Lady Vols set to play at Texas A&M on Feb. 7

Lady Vols set to play at Texas A&M on Feb. 7

Lady Vols vs. Texas A&M / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — The Southeastern Conference has announced a schedule for women’s basketball games on Feb. 7 as a result of game postponements during the 2020-21 season due to the impact of COVID-19.

The No. 20/22 Lady Vols will travel to College Station to take on No. 8/7 Texas A&M at 3 p.m. ET (2 CT) a week from Sunday at Reed Arena in a contest slated to be carried by SEC Network. That match-up was originally scheduled to be the league-opener for both teams on Dec. 31.

The SEC also has reset the Missouri at Auburn game for Feb. 7 at 1 p.m. ET on SEC Network. It had previously been scheduled for Jan. 10.

In addition, the Ole Miss at South Carolina game originally scheduled for December 31 is tentatively scheduled for February 25, at a time to be determined.

The SEC’s COVID-19 management requirements, as developed by the SEC’s Return to Activity adn Medical Guidance Task Force, are available on SECSports.com (PDF).

Feb. 7 Revised SEC Women’s Basketball Schedule
Missouri at Auburn (1 p.m. ET / SEC Network)
Tennessee at Texas A&M (3 p.m. ET / SEC Network)

2020-21 Schedule 

-UT Athletics

Hoops Preview: No. 20/22 Lady Vols vs. Florida

Hoops Preview: No. 20/22 Lady Vols vs. Florida

Lady Vols vs UF / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — No. 20/22 Tennessee (11-3, 5-1 SEC) closes out its four-game home stand Sunday with a Southeastern Conference match-up vs. Florida (9-7/2-6 SEC) at Thompson-Boling Arena.

UT, which is third in the standings and one of only three SEC teams with one loss or fewer in league play (along with South Carolina and Texas A&M), tips it off on The Summitt against the Gators at 2:02 p.m. ET.

Tennessee enters this contest after carding its second one-point victory of the season in three such games, coming from 13 points down and then holding on for the win over Ole Miss, 68-67, on Thursday night in Knoxville.

The Lady Vols find themselves with an opportunity to improve to 6-1 in league play for the second season in a row and preserve a two-game lead over four teams tied for fourth in the standings.

Florida, meanwhile, comes to Knoxville in similar fashion as Ole Miss, with a record that belies its ability to compete with any team in the conference. The Gators are coming off a three-point loss to Missouri on Thursday night, 61-58, that snapped a two-game UF winning streak. One of those victories was a 10-point triumph over Ole Miss in Oxford. Florida also had a four-point loss at Arkansas on Jan. 14. That same Razorback team knocked off UConn on Thursday night in Fayetteville, 90-87.

Following Sunday’s game, there are only two more Lady Vol home games scheduled, including the “Live Pink, Bleed Orange” game vs. South Carolina on Feb. 18 (7 p.m./SEC Network) and Senior Day vs. Auburn on Feb. 28 (SEC Network).

BROADCAST INFORMATION

  • Sunday’s game will be televised by ESPNU with Sam Gore (PxP) and LVFL Tamika Catchings (analyst) on the call.
  • All of the games included in the ESPN package (ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU) and the SEC Network 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.
  • Institutions also can produce for SEC Network+ (SECN+) any conference and non-conference games that are not otherwise televised. Those are available on the ESPN app and SECSports.com.
  • 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.

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT ALLVOLS.COM

  • Single game tickets are on sale, starting at just $5. Go to AllVols.com to purchase.

