Dan + Shay Are “Glad You Exist” – New Music Arriving Friday!

Dan + Shay Are “Glad You Exist” – New Music Arriving Friday!

Dan + Shay dropped a hint this past weekend that something new was on the way from them this Friday.

Now we have a song title.

The guys revealed the track name as “Glad You Exist,” and they posted this message as well, “to us, ‘glad you exist’ is more than just a song. it’s a message of gratitude and hope. a message to everyone in our lives: our fans, our friends, our families, to remind them all how grateful we are to be on the planet at the same time. it’s truly remarkable when you think about it. we’ve spent the majority of the past year, like many others, searching for answers and a sense of normalcy, but finding comfort in memories of better days (that we all know will return soon). concerts, bonfires, road trips with friends, even the simple things like date night at a restaurant, or beers at a bar during a football game. this song has taken on new meaning not being able to see our loved ones in person, but throughout history, music has always had a special way of bringing people together, even when we are furthest apart . these words hold a special place in our hearts, and hopefully they will in yours too. we’ve said it before, and we’ll say it again (and again). we’re just so glad you exist. every. single. one of you. ❤️

We still don’t know what it sounds like…but it seems like we’ll be getting clues everyday from Dan + Shay all the way up until the full reveal on Friday, the 5th!

Photo Courtesy of Dan + Shay

Mickey Guyton Makes Her Late-Night TV Debut On The Late Show With Stephen Colbert

Mickey Guyton Makes Her Late-Night TV Debut On The Late Show With Stephen Colbert

Mickey Guyton appeared on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert this week. In his introduction, Stephen Colbert noted that Mickey is the first black solo female artist to earn a Grammy nomination in a country category.

Mickey’s nominated for Best Country Solo Performance for her song “Black Like Me” – which is also what she performed on the show.

You can watch Mickey make her late night TV debut right here…

Photo Courtesy of UMG Nashville

Jimmy’s blog: Kevin White lists 2 keys to being effective athletic director

Jimmy’s blog: Kevin White lists 2 keys to being effective athletic director

(This is the second in a two-part series regarding an exclusive interview with Kevin White, father of Tennessee’s new athletic director Danny White. To listen to the interview, go to 991thesportsanimal.com)

By Jimmy Hyams 

The job of an athletic director is complex.

It requires wearing a variety of hats.

You have to be able to hire good coaches, raise money, balance a budget, field good teams and steer clear of NCAA violations.

Kevin White, outgoing athletic director at Duke, has been in athletic administration for 38 years. He has worked in the Northeast, the South, the West and the Midwest.

White’s middle son, Danny, was hired recently as Tennessee’s fifth athletic director in less than 10 years.

White was asked which of the above five qualities are most important in an athletic director.

His answer: None.

So how would Kevin White define a good athletic director?

“I’ve tried to get my head around this question and I’ve come up with a pretty simple response as of late,’’ Kevin White said in an exclusive interview with WNML radio.

“I think it’s really about two things. It’s about managing the competing political forces. You can not be a successful athletics director unless you’re able to do that.

“You’ve got the acumen. You’ve got (to have) the skill set, the relationship capacity to be able to manage all of the competing political forces. And quite frankly, (you have to have) the street sense, the street instincts.

“The other one … you can delegate a lot of sub-functions within an athletic department, what I call collegiate franchise, at the highest level. A lot of those sub-functions can be delegated. But you can not, you absolutely can not delegate being the face, being the leader, of being the person that, at the end of the day, is the person responsible.

“Managing the political forces and being the leader, I think, it’s a pretty simple recipe. If you’re 2-for-2, and you’re strongly 2-for-2 in those two realms, you’ve got a chance to be pretty good.’’

Where Danny White goes 2-for-2 in those realms remains to be seen.

Tennessee has had split political forces, going back to the ouster of head football coach Johnny Majors and the promotion of Phillip Fulmer in 1992.

There were differences in the more recent hiring of athletic director John Currie, the aborted hiring of football coach Greg Schiano, the firing of Currie and the hiring of Fulmer as athletic director.

That isn’t the only challenge Danny White faces. He will have to deal with the likely adoption of Name, Image and Likeness, a one-time transfer rule, escalating coaches’ salaries, buyouts, and possible realignment.

What does Kevin White see as the most difficult challenges?

“At the end of the day,’’ White said, “a lot of them have some kind of financial element tied to them. I continue to worry about the economic model around college athletics. I think that is by far and away the largest challenge that’s facing this generation of athletic directors and administrators. And I don’t think that’s going to change any time soon.

