A Day In The Country – August 16th – Midland, Eric Church, Jana Kramer, Brad Paisley, Dan + Shay

A Day In The Country – August 16th – Midland, Eric Church, Jana Kramer, Brad Paisley, Dan + Shay

This is A Day in the Country with Paul Koffy – August 16th

On this day in 2017, Midland earned a Gold single for their song “Drinkin’ Problem”

In 2016 Eric Church was at number-one with “Record Year”

In 2012, Jana Kramer’s “Why Ya Wanna” was certified Gold

In 2005, Brad Paisley released his album Time Well Wasted – which featured Brad’s hit “The World”

And finally…sending out a very happy birthday to Dan Smyers of Dan + Shay…

Photo Credit: Catherine Powell

Luke Bryan Hopes Others Can Find Hope In His Story

Luke Bryan Hopes Others Can Find Hope In His Story

Luke Bryan‘s 5-part docuseries My Dirt Road Diary is available now on IMDb TV.

Luke’s story is one of success…but also tragedy. As fans watch the episodes Luke hopes that is some small way they can see hope, and realize they are not alone in going through the struggles of life.

Luke says, “As this thing came together, I got more and more emotionally invested and now I’m really just invested because I’m excited for the potential to help people heal through tragedy and being inspired through tragedy and the ups and downs in life. So many people deal with that and are going through that constantly so I hope that they can watch this and really feel, understand that there is a light on the other side.”

Luke is continuing to add to his story by being on the road with his Proud To Be Right Here tour – which is off and running…

Luke is knocking on the door to the number-one spot in country music with his song “Waves”…

Photo Courtesy of UMG Nashville

Brothers Osborne Enlist Leslie Jordan for “I’m Not For Everyone” Music Video

Brothers Osborne Enlist Leslie Jordan for “I’m Not For Everyone” Music Video

Emmy-award winning actor and comedian Leslie Jordan is one of country music’s favorite new faces, and he’s just joined Brothers Osborne in the music video of their latest single, “I’m Not For Everyone.”

The video follows Leslie as he strolls through a rowdy bar fight (in an iconic yellow suit), where he ultimately brings the crowd together to jam to the Brothers’ latest tune.

This isn’t Leslie’s first experience in the world of country music – he collaborated with the likes of Dolly Parton, Chris & Morgane Stapleton, Tanya Tucker, Ashley McBryde, T.J. Osborne, and more on his much-lauded project, Company’s Comin’, released in April.

John and T.J. Osborne are hitting the road this fall with Travis Denning and Tenille Townes on the We’re Not For Everyone Tour. Get tickets and date information here.

Photo Credit: Eric Ryan Anderson

Dolly Parton Joins James Patterson for Music City Mystery

Dolly Parton Joins James Patterson for Music City Mystery

Dolly Parton is no stranger to the world of literature. From her first publication in 1979, a book of poetry titled “Just The Way I Am,” and her 1994 autobiography “Dolly: My Life and Other Unfinished Business,” to her beloved children’s book “Coat of Many Colors” and her latest, “Dolly Parton, Songteller: My Life In Lyrics,” she has shared her life and imagination with us in print for decades.

However, she’s delving into a different facet of the literary world with legendary author James Patterson for Run, Rose, Run, a mystery novel that follows a young singer-songwriter “on the rise and on the run” in Nashville, Tennessee.

The description reads:

“The source of her heart-wrenching songs is a brutal secret she has done everything to hide. But the past she has fled is reaching out to control her future—even if it means destroying everything she has worked for.”

Additionally, Dolly has written, performed, and produced 12 songs to accompany the story. She shared, “All new songs were written based on the characters and situations in the book. I hope you enjoy the book and the songs as much as we’ve enjoyed putting it all together!”

James Patterson, who has penned over 200 novels, shared: “It’s been an honor—and a hell of a lot of fun—to work with the inimitable Dolly Parton, whom I’ve long admired for her music, her storytelling, and her enormous generosity. The mind-blowing thing about this project is that reading the novel is enhanced by listening to the album and vice versa. It’s a really unique experience that I know readers (and listeners) will love.”