NOTHING BUT NET (RANKINGS)

  • Tennessee climbed to a season-best NCAA NET Ranking of 13th on Jan. 26 and now stands one spot down at No. 14 after the win over Ole Miss.
  • That rating is the second highest in the SEC (South Carolina is No. 3).
  • Tennessee started at No. 28 on Jan. 4, when the first-ever ranking was released. The rating tool replaces the previous RPI formula that was used for helping determine NCAA Tournament invitations and seeding.
  • The Lady Vols have wins over NET No. 10 Indiana, No. 20 Kentucky, No. 24 Arkansas, No. 29 Alabama and No. 53 Ole Miss.
  • UT has three close losses, including to No. 2 UConn, No. 17 Georgia and No. 22 West Virginia.
  • UT will face top-60 NET foes in No. 3 South Carolina, No. 17 Georgia (in Athens), No. 15 Texas A&M (possibly twice), No. 20 Kentucky (in Lexington), No. 39 Mississippi State (in Starkville), No. 44 Missouri (in Columbia) and No. 60 Florida.

QUICK GLANCE AT THE LADY VOLS

  • Tennessee has posted three victories over ranked teams (No. 13/13 Arkansas, No. 15/15 Indiana, No. 12/12 Kentucky), marking the most by the program in a season since 2017-18 when it had seven.
  • The Lady Vols have done so starting a freshman (Marta Suárez), two sophomores (Jordan HorstonTamari Key), a junior (Rae Burrell) and senior (Rennia Davis). They have played together as a quintet for 10 total games, with Key and Horston being inserted into the starting lineup for the contest at Indiana (12/17/20).
  • UT is led in scoring in all games by junior guard Rae Burrell (16.6 ppg.) and senior forward Rennia Davis (14.5 ppg.), with sophomore point guard Jordan Horston contributing 8.7 and classmate and center Tamari Key chipping in 8.5.
  • In SEC play, four Tennessee players are scoring in double figures, including Davis (17.7 ppg.), Burrell (16.3), Key (11.5) and Horston (10.3 ppg.).
  • Davis (8th) and Burrell (10th) make UT one of two schools with two players ranked in the top 10 on the SEC’s conference-games-only scoring list. Alabama (Jordan Lewis, Jasmine Walker) is the other.
  • Rennia Davis leads the team with a 9.1 rebound average for the season, but she has raised that to 10.2 rpg. in league play to average a double-double vs. SEC foes.
  • Davis, who is on all of the preseason awards watch lists (Wade, Wooden, Naismith, Cheryl Miller), the Wooden Midseason List and a projected All-SEC First Team pick by the coaches and players, is averaging 17.8 ppg. and 13.8 ppg. vs. ranked teams in four games this season.
  • Davis has climbed to 16th on UT’s all-time scoring list with 1,603 points, surpassing Mercedes Russell (16th, 1,597) and standing 18 behind Dana Johnson (15th, 1,621).
  • On the all-time rebounding list, Davis also stands in 16th place with 862. She surpassed Daedra Charles (16th, 858) and is 22 behind Dana Johnson (15th, 884).
  • Sophomore Tamari Key has scored in double figures in five of the past six contests (12/14/15/10/19/7). That 19-point effort vs. Kentucky was a career best. Her scoring average over the past six games is 12.8 ppg. along with 6.0 rpg.
  • The team’s 45.6 shooting percentage, which ranks third in the SEC, currently rates as UT’s highest since the 2013-14 squad knocked down shots at a 45.7 rate.
  • The 45.86 per game rebound average that stands 10th nationally and second in the SEC, ranks as the fifth-best in school history at this point.
  • Tamari Key ranks No. 1 in the SEC in field goal percentage in conference games (65.2), with Rennia Davis (4th, 53.8) and Rae Burrell (12th, 47.5) making the Lady Vols the only school to have three players ranked in the top three of that statistical category.

