Lady Vols Preview: NCAA 2nd Rd 3-seed UT vs. 6-seed Michigan

Lady Vols Preview: NCAA 2nd Rd 3-seed UT vs. 6-seed Michigan

Lady Vols Hoops / Credit: UT Athletics

SAN ANTONIO, Texas — No. 3 seed Tennessee (17-7, 9-4 SEC) and No. 6 seed Michigan (15-5, 9-4 Big Ten) will face one another for the first-time ever on Tuesday in an NCAA Second Round River Walk Region contest.

The No. 13/15-ranked Lady Vols and No. 16/14 Wolverines are set to play at 5 p.m. ET (4 p.m. CT) on the North Court at the Alamodome in San Antonio.

UT earned its way to this meeting by winning its First Round battle with Middle Tennessee, 87-62, on Sunday in Austin.

UM, meanwhile, took care of No. 11 seed Florida Gulf Coast, 87-66, on Sunday at the UT San Antonio Convocation Center.

The winner of this game will advance to the Sweet 16 (March 27 & 28) and extend its stay in San Antonio. A match-up would loom vs. the victor of Tuesday’s No. 2 seed Baylor and No. 7 seed Virginia Tech match-up.

Tennessee head coach Kellie Harper is now 3-1 in her last four NCAA Tournament games and has led her alma mater to the NCAA Second Round for the first time since 2018.

BROADCAST INFORMATION

  • Kevin Fitzgerald (play-by-play), Christy Thomaskutty (analyst) and Holly Rowe (reporter) will have the call for ESPN2.
  • All of the games included in the ESPN package (ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU) will be available through WatchESPN, accessible online at WatchESPN.com, on smartphones and tablets via the WatchESPN app, and streamed on televisions through Amazon Fire TV, Apple TV, Chromecast, Roku, Xbox 360 or Xbox One to fans who receive their video subscription from an affiliated provider.
  • 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 22nd 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 in the black bar at the top of the page.
  • Air time for games on the Lady Vol Radio Network generally occurs 30 minutes prior to tip-off.

LADY VOL NCAA HISTORY IN TEXAS

  • Tennessee improved to 3-1 in NCAA Tournament games played in Texas with the victory over Middle Tennessee.
  • The Lady Vols are now 3-0 in Austin in NCAA Tourney games, having won their first two postseason contests in the Lone Star State at the 1987 Final Four at the Frank Erwin Center over Long Beach State (74-64) and Louisiana Tech (67-44) en route to UT’s first national championship.
  • Tennessee’s other NCAA game in the state of Texas was its last before 2021, and it came at the Alamodome.
  • UT fell to UConn, 79-56 in the Final Four Semifinals there on March 29, 2002.

THE VOLUNTEERS & THE ALAMO

  • Tennessee earned the nickname “The Volunteer State” during the War of 1812, when many Tennesseans stepped in to help with the war effort, especially at the Battle of New Orleans. The nickname became even more applicable during the Mexican–American War in 1846, after the Secretary of War asked the state for 2,800 soldiers, and Tennessee sent over 30,000.
  • The Mexican-American War centered around securing the sovereignty of the Republic of Texas, and with the help of Tennessee volunteers, Mexico ultimately relinquished 50% of its territory to the United States and forfeited all claims to Texas, the Lone Star State.
  • With that, Tennesseans felt they had avenged the death of native frontiersman and former U.S. Congressman David “Davy” Crockett, who gave his life trying to defend the Alamo in San Antonio. A long-lasting relationship between the two states was forged, and the it solidified in history the Tennessee’s nickname, the Volunteer State.

HARPER IN RARE COMPANY

  • In leading Tennessee to a postseason berth, second-year Lady Vol skipper Kellie Harper became only the second basketball coach to guide four different programs into NCAA Division I Women’s Tournament play.
  • She is the first to do so at her alma mater.
  • Harper led Western Carolina (2005, 2009), NC State (2010), Missouri State (2016, 2019) and now her alma mater, Tennessee (2021), to the Big Dance.
  • She joins Jim Foster, who guided St. Joseph’s, Vanderbilt, Ohio State and Chattanooga to NCAA bids.
  • Harper also is one of only 11 coaches to take three different schools to the NCAA Tourney.
  • This marks the 13th postseason appearance of Harper’s head coaching career, including her sixth in the NCAA Tournament.

