracked the top-10 in the national rankings for the first time this season, coming in at No. 10 in Tuesday’s ESPN.com/USA Softball poll.
 
TOP-NOTCH OFFENSE: First-year hitting coach Chris Malveaux guided UT to impressive numbers in league play, as Tennessee boasted the SEC’s third-best scoring offense with 140 runs scored in conference games. The Lady Vols also ranked second in the league in doubles (39), slugging percentage (.540), on-base percentage (.398), and stolen bases (22) in SEC action while finishing third in home runs (38).
 
LOVIN’ THE LONG BALL: With six home runs last weekend vs. Auburn, the Lady Vols have hit 88 homers this year for the second-highest total in a single season in program history. It’s the most for UT since hitting a school record 100 dingers in 2015.
 
UT’s 1.66 home runs per game this year rank third in the SEC and 9th in the country. The Lady Vols have hit two or more homers in 23 games, touting a 21-2 record in those contests.
 
Tennessee has five players with 10 or more homers for the first time since 2015. Kiki Milloy (14), Zaida Puni (14), Ivy Davis (13), McKenna Gibson (10) and Ashley Morgan (10) have mashed double-digit homers for the Big Orange during the 2022 campaign.
 
FREE BASES: The Lady Vols lead the SEC with a program-record 87 hit by pitch this season, led by career record holder Ashley Morgan who ranks third in the league with 18 HBP. Ivy Davis (16), Kiki Milloy (13) and McKenna Gibson (11) each sit inside the conference’s top 10 in HBP this season, and UT is the only program in the country with four players sporting 10-plus HBP in 2022.
 
Despite not having a single player in the conference’s top 10 in walks, Tennessee ranks fourth in the league with 187 free passes awarded this spring. Due in part to its significant number of hit by pitch and walks this season, the Lady Vols rank third in the SEC with a .402 team on-base percentage.
 
NOTING THE OPPOSITION: Mississippi State topped sixth-seeded and 18th-ranked LSU 7-4 in nine innings on Wednesday afternoon to advance to the SEC quarterfinals. Tennessee took two of three games against the Bulldogs earlier this season, mashing eight home runs between the two victories while Ashley Rogers earned both wins in the circle.

  • Head Coach: Samantha Ricketts (Record at MSU: 93-51)
  • 2022 Record: 33-23 (10-14 SEC)
  • Last 10 Games: 4-6
  • Series Record: Tennessee leads 44-21
  • Last Meeting: The 11th-ranked Lady Vols crushed a season-high five homers in a 10-1 six-inning run-rule victory over Mississippi State on April 3, 2022. Ashley Morgan led the attack with two homers and four RBIs for the Big Orange.
  • Key Player/Stat: Fifth-year senior Mia Davidson is the stalwart for the Bulldogs offensively, leading MSU and the SEC with 21 homers and a .935 slugging percentage this season.

UP NEXT: The winner of Thursday’s game will advance to an SEC semifinal matchup on Friday at 3 p.m. that will be televised nationally on ESPN2.

-UT Athletics

Ivy Davis – Lady Vols / Credit: UT Athletics
Chandler Receives NBA Draft Combine Invite

Chandler Receives NBA Draft Combine Invite

Tennessee point guard Kennedy Chandler is among the 78 players who received invitations to participate in the 2022 NBA Draft Combine.
 
The combine takes place next week, May 16-22, in Chicago. Television broadcast details have yet to be announced.

Five Tennessee Vols have been selected in the last three NBA Drafts, with Chandler hoping to become UT’s sixth selection in four years.
 
Projected by multiple draft analysts as a first-round selection, Chandler led the Volunteers in scoring (13.9 ppg), assists (4.7 apg) and steals (2.2 spg) as a true freshman last season. He earned USBWA All-District honors, second-team All-SEC acclaim and was named SEC Tournament MVP while leading Tennessee to a 27-win campaign.
 
The Memphis native had a hand in 33.6 percent of Tennessee’s scoring on the year, dishing out 161 assists—leading to 392 points—to go along with his 473 points scored.
 
During SEC play, Chandler averaged 13.8 points, 4.4 assists and 2.2 steals per game while shooting 47 percent from the field. In Tennessee’s three wins en route to the SEC Tournament Championship, he averaged 14.7 points and 5.0 assists while shooting 50 percent (6 for 12) from 3-point range.
 