RECAPPING UT’S LAST GAME

  • The No. 20/22 Lady Vols held off an upset-minded Ole Miss team on Thursday night, earning a 68-67 win in Thompson-Boling Arena.
  •  Senior Rennia Davis led Tennessee (11-3, 5-1 SEC) with 21 points and seven rebounds, and junior Rae Burrell logged 17 points and three rebounds. Sophomore Jordan Horston was also in double figures, managing 13 points and three assists.
  •  Donnetta Johnson was the high scorer for Ole Miss (7-6, 1-6 SEC) with 19 points, and Shakira Austin and Snudda Collins were close behind with 16 and 13, respectively.
  •  Tennessee overcame trailing by 13 points in the second quarter to defeat Ole Miss, matching a Kellie Harper era comeback of 13 in last year’s SEC Tournament to Missouri on March 5, 2020.
  •  It was the largest regular-season comeback made by a UT team since erasing a 20-point, third-quarter deficit against Stetson on Dec. 5, 2018.
  •  The Lady Vols were a perfect 8-of-8 from the free-throw line in the fourth quarter and were 16 of 19 for the game.
  •  Their free-throw percentage of 84.2 percent against Ole Miss was the highest by UT since having the same exact performance against the Rebels on Feb. 27, 2020, at 16 of 19 (84.2).

ABOUT FLORIDA

  • Florida is led by the dynamic guard tandem of sophomore Lavender Briggs (19.2 ppg., 6.1 rpg.) and redshirt senior Kiara Smith (16.4 ppg., 6.2 rpg.)
  • The Gators won at Ole Miss by 10 last Sunday and only lost by four at Arkansas on Jan. 14
  • Cameron Newbauer is in his fourth year as head coach, leading the Gators to a 43-65 record during his tenure.

UT-UF SERIES NOTES

  • Tennessee holds a 53-4 all-time record vs. Florida, dating back to Feb. 8, 1980, winning five straight and 16 of the past 17 meetings.
  • UT is 23-2 vs. UF in games played in Knoxville, 8-0 at neutral sites and 3-1 in overtime contests vs the Gators, including 3-0 in Gainesville in those extra-frame affairs.
  • UT is 22-2 all-time in games played in Gainesville, winning the past seven trips there and in 13 of the past 14 visits, including 78-50 on Jan. 16, 2020.
  • Kellie Harper is 1-1 vs. the Gators, suffering a 66-64 neutral site loss as North Carolina State’s head coach on Nov, 23, 2012, and starting her UT career, 1-0, with last season’s 78-50 victory.
  • Tennessee has managed to hold Florida to 50 points or fewer in the past three meetings, including exactly 50 the past two seasons.
  • UT’s record for most free throws made in a game (40-46) came at Florida on Feb. 3, 2005.
  • Sunshine State native Rennia Davis is averaging 16.0 ppg. and 8.3 rpg. in three games vs. Florida. The product of Ribault High School in Jacksonville had an 11/10 effort in Gainesville as a freshman in 2018, a 19/10 performance in Knoxville as a sophomore in 2019 and an 18/5 showing in 2020 in Gainesville.

RECAPPING THE GATORS’ LAST GAME

  • Florida fell in a hard-fought battle to visiting Missouri Thursday night inside Exactech Arena at the Stephen C. O’Connell Center, dropping a 61-58 decision despite outscoring the Tigers in the second half.
  • In a back-and-forth contest, Florida (9-7/2-6 SEC) crept within a single possession on several occasions late in the game but could not break through as its two-game winning streak came to an end.
  • Sophomore Lavender Briggs, finishing with her third double-double of the season and 10th of her career, tallied a game-high 19 points to go with 11 boards while senior guard Kiara Smith scored 14 and added six rebounds.
  • Ladazhia Williams led MU with 16 points, while Aijha Blackwell added 14 points and 16 rebounds.

THE LAST TIME THESE TEAMS MET

  • The No. 24/25 Lady Vols picked up their third-straight SEC win on Jan. 16, 2020, defeating the Gators in Exactech Arena, 78-50.
  • Junior Rennia Davis, playing in front of family and friends who made the drive down from Jacksonville, led the effort for Tennessee (14-3, 4-1 SEC), finishing the day with 18 points and five rebounds. Sophomore Rae Burrell was also in double digits with 11 points.
  • Freshmen Lavender Briggs and Brylee Bartram led Florida (11-7, 2-3 SEC) with 11 points each.

