TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – No. 6 Tennessee got production up and down the lineup to come away with a 9-8 victory and another series win at Alabama on Sunday afternoon.
The Vols scored in six different innings and finished the day with 15 hits, their most in an SEC game this season.
Five different players recorded multiple hits for Tennessee. Jake Rucker, Jordan Beck and Luc Lipcius had three hits apiece while Liam Spence and Logan Steenstra had two base knocks. Spence also scored two runs, had an RBI and walked three times despite battling a sore hamstring.
Freshman right hander Blade Tidwell earned the win to improve to 4-1 on the year despite not having his best stuff. The Loretto, Tennessee, native had five strikeouts but also allowed five runs (four earned) in 5.1 innings of work.
Sophomore lefty Kirby Connell was big out of the bullpen once again, striking out five batters in three innings. Sean Hunley picked up Connell in the ninth, recording two high-pressure outs to earn his third save of the year.
Neither team wasted any time getting the bats going on Sunday with three runs apiece in the first inning. Beck and Lipcius both had RBI singles in the top of the first to put the Vols ahead 3-0, but Alabama answered right back with three runs on four hits in the bottom of the inning.
The Big Orange jumped back in front with two runs in the third and another in the fourth, getting a pair of RBI walks from Lipcius and Drew Gilbert to score two of those runs and make it a 6-4 game.
The Crimson Tide punched back once again in the bottom of the fourth with a solo home run by Owen Diodati to cut the Tennessee lead to one run.
Tennessee scored in the sixth, seventh and eighth to take a 9-5 lead, but the Tide did not go down without a fight, as they pulled within two runs on a two-run homer from Sam Praytor in the eighth and scratched across a run in the ninth before Hunley got Drew Williamson to ground out to strand the tying run at third base.
The Vols return to Knoxville for four home games this week, hosting Eastern Kentucky on Tuesday before a big series against Florida next weekend.
NOTABLE
BEST STARTS SINCE: With Sunday’s win the Big Orange improved to 7-2 in SEC play this season, their best start to league play since 2001 when they were 8-1. UT has also won its first three conference series for the first time since that 2001 season. The Vols have won both of their SEC road series, as well, marking the first time they have done that since 2005 (Auburn and Kentucky).
MULTI-HIT VOLS: Five players had multi-hit days on Sunday (Liam Spence, Jake Rucker, Jordan Beck, Luc Lipcius, Logan Steenstra). Rucker, Beck and Lipcius had three hits each while Lipcius also drove in three runs for the Vols. Tennessee’s 15 hits on Sunday are its most in an SEC game this season.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – No. 6 Tennessee pulled out a big win in extras on Saturday night, coming away with an 8-4 victory at Sewell-Thomas Stadium to even its series with Alabama.
The Volunteers scored four runs in the top of the 11th and Camden Sewell retired the side in order in the bottom of the inning to give UT its sixth extra-innings victory this season. Evan Russell drove in the game-winning run with an RBI walk.
Sewell was incredible in relief, tossing 3.2 scoreless innings to earn his first win of the year. The junior right hander gave up just one hit and struck out three batters on the night.
Senior lefty Will Heflin gave Tennessee a great start on the mound, allowing just one run and striking out five in 5.2 innings of work, keeping the Big Orange in striking distance.
The Vols had chances to take the lead early in the game after loading the bases with two outs in the third and fourth innings but were unable to cash in as Alabama starter Dylan Smith got a pair of strikeouts to escape both jams and keep the game scoreless.
The Tide opened the scoring with a solo home run by William Hamiter to lead off the bottom of the fourth. It was the first homer of the year for the sophomore designated hitter.
UT (23-5 // 6-2 SEC) was able to break through and take the lead with a four-run seventh inning. Logan Steenstra sparked the rally with a leadoff triple to straightaway center field before scoring on a failed pickoff attempt by Crimson Tide pitcher Jacob McNairy to tie the game at one. Jordan Beck gave the Vols a 2-1 lead with a sacrifice fly and Connor Pavolony plated two more runs with a two-out RBI single to make it 4-1.
Pavolony played a big part in the Vols’ success, going 2-for-3 with a run scored, two RBI and three walks on the night. Jake Rucker also had a pair of hits to extend his hit streak to 13 games while Drew Gilbert had a hit, walked twice and scored two runs.
