Hoops Preview: #11/10 Lady Vols vs. Virginia Tech

Hoops Preview: #11/10 Lady Vols vs. Virginia Tech

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — No. 11/10 Tennessee (7-0) and RV/RV Virginia Tech (7-1) will clash on Sunday afternoon in Blacksburg,  Va., in a border state battle between two of the nation’s top teams in 2021-22. The contest between the Lady Vols and Hokies will tip off at 2 p.m. ET at Cassell Coliseum.

UT enters the game after posting its largest victory margins of the season, cruising to a 25-point win on Nov. 27 over Oklahoma State in its second contest at the South Point Thanksgiving Shootout in Las Vegas, 80-55, and rolling past Tennessee Tech by 28 on Wednesday night, 76-48, in Knoxville.

Lady Vols vs. Va Tech / Credit: UT Athletics

Tennessee has opened a campaign at 7-0 for the ninth time in the past 20 years and the fourth occasion in the past five. It is seeking to go 8-0 for the first time since 2018-19 and for the seventh occasion in the past 20 years. Kellie Harper has matched her career-best start, also guiding UT to a 7-0 opening in her first year leading the Lady Vols in 2019-20. 

Virginia Tech, meanwhile, enters on a two-game winning streak, handling Wisconsin in Madison on Wednesday night, 70-60. Prior to that road contest, the Hokies split games at the San Juan Shootout in Puerto Rico, falling to Kellie Harper‘s former team, Missouri State, by a 76-68 count on Nov. 26 before rebounding to edge UT Martin, 54-49, on Nov. 27.


BROADCAST INFORMATION

  • Pam Ward (play-by-play) and Stephanie White (analyst) will be on the call for the ACC Network.
  • The contest also can be heard on Lady Vol Network radio stations and by audio stream, with Mickey Dearstone behind the microphone. Now calling the action for his 23rd season, Dearstone is joined by studio host Bobby Rader. 
  • A link to the live audio stream can be found on each game’s Hoops Central page or the Lady Vol 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 Vol Network Affiliates.
  • Air time for games on the Lady Vol Radio Network generally occurs 30 minutes prior to tip-off.

NEXT UP: FIVE IN A ROW AT HOME

  • Tennessee is in a stretch where it plays six of seven games at home during the month of December.
  • Up next, the Lady Vols play host to Georgia State on Dec. 12 at 2 p.m. (SECN+). That starts a run of five games in a row at home from Dec. 12 to Dec. 30.
  • Defending NCAA champion Stanford comes to Rocky Top for a 5:15 p.m. ET match-up on Dec. 18 (ESPN2).

ABOUT THE LADY VOLS

  • The Lady Vols continue to persevere and display consistent improvement after losing starters Rae Burrell and Marta Suárez to injuries. 
  • Tennessee relied on defense and rebounding early on to get through those personnel losses, and the squad has shown signs of great offensive strides over its past four contests.
  • UT also has carved out extra minutes of game experience for its younger players in the past two outings, victories of 25 and 28 points.
  • Tennessee is led by 6-2 junior guard Jordan Horston, who paces the team in scoring (17.7 ppg.), rebounding (10.0 rpg.) and assists (4.5 apg.) in a breakout season.
  • Horston has three double-doubles on the season and has topped UT in scoring in five of her six games played.
  • After her 20-point, nine-rebound effort vs. Tennessee Tech, graduate forward Alexus Dye became UT’s second active player to average double figures in points. She is putting up 10.1 ppg. and 8.6 rpg. She is the active leader among SEC players with 33 career double-doubles.
  • Tamari Key, a 6-6 junior center, is on the verge of averaging a double-double, checking in with 8.6 ppg. and 9.9 rpg. to go along with 4.0 bpg. She had a triple-double of 10 points, 18 rebounds and 10 blocks in UT’s 74-70 OT victory over No. 12/21 Texas and her block average currently ranks No. 1 all-time among Lady Vols in a season.
  • Freshman guard/forward Sara Puckett, graduate guard Jordan Walker, graduate forward/center Keyen Green and sophomore guard/forward Tess Darby average 6.4, 6.3, 6.0 and 5.3 ppg., respectively, with Walker and Darby starting alongside Key, Horston and Dye after Burrell’s injury.
  • Freshman point guard Brooklynn Miles is UT’s eighth active player averaging double-figure minutes at 22.9, and she has been effective as a ball-handler and defender.

EVOLVING OVER OUR LAST THREE GAMES

  • Offensively, Tennessee has begun to find its groove the past three games while facing Kansas, Oklahoma State and Tennessee Tech.
  • The Lady Vols are averaging 74.7 points per game and shooting 44.1 percent from the field after entering the South Point Thanksgiving Shootout with outputs of 58.5 ppg. and 38.0 percent.
  • UT has three players scoring in double figures over the past three contests, including Jordan Horston (13.3), Alexus Dye (11.7) and Tamari Key (10.3) while a fourth starter, Tess Darby (9.7), is very close.
  • Key, Dye and Horston are pulling down 9.7, 8.7 and 8.3 rebounds per game during that stretch.
  • Key is shooting 68.4 percent from the field, while Darby is knocking down 56.3 percent from beyond the three-point arc.
  • Horston and Jordan Walker have 17/14 and 10/4 assist-to-turnover totals during that span.