LAST TIME IN KNOXVILLE

  • Sophomore Rennia Davis (19/10) and redshirt senior forward Cheridene Green (15/10) each posted double-doubles to propel Tennessee (14-7/3-5 SEC) to victory over Florida on Jan. 31, 2019, in Thompson-Boling Arena, 67-50.
  • The Gators (5-16, 1-7 SEC) were led by redshirt senior guard Funda Nakkasoglu, who finished with 18 points, and sophomore Kiara Smith, who notched 11.

WHAT’S NEXT

  • After enjoying a four-game home stand, UT will hit the road for a Thursday game in Starkville against No. 21/19 Mississippi State at 7 CT/8 ET (SECN+).
  • Florida is not slated to play again until Feb. 11 at LSU 7 ET/SECN+) after its Feb. 4 game vs. Vanderbilt was canceled.

-UT Athletics

Hoops Preview: #18 Tennessee vs. #15 Kansas

Hoops Preview: #18 Tennessee vs. #15 Kansas

Yves Pons – Vols F /Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – The 18th-ranked Tennessee basketball team returns to the hardwood for a top-20 showdown in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge when No. 15 Kansas arrives in Knoxville on Saturday night. Tipoff from Thompson-Boling Arena is slated for 6 p.m. ET on ESPN.

Fans can catch Saturday nights game on ESPN and online or on any mobile device through WatchESPN. WatchESPN can be accessed through the ESPN App, or online at espn.com/watch. Bob Wischusen and Dick Vitale 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 battled past Mississippi State, 56-53 to end its two-game losing skid. The Vols were led by senior Yves Pons who scored 13 points on 6-of-9 shooting and the defensive efforts of freshman Keon Johnson who recorded three steals and a pair of blocks, while scoring eight points of his own.

A victory on Saturday would give UT its second win over a top-15 opponent, while also improving the Vols home record to 12-2 during NABC Suits and Sneakers games.

Up next, the Vols will hit the road, for a conference contest with Ole Miss on Tuesday night. Tipoff from Oxford is slated for 7 p.m. ET on either ESPN, ESPN2 or ESPNU.

THE SERIES
• Tennessee owns a 1-4 all-time record vs. Kansas, dating to 2009.
• The first-ever meeting took place at Allen Fieldhouse, with KU claiming a 92-85 victory in 2009. The Vols avenged that loss the following season by upsetting the top-ranked Jayhawks in Knoxville on Jan. 10, 2010.
• In last year’s Big 12/SEC Challenge, Kansas defended its home court with a 74-68 win over the Vols.
• The five previous meetings have been decided by an average of seven points.
• Tennessee’s all-time record against current members of the Big 12 stands at 14-18.

A WIN WOULD…
• Give Tennessee two victories over top-15 teams this season.
• Be the Vols’ 14th win over a ranked opponent during the Barnes era.
• Give the Vols a 12-2 home record in NABC Suits and Sneakers games.

LAYUP LINES
• The 2021 SEC/Big 12 Challenge marks the event’s eighth year. Tennessee is 4-2 in the event, as the Vols did not take part in the inaugural challenge.
• The Big 12 won the challenge in 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2019. The SEC claimed its lone win in 2018, and the series was tied in 2017 and 2020. The Big 12 has a cumulative advantage of 40-30 (.571).
• Rick Barnes on Tuesday passed Kansas legend Phog Allen (and Don Haskins) to ascend to 19th place on the NCAA’s all-time Division I wins list with victory No. 720.
• Tennessee is No. 12 in the latest NCAA NET ratings, with wins over three teams in the top 30.
• This 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.
• True freshman Jaden Springer owns a team-best plus/minus rating of +11.4 per game.
• During SEC play, only 4.0 points per game separate Tennessee’s top seven scorers.

DEFENSE WINS
• Tennessee ranks sixth in the NCAA in scoring defense, allowing just 59.3 points per game.
• According to KenPom, the Vols rank second in the NCAA in adjusted defensive efficiency, allowing only 87.2 points per 100 possessions. College teams typically average close to 70 possessions per game.
• The Vols are forcing 16.7 turnovers per game while converting those turnovers into 18.9 points per game. Tennessee’s turnover margin stands at +5.6 (sixth nationally).
• Tennessee has forced 12 of 14 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 45 games.