UT’S NCAA TOURNEY HISTORY

  • As mentioned, the Lady Vols are making their 39th appearance in the NCAA Women’s Basketball Championship, and UT is the only program to appear in all 39 tournaments.
  • Tennessee was an at-large qualifier for the NCAA Tournament field, finishing third in the Southeastern Conference regular season for the second-straight season and bowing out in the semifinal round of the league tourney to No. 2 seed South Carolina, the eventual champion.
  • UT earned a No. 3 seed for the fifth time and has a 13-3 record in that role after beating Middle Tennessee.
  • As a No. 3 seed, the Lady Vols were national runners-up in 1984, lost in the Sweet 16 in 1985, won a national championship in 1997 in Kellie (Jolly) Harper’s sophomore season and fell in the second round in 2018.
  • The Lady Vols are 126-30 in NCAA Tournament play, and they rank first in games played (156) and victories (126) in NCAA tourney history.
  • Tennessee is second behind UConn in winning percentage at .808 in tourney play.
  • UT is 1-0 in NCAA play under Kellie Harper, making its first appearance with her at the helm in 2021 after the tourney was canceled a year ago due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) global health pandemic.
  • UT has advanced to the NCAA regional round on 34 occasions, posting a 28-6 record in the Sweet 16.
  • The only seasons UT did not make the regional level were in 2009 and from 2017 to 2019. UT lost its opening round contest as a No. 5 seed to No. 12 Ball State in Bowling Green, Ky., in 2009. No. 5 seed UT lost its second-round game at No. 4 seed Louisville in 2017. No. 3 seed UT lost its second-round game to No. 6 seed Oregon State in Knoxville in 2018. No. 11 seed Tennessee fell to No. 6 seed UCLA in the first round at College Park, Md., in 2019.
  • UT has made the Elite Eight 28 times and in five of the past nine tournaments, posting an 18-10 record in that round.
  • The Lady Vols have seen their season ended in the regional championship game in five of the past nine  years (2011, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016).
  • UT has advanced to 18 NCAA Final Fours and won eight of them (1987, 1989, 1991, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2007, 2008), ranking second to UConn.
  • Tennessee has finished second in the nation five times and third on five more occasions.
  • All told, UT has played 88 different opponents during all rounds of the NCAA Tournament, including Michigan.

UT IN THE FIRST & SECOND ROUNDS

  • Tennessee is making its 39th appearance in the NCAA First/Second Rounds, and it owns a 59-4 record during games played in those rounds.
  • The Lady Vols are 31-2 all-time in the NCAA First Round and 28-2 in the NCAA Second Round.
  • The only blemishes are a first-round loss to Ball State, 71-55, in Bowling Green, Ky., on March 22, 2009, a second-round setback to Louisville, 75-64, in Louisville, Ky. on March 20, 2017, a second-round loss to Oregon State, 66-59, in Knoxville, on March 18, 2018, and a first-round ouster by UCLA, 89-77, on March 23, 2019, in College Park, Md.
  • In NCAA First/Second Round play, Tennessee is 45-1 at home, 4-1 away and 10-2 at neutral sites.
  • The breakdown for that is 23-0 home/0-0 away/8-2 neutral for the first round and 22-1 home/4-1 away/2-0 neutral for the second round.

HARPER NCAA HISTORY AS A COACH

  • Kellie Harper, who is making her first tourney visit with Tennessee, has made most of her previous trips with mid-majors and/or lower-seeded teams.
  • She enters the 2021 event with easily her highest-seeded squad.
  • Kellie Harper is 3-5 all-time in the NCAA Tournament, including 0-0 at home, 1-2 away and 2-3 at neutral sites.
  • She is 2-4 in NCAA First-Round games (0-0 at home/0-2 away/2-2 neutral), 1-0 in NCAA Second-Round games (0-0 at home/1-0 away/0-0 neutral) and 0-1 in the Sweet 16 (0-0 home/0-0 away/0-1 neutral).
  • During the 2018-19 NCAA Tournament, Harper piloted #11 seed Missouri State to the Sweet 16, beating #6 seed DePaul and #3 seed Iowa State along the way before falling to #2 seed Stanford by nine en route to 2019 Kay Yow National Coach of the Year acclaim.
  • Harper’s previous entries fell in first-round match-ups: #16 Western Carolina at #1 Tennessee in 2005, #13 Western Carolina vs. #4 Vanderbilt in Albuquerque in 2009, #9 NC State vs. #8 UCLA at Minneapolis in 2010 and #13 Missouri State at #4 Texas A&M in 2016.

HARPER’S STAFF EXPERIENCE

  • While this may be Kellie Harper‘s first NCAA Tournament at Tennessee, this isn’t her staff’s first rodeo.
  • UT assistant coach Jon Harper was on his spouse’s staff in all of those previous NCAA appearances.
  • Assistant coach Jennifer Sullivan was part of the Missouri State staff during the 2016 NCAA Tourney appearance.
  • UT director of recruiting operations Jessica Jackson was recruiting director and assistant coach on Harper’s staff at Missouri State during the Bears’ 2019 NCAA Tournament run and played for the Harpers on the 2009 Western Carolina NCAA team.
  • Tyler Watson, the director of women’s basketball sports performance, also was on Harper’s staff at Missouri State during the 2019 run.
  • While associate director of sports medicine Casi Dailey wasn’t in Raleigh for NC State’s 2010 NCAA appearance under Harper, she did spend a year on Harper’s staff at NC State.
  • UT’s other assistant, Lacey Goldwire, is in her first stint on Harper’s staff, but she possesses NCAA Tournament experience while at Iowa.