LOOKING BACK AT THE LAST GAME

  • Rolling to its second consecutive win of 25 points or more, the No. 11/10 Tennessee women’s basketball team defeated Tennessee Tech, 76-48, Wednesday night at Thompson-Boling Arena.
  • Tennessee (7-0) has now won nine consecutive games at Thompson-Boling Arena. That is its longest streak of the Kellie Harper era and longest since UT rattled off 11 straight from Feb. 19, 2017, to Jan. 7, 2018. The Lady Vols also have matched their longest win streak of the Harper era with the blemish-free start.
  • Junior center Tamari Key finished with 11 points and 11 rebounds, generating her fourth double-double of the season and tying her for the SEC lead in 2021-22. Graduate forward Alexus Dye led all scorers with 20 points on 10-of-15 shooting (66.7 percent), notching her best scoring output at Tennessee. She also grabbed nine rebounds. Sophomore guard/forward Tess Darby was red hot from deep, scoring 12 points of 4-on-6 (66.7 percent) shooting from three-point land. 
  • The Lady Vols have now had at least one player register a double-double in each game this season. Kellie Harper‘s squad pulled down 53 boards, marking the fourth consecutive game with 50+. Winning by a margin of 28, the Lady Vols picked up their largest point differential all season and their second consecutive game winning by 25+.

NOTABLES FROM OUR LAST GAME

  • BLOCK PARTY: Junior Tamari Key had four blocks on the night, pulling within eight of Michelle Snow, who sits at No. 6 on the all-time career blocks list at UT with 194, and within nine of Mercedes Russell, who is fifth with 195. It also keeps Key’s career average at 4.0 bpg., which currently places her number one in school history.
  • DARBY FOR THREEEE: Sophomore Tess Darby knocked down a career-best four treys on the night, shooting four of six from behind the arc en route to a career-high 12 points. She is now nine of 16 over the last three games and has already surpassed her 2020-21 season total of seven. 
  • DOUBLE TIME: Tamari Key logged her fourth double-double of the season against the Golden Eagles and UT’s eighth double-double performance of the year. A Lady Vol has recorded a double-double in every game thus far this season.  
  • DYE DIALED IN: Alexus Dye narrowly missed a double-double against Tennessee Tech, dropping 20 points and grabbing nine boards. It’s the most points she has scored as a Lady Vol and the 10th time in her NCAA career she has scored 20 or more.  
  • FRESHMEN SETTLING IN: Freshmen Brooklynn Miles and Karoline Striplin each carded career highs against the Golden Eagles, with Miles setting new highs in assists (4) and Striplin logging bests in points (6) and rebounds (5).  

UT-VIRGINIA TECH SERIES HISTORY

  • Tennessee leads the all-time series over the Hokies, 7-2, including 3-1 in Knoxville, 3-1 in Blacksburg and 1-0 at neutral sites. 
  • Virginia Tech, however, has claimed the last two meetings in the series, getting a 57-43 win over No. 8 UT in Knoxville on Dec. 6, 2015, and squeezing out a 67-63 triumph over the Lady Vols at Cassell Coliseum on Nov. 27, 2016, in Kenny Brooks’ first season as head coach in Blacksburg.
  • Kellie Harper is 4-1 all-time vs. the Hokies as a head coach, including a loss in 2007 while at Western Carolina and four victories as head of the program at NC State in 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013.
  • Harper was part of Tennessee’s last win over Virginia Tech on March 20, 1999, as the #2/2 Lady Vols prevailed over the #13/15 Hokies, 68-52, in the NCAA Sweet 16 at Greensboro, N.C.
  • In that contest, 13,204 fans were on hand as UT legend Chamique Holdsclaw went over 3,000 career points.
  • Tennessee is 111-29 vs. schools currently in the ACC.

ABOUT THE HOKIES

  • Virginia Tech returned all five starters and eight total letterwinners from last season, when the squad finished 15-10 overall and 8-8 in Atlantic Coast Conference play while navigating a schedule delayed and occasionally interrupted by the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • The focal point of that group of veterans is 6-foot-6 junior center Elizabeth Kitley, who leads the Hokies at 19.6 ppg. and 9.4 rpg., sporting a 63.5 field-goal percentage.
  • Aisha Sheppard, a 5-9 graduate guard, is No. 2 in scoring at 12.5 ppg. and has nailed 24 of 57 three-point attempts thus far (42.1 pct.).
  • Sheppard and Kitley are both on the Wooden Preseason Top 50 Watch List and members of the Preseason All-ACC Team.
  • Kitley also is on the Wade and Lisa Leslie Award Preseason Watch Lists.
  • Kayana Traylor, a 5-9 senior guard, averages 11.1 ppg. off the bench, while 6-0 junior guard Cayla King is putting up 9.1 ppg. as a starter.