“We need to continue to find more ways to generate more resources to provide these world-class experiences for these young people. That’s what they sign up for. And when these coaches are in their living rooms and encouraging young people to come to some of the best  institutions in the country, we’ve not only got to deliver that promise, we’ve got to over-deliver. And there is a financial reality to all of that.’’

Kevin White is convinced his son has the skill set to be a successful athletic director at Tennessee.

Danny White did a marvelous job of hiring coaches at his two previous stops: Bobby Hurley, Nate Oats and Lance Leipold at Buffalo; Scott Frost, Josh Heupel and Johnny Dawkins at Central Florida.

What’s the key to making good hires?

“Homework,’’ Kevin White said. “You’ve got to be able to understand the market place in which you’re operating and perhaps where your institution fits into that respective market place at that moment.’’

While admitting his parental prejudice, Kevin White said son Danny is a “natural leader. he’s incredibly empathetic. He’s highly task oriented. Adaptive. He’s flexible. He’s really passionate, if not intensely passionate. I think for coaches that are equally as aspirational, they’re attracted to somebody like that. I think that’s the package Danny has.

“I think it’s authentic. I don’t think it’s contrived. I think he kind of finds people that are pretty darn compatible with who he is and what’s he’s trying to do.’’

Kevin White said it takes a “village’’ to have a successful athletic department, and that means the school president, chancellor, board of trustees and everyone is “jogging down the same pathway. I know that may sound Pollyanna, but the really great programs in our country have done a really good job of doing just that.’’

Danny’s older brother, Mike, is the men’s basketball coach at Florida.

Could Mike work for Danny?

“Not a chance,’’ Kevin White said. “Not a chance. You grow up in a family of five and you’re the middle of two brothers, not a chance. A lot of blood (shed) playing 1-on-1 (basketball) in the driveway.’’

Kevin White has called the Tennessee athletic department a “magical place’’ and he believes his son can restore the shine that has dimmed in the last decade.

And the father can’t wait to come to Knoxville to watch his son’s sports programs.

“There is no question about that,’’ Kevin White said. “I can’t wait to get over there … and attend some athletic contests.’’


 

Sponsored by Big Kahuna Wings: The wings that changed it all 

LANCO’s New Hit is a “Near Mrs.”

LANCO’s New Hit is a “Near Mrs.”

LANCO recently celebrated the three anniversary of the release of their album Hallelujah Nights with a live stream event.

During that online show, the guys treated fans to some new songs mixed in with their fan favorites. One of those new tracks is “Near Mrs.” which is the guys next single…arriving this Friday, the 5th.

Check out this sneak peek video LANCO shared on their socials…

Photo Courtesy of Sony Music Nashville

Kelsea Ballerini Shares Stories & Sings on The Kelly Clarkson Show

Kelsea Ballerini Shares Stories & Sings on The Kelly Clarkson Show

This week Kelsea Ballerini appeared on The Kelly Clarkson Show show where she talked about how attending therapy helped her in her life, and also in her career.

Kelly Clarkson said that she and Kelsea are meant to be friends forever when she showed Kelsea’s work out video of using chips and dip as motivation for doing push ups.

Kelsea talked about how her song “Love Me Like A Girl” was kind of a musical road map for her husband to help him understand her better.

And, Kelsea also shared a story about a wine glass shattering in her mouth while talking to Miranda Lambert.

Check out the whole conversation right here…

You can also watch Kelsea’s performance of “Love Me Like A Girl” during her appearance on The Kelly Clarkson Show.

Photo Courtesy of Kelsea Ballerini

 

Davis advances to Wooden late season Top 20

Davis advances to Wooden late season Top 20

Rennia Davis – Lady Vols / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — The Los Angeles Athletic Club announced the John R. Wooden Award® presented by Wendy’s® Late Season Top 20 on Monday, and Tennessee’s Rennia Davis has advanced to that watch list.

Chosen by a poll of national college basketball experts based on their performances during the 2020-21 season thus far, the list consists of 20 student-athletes who are front-runners for the sport’s most prestigious honor.

The players on the list are considered strong candidates for the 2021 John R. Wooden Award Women’s Player of the Year presented by Wendy’s. Players not chosen to the preseason or midseason list are still eligible for the Wooden Award™ National Ballot.

Davis, a 6-foot-2 senior guard/forward from Jacksonville, Fla., is averaging 14.5 points and 8.9 rebounds per game while shooting 47.8 percent from the field and 78.9 percent from the free-throw line. In SEC play, Davis is putting up 17.1 ppg. and 9.7 rpg. while shooting 51.6 percent from the field and 81.0 from the charity stripe. Versus four ranked foes, Davis is even better, averaging a double-double of 17.8 ppg. and 13.8 rpg. while hitting 50.8 percent and 83.3 percent, respectively.