Alabama (16-10 // 2-6 SEC) took advantage of a pair of errors in the seventh to get a run back and cut UT’s lead to two before plating two more runs in the eighth to tie the game at four. Andrew Pinckney drove in the tying run with an infield single with two outs.
Sewell went on to pitch three straight shutout innings to stifle the Tide’s momentum while Tennessee’s offense displayed some clutch situational baseball in the 11th to put the game away. Aside from Russell’s RBI walk, Steenstra drove in a run with a sacrifice fly and Pete Derkay laid down a perfect squeeze bunt with two outs to drive in a run, as well.
The Vols will look to take the series with a win in Sunday’s rubber game, which is slated to start at noon ET and will be aired on the SEC Network.
NOTABLE
EXTRA INNINGS MAGIC CONTINUES: Tennessee improved its record to 6-0 when going to extra innings this season with Saturday’s win. The Vols have won their past seven games that have gone to extras dating back to 2019.
HEFLIN & SEWELL SOLID ON THE MOUND: A big reason UT was able to pull out the win on Saturday had to do with the pitching of Will Heflin and Camden Sewell. The duo combined to pitch 9.1 innings, allowing just one run why accounting for all eight of the team’s strikeouts. Sewell earned his first win of the year after throwing 3.2 scoreless innings to finish the game.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – A pair of errors leading to a six-run third inning was the difference as the No. 21 Tennessee softball team fell to No. 8 Kentucky, 13-2, on Saturday at Sherri Parker Lee Stadium.
The Lady Vols (27-6, 3-5 SEC) struggled at the dish with runners in scoring position, going just 1-for-7 in run scoring opportunities, while Kentucky (27-5, 4-4 SEC) recorded four multi-RBI homers to power past UT.
One bright spot for the Orange & White came in the fourth, when freshman Rylie West belted her first career home run off the bottom of the scoreboard in left center.
Senior infielder Chelsea Seggern was the lone Lady Vol to post multiple hits, going 2-for-2 at the dish with a pair of singles and an RBI in the third frame.
Kentucky led from wire-to-wire, tacking on multiple runs in the first, third, fourth and fifth, posting a six-spot in the third to take a commanding eight-run lead that would be the difference in the evenings’ proceedings.
The Wildcats added a trio of insurance runs in the fourth to take an 11-2 lead into the would-be final inning of the night.
UK added two more runs in the fifth, before Grace Baalman closed out her complete game effort to force a series deciding game three.
UP NEXT
Tennessee and Kentucky return to Sherri Parker Lee Stadium for an Easter Sunday rubber game. First pitch from Knoxville is set for 2 p.m. ET on ESPNU.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee’s Rennia Davis has added two more All-America honorable mention accolades to her list of postseason awards, earning distinction from the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association and the United States Basketball Writers Association.
The WBCA honor was the third of Davis’ career, while the USBWA nod was her second. Those awards follow previously-announced Associated Press Honorable Mention kudos for the second year in a row.
Davis, a 6-foot-2 forward from Jacksonville, Fla., averaged 17.3 points and 8.8 rebounds per game to pace Tennessee in both categories this season. She shot 48.0 percent from the field and 85.3 percent at the free-throw line. Even better in SEC play, Davis put up 20.0 ppg. and 9.0 rpg. while shooting 52.3 percent from the floor and 85.2 at the charity stripe.
Her worksheet also included 10 double-doubles and 10 games of 20 or more points, leading UT to a 17-8 final record, a third-place mark of 9-4 in SEC play, a No. 13 AP national ranking and advancement to the NCAA Tournament Second Round for the first time since 2018.
Davis earned All-SEC accolades for the third time in her career, including first-team honors the past two seasons. She also was an AP All-America Honorable Mention choice for the second time, a finalist for the Cheryl Miller Award and a repeat candidate as well for the Wade Trophy, Naismith Trophy and John R. Wooden Award.
From a career standpoint, the projected first-round pick in the upcoming WNBA Draft concluded her UT tenure fourth all-time among Lady Vols in double-doubles with 39, trailing only Chamique Holdsclaw (57), Mercedes Russell (46) and Candace Parker (45). She was fifth in career 20-point scoring games with 23.
In the Lady Vol record book, Davis wound up ninth in scoring (1,815) and points per game (15.4), 10th in rebounds (947) and sixth in rebounds per game at 8.03 rpg. Additionally, she finished sixth in free-throw percentage (.816), eighth in field goals attempted (1,477) and ninth in field goals made (696).