ABOUT THE HEAD COACH

  • Kenny Brooks is in his sixth season as the head coach at Virginia Tech, compiling a 108-60 mark.
  • Brooks is 445-182 overall in 20 years as a college head coach, starting his career with a 337-122 mark in 14 seasons as the leader of a very successful program at James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Va.                                                      
  • Tech has enjoyed five winning seasons under Brooks’ tutelage, including a return to the NCAA Tournament a year ago after a 15-year absence by the program.

THE LAST TIME VT PLAYED

  • The Virginia Tech women’s basketball team got a 29-point showing from the bench on the way to a 70-60 victory over the Wisconsin Badgers in the Big Ten/ACC Challenge on Wednesday night in Madison, Wis.
  • The Hokies (7-1) had four players score in double figures, led by Azana Baines, who notched a double-double with 19 points and 10 rebounds. Elizabeth Kitley tacked on 13 points, and Kayana Traylor helped out with 10 points off the bench.
  • Virginia Tech forced 14 Wisconsin turnovers while committing 13 themselves in Wednesday’s game. The Hokies turned those takeaways into 13 points on the offensive end of the floor. Baines’ one steal led the way for Virginia Tech.

-UT Athletics

Hoops Preview: #13 Tennessee at Colorado

Hoops Preview: #13 Tennessee at Colorado

BOULDER, Colo. – The 13th-ranked Tennessee men’s basketball team heads west for a rare non-conference road game Saturday, taking on Colorado at 2 p.m. ET at the CU Events Center.

Vols G Jahmai Mashack / Credit: UT Athletics

Fans can catch Tuesday’s game on FOX Sports 1, online at FOXsports.com or on any mobile device through the FOX Sports app. Jacob Tobey (play-by-play) and Sed Bonner (analysis) will have the call.
 
Fans can also listen live on their local Vol Network affiliate to hear Bob Kesling and Bert Bertelkamp calling the action. The broadcast is also available on channel 138 on Sirius, channel 191 on SiriusXM and channel 962 on the SiriusXM app.
 
Tennessee hits the road coming off of an 86-44 win over Presbyterian on Tuesday night. Freshman Kennedy Chandler tied the single-game program record for steals with seven during the win, in addition to scoring 15 points and racking up seven assists. Sophomore Justin Powell tied Chandler for the team lead in scoring with 15 points of his own, coming by way of 5-for-5 3-point shooting. Powell became only the ninth player in program history to make five or more threes without a miss in a single game.
 
Saturday marks the Vols’ first true non-conference road game since Jan. 25, 2020 at Kansas, and Tennessee is searching for its first win in a non-conference true road game since Dec. 15, 2018 at Memphis. Under Rick Barnes, Tennessee has only played 11 total non-conference true road games.
 
Following Saturday’s game, the Vols will head directly to New York City in preparation for the Jimmy V Classic against Texas Tech. Tip-off in Madison Square Garden is set for 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 7.
 
THE SERIES
• UT leads its all-time series with Colorado, 3-0, dating to 1980. Prior to last year’s UT season-opener, the programs had not met since 1981.
• Last year’s clash came together less than 72 hours before tipoff. See “Last Meeting” note below.
• Colorado head coach Tad Boyle was Tennessee’s administrative assistant/director of basketball operations under head coach Jerry Green during the 1997-98 season. That team finished 20-9 and earned an NCAA Tournament berth.
• Saturday’s game will be just the second game the Vols have ever played in The Centennial State. Tennessee logged a 64-63 win in Boulder on Dec. 8, 1981.
• To complete this current three-game series contract, Tennessee and Colorado will meet for a neutral-site showdown next season at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena.
 
SCOUTING REPORT
• The Vols’ 20.2 assists per game rank fourth nationally and lead the SEC. Tennessee also owns the best assist/turnover ratio in the SEC (1.73, ninth nationally).
• 47 percent of Tennessee’s points this season have been scored by first-year Vols (229 of 492).
• UT’s backcourt duo of Kennedy Chandler and Santiago Vescovi is averaging 29.8 points, 8.3 rebounds and 8.3 assists per game while shooting .394 from 3-point range.
• Senior Victor Bailey Jr. is coming off a season-high 14-point outing Tuesday. The Pac-12 veteran played his first two seasons at Oregon and has 842 career points.
• Vols junior Josiah-Jordan James has been sidelined with a left (shooting) hand injury. He has missed UT’s last three games.
• The Vols recorded 42 pass deflections during Tuesday’s win over Presbyterian, including 27 in the second half.
 
LAYUP LINES
• The Vols are embarking on a six-day, two-game, 3,909-mile road trip that takes them from Rocky Top to Boulder, Colorado, and then to New York City before returning home.
• At 5,400 feet above mean sea level, CU Events Center has the fifth-highest elevation among Division I arenas. The venue owns the No. 1 rating in KenPom’s homecourt advantage metric.
• Tennessee produced a pair of Colorado pro sports legends in Todd Helton and Peyton Manning.
 