ABOUT KANSAS
• Kansas snapped a rare three-game losing streak with a 59-51 victory over TCU Thursday. The win gives the 15th-ranked Jayhawks an 11-5 (5-4 Big 12) record entering Saturday’s showdown on Rocky Top.
• In his 18th season in Lawrence, head coach Bill Self bid farewell to 2019-20 consensus second team All-America selections Devon Dotson and Udoka Azubuike. Also departed from last year’s squad is Isaiah Moss, who was the team’s third-leading scorer last season.
• Despite recent struggles, the Jayhawks have been led by 2020 Naismith Defensive Player of the Year, Marcus Garrett. Garrett is the team’s fifth-leading scorer with 9.9 points per game, the team leader in assists with 3.7 per contest, and on the defensive end, he averages 1.5 steals per game. Like Tennessee’s Yves Pons, Garrett is both a member of the 2021 Naismith Defensive Player of the Year watch list.
• Junior Ochai Agbaji is KU’s leading scorer, pouring in 14.4 points per game, scoring in double-figures in all but one game for the Jayhawks thus far and ranking ninth in the Big 12 in scoring.
• On the glass, redshirt freshman forward Jalen Wilson has pulled in a team-leading 6.9 rebounds per game. That rebounding average places him in fifth among Big 12 players. Wilson also has made an impact offensively, ranking second on the team with 12.3 points per game.
• As recently as 2018, a local law in Lawrence, Kansas, stated that all cars entering the city limits must first sound their horns to warn nearby horses of their arrival.

LAST MEETING WITH KANSAS
•  Despite a career-high 24 points from junior Yves Pons and a third double-double in five games from junior John Fulkerson, solid late free-throw shooting led third-ranked Kansas past Tennessee, 74-68, on Jan. 25, 2020, at historic Allen Fieldhouse.
•  Pons’ 24 points were the most points scored by a Vol in UT’s all-time series with Kansas. He finished the afternoon 8-of-14 from the field and 6-of-7 from the free-throw line.
•  Fulkerson’s 12 rebounds were both a career-high and the most-ever by a Tennessee player against Kansas. He added 15 points to his ledger to finish with a double-double.
•  Vols senior Jordan Bowden also had an effective evening for the Vols, scoring 19 points—all after halftime—to lead UT’s second-half charge.
•  Freshman Santiago Vescovi added nine points, five rebounds, three assists and no turnovers.
•  A slow start for both squads through the opening 10 minutes saw the Jayhawks build an early 11-9 advantage despite the teams combining for a 36-percent shooting mark from the field (9-of-25).
•  Over the next two minutes, the Vols broke open a 12-2 run, knocking down four consecutive field goals—spearheaded by two 3-point baskets from Pons—to take a 20-13 lead with 8:02 remaining in the opening half.
•  The Jayhawks responded, outscoring UT 13-6 over the next four minutes to knot the score at 26-26.
•  In the closing minutes of the opening frame, Kansas established its largest lead of the afternoon, holding a 37-30 advantage as the teams headed to the locker rooms.
•  Out of the break, an evenly matched start to the second half saw Kansas hold on to its seven-point advantage as both squads went bucket-for-bucket to increase the score line to 49-42, in favor of the Jayhawks at the under-16 media timeout.
•  As the second half wore on, the Vols held steady against the Kansas attack, trimming their deficit to just six points, as the Jayhawks led 62-56 with less than eight minutes remaining.
•  In the game’s final minutes, the Vols fought incredibly hard, knocking KU’s lead to as few as three points. However, solid free-throw shooting from Kansas cemented the outcome.

BARNES & SELF: 1,400 COMBINED WINS
•  Rick Barnes (720) and Bill Self (719) are the seventh- and eighth-winningest active Division I coaches, respectively, in terms of total victories.
• Barnes owns seven head-to-head wins over Self—six while Self was at Kansas, once at Illinois. No other head coach (active or former) has defeated Self more than that. Michigan State’s Tom Izzo also has beaten Self seven times.