Davis is well on her way to becoming one of only five players who rank in the top 10 in both career scoring and rebounding average at UT, standing 10th (14.8) and sixth (8.0), respectively. The others are Patricia Roberts, Chamique Holdsclaw, Candace Parker and Tamika Catchings.  Davis also is on her way to becoming only the 13th UT woman to average double figures in scoring all four years of her career.

Through 15 games this season, Davis leads the team with six double-doubles and has 35 for her career to tie for fifth all-time at Tennessee. She has scored 20+ points on three occasions as a senior, tallying 16 such games during her career to stack up seventh in program annals. Davis also pulled down 20 rebounds vs. No. 12/12 Kentucky on Jan. 24, becoming only the eighth Lady Vol to do that and tying for the fifth-highest total in UT history.

The National Ballot consists of 15 top players who have proven to their universities that they meet or exceed the qualifications of the Wooden Award. Nearly 1,000 voters will rank in order 10 of those 15 players when voting opens prior to the NCAA Tournament and will allow voters to take into consideration performance during early round games.

The Wooden Award All American Team™ will be announced the week of the “Elite Eight” round of the NCAA Tournament. The winner of the 2021 John R. Wooden Award will be presented by Wendy’s following the NCAA Tournament in April.

About the John R. Wooden Award
Created in 1976, the John R. Wooden Award Program hosts the most prestigious honors in college basketball recognizing the Wooden Award Most Outstanding Player for men and women, the Wooden Award All American Teams for men and women and the annual selection of the Wooden Award Legends of Coaching recipient.

Honorees have proven to their university that they meet or exceed the qualifications of the John R. Wooden Award as set forth by Coach Wooden and the Wooden Award Steering Committee, including making progress towards graduation and maintaining at least a 2.0 cumulative GPA. Previous winners include Larry Bird (’79), Michael Jordan (’84), Tim Duncan (’97), Kevin Durant (’07), Candace Parker (’07; ’08), Maya Moore (’09; ’11), Chiney Ogwumike (’14), Breanna Stewart (’15; ’16) and last year’s recipients, Sabrina Ionescu of Oregon and Obi Toppin of Dayton.

Since its inception, the John R. Wooden Award has contributed nearly one million dollars to the universities’ general scholarship fund in the names of the Wooden Award All American recipients and has sent more than 1,000 underprivileged children to week-long college basketball camps. Additionally, the John R. Wooden Award partners with the Special Olympics Southern California (SOSC) each year to host the Wooden Award Special Olympics Southern California Basketball Tournament. The day-long tournament brings together Special Olympics athletes and Wooden Award All Americans and coaches in attendance. It is hosted at the Los Angeles Athletic Club during the John R. Wooden Award Weekend.

For up-to-date information on the Wooden Award, please go to www.woodenaward.com and follow the Wooden Award on Facebook at www.facebook.com/woodenaward and @WoodenAward on Twitter and Instagram.

2020-21 John R. Wooden Award Late Season Top 20
Aliyah Boston, South Carolina
Paige Bueckers, UConn
Charli Collier, Texas
Zia Cooke, South Carolina
Elissa Cunane, NC State
Rennia Davis, Tennessee
Chelsea Dungee, Arkansas
Dana Evans, Louisville
Arella Guirantes, Rutgers
Naz Hillmon, Michigan
Rhyne Howard, Kentucky
Rickea Jackson, Mississippi State
Ashley Joens, Iowa State
Haley Jones, Stanford
Natasha Mack, Oklahoma State
Aari McDonald, Arizona
Olivia Nelson-Ododa, UConn
Michaela Onyenwere, UCLA
NaLyssa Smith, Baylor
Kiana Williams, Stanford

-UT Athletics

Hoops Preview: #11 Tennessee at Ole Miss

Hoops Preview: #11 Tennessee at Ole Miss

Vols F Olivier Nkamhoua / Credit: UT Athletics

OXFORD, Miss. – The 11th-ranked Tennessee basketball team returns to action on Tuesday for a road contest with Ole Miss. Tipoff from The Pavilion is slated for 7 p.m. ET on ESPN2.

Fans can catch Tuesday’s game on ESPN2 and online or on any mobile device through WatchESPN. WatchESPN can be accessed through the ESPN App, or online at espn.com/watch. Kevin Fitzgerald and VFL Dane Bradshaw will have the call.

Fans can also listen live on their local Vol Network affiliate to hear Bob Kesling and Bert Bertlekamp describing the action.

Last time out, Tennessee dominated 15th-ranked Kansas, 80-61, in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge. The Vols were led in scoring for the third consecutive game by senior Yves Pons who scored 17 points on 7-of-9 shooting. SEC Freshman of the Week Jaden Springer dropped in 13 points, pulled down four rebounds and dished out a trio of assists.