HARPER AS NCAA STUDENT-ATHLETE

  • Kellie (Jolly) Harper was 21-1 in the NCAA Tournament as a student-athlete at Tennessee.
  • The 5-foot-10 point guard was part of three national championship teams in 1996, 1997 and 1998.
  • The 1998 team was undefeated at 39-0.
  • Harper tallied an NCAA title game-record 11 assists in 1997 as UT defeated Old Dominion.
  • She scored 20 points in the 1998 title game vs. Louisiana Tech, hitting seven of 10 field goal attempts. Her 4-of-5 effort from beyond the arc is still tied as a championship game record.
  • Her 1998 effort earned her a spot on the Final Four All-Tournament Team.

UT VS. THE NCAA FIELD

  • Tennessee has played 13 games vs. 10 different teams in the 2021 NCAA Tournament field.
  • The Lady Vols are now 6-7 vs. those opponents.
  • Tennessee was 2-2 vs. non-conference NCAA Tournament-qualifying foes this season, defeating Indiana and Middle Tennessee (NCAA First Round), while narrowly losing to UConn and West Virginia.
  • The Big Orange had a 4-5 record vs. SEC teams that made the NCAA Tournament, defeating South Carolina, Arkansas, Kentucky and Alabama, and falling to South Carolina, Texas A&M, Georgia (twice) and Kentucky.
  • The SEC placed seven teams in the tournament, which tied for the second-most of any league (with the Big Ten), following the eight from the ACC.
  • The SEC’s teams going dancing in 2021 include Alabama, Arkansas Georgia, Kentucky, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas A&M.

LADY VOL NCAA EXPERIENCE

  • Only three of Tennessee’s active players possessed NCAA Tournament experience as the 2021 Big Dance began.
  • Rennia Davis (3), Kasiyahna Kushkituah (2) and Rae Burrell (1) combined to give the Lady Vols only six total games of NCAA experience and three starts.
  • Those numbers for Davis, Kushkituah and Burrell now stand at four, three and two.
  • Seeing their first NCAA duty vs. Middle Tennessee were graduate transfer/redshirt junior Jordan Walker; sophomores Jordan HorstonTamari KeyJessie Rennie and Emily Saunders; and freshmen Tess Darby and Destiny Salary.
  • Rennia Davis has averages of 17.5 ppg. (70 pts.) and 11.5 rpg. (46 rebs.) in four NCAA games while shooting 53.1 percent (26-49) from the field.
  • Davis now has three double-double in four tournament games, including 24/14 vs. Middle Tennessee in 2021, 21/10 vs. UCLA in 2019 and 18/11 vs. Liberty in 2018.
  • Kushkituah has reached double figures in all three of her tourney appearances, tallying 10 vs. Middle Tennessee in 2021, 16 vs. UCLA in 2019 and 10 vs. Liberty in 2018. That equals and average of 12.0 ppg.
  • In that 2018 contest between UT and Liberty, the Flames’ Keyen Green scored 10 points on 4-of-4 shooting vs. Tennessee. She’s now a Lady Vol (grad. transfer) and is sitting out the season due to injury.
  • Rae Burrell saw two minutes of duty vs. UCLA two seasons ago but didn’t record any statistics. She had 22 points vs. Middle Tennessee this season in her first extensive minutes.

RECAPPING UT’S LAST GAME

  • The No. 3 seed Lady Vols shot a scorching 52 percent from the floor to fend off in-state opponent and No. 14 seed Middle Tennessee in the NCAA First Round on Sunday, winning 87-62 at the Frank Erwin Center.
  • Senior Rennia Davis led No. 13/15-ranked Tennessee (17-7) in scoring, posting a double-double with 24 points and 14 rebounds. Junior Rae Burrell was close behind with 22 points, and sophomore Tamari Key and senior Kasiyahna Kushkituah were also in double figures with 13 and 10, respectively. Redshirt-junior Jordan Walker narrowly missed a double-double, finishing with nine points and a career-high 14 rebounds.
  • MT (17-8) was led by sisters Anastasia and Aislynn Hayes, who combined for two-thirds of the Lady Raiders’ 62 points. Anastasia Hayes turned in 26, while Aislynn Hayes managed 15.

LADY VOL NOTES

  • Harper Gets Her FirstKellie Harper picked up her first NCAA win as head coach of the Lady Vols and became only the second women’s coach to lead four different programs to the NCAA Division I Tournament. She is the first to do so as her alma mater.
  • Davis Making Moves: With 24 points and 14 rebounds vs. MT, Rennia Davis logged her 10th double-double of the season and the 39th of her career. Her new total of 943 career rebounds surpassed Shyra Ely (940) to land her at 10th all-time among Lady Vols. She also moved up the leader board in scoring, passing Sheila Frost (1,790) to rank ninth all-time with 1,803 career points.
  • Horston Slides Past 100Jordan Horston dished out a game-high six assists vs. Middle Tennessee. She moved past 100 and now has 103 for the season in 24 games. She had 143 last year in 31 contests.
  • Postseason Looks Good On Her: Davis has now recorded double-doubles in three of her four appearances in NCAA Tournament games. She is averaging 17.5 ppg. and 11.5 rpg. in games played in the NCAA Tournament.
  • Dominating The Paint: Tennessee outrebounded Middle Tennessee, 56-21 (20-9 on the offensive glass), turning those into 21 second-chance points. On the season, UT is outrebounding opponents by an average of 45.8 rpg. to 32.3 rpg. The 56-rebound total was UT’s second highest of the season and marked the seventh occasion in 2020-21 the Lady Vols had eclipsed 50 boards in a game. The 35-board margin was a season high.
  • Tightening The Defense: Tennessee gave up 21 points to Middle Tennessee in the second quarter and was tied 39-all at the half, but it only surrendered 23 points the rest of the game. UT also minimized scoring in the paint in the final 20 minutes. After allowing MT 18 paint points in the first half, the Lady Vols allowed only eight in the second half.