VOLS, JAYHAWKS TRAVEL TOGETHER
• In addition to a home-and-home contract in 2009 and 2010—which saw each team win on its own home court—the Vols and Jayhawks have been on a similar holiday tournament rotation the past decade.
• The teams were part of the same field at the 2011 Maui Invitational (did not meet), the 2013 Battle 4 Atlantis (did not meet), the 2014 Orlando Classic (Kansas defeated the Vols) and the 2018 NIT Season Tipoff (Kansas defeated the Vols in the championship game).

AIR FORCE 1s
• Rick Barnes and his staff are stomping in some flyknit anthracite Nike Air Force 1s this week for the NABC’s Coaches vs. Cancer Suits & Sneakers Week.
• Tennessee is 17-6 all-time in Suits & Sneakers games dating to 2004, including an 11-2 record at home.

SPRINGER EFFICIENT & ESSENTIAL
• When not sidelined by injury, freshman Jaden Springer has displayed remarkable poise and efficiency.
• The 2020 McDonald’s All-American is shooting .524 (43-82) overall and  .563 (9-16) from 3-point range.
• The true freshman phenom is the team’s third-leading scorer at 9.9 ppg while only attempting 6.8 field goals per game. His plus-minus rating is a team-best +11.4 per game.
• The Vols lost to Alabama on Jan. 2, a game Springer left early with an ankle injury after logging only five minutes of action. And after Springer reinjured the ankle late in the win over Vanderbilt on Jan. 16, Tennessee lost its next two games while he was sidelined.
• During the two losses in which he did not play, plus the portion of the Alabama game after Springer was sidelined, Tennessee was outscored 205-162.

PONS VYING FOR NATIONAL DPOY
• Tennessee senior Yves Pons was one of only two SEC players to earn a spot on the 15-man candidate list for this year’s Naismith Men’s Defensive Player of the Year Award.
• Pons is the reigning SEC Defensive Player of the Year, and he also is a top-10 finalist for the Julius Erving Small Forward of the Year Award.
• Pons’ plus/minus rating is an impressive +10.6 per game this season. He leads the Vols and ranks tied for second in the SEC with 2.5 blocks per game during SEC play.
• There is no position on the court—no opposing player—that he is incapable of guarding effectively.

-UT Athletics

Boxscore/Interviews: No. 20/22 UT holds off Ole Miss 68-67

Boxscore/Interviews: No. 20/22 UT holds off Ole Miss 68-67

Rennia Davis – Lady Vols / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – The No. 20/22 Lady Vols held off an upset-minded Ole Miss team on Thursday night, earning a 68-67 win in Thompson-Boling Arena.

Senior Rennia Davis led Tennessee (11-3, 5-1 SEC) with 21 points and seven rebounds, and junior Rae Burrell logged 17 points and three rebounds. Sophomore Jordan Horston was also in double figures, managing 13 points and three assists.

Donnetta Johnson was the high scorer for Ole Miss (7-6, 1-6 SEC) with 19 points, and Shakira Austin and Snudda Collins were close behind with 16 and 13, respectively.

Both teams struggled offensively at the start, going through three possessions each before Johnson scored on a fast-break layup a minute and a half in, and Collins followed it up with another on Ole Miss’ next possession. Tamari Key got UT on the board with a layup at the 7:45 mark before four points from Austin stretched the Rebels’ lead to six. It was a margin they would maintain until the final two minutes, when they held the Lady Vols scoreless for two possessions while putting in three points to lead 15-6 with 1:47 left in the quarter. Jordan Walker countered with a long-range jumper on the other end to cut it to seven, but Collins responded with a trey of her own to send the Rebels into the second period with an 18-8 lead.