Run, Rose, Run – and its accompanying album – will be available March 7, 2022.

Headline Photo Courtesy of Getty Images

Additional Photo Credit: Little, Brown and Company

 

Shy Carter is Having Beer With His Friends Cole Swindell & David Lee Murphy

Shy Carter is Having Beer With His Friends Cole Swindell & David Lee Murphy

Are you ready to get the party going?

Shy Carter is!

That’s why he’s got Cole Swindell and David Lee Murphy on his high energy “Beer With My Friends”!

Shy says, “This song is all about getting together with your buddies, your best friends. My brother Cole Swindell, my awesome friend David Lee Murphy came through to help me tell y’all that’s it’s been way too long, no matter how long it’s been. It’s time to have a beer with my friends.“

The trio came together for the music video to the track…

The friends also played a little Truth or Drink…

Photo Courtesy of Jess Williams

VFL In The NFL Update: Week 1 of Preseason; 33 U. of Tennessee players & 12 with local ties

VFL In The NFL Update: Week 1 of Preseason; 33 U. of Tennessee players & 12 with local ties

Chiefs OL Trey Smith / Credit: Chiefs Media Site

By Vince Ferrara / @VinceSports

Here’s an updated list of University of Tennessee players in the National Football League, as well as players that were once at UT and other Knoxville area players. This is during Week 1 of the 2021 NFL Preseason.

Look for constant VFL in the NFL updates here on my blog “Vince’s View.” Bookmark my blog page and check back often.

This update does not include coaches with U. of Tennessee ties on NFL coaching staffs or in front office positions around the league. I will list those in a separate post here on my blog.

Rosters are currently at a max of 90. Teams must cut down to 85 players by August 17, 80 players by August 24 and the final roster limit of 53 players for the season by August 31.

Depth chart positions are from our friends at Ourlads NFL Scouting Services.


Notes and Numbers On UT Players
*33 U. of Tennessee players on expanded NFL rosters
*3 rookie VFLs are currently on rosters (T. Smith, J. Palmer & B. Thompson)
*New Orleans has most current UT players with 5

*DL is the largest position represented with 7
*19 of the 32 teams have a UT player on rosters
*There are 6 players that were once at U. of Tennessee but then transferred
*There are 6 players that didn’t attend UT, but have Knoxville/East TN ties
*7 players that went to high school in the Knoxville area are on current rosters (A. Rodgers, B. Colquitt, L. Smith, H. Smith, R. Cobb, T. Higgins, N. Gilliam)


Tennessee Volunteers On 90-Player NFL Rosters as of 8/14/21 (33)
x = Rookie
AFC East (5)
CB – Justin Coleman (27) Miami Dolphins – starting CB
P – Michael Palardy (5) Miami Dolphins – starting P
FB – Jakob Johnson (47) New England Patriots – starting FB
WR – Josh Malone (83) New York Jets – 3rd team WR
DE – Kyle Phillips (93) New York Jets (PUP list)
NONE – Buffalo Bills

AFC North (7)
DB – Nigel Warrior (39) Baltimore Ravens – 3rd team FS
OT – Ja’Wuan James (60) Baltimore Ravens – backup RT
DT – Kahlil McKenzie (69) Cincinnati Bengals – 4th team NT
RB – John Kelly (49) Cleveland Browns – 5th team RB
DT – Malik Jackson (97) Cleveland Browns – starting LDT
DB – Cameron Sutton (20) Pittsburgh Steelers – starting RCB
QB – Joshua Dobbs (5) Pittsburgh Steelers – 4th team QB

AFC South (2)
TE – Luke Stocker (85) Tennessee Titans – 3rd team TE
LS – Morgan Cox (46) Tennessee Titans – starting LS
NONE – Houston Texans, Indianapolis Colts, Jacksonville Jaguars

AFC West (5)
ILB – Alexander Johnson (45) Denver Broncos – starting ILB
OL – Trey Smith (65) Kansas City Chiefs – x – starting RG
WR – Joshua Palmer (5) Los Angeles Chargers – x – 4th team WR
DE – Kendal Vickers (93) Las Vegas Raiders – 4th team DT
TE – Alex Ellis (81) Las Vegas Raiders – 6th team TE