UT-UM NOTES

  • This marks the first meeting between Tennessee and Michigan in women’s basketball.
  • It also marks Kellie Harper‘s first game vs. the Wolverines during her head coaching career.
  • The Lady Vols are 80-14 vs. teams currently in the Big Ten Conference.
  • The Big Orange women are 8-3 in NCAA Tournament games vs. Big Ten programs.
  • UT defeated Big Ten favorite and 2021 runner-up Indiana, 66-58, in Bloomington on Dec. 17 in the only meeting between the Lady Vols and a Big Ten team this season.
  • Michigan fell to Indiana, 70-65, in Bloomington on Feb. 18.
  • The Hoosiers are the only common foe for UT and UM this season.
  • Tennessee’s roster includes Western Michigan graduate transfer and Muskegon native Jordan Walker, a graduate of Mona Shores High School.
  • Walker is a redshirt junior guard who pulled down a career-best 14 rebounds in her NCAA Tournament debut vs. Middle Tennessee on Sunday.
  • Tennessee assistant coach Jennifer Sullivan is familiar with the Wolverines from her tenure as an assistant at Ohio State (2018-19). As it turns out, she will provide the scouting report for this contest.
  • Speaking of Ohio, there are three players from the Buckeye State who will play significant roles in the game.  Tennessee’s assists and steals leader, Jordan Horston, hails from Columbus, while Michigan stars Naz Hillmon and Akienreh Johnson hail from Cleveland and Toledo, respectively.

ABOUT MICHIGAN

  • Michigan finished fourth in the Big Ten this season with a 9-4 mark in league play and is ranked No. 16/14 in the national polls.
  • The Wolverines are led by the trio of 6-2 junior forward Naz Hillmon, 6-1 junior guard Leigha Brown and 6-0 graduate transfer guard Akienreh Johnson, who average 24.6, 17.6 and 11.0 points per game, respectively.
  • Hillmon, a finalist for the Katrina McClain Power Forward of the Year Award, also averages 11.5 rebounds per contest and shoots 62.5 percent from the field.
  • She put up a Michigan women’s and men’s record 50 points vs. Ohio State on Jan. 21, 2021.
  • Michigan entered the NCAA Tournament having lost three of its last four games, with losses at Iowa and vs. Maryland, a victory over Northwestern and a loss to Northwestern in the Big Ten Tournament.
  • Sunday’s 87-66 NCAA First Round win over Florida Gulf Coast marked the most points scored by UM since tallying 92 vs. Wisconsin on Dec. 31.
  • Michigan is coached by Kim Barnes Arico, who is 192-101 in her ninth year in Ann Arbor. She is 462-307 during a 25-year career as a head coach.

RECAPPING THE WOLVERINES’ LAST GAME

  • The University of Michigan women’s basketball team used a 23-5 run in the fourth quarter and got 29 points from junior Leigha Brown — 19 in the third quarter — to cruise past Florida Gulf Coast, 87-66, in the first round of the NCAA Tournament on Sunday at the UTSA Convocation Center.
  • The Wolverines snapped the Eagles’ 25-game win streak, shooting 53.6 percent (30-for-56) from the field and making a season-high eight three-pointers with four different players draining two each.
  • Leigha Brown ended her stellar outing with a game-best 28 points on 12-for-16 shooting, and junior Naz Hillmon notched her 28th career double-double with 14 points and 13 rebounds despite playing only 23 minutes due to early foul trouble.
  • Graduate student Akienreh Johnson also recorded a double-double with 15 points and 10 rebounds, while adding six assists, two steals and one block to her stat line in just 20 minutes on the floor. Hailey Brown scored 10 points, all in the first half.
  • Michigan (15-5) outrebounded FGCU, 43-23, grabbing 13 offensive boards and scoring 15 second-chance points.

-UT Athletics

Transcript: Kellie Harper and Jordan Walker 2nd Rd preview

Transcript: Kellie Harper and Jordan Walker 2nd Rd preview

Rae Burrell & Kellie Harper – Lady Vols / Credit: UT Athletics

SAN ANTONIO, Texas – Tennessee head coach Kellie Harper and redshirt junior point guard Jordan Walker participated in a Zoom media availability on Monday in advance of Tuesday’s NCAA Second Round game vs. Michigan.