UM opened the second frame with a 5-2 run to lead 23-10 two and a half minutes in, but Horston gave the Lady Vols a spark. She hit a trey and then soon after grabbed a rebound on the other end and converted on the fast-break layup to cut the deficit to eight points less than 30 seconds later. Mimi Reid answered with a 3-pointer, but Burrell knocked down a layup and Horston found Davis on the break to pull UT within seven at 26-19 just before the media timeout.  Tennessee kept up the pace coming out of the break, holding the Rebels scoreless through three possessions while whittling the deficit down to two on the offensive end. Ole Miss would stretch its lead back to seven a minute and a half later, but UT closed out the half with four-straight points from Burrell and Davis to pull the halftime deficit to three at 33-30.

The Rebels were first to score in the second half off a Johnson layup, but Davis and Horston both hit jumpers to pull UT within one by the 7:19 mark. The teams swapped buckets for nearly four minutes until Davis converted on an old-fashioned three-point play to tie the score at 41-all with 3:32 left in the quarter. Davis gave UT its first lead of the game with a pair of free throws on the following possession at the 3:07 mark, but Ole Miss reclaimed it 30 seconds later off a 3-point play by Madison Scott. Davis again scored for UT to tie things up at 45, and Destiny Salary found Key in the paint for a layup on the next play to give the Lady Vols a 47-45 lead with 1:21 to go in the period. Salary stretched the advantage even further just before the buzzer, getting the rebound and the put-back to give Tennessee a four-point lead entering the final stanza.

Johnson opened the fourth quarter by scoring four straight points for Ole Miss to tie it up at 49-all, but Burrell knocked down a trey two and a half minutes in to give UT a three-point edge, a margin that would hold through the final media timeout.  Following the break, Salary drove through the paint and knocked down a layup to stretch UT’s lead to five, but the Rebels continued to hang around as Collins nailed a trey on the next possession and Johnson followed it up with a jumper to knot the score at 56 with just under five minutes left in the game. There would be three lead changes before Walker and Horston each hit a pair of free throws to put the Lady Vols up 64-61 with 58 seconds to play. A traveling violation on the other end gave the Big Orange the ball back, and Davis scored on a layup to extend the lead to five with 16 seconds on the clock. Reid converted on a three-point play in the closing seconds, but Burrell hit both of her free throws on the other end to give UT a four-point cushion with five seconds remaining. Johnson’s 3-pointer at the buzzer cut the deficit to one, with the Lady Vols escaping with a 68-67 nail-biter.

Up Next: Tennessee closes out its four-game home stand on Sunday, hosting Florida in a 2 p.m. contest that will be broadcast on ESPNU.

Comeback Kids: Tennessee overcame trailing by 13 points in the second-quarter to defeat Ole Miss. It was the largest comeback made by a UT team since erasing a 20-point, third-quarter deficit against Stetson on Dec. 5, 2018.

Big-Time Boards: The Lady Vols out-rebounded the Rebels, 35-28. They have now out-rebounded every opponent this season by a margin of 45.9 to 31.1.

Making Free Throws Count: The Lady Vols were a perfect 8-of-8 from the free-throw line in the fourth quarter and were 16 of 19 for the game. Their free-throw percentage of 84.2 percent against Ole Miss was the highest by UT since having the same exact performance against the Rebels on Feb. 27, 2020, at 16 of 19 (84.2).

Davis Climbing Lists: With 21 points, Rennia Davis posted her third 20+ scoring effort of the season and the 16th of her career, ranking seventh all-time at UT. She also moved past the 1,600-point career scoring mark at 1,603, surpassing Mercedes Russell (1,597) and moving into 16th place on Lady Vol list. Her seven boards also moved her into 16th on the career rebounding list at 862, passing Daedra Charles (858).

Box Score (PDF) | Highlights | Harper Presser | Davis Presser | Horston Presser | Postgame Quotes | Photo Gallery 

-UT Athletics

Transcript: Michael Schwartz Media Avail Previewing Kansas

Transcript: Michael Schwartz Media Avail Previewing Kansas

Vols Associate HC Michael Schwartz / Credit: UT Athletics

Tennessee basketball associate head coach Michel Schwartz met with the media on Thursday afternoon to recap the Vols win over Mississippi State and preview the Saturday matchup with the Kansas Jayhawks.