The victory ended UT’s two-game losing skid to Kansas and helped the SEC earn its second victory all-time in the history of the SEC/Big 12 Challenge.

A victory on Tuesday would be the Vols sixth consecutive against Ole Miss, marking the longest win streak in the series for UT, since winning six in a row from 1991-96.

Up next, Tennessee stays on the road with a Saturday night road matchup with Kentucky. The opening tip from Rupp Arena is slated for 8 p.m. ET on ESPN.

THE SERIES
• Tennessee leads the all-time series with Ole Miss, 75-44, dating to 1924.
• The Volunteers own a 27-25 edge when the series is played in Oxford.
• Tennessee is riding a five-game win streak in the series, including each of the last two meetings at The Pavilion.
• This is the only time these teams are slated to meet during the regular season.
• No active Vol has ever played in a loss to Ole Miss. John Fulkerson was on the roster when UT lost at Ole Miss on Jan. 17, 2017, but he was inactive (season-ending injury in December).

A WIN WOULD…
• Extend UT’s win streak over Ole Miss to six games. Tennessee hasn’t won six consecutive games vs. the Rebels since 1991-96.

LAYUP LINES
• On Jan. 5, 2015, Ole Miss grad transfer Romello White Tweeted his commitment to Tennessee, but he eventually signed with Arizona State. See note below.
• Tennessee dominated #15 Kansas Saturday for an 80-61, wire-to-wire win that clinched the SEC/Big 12 Challenge for the SEC (5-4).
• The victory over the Jayhawks capped a perfect 7-0 sweep of the non-conference portion of Tennessee’s schedule.
• Yves Pons is averaging a team-best 16.7 points while shooting .655 over UT’s last three games.
• Tennessee is No. 10 in the latest NCAA NET ratings, with wins over three teams in the top 35.
• Last week, senior Yves Pons was named a top-10 finalist for the Julius Erving Award and one of 15 candidates for Naismith Men’s Defensive Player of the Year.
• Vols senior John Fulkerson  has been named to the Wooden Award’s Midseason Top-25 List.

DEFENSE WINS
• Tennessee ranks sixth in the NCAA in scoring defense, allowing just 59.4 points per game.
• According to KenPom, the Vols rank second in the NCAA in adjusted defensive efficiency, allowing only 86.6 points per 100 possessions. College teams typically average close to 70 possessions per game.
• The Vols are forcing 16.1 turnovers per game while converting those turnovers into 17.9 points per game. Tennessee’s turnover margin stands at +4.8 (10th nationally).
• Tennessee has forced 12 of 15 opponents to turn the ball over on 20 percent or more of their possessions.
• Tennessee has allowed only one opposing player to score 20 points all season (Xavier Pinson).
• Reigning SEC Defensive Player of the Year Yves Pons has 20 blocks through UT’s first eight SEC games. Pons has 100 blocks in his last 46 games.

ABOUT OLE MISS
• After opening the year with COVID-19 issues, the Rebels jumped out to a 5-1 start, but since the beginning of conference play it has been of a mixed bag of results for Ole Miss, which owns an 8-8 overall record and a 3-6 mark in SEC play. Most recently, Ole Miss suffered  back-to-back road losses to Arkansas (74-59) on Wednesday and Georgia (71-61) on Saturday.
• In year No. 3 in Oxford, head coach Kermit Davis has had to develop new offensive leaders after losing Breein Tyree, who was one of the SEC’s most prolific bucket-getters a season ago.
• This season, the Rebels have been reliant on senior guard Devontae Shuler. Shuler leads the team and ranks 11th in the SEC in scoring with 14.9 points per game. He’s also dishing out points nearly as efficiently as he’s scoring them, leading the team and ranking seventh among SEC players with 3.8 assists per contest.
• On the defensive end, Shuler and Luis Rodriguez have combined to record 55 total steals on the year, with Rodriguez leading the team and sitting in fourth in the SEC in steals (1.8 spg). Shuler ranks seventh in the league and second on the team (1.7 spg).
• On the boards, Rodriguez has been a force, pulling in a team-leading 6.4 rebounds per game. He also ranks 11th in the SEC in rebounding through 16 games. On the score sheet, Rodriguez has chipped in his fair share as Ole Miss’s fifth-leading scorer with 7.7 points per game.
• Manning Way is a street on campus in Oxford named after football alumni Archie Manning. In his honor, the speed limit is 18 mph—his jersey number. After his son, Eli, starred on the gridiron at Ole Miss, the school changed the speed limit to 10 mph—Eli’s number—to honor the younger Manning.