The No. 3 seed Lady Vols (17-7) and No. 6 seed Wolverines (15-5) will meet at the Alamodome at 5 p.m. ET (4 CT). The contest will be televised by ESPN2 and carried on the Lady Vol Radio Network.

Tennessee Head Coach Kellie Harper

Opening Statement:
“We’re excited to be advancing and really proud of our team for getting the first-round win and taking care of business there. We know we have a really tough opponent in Michigan. They’ve got great posts, great guards, and the right pieces. They’re obviously coming from a very physical league, and they’ve got good size. So, it’s going to be a tough one, but we’re excited about it, and we’re ready to get out on the court and play.”

On what challenges she thinks Michigan presents and what she sees on film with them:
“Well, I think it’s an interesting match-up, and I agree with you, I think this is one of those to look at on paper people say, ‘Let’s make sure we tune in to this one.’ Both teams do match up well with each other. I think the problems they present with their opponent are, one: Naz Hillman is really good; she’s not the player of the year for no reason. She is incredible in how she works to get the ball in scoring position, she’s incredible when she gets the ball to score, and she’s incredible in getting on the boards. So, I think she is going to be a handful for our post players. And then, obviously, coming off a good season and a great game, is Leigha Brown, an athletic wing that can put the ball on the floor. She can shoot, she’s aggressive, and she feels really good about her game right now. So, obviously, that’s their one-two punch. Then with other pieces, they have size, athleticism, they can shoot, and put the ball on the floor. They are really excited to be here right now and taking advantage of this opportunity. So, I think they are a really good team, and I think they’re going to be tough.”

On how physical she thinks the battle will be on the boards, and how key it will be for Tamari Key and Kasiyahna Kushkituah to play well in tomorrow’s game:
“I think it would be really great for us to establish some post presence offensively and, obviously, on the glass. We have been consistent there. We’ve outrebounded everyone but one this year, and that was in the (SEC) semis against South Carolina. We have to do that, but they are going to make that difficult for us, because they are going to be very physical, and they’re going to have great size. You’re not just going to get rebounds by outjumping people, and you’re not going to get rebounds because you’re bigger. You’re going to have to stick your nose in there and be disciplined when you box out. They’re worried about the same thing; they’re talking about the same thing, and how they are going to keep us off the boards as well. So, at this point, it’s not about a want to. We both want to (win). It’s about execution.”

On how much she has been following Kyra Elzy at Kentucky, her relationship with her, and Pat Summitt’s legacy:
“I didn’t get to watch their game, but I’ve been following all of the SEC teams in particular. But I just have a special love for Kyra, because she was my teammate for three years. (She was) a great teammate, and I loved playing with her and rooming with her. She was one of my favorite roommates – we always had this rotation for roommates when traveling. She’s such a good person. She was a tough player; she did the little things you had to do, played hard, and I think she’s asking her team to do the same thing. She’s coaching them with discipline, and obviously, everybody knows that’s what Pat did. That would be one where I’d love to step in and watch a practice. I would love to step in and watch Kyra lead a practice, because I’m sure I could see some similarities.”

On how important the post defense will be and making sure her posts don’t get in foul trouble:
“I think our post defense will be critical to this game. Like I said earlier, we’ve got our hands full. We’ll have to see if we can go one-on-one, and we may have to find ways to double team and ways to help them out. But obviously, we don’t play a lot of people in that position, so keeping at least one of the two on the court at all times is going to be important, and they’re going to have to play pretty clean.”

On her philosophy on adjusting the defense to stop one dominant player:
“Honestly, it depends. Sometimes we talk about trying to… typically great players, you’re not going to shut them down. We’re not going to keep (Naz Hillmon) scoreless; that’s just not going to happen. Sometimes you’re going to try to slow them down. Sometimes you’re going to try to cover everybody else and make her beat you. There are so many different philosophical ways to look at each game. I can’t say that I have one particular way that I have going into every game. It is different. It’s different, and it’s different based on how we’re playing at the time, how the opponent is playing at the time, what the matchups are, are they favorable in other places? I think as a team, we have to weigh those. If you’ve got to give up something, you’ve got to give up something probably pretty good at this point. I mean, this is a good basketball team.  So, sometimes you’re just playing the numbers, and sometimes you’re playing the feel and how the flow is going in the game.”

On if the team will have a chance to be on the court at the Alamodome before the game:
“We couldn’t get in there today. We were in the Convention Center at our practice today, but we do have a scheduled shoot-around in the morning, so we’ll be able to get in there and see the venue and get some shots up. For me, I want to check out that depth perception and see what that feels like. At least they’re not walking in there at game time and that being the first time they see it, so I’m really excited we have that opportunity in the morning.”

On how similar Tennessee’s stats are to Michigan’s and what she feels is the area that’s key to winning the game:
“I don’t know that I can give you just one; I think that’s tough. I’d like to take care of the basketball. I’d like to try to take away some easy paint points from them. We’d like to win the battle on the boards. I’d like to shoot about 75 percent tomorrow, that would be great. I think when you’re playing somebody even, I don’t know that there’s one stat that can win this game. I think you’re going to have to execute on both ends of the court, I really do.”