A WIN WOULD…
• Push Tennessee’s all-time record against current members of the Pac-12 Conference to 21-12.
• Give the Vols their fifth major-conference true road win of the Barnes era (Georgia Tech, Wake Forest, Iowa State, Memphis).
 
ABOUT COLORADO
• Colorado head coach Tad Boyle is in his 12th season as the Buffaloes head coach. During the 1997-98 season, Boyle served as an assistant at Tennessee on the staff of former Vols’ coach Jerry Green. 
• Boyle has compiled a 239-145 record as Colorado’s head coach. The Buffaloes have logged 22 wins over ranked opponents during his tenure.
• Also on Colorado’s staff is former Mississippi State and Southeast Missouri State head coach Rick Ray. Tennessee compiled a 4-1 record against Ray during his time at Mississippi State.
• Of Colorado’s eight games this season, only two have come against major conference teams—a pair of Pac-12 conference games against Stanford and UCLA. The Buffaloes defeated Stanford, 80-76, on Sunday before falling to No. 5 UCLA on Wednesday, 73-61.
• The Buffaloes’ other loss came to Southern Illinois on Nov. 19 in the Paradise Jam, 67-63.
• Sophomore forward Jabari Walker, who was named to the 2020-21 Pac-12 All-Freshman Team as well as selected as an honorable mention on the 2021-22 preseason All-Pac-12 team, is leading the Buffaloes in scoring (14.9 ppg) and rebounding (9.5 rpg) through eight games.
• Just behind Walker in scoring is senior forward Evan Battey, a preseason All-Pac-12 team selection who is averaging 13.5 points per game.
• Colorado has kept the same starting five in each of its eight games this season—Walker, Battey, senior guard Elijah Parquet, sophomore guard Keeshawn Barthelemy and sophomore forward Tristan da Silva.
 
LAST MEETING WITH COLORADO
•  In its first game in 276 days, the 12th-ranked Tennessee basketball team took down Colorado in a tight defensive affair, 56-47, to open the pandemic-affected 2020-21 season on Dec. 8, 2020.
•  The game was played on a Tuesday evening, and it came together (out of necessity due to COVID cancellations) on the previous Saturday, less than 72 hours before tipoff.
•  Tennessee saw a balanced effort across the board, with nine of 10 Vols who saw action getting on the score sheet, while Jeriah Horne led Colorado with 15 points and 11 rebounds.
•  John Fulkerson and Santiago Vescovi led the Big Orange in scoring with 11 points apiece, while Yves Pons was a beast on the boards, pulling in a team-high 10 rebounds. Vescovi also added a game-high five assists.
•  Sophomore Josiah-Jordan James had the most balanced game for the Vols, tallying eight points—knocking down all four of his attempts from the charity stripe—six rebounds, three assists and three steals.
•  Redshirt junior Victor Bailey Jr., who made his debut with Tennessee after sitting out the 2019-20 season as a transfer from Oregon, earned the start and was explosive in the early going, draining his first three shot attempts to score eight first-half points
•  Tennessee’s freshman duo of Keon Johnson and Jaden Springer combined for 10 second-half points and was key to the Vols pulling away late.
•  The Vols came roaring out of quarantine, opening the night on a 12-2 run through the game’s first four minutes. James and Fulkerson led the way with five and four points, respectively, during that early stretch.
•  The Buffaloes responded to UT’s initial punch, coming within as few as four points with less than a minute to play in the half. However, Tennessee’s stifling defense and a timely 3-pointer from Vescovi took the Vols into the locker room with a 31-24 lead.
•  Tennessee’s starting lineup featured five left-handers in Bailey Jr., Fulkerson, James, Pons and Vescovi.
 
BAILEY HAS PAC-12 EXPERIENCE
• Senior Tennessee guard Victor Bailey Jr. spent his first two collegiate seasons in the Pac-12 while attending Oregon.
• Bailey played in 73 games in his two years at Oregon, including eight starts, and averaged 7.0 points in 17.9 minutes per game. As a sophomore in 2018-19, he scored in double figures 13 times and dropped a season-high 20 points on UCLA.
• Between his time at Oregon and Tennessee, Bailey is 2-1 in three games vs. Colorado. He averages 6.3 points while shooting 35 percent from the field against the Buffs.
 
KC THE PLAYMAKER
• In addition to being Tennessee’s second-leading scorer (14.3 ppg), freshman phenom Kennedy Chandler has a team-high 31 assists.
• Chandler’s assists have led directly to 75 points this season, and junior guard Santiago Vescovi has benefited the most, as he has 21 points off Chandler dimes.
• Chandler’s presence has allowed Vescovi to play off the ball this year, a shift from the last two seasons, during which Vescovi served as the Vols’ primary ball-handler. Vescovi is performing at an All-SEC level in his new role.
 