NFC East (2)
DE – Derek Barnett (96) Philadelphia Eagles – starting RDE
TE – Jason Croom (81) Philadelphia Eagles – 6th team TE
NONE – Dallas Cowboys, New York Giants, Washington Redskins

NFC North (2)
OLB – Jalen Reeves-Maybin (44) Detroit Lions – 3rd team ILB
P – Britton Colquitt (2) Minnesota Vikings – starting P
NONE – Chicago Bears, Green Bay Packers

NFC South (6)
WR – Cordarrelle Patterson (84) Atlanta Falcons – backup RB & starting KR
RB – Alvin Kamara (41) New Orleans Saints – starting RB
DT – Shy Tuttle (99) New Orleans Saints – starting NT
WR – Marquez Callaway (12) New Orleans Saints – backup WR
CB – Bryce Thompson (31) New Orleans Saints – x – 4th team RCB
TE – Ethan Wolf (86) New Orleans Saints – 4th team TE
NONE – Carolina Panthers, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

NFC West (4)
CB – Emmanuel Moseley (41) San Francisco 49ers – backup LCB
WR – Jauan Jennings (15) San Francisco 49ers – 4th team WR
DE – Darrell Taylor (52) Seattle Seahawks – starting LEO “DE-OLB”
TE – Dom Wood-Anderson (49) Seattle Seahawks – 6th team TE
NONE – Arizona Cardinals, Los Angeles Rams


Recent VFLs in the NFL that are not currently on rosters
LB – Daniel Bituli
DB – Rashaan Gaulden
QB – Tyler Bray
DT – Dan McCullers
P – Dustin Colquitt
OG – Zach Fulton (retired)
TE – Jason Witten (retired)


UT Players In The NFL By Position (33)
QB – 1
RB – 2
WR – 5
TE – 5
FB – 1
OL – 2
DL – 7
LB – 2
DB – 5
P – 2
PK – 0
LS – 1


One-Time Vols That Transferred To Other Schools On NFL Rosters (6)
x = Rookie
TE – Lee Smith (85) Atlanta Falcons (Powell HS/U. of Tennessee/Marshall) – backup TE
TE – Eli Wolf (87) Baltimore Ravens (U. of Tennessee/Georgia) – 3rd team TE
P – Tommy Townsend (5) Kansas City Chiefs (U. of Tennessee/Florida) – starting P
QB – Nathan Peterman (3) Las Vegas Raiders (U. of Tennessee/Pitt) – 3rd team QB
WR – Preston Williams (18) Miami Dolphins (U. of Tennessee/Colorado St) – 5th team WR
WR – Jalen Hurd (14) San Francisco 49ers (U. of Tennessee/Baylor) – 3rd team WR


Active Knoxville Area Players That Didn’t Play At UT on NFL Rosters (6)
x = Rookie
WR – Tee Higgins (85) Cincinnati Bengals (Oak Ridge HS/Clemson) – starting SWR
WR – Amari Rodgers (8) Green Bay Packers (Catholic HS/Clemson) – x – 4th team WR
WR – Randall Cobb (18) Green Bay Packers (Alcoa HS/Kentucky) – backup WR
RB – Nathan Cottrell (31) Jacksonville Jaguars (West HS/Georgia Tech) – 3rd team RB
OL – Nate Gilliam (65) Los Angeles Chargers (Farragut HS/Wake Forest) – 3rd team C
S – Harrison Smith (22) Minnesota Vikings (Catholic HS/Notre Dame) – starting SS


Find more of my broadcasting work at VinceSports.net

Garner Looking for Continued Improvement and Winning Mentality from Defensive Front

Garner Looking for Continued Improvement and Winning Mentality from Defensive Front

Vols DL LaTrell Bumphus / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee defensive line coach Rodney Garner met with the media after a hot and humid morning practice as Haslam Field on Monday to talk about the progression of the Vols’ deep defensive line group.