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – No. 6 Tennessee dropped its first series opener of the year, falling 7-4 to Alabama on Friday night at Sewell-Thomas Stadium.
The Volunteers (22-5 // 5-2 SEC) jumped out to an early 4-0 lead, but back-to-back big innings for the Crimson Tide in the fourth and the fifth turned the game.
UT starting pitcher Chad Dallas was solid through the first three innings of the game before running into trouble in the fourth, allowing three runs on three hits, a walk and a hit batter before exiting the game.
Like Dallas, the normally stout Sean Hunley did not have his best night either, allowing three runs on a pair of hits in 1.1 innings of work, picking up the loss to drop his record to 4-1 on the year.
Seven different Tennessee players recorded a hit, but Liam Spence was the only Vol to have multiple base knocks in the game, finishing 2-for-5 with a pair of singles and a run scored.
Luc Lipcius provided the Big Orange with an early 1-0 lead, blasting a solo home run to right field in the top of the second inning to open the scoring. It was the fourth homer of the year for the Virginia native.
Tennessee added to its lead with three more runs in the third, using three straight two-out RBI hits from Jake Rucker, Drew Gilbert and Jordan Beck to build a 4-0 lead.
Alabama (16-9 // 2-5 SEC) cut UT’s lead to one with a three-run fourth inning. The Crimson Tide loaded the bases with no outs before plating three runs on a hit batter, fielder’s choice and RBI single to make it a 4-3 game.
The Tide continued their hot hitting in the fifth, taking their first lead on a two-run homer by Sam Praytor. They went on to score one more run in the inning on a sacrifice fly from Drew Williamson to take a 6-4 lead into the sixth. Williamson drove in his third run of the night with a solo home run in the eighth to cap the scoring.
The Vols brought the tying run to the plate in the top of the ninth, but Alabama closer Chase Lee was able to escape the jam and end the game with a strikeout to earn his second save of the season.
The Vols will look to even the series tomorrow night at 7 p.m. ET. Game 2 will be televised on the SEC Network.
NOTABLE
ON-BASE STREAKS EXTENDED: Despite the loss, four Vols extended their lengthy on-base streaks on Friday night. Liam Spence (29), Max Ferguson (20), Pete Derkay (14) and Jake Rucker (12) all reached base to extend their streaks.
FIRST SERIES-OPENING LOSS: Friday’s loss to Alabama marked the first loss for Tennessee in a series opener this season. The Vols had won all six of their series openers entering the weekend.
Here are some images from UT’s fourth spring football practice, courtesy of Tennessee Athletic Communications.
Tennessee Football Spring Practice 4
KNOXVILLE, TN - April 01, 2021 - Quarterback Harrison Bailey #15 and Running back Marcus Pierce #28 of the Tennessee Volunteers during practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Kate Luffman/Tennessee Athletics
KNOXVILLE, TN - April 01, 2021 - Quarterback Brian Maurer #18 of the Tennessee Volunteers during practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Kate Luffman/Tennessee Athletics
KNOXVILLE, TN - April 01, 2021 - Running back Dee Beckwith #21 of the Tennessee Volunteers during practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Kate Luffman/Tennessee Athletics
KNOXVILLE, TN - April 01, 2021 - Head Coach Josh Heupel of the Tennessee Volunteers during practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Kate Luffman/Tennessee Athletics
KNOXVILLE, TN - April 01, 2021 - Running back Tee Hodge #44 of the Tennessee Volunteers during practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Kate Luffman/Tennessee Athletics
KNOXVILLE, TN - April 01, 2021 - Offensive lineman Jerome Carvin #75 of the Tennessee Volunteers during practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Kate Luffman/Tennessee Athletics
KNOXVILLE, TN - April 01, 2021 - Defensive back Bradley Jones #8 of the Tennessee Volunteers during practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Kate Luffman/Tennessee Athletics
KNOXVILLE, TN - April 01, 2021 - Wide receiver Cedric Tillman #4 and Defensive back Tyus Fields #17 of the Tennessee Volunteers during practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Kate Luffman/Tennessee Athletics
KNOXVILLE, TN - April 01, 2021 - Linebacker Morven Joseph #19 of the Tennessee Volunteers during practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Kate Luffman/Tennessee Athletics
KNOXVILLE, TN - April 01, 2021 - Offensive lineman Kingston Harris #54 and Offensive lineman Dayne Davis #66 of the Tennessee Volunteers during practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Kate Luffman/Tennessee Athletics
KNOXVILLE, TN - April 01, 2021 - Wide receiver Ramel Keyton #80 of the Tennessee Volunteers during practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Kate Luffman/Tennessee Athletics
KNOXVILLE, TN - April 01, 2021 - Wide receiver Velus Jones Jr. #1 of the Tennessee Volunteers during practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Kate Luffman/Tennessee Athletics
KNOXVILLE, TN - April 01, 2021 - Running back Dee Beckwith #21 of the Tennessee Volunteers during practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Kate Luffman/Tennessee Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Another dominant performance in the circle from junior Ashley Rogers and an explosive fifth inning, propelled the No. 21 Tennessee softball team past eighth-ranked Kentucky, 6-1, on Friday at Sherri Parker Lee Stadium.