On the article by the Wall Street Journal about the term “March Madness” being reserved for use by the men’s tournament:
“I didn’t know that. I’ve been really focused in on our team today and practicing, getting ready for Michigan. I use it. I use that term. I don’t know if I’m using it illegally, but this is March Madness, and to me, we’re a part of that. I’ll have to go and read that… but we’re in the middle of March Madness, and to watch the games being played today and in the next couple of weeks, you have to use that term with what we’re doing right now.”

On it being both her and Tennessee’s first-ever matchup with Michigan:
“For historians, Lady Vol historians like you, Maria (Cornelius), I’m sure when you flip through (the record book), you would’ve already remembered if Tennessee had played Michigan in the past. You probably could have spit out all the stats from that game if we had played Michigan in the past. It actually is very unusual. With Tennessee and how many games nationwide – tournament games and others – that have been played, and not to have a team like Michigan on there is a little bit unusual.”

On being away from her children:
“One thing, I’m so excited to be here, and we understand the bubble. You know, we’re here. We’re in it. We hope to be in it a long time. But as a mom, it’s hard. Thank goodness for Facetime, because we can see the kids, and they can send videos. And I talk to them multiple times per day, but it’s hard. When your two-year-old looks and you and says, ‘You going to get me in the morning?’ You have to say no. And Jackson at least understands it a little bit more, but we’re very fortunate that we have a nanny back home taking great care of them. I’m already ready to squeeze them. I won’t want to go home, but I’m ready to squeeze them when I get to see them.”

Tennessee Redshirt Junior Jordan Walker 

On her rebounding ability as a 5’8″ guard:
“I just love rebounding. I love tracking the ball. It’s an effort thing and making hustle plays, which I love doing because you can control that. You’re always in control of that. Now, sometimes when they (opponents) are a little bit bigger, it’s hard to control if you get the rebound or not. I can always try. I can always track it down, and most of the time get that ball.”

On how excited she gets going into a game that’s expected to be physical and what she can do to alleviate some of the pressure from the post:
“Going into a game where there’s a team who loves to rebound, it’s always fun because you know you’re going to have to box out. You know you’re going to have to put yourself in position to go get that board. I think that with this game, our posts are going to have to rebound as well, which they’re good at doing, too. I think to help them out, we can make those 50-50 plays. Any time that we need to box out somebody else when they go to help so they can snag those rebounds, we’re going to have to make those plays. I feel like that’s what I can do to contribute tomorrow.”

On her process of getting a rebound:
“It’s kind of different for each spot on the court. If it’s a weak-side rebound, I feel like those are the easiest to track because most of the time you can see if it’s going to be short and go back to the other side, or you can see if it’s coming over. I notice that when I speed in there, most of the time it’s going to go over your head. Usually, I slow down and see how it’s rolling off the rim. That’s how I do it.”

On if looking for her shot is a key part of her game that keeps the defense honest:
“I definitely think so. Being able to hit shots helps my team out, because they won’t be able to sag off. They won’t be able to help off. I really feel like being able to hit those shots helps my teammates out, helps the team out and helps our offense flow better. I think being able to continue to hit those shots will help us down the stretch.”

-UT Athletics

Baseball Preview: #9 Vols Host EKU for Tuesday Midweek Contest

Baseball Preview: #9 Vols Host EKU for Tuesday Midweek Contest

Vols Baseball bench / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – No. 9 Tennessee returns to Lindsey Nelson Stadium to start a five-game homestand with a midweek contest against Eastern Kentucky on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m.

The Volunteers are coming off a series win at Georgia to open SEC play last weekend after winning Sunday’s rubber game in Athens, 4-1. Tuesday’s contest is the first of two scheduled meetings between UT and EKU this season.

GAMEDAY INFORMATION

Relying on the expertise of public health authorities, the state of Tennessee, appropriate university and government agencies including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), we are implementing a number of new initiatives at Tennessee Baseball gamedays this spring. The well-being of our student-athletes, fans and staff are our top priorities and guide our decisions. Exposure to COVID-19 is an inherent risk in any public location where people are present; we cannot guarantee you will not be exposed during your visit.

The Southeastern Conference in August released several conference-wide fan health and safety guidelines for all member institutions this fall. The Tennessee-specific measures outlined on this page are in line with, and in addition to, the SEC’s guidelines.

Parking
Baseball parking is located primarily in Lots GF1, G16, and C1.

Additional on-street parking is located in C10 along Todd Helton Dr. and Chamique Holdsclaw Dr. and along West Volunteer Blvd.

Handicap parking is located in marked handicap spaces on Pat Head Summitt St. and in the G16 Volunteer Blvd. garage.  The 2021 parking map can be seen HERE (PDF).

For more information and gameday info, visit the Tennessee Baseball Gameday Information page by clicking HERE.

TICKET INFORMATION

Season tickets for this season are sold out. There are limited seating options still available for select games in the Porch and Deck areas. Fans should contact Maggie Coates at 865-974-9579 or [email protected] for more information.