LAST MEETING WITH OLE MISS
•  A dominant offensive performance, highlighted by John Fulkerson’s double-double, resulted in a Tennessee 73-48 victory over Ole Miss on Jan. 21, 2020, at Thompson-Boling Arena. The win marked Rick Barnes‘ 100th victory as Tennessee’s head coach.
•  Fulkerson had a hot hand from the start, scoring 16 points alone in the first half—giving him the highest-scoring half of his career. The Kingsport native finished with a career-high 18 points, and 10 rebounds gave him his third career double-double.
•  Freshman Josiah-Jordan James surpassed his season scoring average and concluded the evening with 11 points and a game-high six assists.
•  Tennessee was dominant during the first half. Ole Miss head coach Kermit Davis called two timeouts to try and squelch UT’s momentum, but the Vols—aided by 11 points off turnovers—maintained a double-digit lead for the final 10 minutes of the half.
•  The first half closed with Ole Miss scoreless for the final three minutes. After shooting just 23 percent, the Rebels trailed, 42-23, at the break.
•  Recently granted eligibility by the NCAA, redshirt freshman big man Uroš Plavšić received a warm welcome from a crowd of 17,031 in Thompson-Boling Arena. Plavsic netted four points in nearly 11 minutes off the bench in his home debut.

MEMORABLE VOL PERFORMANCES AGAINST OLE MISS
• Brandon Wharton scored 20 points, Rashard Lee added 17 and 10 rebounds, Isiah Victor poured in 16 points and C.J. Black totaled 15 and 13 rebounds as UT upset the 11th-ranked Rebels 77-67 in Knoxville on Jan. 17, 1998.
• Gene Tormohlen grabbed 31 rebounds at Ole Miss on Feb. 11, 1957, to lift UT to a 98-88 win in Oxford. The 31 boards still stand as the second-best single-game effort in school history.
• Carlus Groves went 11-for-12 (.917) from the floor, the fourth-best single-game average in UT annals, against the Rebels to lift Tennessee to a 98-86 win in Knoxville on Feb. 19, 1992.
• Jeronne Maymon grabbed an incredible 10 offensive rebounds as part of an 11-point, 17-rebound effort against Ole Miss in the 2012 SEC Tournament in Nashville. Despite 21 points from Trae Golden and 15 from Skylar McBee, the Vols fell in overtime, 77-72.

MISSISSIPPI LETTERMEN UNCOMMON
• Incredibly, Tennessee has had just one all-time letterman from the state of Mississippi. Sardis, Mississippi, native Torrey Harris played for the Vols from 1995-99.

WHITE COMMITTED TO TENNESSEE
• Current Ole Miss grad transfer Romello White Tweeted the following on Jan. 5, 2015: Glad to say I’m committing to the university of Tennessee (orange emoji) #VolNation #truly blessed Thank you to all the coaches that recruited me (100 emoji)
• White’s verbal commitment to UT came during the head coaching tenure of Donnie Tyndall, which lasted only one season (2014-15). Assistant coach Chris Shumate was White’s lead recruiter; Shumate is now the associate head coach at Georgia Southern.
• Following Tyndall’s departure from Tennessee, White reopened his recruitment in April of 2015 and ended up signing with Arizona State, where he starred until enrolling at Ole Miss as a grad transfer prior to this season.

TRENDING: TENNESSEE BLOCK PARTY
• Tennessee is on track to finish among the top 10 nationally in block percentage for the third straight season. The Vols are blocking 15.0 percent of opponents’ two-point field-goal attempts this season.

Season          Total Blocks            Block Pct.           DI Rank

2018-19          199                           14.8%                 10

2019-20          186                           15.6%                   5

2020-21            73                           15.0%                   8

NEW AD WHITE HAS HOOPS DNA
• Tennessee’s new director of athletics, Danny White, is a former college basketball student-athlete who played at both Towson (1998-2000) and Notre Dame (2000-02).
• White’s father, Kevin White, is a legendary career AD who recently announced his retirement following a long career at Duke. Danny’s older brother, Mike White, played basketball at Ole Miss and is now the head coach at Florida.

-UT Athletics

Springer Earns Second SEC Freshman of the Week Award

Springer Earns Second SEC Freshman of the Week Award

Vols G Jaden Springer / Credit: UT Athletics

Tennessee basketball standout Jaden Springer garnered his second SEC Freshman of the Week award of the season on Monday. Springer averaged 11.0 points, 4.0 rebounds and 4.0 assists in victories over Mississippi State and No. 15 Kansas last week.