The win is Tennessee’s (27-5, 3-4 SEC) second victory over a top-10 opponent this season, and Kentucky’s (25-5, 3-4 SEC) fourth road loss in its last five true road games.
Rogers’ performance credited her with a win for the fourth consecutive game for the Lady Vols, as she fanned 10 batters and gave up just one run on three hits, while also tossing her 12th complete game of the year. Rogers’ 10 K’s marked her seventh double-digit strikeout performance of the season.
Senior Amanda Ayala was electric at the dish, going 3-for-4 with three runs scored, two RBIs and a massive home run to help UT regain the lead late in Friday’s win.
Classmate Ashley Morgan was also big, finishing 2-for-4 with a pair of RBIs. Both of Morgan’s hits and RBIs came in the Orange & White’s final two innings at the plate to give the Lady Vols some much-needed insurance.
Graduate student Cailin Hannon was the third Lady Vol to finish with multiple hits, going 2-for-4 with a double and an RBI to give Tennessee a quick lead in the opening.
The Lady Vols opened the scoring in the first inning on back-to-back hits from Ayala and Hannon. Ayala punched a single through the left side, before Hannon belted a double to left field to give UT the early, 1-0 lead.
Two innings later, Kentucky evened things up on a solo shot off the scoreboard from Kayla Kowalik.
Following two business-as-usual innings, and the score still tied, Ayala delivered with Kaitlin Parsons on first. The Bloomfield, New Jersey native went yard over the left field wall, putting UT back in the lead, 3-1.
The Orange & White closed the fifth inning with two more runs on singles from Ashley Morgan and Kiki Milloy to take a massive, 5-1, lead heading into the evening’s latter stages.
Morgan collected her second RBI of the day on a single through the left side, scoring Ayala for the third time and increasing the UT lead to, 6-1 heading into the final frame.
UP NEXT
Tennessee will take on Kentucky in game two of its Easter Weekend series with the Wildcats on Saturday night on national television. First pitch from Sherri Parker Lee Stadium is slated for 6 p.m. ET on ESPN2.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Back-to-back outdoor padded practice days filled with energy, physicality and attentiveness closed the second week of Tennessee spring football with positive momentum under new head coach Josh Heupel.
The Volunteers held their first full pads practice on Tuesday, while wearing shoulder pads Thursday and finishing off the week in full pads on Friday. The squad reviewed the practices in position meetings and ended Friday’s workout – the fifth of the spring – with a live goal line team period featuring first team offense against first team defense.
“At practice today, they competed really hard,” Heupel said. “We went into a third-and-short situation down on the three-yard line, two plays to get the ball into the end zone. Just compete and nothing matters about what happened during the first 22 or 23 periods of practice. It’s all about how you finish at this point. We’re learning how to have a winning mentality. That’s effort, that’s attitude, that’s learning how to be a tough football team.”
Two months at the helm in Knoxville, Heupel also discussed his program philosophy that continues to be forged daily in the building.
“In what we do, it is going to be fast, it’s going to be fun, and most importantly, there are going to be real relationships that are formed. We’re going to be real in who we are, and as recruits see that, they’ll find out that this is a pretty special place to come play football, grow as a football player and grow as a man, more importantly.”
The Vols will take the Easter weekend off before kicking off the first of three week three practices on Tuesday afternoon.