UNDER BARNES, VOLS ARE 76-25 AS AN AP-RANKED TEAM
• Tennessee has played 101 games as a ranked team (AP Poll) under head coach Rick Barnes, and the Vols are 76-25 (.752) in those contests.

-UT Athletics

Rick Barnes and Olivier Nkamhoua Preview Colorado Game, Talk Season

Rick Barnes and Olivier Nkamhoua Preview Colorado Game, Talk Season

Head Coach Rick Barnes

On how he balances trying out different rotations while also building team chemistry…

“I think with what we do in practice every day with the competition and the fact that we’re always mixing teams, matching things up in practice and flipping jerseys, the guys understand each other. I think we’re still, as we’re going through this, learning good rotations that we feel comfortable with when guys are out there. We try to keep some older guys out there sometimes earlier in the year, but now that we’ve got some experience with most of these young guys in general, we can sort of do what we do in practice every day where we’re not really concerned with the lineups that we have. We know that the guys we put out there know what we’re doing and what we need to get done. The chemistry takes place a lot in the locker room too. I think it goes back to leadership from our older guys and our younger guys as they continue to understand the game, understand how valuable minutes are and realize too that it’s a long year. A lot can change. As long as they’ll continue to work and put the team first, good things will work out for everybody.”

Vols HC Rick Barnes / Credit: UT Athletics

On having to scramble this time last year to schedule teams like Colorado and how unique it is to have a road game and neutral site game within four days of each other…
“I think it is unique. You’re right. This time last year, we had made up two of those games that we had scheduled on the fly last year, obviously UT Martin being one of them and Colorado being the other one. We were thankful that they were able to do it. Last year, Tad (Boyle) was able to come here which helped us because we were coming off just having a couple days of practice prior to that. It’s been unique. Going on this trip, I think it’s going to be a big week for us. We’re playing two outstanding teams. It’s really a true road game here early and then obviously, a neutral site game up in New York. I say it every time we go out, we have a chance to learn something about ourselves and see if we can continue to do what we need to do to get better. Hopefully, we’ll continue to find something out about us in these next two games.”
 
On if he wants to shoot 20-30 3-point shots per game…
“I think it varies. Early in the year when we were playing, John wasn’t with us. We were playing as much through the post because we were still working on developing those other guys to do that. Plus, we’re playing teams that were way back in there, giving us that shot. I think to create confidence and get guys to shoot the ball, we tell them all the time, ‘If we’re open, we’re going to shoot it,’ We take great pride in the work ethic that these guys have put in to become good shooters. We don’t have a set number. We want open shots. They’re hard to come by, but when we move the ball the way we want to move it, we think we’ll get those opportunities but we don’t have a set number. Early in the year, the reason the numbers were that high was simply because we weren’t playing inside as much as we would like to have that balance. We’re getting there now.”
 
On Jonas Aidoo working himself into a position to make contributions during games…
“The best way I can answer it for you would be with his practice habits, it will be what he does in practice. He has shown us here in the last week or so that he is still behind because of time missed, but we do know that he can help us, and we think, like I said earlier, it’s a long time between now and the end of the year. He does give us something that we don’t have out there most of the time out there, his great length. I mean every day in practice he affects shot when he is out there. As he continues to get himself into the kind of shape that we need him to be in speed wise, and play at the pace we are playing at, I think we’ll be the best determining factoring. Arguably the most important thing is understanding our defense is capable away from the basket. Realizing he is going to have to get out there quicker, he can’t give up separation when his man runs from under him because he is going to be in a lot of ball screens as much as we talked about our guards learning how to play ball screens, these young guys. Same is true for post guys, and you give up great separation coming out from underneath the basket. It’s hard for those guards to do their jobs, and when you’re playing from behind, it really puts you in rotation every time. I think that once he really gets that part of it down and continues to do what we need him to do on the offensive end, I can only tell you this, we have confidence in him, but he is going to have to get there quickly.”
 
On Uros Plavsic and what he likes and what he feels Plavsic needs to improve on…
“Well, we like what he does in practice, and what we want to see is him do exactly what he does in practice. As opposed, I mentioned it the other night, sometimes he gets in the game, and I think he feels he’s looking to score more than he does in practice. Obviously, all the shots around the rim, I mean they’re not easy those aren’t ‘gimmes’ by any means. When the traffic is going on there, and you have to play in tight space, I like to see not just him, but all of our guys finish more of those shots around the rim. If he would just do what he was normally does every day in practice, he has to cut down fouling, because he gets himself in fouling trouble by leaning a little bit more than he should at times or using his upper body more inside trying to play post defense that way. If he would just do what he does in practice, there’s no doubt he will continue to help us.”
 
On Colorado and what to expect…
“One, Tad (Boyle) does a terrific job with his teams. They are explosive offensively, a terrific inside player that can create all kinds of problems for you, and we are going to have to collectively as a team guard, which I think we are capable of. Last year, they played a lot of 2-3 zones, so we will certainly expect to see that some because it has definitely stifled us in some ways. We were up, had a pretty good lead, and they fall back, which they would do anyway. So, we are expecting to see some of that and with that said, it’s about us trying to see what it’s going to be like with our first real road game seeing how we respond to it.”
 