A starter in every game he played during his lone season on Rocky Top, Chandler posted a double-figure scoring effort in 25 of 34 games, scoring 20 or more points three times. His season-high scoring output came during Tennessee’s win at Colorado, as he exploded for 27 points on 13-for-20 shooting. His 13 made field goals were the most by a Vol in a game since 2013.
 
An elite defender, Chandler’s 74 total steals were eighth-most among all Division I players last season and the second-highest single-season total in Tennessee program history.
 
The 2022 NBA Draft will be held on Thursday, June 23, at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn.
 
Tennessee has produced 51 all-time NBA Draft picks, including 11 first-round selections.

-UT Athletics

Kennedy Chandler – Vols G / Credit UT Athletics
Stats/Story: #1 Vols Top Bellarmine in Midweek Clash, 11-5

Stats/Story: #1 Vols Top Bellarmine in Midweek Clash, 11-5

Box Score (PDF) 

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Late home runs from Drew GilbertTrey Lipscomb and Blake Burke proved to be the difference Tuesday as No. 1 Tennessee defeated Bellarmine in a midweek meeting at Lindsey Nelson Stadium, 11-5.
 
Gilbert and Lipscomb both had three-hit, three-RBI outings for Tennessee (43-6), while the Vols had 14 hits as a team—their 25th game this season of double-digit hits. Overall, 10 different Vols accounted for hits on Tuesday.
 
On the mound, Kirby Connell (2-0) was credited with the win after 1.1 innings of work. Seven different players threw pitches for the Vols in Tennessee’s 12th midweek victory of the season.
 
With Bellarmine (11-36) having cut the Tennessee lead to just one run at 5-4, the Vols exploded for a four-run sixth inning to extend their lead to 9-4. All four runs came by way of back-to-back home runs from Gilbert and Lipscomb—Gilbert’s home run was a three-run shot to right-center that scored Christian Scott and Jorel Ortega, while Lipscomb immediately followed with a blast to left-center.
 
The Knights added one run in the seventh inning to draw within four at 9-5, but in the eighth inning, Burke gave Tennessee its third home run of the night with a two-run blast to center field that pushed the lead to 11-5.
 
Despite Tennessee gaining control early in the game, Bellarmine briefly had the lead in the top of the first inning, as leadoff hitter Matt Higgins hit the second pitch of the game over the right-center field wall off the scoreboard.
 
The Vols, however, quickly responded with two runs in the bottom of the inning and two more in the third inning.
 
In the bottom of the first, Seth Stephenson scored on a sacrifice fly from Jordan Beck and a two-out Lipscomb double drove in Luc Lipcius. In the third, the Vols’ two runs came via a Cortland Lawson RBI single and a wild pitch that Gilbert scored on from third base.
 
UP NEXT: Tennessee continues its five-game homestand, welcoming No. 22/NR Georgia to Knoxville for a weekend series starting Thursday night at 7 p.m. ET. Tickets are sold out, but the series opener will be broadcast on ESPNU with Friday night’s game on SEC Network.

NOTABLE

RACKING UP MIDWEEK WINS: Tuesday marked Tennessee’s 12th midweek victory of the season. The 2022 season is only the third season in which UT has logged a dozen midweek wins in a single season since 2001. Tennessee’s 12 midweek victories are also the most midweek wins of any team in the nation this season.

-UT Athletics

Vols 3B Trey Lipscomb / Credit UT Athletics
Carrie Underwood Starts to Wrap Up Her Las Vegas Residency Reflection Show

Carrie Underwood Starts to Wrap Up Her Las Vegas Residency Reflection Show

Carrie Underwood‘s Las Vegas residency show Reflection is wrapping up it’s final run.

Before the first of the final performances kicked off last night, Carrie posted a pic from the stage…

May 13th, 14th, 18th, 20th and 21st are the final shows for Reflection…but with all the fun she had, something tells us this is not the last of the residency runs for Carrie.

Next stop for Underwood will be CMA Music Fest in June – which is also the same week her new album Denim & Rhinestones arrives for fans.

“Ghost Story” – Carrie Underwood’s current single at country radio is one of the tracks fans will find on Denim & Rhinestones when it arrives on June 10th.

Photo Courtesy of Carrie Underwood
Additional Photo Credit: Jeff Johnson

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