The Chevrolet Orange & White Spring Game is scheduled for 4 p.m. ET on April 24 in Neyland Stadium.
Season tickets for the 100th year of Neyland Stadium and the start of the Heupel era are on sale now at AllVols.com. Season tickets start as low as $300, with the Vol Pass and payment plan options offered. Fans can experience the Neyland Stadium 3D map to select tickets based on preference. Fans with questions related to seats, views and options can utilize the live “CHAT” feature on AllVols.com.
“It was an awesome day out there. The sunshine came out. We had a ton of energy and it was fun to get out on the practice field again. We’re five days in, and it’s been awesome just getting around our players. They’ve learned a ton, and we’ve learned a ton about how to compete on the level we want to, how to bring the right amount of energy out to practice and the expectations. Guys are flying around and competing hard, but I think having a tremendous amount of fun too. We’re having to grow and build together as a football team.”
On any wide receivers standing out so far …
“I think we’re going to continue to grow and develop depth out there. Cedric Tillman has done a fantastic job of just being really purposeful in his work habits on the practice field. He’s playing faster as he’s getting more comfortable from day one to day five. Velus Jones (Jr.) has done a tremendous job. He’s a really strong competitor and brings a great amount of leadership to that wide receiver group every day in the meeting rooms, and that’s transitioned onto the practice field as well. Jimmy Calloway is having a good spring and a good start here. He’s a guy that is learning how to play with technique and with what we’re asking him to do. He’s getting better every day, but has the opportunity to extend the field and really make some plays down the field. I would never use the word ‘satisfied’ or ‘completely happy’ with any position when you’re five days into spring ball, but I like the purpose that those guys are playing with, and they’re starting to trust in what we’re doing. They’re starting to play with better technique which will give them the opportunity to go win down the football field. They’ve created some big plays in the passing game.”
“He’s been rock solid since we’ve gotten here in the way that he competes, his attention to detail and how he competes out on the practice field. Those guys get graded every day, and the rotation up front in practice one was based off of how they graded out in everything that they were doing every day leading up to spring ball. Now, you get graded every day in practice. Based on that, that kind of sets the rotation as far as whether you’re playing with the ones, the twos or threes for the day. These guys compete really hard. Up front we have some flexibility with some of the guys that can play left, play right—they’ve had some experience doing that. The biggest thing to me is just our players learning how to play from snap to the echo of the whistle. There’s a lot of different teams you can use, but at the end of the day it’s about your effort. We use the word ‘attack’ here inside of our program and our kids are learning to do that. He’s been a guy that’s really consistent in the way he plays from snap to whistle.”
On what he has learned about his team physically through five practices …
“I’ll start not with the physical side of it, but with their attentiveness, their ability to be coached. They’re willing to take that coaching and try to implement it into the game, try not to make the same mistake twice. At practice today, they competed really hard. We went into a third-and-short situation down on the three-yard line, two plays to get the ball into the end zone. Just compete, nothing matters about what happened during the first 22 or 23 periods of practice. It’s all about how you finish at this point. We’re learning how to have a winning mentality. That’s effort, that’s attitude, that’s learning how to be a tough football team. There’s a drill that we did in day three, we call it ‘the Vol Drill,” that’s really about putting your face on somebody, getting your face in the right place, being able to run your feet on offense and defensively, shed and make a play. Day three was not anywhere near meeting the level of standard or expectation. Day five, we repeat the drill and there was a whole lot more energy, a whole lot more toughness. Our attitude was in a better spot, and we got a whole lot better. I think you have to gain in the inches every single day and it starts with our guys’ ability to be coachable, to have some of those winning attributes, the way they’re going to communicate with each other. We’re growing in that, learning how to shed some losing habits and gain some winning habits. Along those lines though, the physicality, our guys are growing in that every day. Day one in pads, not anywhere near where we need to be, but today we got out there full pads, second time we have been in that and guys competed and you heard pads popping at a whole different level than the first time we jumped into that.”