There are no single-game general admission tickets being sold at the stadium this season. Single-game tickets can be purchased via Vivid Seats by clicking HERE.

In order to keep Lindsey Nelson Stadium as full as possible during a season with limited capacity, we are encouraging season ticket holders who are unable to use their tickets for a game(s) to either transfer your tickets to someone else (Instructions HERE), sell them on VividSeats (Instructions HERE) or participate in our new Seats for Student program (Instructions HERE).

BROADCAST INFO

Tuesday’s game will be streamed live on SEC Network Plus and the ESPN app with Andy Brock (PxP) and Charlie Puleo (color) on the call.

Fans can also listen to the game on UTSports.com and the UT Gameday app, as John Wilkerson and Vince Ferrara call the action.

SERIES HISTORY

Overall: Tennessee leads, 29-4
In Knoxville: UT leads, 17-2
In Richmond: UT leads, 3-0
Neutral Sites: N/A
Site Unknown: UT leads, 9-2
Last Meeting: W, 7-6 (April 10, 2017)

The Vols and Colonels will meet for the first time since 2017 on Tuesday. UT has won 12 of the past 13 meetings and is 17-2 all-time against EKU in Knoxville.

NOTABLE

Tidwell Wows in SEC Debut
Vols’ true freshman Blade Tidwell made one heck of a statement in his SEC debut last Sunday afternoon. The Loretto, Tennessee, native put forth a dominant performance in Tennessee’s 4-1 victory in Sunday’s rubber game at Georgia. Tidwell gave up just one run on four hits while striking out six batters in a career-high 7.1 innings pitched and was named the SEC Freshman of the Week for his efforts.

Opening SEC Play on a High Note
UT opened SEC play with a series win at Georgia last weekend, marking the first time the Vols have won their opening series in conference play since 2014. It was also Tennessee’s first series win in Athens since 2016.

Spence Continues to Rake
Senior shortstop Liam Spence is coming off another impressive week at the plate,  leading the Vols with seven hits and two doubles. In UT’s series at Georgia, Spence hit a team-high .429 while scoring five times and driving in four runs. The Australia native opened the series with a leadoff home run on Friday and reached base in all four games last week to extend his on-base streak to 24 games.

Walk It Out
Tennessee has been one of the most patient teams at the plate in college baseball this season, ranking fifth in the country and second in the SEC with 117 walks. The Vols drew 12 walks in Friday’s 11-6 win at Georgia walked 26 times in four games last week.

OPPONENT SCOUT

EKU Colonels

  • 2021 Record: 8-10 (3-3 OVC)
  • 2019 Postseason: N/A
  • Head Coach: Chris Prothro (1st season) // Helped lead South Alabama to two conference titles and two NCAA Regional appearances as an assistant coach.
  • The Colonels were picked to finish sixth in the Ohio Valley Conference Preseason Poll. They have already beaten two ranked teams this season with wins over No. 15 Georgia Tech (Feb. 20) and No. 7 Louisville (March 16).
  • Junior infielder Daniel Harris was named to the OVC Preseason All-Conference Team and was also tabbed the league’s preseason player of the year by D1Baseball.com.
  • Cam Ridley, Charles Ludwick and Caleb Upshaw have been EKU’s top hitters this season. Ridley leads the team with 20 hits and 15 runs while Ludwick has the team lead with four homers and Upshaw is tops on the squad with 16 RBI.
  • Projected starting pitcher Brennan Kelly enters Tuesday’s game with a 1-1 record and 7.90 ERA in seven appearances (three games started).

GAME PROMOTIONS

Upcoming promotions for all Tennessee athletics home events can be found on the UT Fan Experience page by clicking HERE.
Fans are encouraged to download the My All App for their phones and devices this season. The app is available on the Google Play Store and Apple App Store and will allow fans to participate in in-game trivia, the custom filter selfie cam and more throughout the year.

ON DECK

The Vols jump back into SEC play this weekend when they host No. 22 LSU at Lindsey Nelson Stadium. Friday’s series opener will start at 6:30 p.m.

-UT Athletics

Tidwell Named SEC Freshman of the Week

Tidwell Named SEC Freshman of the Week

Vols RHP Blade Tidwell / Credit: UT Athletics

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – Tennessee right-handed pitcher Blade Tidwell was named the Southeastern Conference Freshman of the Week, as announced by the league office on Monday.

The Loretto, Tennessee, native was dominant in his SEC debut, leading the 10th-ranked Vols to a 4-1 victory in Sunday’s rubber game at Georgia. Tidwell picked up his third straight win to improve to 3-1 on the year after throwing a career-high 7.1 innings against the Bulldogs, allowing just one run on four hits while striking out six batters.

Tidwell is the first Tennessee player to earn SEC Freshman of the Week honors since Zach Osborne on May 18, 2009 and is just the second pitcher in program history to win the weekly award, joining Josh Lindblom (Feb. 20, 2006).

Sunday’s victory gave UT its first series win to open SEC play since winning two of three games at Missouri in 2014.