UT’s defensive front proved to be one of the strongest units in Thursday’s scrimmage, drawing praise from head coach Josh Heupel afterwards.

“I thought the defensive side of the football was extremely physical and changed and disrupted the offensive front, played on the other side of the line of scrimmage,” Heupel said after Thursday’s scrimmage at Neyland Stadium.

Despite the impressive showing on Thursday, Garner was quick to point out that his group still has plenty to improve on before the season opener in less than three weeks.

“There’s room for improvement all across the board, including coaching. We’ve all got to hold ourselves to a higher standard and understand what that standard is, just understand that there are no shortcuts to success,” Garner said. “It’s going to happen through adversity and how you handle adversity when you put yourself in adverse situations.

“Are you going to find a way to fight and win, or are you going to find a way to lose? That’s what we’ve got to change, that mentality. Where we’re going to find a way to win when the game is on the line.”

The Big Orange will get back to work on Sunday and Monday at Haslam Field before holding another closed scrimmage on Tuesday.

Tennessee opens the 100th year of Neyland Stadium, Shield-Watkins Field on Sept. 2 against Bowling Green at 8 p.m. ET on SEC Network. Tickets are on sale now at AllVols.com.

The full transcript from Garner’s media availability as well as select quotes from defensive linemen LaTrell Bumphus and Da’Jon Terry can be seen below.

 

Defensive Line Coach Rodney Garner

On his assessment of the defensive line compared to spring camp…

“I think for the most part, guys are trying to buy in. Obviously, we’re a work-in-progress. There’s room for improvement all across the board, including coaching. We’ve all got to hold ourselves to a higher standard and understand what that standard is, just understand that there are no shortcuts to success. It’s going to happen through adversity and how you handle adversity when you put yourself in adverse situations. Are you going to find a way to fight and win, or are you going to find a way to lose? That’s what we’ve got to change, that mentality. Where we’re going to find a way to win when the game’s on the line. It’s a process. They’ve got to embrace it, and we’ve got to do a better job of holding everybody to those standards.”

On the development of accountability in the defensive line room…

“Obviously, I’ve seen growth out of the room, but we still have a long way to go. That’s the thing that everybody needs to understand. Yes, we’ve moved the needle a little bit in the right direction, but it’s not far enough. It really will never be far enough. We’ve just got to understand, we’ve got to set goals. If we achieve a goal, then we’ve got to reassess, reset our goals and work to keep moving that needle. I equated it to them, it’s like climbing Mount Everest. You’re not going to do it in a day. It’s a process. They’ve got to embrace every step of that process and understand what they are working for, what’s the end goal. My whole mission is to try to put them in the toughest situations during the week so they’ll be able to handle it on gameday, on Saturday. I want to know who’s going to quit on me Sunday through Friday. I don’t want to find out on a Saturday that I can’t count on this guy, alright? So, we’re trying to put them in those difficult situations to see how they can handle them.”

On transfer linemen Caleb Tremblay and Da’Jon Terry becoming acclimated at Tennessee…

“They’re great guys. They definitely involve some positive energy, but I think they would be the first to tell you that this league’s a little bit different. The intensity, the accountability, what we’re expecting out of practice, how we work every day. They still have got to get acclimated to the standards, intensity, how we’re going to perform and how we’re going to attack the day. I’m never going to be satisfied with them being average, and I’m not going to apologize to them for pushing them to try to strain and be great. That’s something I will never apologize to them for, because when they all came to Tennessee, they didn’t say they wanted to come to Tennessee to be average. Not one of them said, ‘I want to come in and be an average player.’ They all had goals, dreams, aspirations, and it’s my job to try to help them reach that.”

On the defensive line’s performance in Thursday’s preseason scrimmage…

“There was good and bad. I thought we started out really, really good, and then we died. We didn’t finish, we didn’t strain. We have a little motto in our room that we’re always grinding for greatness. The only way you’re going to achieve greatness is you have to grind for it. You’ve got to strain. Like I’ve told them, we all have to become comfortable (with) being uncomfortable. That’s what we’re trying to do. We started out really good, did some real, real good stuff. Then at the end, we sort of tailed off. That’s where we’ve got to learn how to strain and fight through.”