On his recruiting pitch on why Tennessee …
“It’s about developing relationships. It’s about pouring into kids. There is no substitute for that. In some ways, we’re a little bit behind schedule with the timing of when we got hired. The nature of that and then some of the questions surrounding our program. Our coaches have been working on that relationship building with those players. At the end of the day, this is one of the greatest traditions in college football, and we get to put a completely new-age approach on it. That’s the way we interact with our players, the energy we have in our building every day and who and what we’re going to be out on the football field. It’s going to be a place that guys can be able compete at the highest level, have a great attitude and are going to have fun inside of our building. I don’t care if that’s in the strength and conditioning area or the way we practice. In what we do, it is going to be fast, it’s going to be fun and most importantly, there are going to be real relationships that are formed. We’re going to be real in who we are, and as recruits see that, they’ll find out that this is a pretty special place to come play football, grow as a football player and grow as a man, more importantly. As we continue to go through this recruiting cycle, I think recruits are going to see that.”
On his offense being a wide receiver’s dream …
“I think for us, the ability to play with tempo, for those guys to be put in a position where we’re going to try to find ways to isolate them in a one-on-one position and then give them the tools to go win. I think at the end of the day, as a wideout, that’s what you’re looking for. The tempo we play, the number of snaps we get, the number of ball in hand opportunities that our skill players have, I think you put all of that together, plus the energy with which we play on game day and even on the practice field, I think it is a really unique offense for skill players and wide receivers to play in, and something they can absolutely flourish in.”
“Those two guys are fighting their butt off to get back at 100 percent. They’ve done a tremendous job just in the rehab process and have transitioned more into the strength and conditioning side of it, getting their bodies right and continuing to come back. They’ve done a great job in the meetings, sat in on a couple with the linebackers. Their attentive. They care. They’re pushing hard to get back and be ready to take a bunch of ownership and take a bunch of snaps at the linebacker position. Those guys are going to be allowed to do more and more as we go through spring ball, but don’t think any of them will be in full contact situations.”
On how well the staff is meshing together at this point, since working together for such a short period of time …
“Yeah, some truth in that, what you’re saying for sure. But, I think there is actually more connectedness than people probably realize. We got a group of guys that came with me from Orlando and have great trust in each other and the process and knowing the expectations and standards that I’ve set in how we’re going to operate. You’ve got a few guys that were not together on the defensive side of the football, but there is a connective piece between those guys. They’ve worked with each other at different stops, and Coach (Tim) Banks is a tremendous leader and has a great vision of what he wants to do. I think he’s building defensively, just the communication, the system gives us some flexibility. Building it the right way has a tremendous amount of buy-in and trust from the guys that are in that defensive staff room with him. I think our players have fed off of the energy and chemistry from the staff as well. Everyone’s in sync, communicating the same way and their standards and expectations are clearly defined and are coaching in a positive way. Coach hard, hold our players feet to the fire, hold them accountable, but at the same time we could go out and communicate in a way that’s positive and creates energy as well. I think that’s why the practice field has been the way that it has been.”
On how these quarterbacks are in the process of learning the system …
“Are they perfect in their communication and decision making? No, we don’t expect them to be. They won’t be perfect by the time we get to kickoff next fall. You’re never perfect in that journey. You could be a 12-year NFL Hall of Fame career guy, and you’re still training to get better at something every single day. Our guys are competing really hard, and I think they’ve been phenomenal in the meeting room. Their attentiveness to the details I think has in a sense of urgency within that has really increased over the last two to three practices. You coach some things before you get to the field. Once you get on the field, I think the understanding of the ‘why’ those things are important become even clearer for them. Their urgency in that has gone up. I think they’ve been really good. They’ve made a bunch of plays in the pass game, and they’ve had a bunch of things that haven’t gone their way either. They’ve tried to learn from it. They’ve been able to give great energy to the guys around them. They’re learning how to have winning habits. That’s on the field, that’s in the meeting room, and that’s in what they’re doing every single day. The group together has been really positive with each other while they’re competing with each other, too. We’ve got a long way to go, but the group is pushing to get there and they’ve been good to work with.”
Ashley Rogers – UT Softball P / Credit: UT Athletics
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – The No. 21 Tennessee softball team returns to action for a three-game weekend series with SEC foe, No. 8 Kentucky, at Sherri Parker Lee Stadium. First pitches for the Lady Vols third SEC series are slated for 5 p.m. ET on Friday, 6 p.m. ET on Saturday and a 2 p.m. matinee start on Easter Sunday.
BROADCAST INFORMATION
All three of Tennessee’s games will be available on national television. Friday and Sunday’s contests can be viewed on ESPNU, while Saturday’s game will be broadcasted on ESPN2.