Following his outstanding performance on Sunday, Tidwell is tied for the team lead with three wins and boasts the lowest ERA (1.65) of any of Tennessee’s starting pitchers. The freshman right hander also leads the team with 27.1 innings pitched and ranks third with 27 strikeouts.

The Vols are back in action on Tuesday night when they host Eastern Kentucky at 6:30 p.m. before taking on No. 22 LSU at home this weekend.

-UT Athletics

Carrie Underwood Announces Special Easter Day Performance of My Savior

Carrie Underwood Announces Special Easter Day Performance of My Savior

Carrie Underwood‘s brand new album, My Savior, arrives this Friday, March 26th, but next Sunday, April 4th – on Easter – Carrie is going to have a very special performance for her fans.

Carrie shares the details about her Easter day special virtual event from the Ryman in Nashville…

Carrie takes you inside the making of and inspiration behind her album My Savior – which arrives this Friday, March 26th.

Photo Credit: Jeremy Cowart

Kenny Chesney Will Be Back Touring in 2022

Kenny Chesney Will Be Back Touring in 2022

Kenny Chesney announced to his fans that he will be back on tour in 2022.

Kenny shared, “It has been too long, and I miss you guys. You know how you feel when the music starts, the show open rolls, the lights spin? And it build, and then…I walk out and see you?! THAT is the greatest moment, and it starts the biggest rush I’ve ever experienced.”

Kenny says, “We have waited, and we have hoped…talked to medical experts, stadium people, local officials across the country. I hate what I’m about to tell you – with all the progress being made around the pandemic, there is still too much unknown. What we’re hearing changes daily…anything is possible…but if we can only do two-thirds of an audience? We decided who doesn’t get to come to the show we’ve all been waiting for? If we have to have social distancing measures, how far apart will you be?”

Kenny adds, “I have held on all these months, thinking I was going to get to see your faces soon. On bad days, that thought made me smile, gave me patience, inspired me to be my better self. Seeing your faces, though, reminds me of what I said when we postponed last year: I won’t take chances with people I love. I also don’t want to come out there and after all this time…and not deliver the best show I ever have to all of you! If I can’t give you more than you expect, it feels like I’m letting you down. And I’d rather let me down than any of you.”

Kenny ends with, “So, here comes reality: We’re moving to 2022…Where I feel better about us all being together safely. I’d rather keep everyone safe + know we can rock for years to come.” 

Kenny posted, “All current tickets will be honored for the rescheduled show date. If you love your seat, do nothing. You’re all set. Beginning now, if you’re unable to attend the rescheduled show, you may request a refund at the original point of purchase.”

Photo Credit: Allister Ann

Additional Photo Courtesy of Kenny Chesney

Maddie & Tae Take the Husband Makeup Challenge

Maddie & Tae Take the Husband Makeup Challenge

Maddie from Maddie & Tae did a very brave thing recently — she allowed her husband Jonah to apply her makeup.

Before he started, Maddie said that since they’ve been together for 11 years and Jonah has witnessed her putting on makeup thousands of times, he should do well.

While he won’t be hired anytime soon as a makeup artist, Jonah didn’t do that bad for his first try.

Check out Maddie and Jonah’s Husband Makeup Challenge video right here…

Photo Credit: Nolan Feldpausch

2nd Ave Strong Benefit Concert This Friday, March 26th

2nd Ave Strong Benefit Concert This Friday, March 26th

Music city is using music to help the recover from the devastating bomb that exploded on Christmas Day 2020 in the 2nd Ave area of downtown Nashville.

This Friday, there will be a broadcast and livestream benefit event to raise money for the 2ndavestrong fund – which is to help restore the vitally important historic district of 2nd Avenue. Named 2ndAveStrong, this fund was created in response to damage resulting from the Christmas Day bombing.

Schedule to appear at the benefit are Ashley McBryde, Old Dominion, Lindsay Ell, Scotty McCreery, LOCASH, Lee Brice, Phil Vassar, and more with the event being hosted by Natalie Stovall.

Talking about being involved with the 2nd Ave Strong Benefit Scotty McCreery says, “Nashville has been my second home for the last ten years. I was stunned when I saw the news of the bombing on Christmas Day. I’ve walked that street, eaten at those restaurants and performed at the Wildhorse Saloon several times. We all have – it’s such an important and fun part of Nashville. As soon as I was asked to participate, I said yes. Nashville is one of those great cities where everyone pulls together, and I’m proud to join with so many great artists to help do our share with the 2nd Avenue Strong event. Ashley McBryde, Old Dominion, Lee Brice, Breland, Shenandoah, Lindsay Ell, Tyler Rich, Sixwire and more. I’m proud to be part of that  line-up. I hope folks will tune in and donate.”

For Nashville area residents, the benefit will air this Friday, March 26th 2021, from 7 pm to 9pm (Central Time) on the local NewsChannel 5 — for everyone else you can watch it 2ndAveStrong.org — you can also donate there as well.

 

 

Photo Courtesy of 2nd Ave Strong

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