On Kennedy Chandler so far this season…
“What I like now is after he didn’t have such a great performance against Tennessee Tech, where we didn’t feel he had prepared the way he needs to prepare, the next couple of days were what we’re proud of because he did. He understood everything. Every game counts. Even when you’ve had the success that he’s had, not to start feeling too good about yourself and not thinking you have it all figured out. Not that he did that, he’s just young. He showed great character and great discipline after the Tennessee Tech game. He fought back and really worked in practice. The other night, defensively, was arguably the best effort he’s had all year. He’s really trying to do the things that we want to see him do. Kennedy has the chance to be as good as he wants to be, but there’s going to be a price you have to pay to get there. We have confidence in him that he wants to do it.
 
On Josiah Jordan-James’ status…
“I don’t know, I haven’t talked to Chad Newman yet today about it. He goes through some of the warmup that we do in practice, but he hasn’t had any contact in practice yet. As I said, we have so much trust in him and he will let us know when he thinks he can be effective out there doing whatever it is he can help us with. He’s doing his part in any and every way he can to keep himself into shape, taking care of his body, staying engaged with game plans, helping those guys and being the leader that we talked about he and those older guys being for our team this year.”
 
On playing in Madison Square Garden…
“Even through the years after leaving Providence—obviously every year having the Big East Championship there and we were fortunate to win it our last year at Providence—Clemson, Texas wherever we’ve been, we’ve always felt it’s been very important to play up in the northeast. The one thing I’ve learned after leaving George Mason and going up into New England, is just how big basketball is in the northeastern part of the country. People love it up there. I think it’ll be really a great thrill for our guys to walk into Madison Square Garden, as we know it’s the mecca of college basketball. I’m not sure what it’s going to be like traveling into New York this time of year. It’s always been a very vibrant area and city and somewhere that I’ve always enjoyed going back to. We’re going to play a team in Texas Tech who’s finding their way. I watched them play last night and they had a great game against Providence College. For our players, if they don’t know what it means to play in the Garden, I think that once they get up there and start thinking and talking about the history of it, they’ll realize it’s something that they should hold special.”
 
Junior Forward Olivier Nkamhoua Quotables
 
On what to tell younger teammates who are going into their first true road game…
“I think one good thing about that for us is that our games are always packed, and the energy is always up there. Regardless of where we travel, the only difference is the arena. The energy is going to be up there. You tell them a little bit that you don’t really know what to expect from the fans, because you might have a little fan section, but everybody else is on whoever’s side that’s more exciting to watch at times. There’s not much you can really tell them until they’ve experienced it, in my opinion.”
 
On facing off against Jonas Aidoo in practice and the impact he can have on the court
“It’s hard to deal with Jonas, actually. He’s very tall, long and blocks shots pretty well. He has good reflexes and good reaction time. You have to be able to deal with that and I think that can be a great asset for us, because not a lot of guys that are that tall and long can still react as well as he can. He’s still working on his body every day, getting stronger and getting better. That’s great for him.”
 
On where he’s improved the most since last year and areas of his game that he can still improve…
“I’m still finding my rhythm. I think I’ve gotten a lot better maturity-wise, just understanding the game and feeling more comfortable out there on the court. My shot feels more fluid. I know the offense better than I have in the past years. Defensively, I’ve started to pick up on some things. Honestly, I can still improve on everything that I do, mostly on my defensive game and then a good amount of my game on the block.”

-UT Athletics

Postgame/Stats/Story: #11/10 Lady Vols Fly Past Golden Eagles, 76-48

Postgame/Stats/Story: #11/10 Lady Vols Fly Past Golden Eagles, 76-48

Box Score (PDF) | Postgame Quotes 

Rolling to its second consecutive win of 25 points or more, the No. 11/10 Tennessee women’s basketball team defeated Tennessee Tech, 76-48, Wednesday night at Thompson-Boling Arena.

Tennessee (7-0) has now won nine consecutive games at Thompson-Boling Arena. That is its longest streak of the Kellie Harper era and longest since UT rattled off 11 straight from Feb. 19, 2017, to Jan. 7, 2018. The Lady Vols also have matched their longest win streak of the Harper era with the blemish-free start.

Alexus Dye – Lady Vols / Credit: UT Athletics

Junior center Tamari Key finished with 11 points and 11 rebounds, generating her fourth double-double of the season and tying her for the SEC lead in 2021-22. Graduate forward Alexus Dye led all scorers with 20 points on 10-of-15 shooting (66.7 percent), notching her best scoring output at Tennessee. She also grabbed nine rebounds. Sophomore guard/forward Tess Darby was red hot from deep, scoring 12 points of 4-on-6 (66.7 percent) shooting from three-point land. 