Each game can also be streamed on WatchESPN through the ESPN app or at espn.com/watch.
Fans can also listen to the series with the Cats on your local Vol Network affiliate or online at UTsports.com. VFL Brian Rice will have the call.
QUICK HITS OFFENSE NOT SHY AGAINST THE WILDCATS
Dating to 2015m Tennessee is 9-1 against Kentucky, scoring five or more runs in all but one of those contests. In the 10 meetings between the programs, the Lady Vols have outscored UK, 67-27, with five wins by a margin of five or more runs, along with a pair of shutout victories.
OUCH OR CONGRATS?
Senior infielder Chelsea Seggern penned her name atop the UT record books on Tuesday afternoon, just not in the category you would initially think of.
The Thrall, Texas native was hit by a pitch for the 36th time in her career in Tennessee’s, 6-0, victory over Liberty. That mark places her at the top of Tennessee’s all-time HBP list, passing LVFL Cheyanne Tarango.
OOOOOOO SHE STEALIN’
Sophomore outfielder Kiki Milloy is leading the SEC in stolen bases by a wide margin, having swiped 23 bases through 31 games. The Woodinville, Washington native also leads the league in stolen base attempts with 24 for an insane stolen base percentage of .958.
She has also stolen at least one bag in each of the Lady Vols last five games, having stolen multiple bases in game one against both Furman (March 29) and Kennesaw State (March 24). Milloy has stolen more than one base on six different occasions this season.
MID-WEEK DOMINATION
So far this season, Tennessee has compiled a 6-0 record in mid-week contests, outscoring opponents 49-1, while tossing five shutouts as a pitching staff. In those six wins, Lady Vol pitchers have yielded just 10 hits, winning three of those contests while giving up one or no hits.
SCOUTING KENTUCKY 2021 Record: 26-4 Overall, 3-3 SEC Series Record: Tennessee Leads – 46-15 Last Outing: A dominant, 6-0, victory for Tennessee in Knoxville on April 29, 2018 Key Player/Stat: Kentucky is off to a blistering start to the 2021 season. Through 30 games, the Wildcats lead the SEC in team batting average, hitting at a clip of .353. At the dish, they’re led by junior catcher Kayla Kowalik who’s running the lineup with a .471 batting average, 14 extra-base-hits, 23 RBIs and a sparkling .750 slugging percentage. Kowalik’s average also leads the SEC by nearly 20 points.
UP NEXT
Tennessee will remain at home before its second SEC road series of the season when it takes on in-state foe Tennessee Tech for a Tuesday twin bill at 4 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. ET.
Harold “Herky” Payne, a two-sport standout for the Volunteers in the early 1950s, passed away Tuesday in Knoxville. At 92 years old, he was one of Tennessee’s oldest living lettermen.
A native of Pensacola, Florida, Payne lettered three years with the football team (1949-51) and three years with the baseball program (1950-52). He earned two degrees from Tennessee, served two years in the U.S. Army and was selected to the Greater Knoxville Sports Hall of Fame in 1998.
As a tailback on Tennessee’s 1951 football national championship team, coached by Gen. Robert R. Neyland, Payne scored 14 touchdowns and led the Southeastern Conference in scoring with 84 points. At that time, he was the second Vol ever to lead the league in scoring, joining 1933 scoring champion Beattie Feathers.
Payne was named third-team All-SEC by both the Associated Press and UPI following that 1951 campaign. His career totals on the gridiron included 23 touchdowns and 1,145 rushing yards.
His 90-yard punt return for a touchdown against Duke on Oct. 1, 1949, stands as the second-longest punt return in school history.
Payne also starred as a second baseman on Tennessee’s 1951 SEC champion baseball squad that posted a 20-3 (16-1 SEC) record and advanced to the College World Series championship game, where it fell to Oklahoma by one run, 3-2. He batted .354 that season and hit for a .333 average in 1952.
Following his multi-sport career at Tennessee, Payne was drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the ninth round of the 1952 NFL Draft. He ended up playing professional baseball briefly in Florida before returning to East Tennessee.
Payne earned both a bachelor’s (1953) and master’s (1975) degree from UT’s College of Business.
At the time of his passing, Payne was believed to be Tennessee’s sixth-oldest living letterman. He is one of only 32 Vols in the modern era (1933 to present) known to have earned at least six varsity letters.