On if any players set an example in Thursday’s preseason scrimmage…

“When we win or lose, it’s together. So when one of them’s not doing it, shoot, we all aren’t doing it. The chain is only as strong as the weakest link, right? Like I told them out there today, they can kill us off one-by-one. If we’re splintered off like that, we’ve got zero chance. We’ve got to stay together as a unit, and we’ve got to finish together. We’ve got to learn to finish the Tennessee way. It’s not the Matthew Butler way, it’s not the Byron Young way, the Tyler Baron way. We want to do everything the Tennessee way, and that’s the right way.”

On what he’s seen from Tyler Baron and Byron Young…

“Obviously, they’ve gotten better. We’ve got to get better with the technical aspects. We’ve been spending a lot more time working on pass-rush technique. Obviously, pass rush starts with your get off. It’s all about feet and hands, then learning how to flip your hips. Just doing those technical things that it takes to be successful to get on the edge, and then learn how to dip that inside shoulder, point that knee and toe, accelerate through and finish on the quarterback. It all starts with your get off, so if you’ve got bad get off, that’s the difference between a pressure and a sack. We’ve been spending a lot more time here the last four-day block of practice focusing on pass rush. Now we’re going into our third four-day block and we’re trying to split it up. First four was mostly run emphasis, now we’re trying to balance it up, run and pass, because obviously we’ve got to get good in both areas. Leos, ends, they’re all interchangeable. Obviously, when we’re running our pass rush games, those guys are interchangeable, and then when we also get into our rabbits, we’re going to take some outside guys and put them inside, we’ll do vice versa, we’re going to do everything. So, everybody has to know what to do in every position.”

On how Omari Thomas has looked and where he still needs to progress…

“He’s got to get better at playing in good football position, being a natural knee bender. Obviously, he struggles as a taller guy (and) he’s got to learn how to play behind his pads. That’s something that I’m stressing to him every day. Obviously, having Richard Seymour, Marcus Stroud and Derrick Brown, I’ve had taller guys. They have to be very, very conscientious of their pad level. Even when he thinks he’s low, he’s not low, he needs to get lower and it has to become more natural. He can’t be a waist bender, he has to be a knee bender, so now he can move, change direction and do the things in a football functional position that (defensive) linemen can do, and then change all the different directions and do all the things that we ask them to do.”

Senior DL LaTrell Bumphus

On this year’s defensive line…

“As a defensive line we are a really tight group. I noticed that we’ve hung out a lot more, we talk about anything, you know, whether that’s personal or whatever. I think just having those conversations have helped us grow a whole lot and that has carried onto the field and we’ve come a long way.”

On going against the o-line…

“Cade (Mays), I think he’s trimmed down a little bit and I think he is moving a lot faster, but I would say all of them have (played) really well with their hand placement and movement and such. I think we’ve got a very good o-line no matter who is playing.”

On defensive coordinator Tim Banks…

“Coach Banks is great. He is always there motivating and stuff. He’s there, you know, like if we’re doing wrong, he can tell us in a different way that not everyone (can do). I feel like he reaches down to us where we can all understand what he’s going for.”

Redshirt-Sophomore DL Da’Jon Terry

On what his experience has been like so far at Tennessee…

“On the field we’ve got coach G (Rodney Garner), coach Heupel, coach Banks and they push us every day. Off the field has been amazing too, this is way different from Kansas, like there is a lot more stuff. I wanted to get closer to home, I wanted my family to be able to come to more of my games because it was a 12-hour drive to Kansas (from Mississippi), so this is a lot closer.”

On getting to play under coach Garner…

“It’s amazing, it’s a dream come true. He’s tough, but that’s what you need to be the best player you can be.”

On getting used to Garner’s coaching style…

“I know he is a tough coach but I mean, it’s coaching, that’s what you expect. He’s the best d-line coach in NCAA football. Hard coaching is going to bring the best out of you, you’ve just got to stick to it. Don’t give up, just keep grinding every day.”

-UT Athletics

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