The 2020 McDonald’s All-American from Charlotte, North Carolina, also was named SEC Freshman of the Week on Dec. 21.

The previous week, Springer missed both of Tennessee’s games with an ankle injury suffered late in the Vols’ win over Vanderbilt on Jan. 16. He returned to the lineup Tuesday against Mississippi State and totaled nine points, five assists, four rebounds and a block in 25 productive minutes off the bench.

He built on that performance Saturday against Kansas, as he earned a starting assignment and finished with 13 points, four rebounds and three assists while shooting a perfect 7-for-7 from the foul line.

Through 15 games, Springer is Tennessee’s third-leading scorer (10.2 ppg) while averaging just 6.8 field-goal attempts per game.

He also boasts the team’s second-best field-goal percentage (.517) and is shooting an impressive .563 percentage from 3-point range.

Tennessee players have now garnered 17 SEC weekly awards during the tenure of sixth-year head coach Rick Barnes.

Springer and the 11th-ranked Vols return to action Tuesday at Ole Miss. Tipoff is set for at 7 p.m. ET on ESPN2.

-UT Athletics

Transcript: Rick Barnes Availability Previewing Ole Miss

Transcript: Rick Barnes Availability Previewing Ole Miss

Vols HC Rick Barnes / Credit: UT Athletics

Tennessee basketball coach Rick Barnes met with the media via Zoom on Monday to review UT’s win over Kansas and preview the upcoming matchup with Ole Miss.

On if it is concerning that the team had opposite performances in the games against Florida and Kansas:
“Well, I think you’re always concerned when you don’t do the things that you feel like you’re capable of. I also know this—that old saying in coaching—you’re never as good as you think you are and you’re probably never as bad as you think you are. We’re somewhere in the middle probably. To answer that is the word consistency. Can we get consistent with it? Again, when we’ve had everybody healthy, I think we’ve been better. I don’t think there’s any question about that. Even with that said, I think that we are a good enough team that we shouldn’t get beat as badly as we did at Florida. So much of the game is mental and you can get rocked back a little bit, and sometimes it takes you longer to get out of it. We cost ourselves in games because we would not shoot the ball, and that led to a lot of turnovers. Like I said here against Mississippi State the other night when I was talking about kind of the same situation that you’ve asked me about, we finally started shooting the ball. They didn’t go in, but then the challenge was would we continue to shoot open shots. We did that other night against Kansas, and I would be very disappointed—I will tell you this, too. Yesterday during film, I got onto Santi (Vescovi) about turning down some shots that he’s got to take for us. The key going forward will be if we do that, I think it takes a lot of pressure off. You’re not going to make them all. Nobody makes them all against us and we’re not going to make them all, but I think we’re all looking for consistency from everybody. I think that discrepancy—I can’t tell you why it’s like that other than I know that it gets back to consistency.”

On what a ‘Come to Jesus’ meeting looks like with him:
“I would like to think that our players know that we’re going to be truthful and that we’re going to coach them the way that we want them to be coached. We’re going to watch film. We’re not going to hold back. Every game we show them the good, the bad, and the ugly. I think sometimes you’ve got to go deeper than that. Sometimes you revert back to experiences you’ve dealt with in the past. Coaching is an everyday proposition. You can’t ever think you’re there. Instead, you get up every day with the mindset ‘How can we get better?’ Knowing that this is what I do for a living, the guys that I coach want to do it for a living, but they have no idea what goes into that. I do believe if you take days off trying to coach them and help them, it hurts them in the long run. The biggest thing that you can do, and I think our players will tell you, is that I am brutally honest. Sometimes the truth hurts when you see it, but I’m not going to say anything to them that I can’t validate with the tape in terms of their effort and in terms of them not playing the way we need to play. I can point it out to them, but that tape validates it. In the past I’ve said I can arrest them, but the tape charges them. I think as a staff we’re very straight forward with them. The most important thing in life is truth, and I think as long as you’re speaking truth, you’re going to be fine.”

On how to balance wanting to play well now versus wanting to peak at the end of the season:
“We showed yesterday, and just like you would expect in the game the other night against Kansas, we did not execute particularly well to start the game, which I wasn’t surprised because we had two freshmen out there that haven’t been in that situation. If I said it once yesterday, I said it ten times, we’ve got room to get so much better. I don’t think we’re anywhere near peaking right now. It’s still about us getting better. It’s about certain guys still learning the offense, understanding what they need to do, spacing wise. We can get so much better. Defensively the other night I thought we were really good. Where we’ve got to get consistent is offensively. I’m not talking about making shots. When you’re making shots like we did at the start of the game, it made everything look pretty. From a technical standpoint, that’s what it was. We made shots. Once the game settled down, we got back into where we were executing what we wanted to get done.”