The Lady Vols have now had at least one player register a double-double in each game this season. Kellie Harper‘s squad pulled down 53 boards, marking the fourth consecutive game with 50+. Winning by a margin of 28, the Lady Vols picked up their largest point differential all season and their second consecutive game winning by 25+.

Tennessee and Tennessee Tech battled through the first quarter. Darby drained a three from the corner to provide her team an 18-17 lead going into the quarter break. The Lady Vols out-rebounded the Golden Eagles 14-8, but both sides were stout defensively. Tennessee shot 8-of-21 (38.1 percent), while TTU was 6-of-16 (37.5 percent)

The offense came alive in the second quarter for UT, as the Lady Vols started 6-of-6 with a 3-pointer, opening the first four minutes on a 12-2 run. Dye was automatic from mid-range, sinking 3-of-4 tries from the elbow. She led the offensive output in the period with eight points, as Tennessee outscored the Golden Eagles, 20-13, and entered the half with a 38-30 advantage.

UT came out of the locker room strong, taking the third period by an 18-5 count. After TTU’s Kesha Brady made a layup 24 seconds into the quarter, Tennessee did not allow another field goal on 13 Golden Eagle shots. Darby led all scorers in the quarter with six points, both coming by way of the three. She swished both of her tries. The five points allowed tied for the eighth fewest the Lady Vols have allowed in a quarter in program history.

In the fourth, freshman guard Kaiya Wynn and graduate forward/center Keyen Green helped the Lady Vols close out the contest, each tallying six points. Tennessee pulled down 13 rebounds in the period and had four assists while only surrendering one turnover. The defense forced five turnovers and swatted away three Golden Eagle shots, courtesy of junior center Emily Saunders, freshman forward Karoline Striplin and junior guard Jordan Horston.

NEXT GAME: The undefeated Lady Vols look to keep their winning ways going, as they take to the road for a battle with ACC foe RV/RV Virginia Tech. The sides will square off Sunday, Dec. 5, at 2 p.m. ET at Cassell Coliseum in Blacksburg, Va. The game will be broadcast on ACC Network.

BLOCK PARTY: Junior Tamari Key had four blocks on the night, pulling within eight of Michelle Snow, who sits at No. 6 on the all-time career blocks list at UT with 194, and within nine of Mercedes Russell, who is fifth with 195. It also keeps Key’s career average at 4.0 bpg., which currently places her number one in school history.

DARBY FOR THREEEEE: Sophomore Tess Darby knocked down a career-best four treys on the night, shooting four of six from behind the arc en route to a career-high 12 points. She is now nine of 16 over the last three games and has already surpassed her 2020-21 season total of seven. 

DOUBLE TIMETamari Key logged her fourth double-double of the season against the Golden Eagles and UT’s eighth double-double performance of the year. A Lady Vol has recorded a double-double in every game thus far this season.  

DYE DIALED INAlexus Dye narrowly missed a double-double against Tennessee Tech, dropping 20 points and grabbing nine boards. It’s the most points she has scored as a Lady Vol and the 10th time in her NCAA career she has scored 20 or more.  

FRESHMEN SETTLING IN: Freshmen Brooklynn Miles and Karoline Striplin each carded career highs against the Golden Eagles, with Miles setting new highs in rebounds (5) and assists (4) and Striplin logging highs in points (6) and rebounds (5).  

-UT Athletics

Butler Named To SEC Community Service Team

Butler Named To SEC Community Service Team

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The Southeastern Conference office announced Wednesday morning that Tennessee senior defensive lineman Matthew Butler has been named to the 2021 SEC Football Community Service Team.
 
The SEC names a Community Service Team for each of its 21 league-sponsored sports, looking to highlight an athlete from each school who gives back to his community through superior service efforts.

Vols DL Matthew Butler / Credit: UT Athletics

A nominee for the Wuerffel Trophy and William V. Campbell Trophy semifinalist, Butler is a team leader on and off the field for the Tennessee football program. He has volunteered his time with numerous organizations and fundraising events over the course of his college career, including the Emerald Youth Foundation, Habitat for Humanity, Interfaith Clinic, Race Against Racism, Read to Lead and the East Tennessee Children’s Hospital. Butler was also a member of the VOLeaders Academy 4.0 cohort that visited Rwanda for a cultural immersion and service trip in the summer of 2019.
 
The Raleigh, North Carolina, native elected to return for his “super” senior season in 2021 and has been a consistent presence for the Vols throughout the year. He leads the Tennessee defensive line with 43 total tackles and ranks second on the team with 5.0 sacks and six quarterback hurries.
 
Regarded as one of the SEC’s top scholar-athletes, Butler completed his undergraduate degree in December 2020 and is currently pursuing a master’s in political science. He is a recipient of the 2021 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship, four-time member of the SEC Academic Honor Roll and three-time CoSIDA Academic All-District First Team honoree.

-UT Athletics

Thomas Rhett’s Music Video for “Slow Down Summer” is Out Now

Thomas Rhett’s Music Video for “Slow Down Summer” is Out Now

Thomas Rhett‘s current single at country radio is “Slow Down Summer.”