On what ‘drawing the line’ means to the team and how is that something they accomplished:
“It was about us. The line had nothing to do with anybody but us. The night before we talked about the things that we had to do within our own team. This group of guys, they love each other, they care about each other, but it’s about the respect level within our team in terms of guys doing their jobs night in and night out, and excepting the role that we need them to play. A lot of it was directed towards rebounding the basketball. We had gotten our tails kicked in rebounding. Whether you want to call it toughness or technique, the fact is it’s a mindset. We said we’re going to draw the line. We’ve talked, and everybody says you just have to do it. Whether you’re talking about–whatever it takes is what it gets down to. Block your man out and go get the ball. We’ve got to go rebound. Drawing the line, what we’re referring to is in our own team structure in terms of proving to ourselves that we were tough enough to do it and capable of doing it.”

On his early impressions of Ole Miss:
“Well, obviously they have a whole new team from a year ago. With Kermit and his teams—you go back to the beginning of the year they, have been playing great basketball. They are aggressive, they trap, they really work hard at turning you over and they do a terrific job of getting turnovers, and turning those turnovers into baskets. They are very active defensively and I really like the way they run their offense with speed. So, every night we go out, it’s a different opponent, but yet we have to have to same mindset in terms of playing against teams that are very well coached and they know what they’re looking for. He’s going to have them ready to play, and he always has his teams ready to play. We’ve got to be ready to step up and show that we can be consistent.”

On how fine the line is between the extra pass, passing up a good shot for a better shot, and taking the open shots he’s been talking about recently…
“The fine line between shooting the ball and extra pass is obviously important. We want as many uncontested shots as we can get. What you don’t want is an extra pass with a really good shooter that has a good look at it, to a guy that is maybe not as good a shooter. Even with that, we’d rather a guy that’s not a great shooter—unless it’s an absolute special situation—to get a cleaner look. Contested shots are hard to make. We do want ball movement and we love assists. We love the pass that leads to the assist. Yves (Pons) did a great job the other night when he passed the ball to VJ (Victor Bailey Jr.), Vj threw it back, and instead of shooting it, he put it on the floor with two dribbled and drove the ball and it was a terrific basketball play. We just want high percentage shots, and as many uncontested shots as we can get.”

On where he is during the COVID season whether it is at home, still at Pratt, or his office…
“I don’t spend more time at home. It’s different here. If you guys walked in our locker room it doesn’t look anything like it did a year ago. When the women aren’t playing here, we do most everything in the Ray Mears room. Most guys in the past might sit around and eat, and now most of them carry their food back, except the night before the game when we come back for our meeting prior to the game every night in Ray Mears. We don’t use our film room, so we haven’t been in our film room since we got back from Nashville back in the spring. All of our furniture was taken out of the lounge. When we’re in there, we have dividers up in the lockers and those type of things. We really do try to do everything we can that way. Today I’m here, then I walk through the locker room, and when we finish up I’ll go sit at the court at Thompson Boling Arena. We do go back and practice at Pratt, so we’re normally up there. Other than the way the locker room is set up, there’s not much that has changed in terms of the way I do things. I think our guys really miss the lounge, I do. It had become a home for them, where they would love to hang around and be together, and obviously we have encouraged them not to do that as much as possible. That’s the biggest difference, because my favorite time with them honestly is before practice and when we get started, or after practice when they are getting ready to eat, I’d hang out with them till the end. I loved being around them, and I’d get to cut up with them and kid with them, even If I had gotten on them in practice. That’s probably the biggest adjustment we’ve had to make with what goes on in our locker room.”

On freshman Olivier Nkamhoua’s Saturday performance, playing time and rotations going forward:
“Olivier did okay. I put him in and when I took him out, I said he took two shots and the first one wasn’t a very good shot and the second one I get it, but that’s not why I’m taking you out. We talked the night before and he said to me that his number one job was to play defense and rebound, and in that short span of missing those two shots, he gave up two baskets. Not easy ones, but he could have guarded better and he actually did when he went back in. We think that Olivier can score. I do think the more he’s out there, the more comfortable he will get mentally probably more than anything.

“I still think we’re going play 11 people going forward. We still have confidence in E.J. (Anosike) and Uros (Plavsic) and we want those guys to play. It’s hard to get beyond that 10 or 11 guys. It really is, because we’re still trying to get the consistency going. We had planned on really starting the younger guys a couple weeks back, but we couldn’t do it because of the injuries. We’ve been hit with that all year, and we want to get out there in practice and get that rhythm we want. This group of guys work hard, knowing that when their number is called, they’ll be ready for the opportunity they’ve been waiting on. We do want to keep the minutes down and in a perfect world, we like to keep everybody under 30 minutes in a game. We feel good about guys playing 28 minutes or somewhere in there. We think we’re all much more affective when we can do that, but for us to do that, we’ve got to get consistent play from our bench.”

On if success against Kansas was a product of shot selection:
“I think it has a lot to do with it. We talk about game shots and game speed, and that’s what we want to see. The other night, we felt like guys were a little bit calmer with the ball. I liked the fact that Yves Pons and Josiah-Jordan James got the ball down and got themselves in triple-threat position and raised up and shot it. I think that’s a great way to shoot a three, especially because I know how much time those guys have put in to doing just that. We all just want guys to do what they practice, and we want to come within the framework of our offense and feel like our guys know what we’re trying to get done. We did isolate a little bit more the other night, and we had some isolation plays that we went to that we like. It plays into those guys again doing what they practice.”

On the SEC defeating the Big 12 (5-4) and what kind of statement that was for the league:
“I think it’s important because everybody every year has their opinion. The narrative is that the Big 12 and Big 10 have the best leagues right now. I think the fact is that we did have an opportunity to go head-to-head and we came out on top. So yeah, I think it helps our league and the perception of our league. I also think that this time of year, it’s very important for teams that are fighting to get in to post-season play because every game is being closely watched. They always are, but maybe more so this year than ever because of the fact that some teams are not going to play as many games as others. I told someone after the game that all day long, I’d bump into people who were talking about the excitement of watching all these games on T.V. and that it felt like an NCAA Tournament because there are games going on all day long. They are terrific games obviously, so for our league, I think it was great and only the second time that I think we’ve been able to win the challenge.”

On the passing John Chaney and Coach’s memories of Chaney:
“It was a blessing to get to meet him and be able to be around him some and he was just a lovely person. He was always the same person every time I spoke with him and treated me very nice. The way I got to know him even more without him knowing that, was through Dan Leibovitch who is the associate commissioner of basketball in the SEC. Dan loved him and I would ask Dan about him and Dan said that if you were a student-athlete in Chaney’s program; it was all about getting an education. He drove that through his players and Dan told me that no one cared about his players wanting to create a better life for themselves more than John Chaney. We lost one of the best in the business. He came through during a time where there weren’t that many black coaches. Someone told me back in the day he was a public player of the year. He probably wasn’t recruited the way a player of that stature should have been but he made the best of it. You look at the legacy he left behind, he left the thing so much better than he found it and he’s so terrific for the game of college basketball.”

On his relationship with Kermit Davis:
“Kermit’s one of those guys the first time you meet him you feel like you’ve known him your whole life. He’s always had a pleasant personality with me and I’ve kept up with Kermit because ever since he got into coaching, everyone knew he was a terrific basketball coach. He did an incredible job at Middle Tennessee and there’s a lot of things about Kermit I like because he’s real. When he left Middle Tennessee, very few coaches would’ve said what he said. He came to Ole Miss and said this is a total rebuild. Most coaches wouldn’t want to say something like that and that tells you who he is, how secure he is and what he does. Everyone knows how good he is with the X’s and O’s and he’s done a good job at building programs and he’s doing the same thing with Ole Miss.”

On his first impression of Josh Heupel:
“I like him a lot. I met him in the football locker room the first day he was here and he was on the court the other night. Just spending a little time with him he’s a lot like Danny White. It takes me back to where I was at Providence or Clemson; they just want a chance where they want to come into a situation like this and make the program better. I like the fact that they think they’ve got a great job. They know what this place can be and they want to be a part of bringing this place back to be what we all want it to be. I can only speak from when I was at that age that you’re not afraid to compete. I think these guys are going to get us into the fight and that’s what we all want. Being around him and Danny, I’m impressed with their fire and enthusiasm on wanting to get things done.”

On wanting to get more out of Yves Pons and John Fulkerson and how they did that on Saturday night:
“We talked about drawing the line and it was directed at those guys quite a bit, to be honest with you. I thought both of them responded in a great way because of what we expected from them from the get-go. I thought they did exactly what we needed them to do. It goes back to having to do it again and again.

On why Tennessee outrebounded Kansas this year and not last year:
“For some reason, they didn’t send as many to the glass. Watching the tape, we had as many as five guys going up for the rebound sometimes. We told them the night before I don’t care who gets it, go get the ball. Santiago Vescovi had a great night on the glass and we had some good block-outs but nothing is perfect by any means. Our guards did a great job but they weren’t sending as many guys as they have before when we faced them but I don’t know. I just like the fact on a lot of clips, we had 5 guys around the basket ready to go get it.”

-UT Athletics

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