Talking about the track, Thomas says, “Slow Down Summer really is about two kids in love. I think it was my envisionment of two high school kids – one’s going to one college, one’s going to a different college, and they kind of know that once the leaves start changing that this relationship probably ain’t gonna make it. I know that I’ve been there, I know that a lot of people have been there. But really, it’s just kind of hoping that summer would last for forever so that you never have to leave this moment of this firework stage that you’re in.”

While many expected new music from Thomas to come from an album called Country Again: Side B…since Country Again: Side A arrived earlier this year…but Thomas recently shared the news that 2022 will see him releasing 2 new albums.

Country Again: Side B will be released later in the year, while a new project called Where We Started will come out in the beginning of 2022, and that’s where fans will be able to find “Slow Down Summer.”

Thomas is excited because after spending the last almost 2 years writing a bunch of new music, he finally has a plan to share it all with the fans in 2022!

Speaking of sharing, Thomas just released the music video for “Slow Down Summer” – it’s available to watch right here…

Photo Courtesy of Thomas Rhett

Blake Shelton’s Body Language Deluxe – Available Now

Blake Shelton’s Body Language Deluxe – Available Now

Blake Shelton is giving his fans more new music this year with his album, Body Language Deluxe – which is available now!

Blake added 4 new songs to Body Language‘s original 12-tracks, – one of which is his current single “Come Back As A Country Boy.”

Talking about the newly added track, Blake says “’Come Back As A Country Boy’ is song basically about just having so much pride about being country and living the country lifestyle that even if you come back to life you wouldn’t do it unless you could be country again.”

The other 3 new songs on the Deluxe version of Body Language are “Fire Up The Night (feat. HARDY),” “Throw It On Back (feat. Brooks & Dunn),” and “We Can Reach The Stars.”

Body Language Deluxe from Blake Shelton is available now and features “Come Back As A Country Boy.”

Photo Credit: Todd Stefani

Dan + Shay Make It “Officially Christmas” Now

Dan + Shay Make It “Officially Christmas” Now

Before they dropped their new music video Dan + Shay teased their fans with the picture of them in tuxedos with the comment “we’re either about to serve you dinner or sing you a Christmas song. possibly both.”

So…the answer is, it’s a Christmas song…and a music video!

Get ready to get in the holiday mood with Dan + Shay because it’s “Officially Christmas”…

Photo Courtesy of Dan + Shay

Maren Morris Names Her Favorite Song on Ryan Hurd’s Album, Pelago

Maren Morris Names Her Favorite Song on Ryan Hurd’s Album, Pelago

Ryan Hurd recently released his debut album, Pelago

…which features the smash-hit song “Chasing After You” with his wife Maren Morris.

While that track from the album is the favorite of many, Maren shares her favorite from Pelago, “I have a couple of favorites, but the one that I’m excited for everyone to hear is called ‘Hell Is An Island.’ And it’s just a really unexpected turn from what you think it will be about. The title is just so mysterious and when you hear it, I don’t want to give anything away but it’s just very jammy and you just want to like hear it at a festival and rock out. But it’s, it’s also just a brilliant lyric, but I’m jealous. I’m jealous I wasn’t a writer on it. That’s the ultimate compliment.”

Ryan agrees with Maren’s pick, “I’m glad that’s your favorite, that’s one of mine too.”

Check out “Hell Is An Island” here…

Photo Courtesy of Ryan Hurd & Maren Morris

Luke Bryan is Back to Judging on American Idol in 2022

Luke Bryan is Back to Judging on American Idol in 2022

American Idol fans now know where the next season will start…Febraury 27th 2022

ABC TV has announced American Idol will return for a fifth season Feb. 27. Luke Bryan, Katy Perry and Lionel Richie return as judges, and Ryan Seacrest is back for the 5th Season on ABC, and 20th season overall.

Luke is now a seasoned pro on Idol when it comes to judging talent, but he admits that he’s learned and changed up some things since he first began on the show, “I think how I’ve changed as a judge is when I really, really like something, I know it, and when I don’t, it’s like let’s get back to the talent. Sometimes we get some wild and crazy artists in there, and if it’s practical, I like to try to be the champion. If it’s a little out there for me, I’m more vocal about that. But the beauty of me and Lionel and Katy is we really kinda can feed off of each other. We know what each other’s thinking, and it’s a true friendship and a true partnership with all of us. I mean, we’re really focused to find the best talent we can find, because it certainly validates our show and it gives us purpose and reason for being there…we’re working 12 hour days, multiple days in a row, and we want our work to really come to light by finding the right winner and even getting the Top 10 perfect.”

As fans wait for the new season to start – they can check out a pretty talented guy in the meantime…Luke Bryan’s current single at country radio is “Up”

Check out Luke’s performance from this year’s CMA Awards….

Photo Credit: Ryan Anderson

Weather

  • Forecast
  • Currents
  • Planner