On what sticks out from the Kansas game last season and if Yves Pons is getting back to the form that he played with last season:
“You hope so. Obviously, it’s great to get him back in a rhythm. Defensively, he’s been pretty consistent all season long, but to have two games where, offensively, he’s had some confidence out there. He’s taken the shots that we want him to take. He’s shot it with aggression. He’s driven the ball well. He’s finished around the basket and played above the rim, which Coach (Rick) Barnes and the staff have really challenged him to do – to use his athleticism on offense. He’s done so the past two games. Obviously, that’s a real positive for our team. In terms of the game last year, thinking back on it, you think about what an incredible atmosphere it was and what an incredible game it was. With 1:30 left in the game, it was a three- or four-point game. We had a costly turnover when I believe we were down four. We got an offensive rebound on a big possession and turned it over. The game got off to a defensive start for both teams. It was slow to start. Both teams were defending really well. Kansas took a lead. We stormed back and we took a lead. I think we were up six or seven and they went on a seven or 8-0 run. Taking it into halftime, they were up a couple of possessions at halftime. They extended their lead in the beginning of the second half and we fought back to get it to within a one possession game. Obviously, it’s exciting that they’re coming in here. It was a heck of a game last year. We’re going to need to do our job in the paint and on the boards, because that’s where they really hurt us last year. Even though, big man (Udoka) Azubuike isn’t there, (David) McCormack is equally good and equally as challenging for us to be able to defend and rebound in the paint.”

On if Saturday’s game against Kansas feels more like a conference game, with it being the third consecutive season of the matchup:
“That’s a good point. I guess it’s more so than a typical nonconference game. You could say that with Kansas just because of some of the familiarity over the last two seasons, as well as Coach Barnes and Coach (Bill) Self going way back to the Big 12. That’s a good point. You also add the style of both teams, physical inside-out teams. They want to play inside-out and they’re shooting the ball really well. It’s coming from the paint first. We want to play inside-out. We may not be shooting it as well right now, but we know we want to get the ball in the paint. Any time you add that, there’s going to be that element of a physical game. That’s what they were like in the Big 12 and that’s what they have been like the past two years as well.”

On if he believes Yves Pons to be a better defender than he was last season:
“Yes, we do think he’s a better defender. It’s no different than a player on offense as they grow from year to year – as they go from the freshman, sophomore, junior and senior year. He’s done the same thing. He’s really enhanced his communication out there on the perimeter. He talks. He needs to talk a lot more. Coach Barnes, the whole staff and the team have challenged him to do so. We need him to have a more vocal presence with this team – in the locker room and on the court. One thing he has done is he’s always taken a lot of pride in his defense, his one-on-one defense and obviously his shot blocking. There’s not much else to say about that. What he’s taken a great amount of pride in this year is helping the other guys try and be on the same page. All five guys need to be on the same page. He’s out there communicating. He’s calling out our coverages and he’s done a lot more off the ball, on the perimeter than he’s ever done in his career. If you look at some of the things he’s doing: tagging on ball screen rolls, being on the help line – what we call the white line – stunting and making plays that elite defenders make. He’s seeing the whole floor; he’s not just seeing his man. He’s not just seeing the shot block attempt. He’s seeing how he can help other guys off the ball, even in a non-statistical way. That’s a sign of someone who’s growing, maturity wise, on defense. He’s done that.”

On how encouraging it was to see Olivier Nkamhoua play well in Tuesday’s win over Mississippi State:
“It was really encouraging because we need it. We need his physicality. We need his rebounding. We need his size and strength. Last year against Kansas, he went in there and they went at him pretty quickly. Late in the first half, he had a good possession where he showed that physically he can do it. He did that in the last game versus a really big front line and as good of a front line as there is in this league, in terms of Mississippi State. To see him do that defensively, rebounding and finishing above the rim twice. It’s what Coach (Barnes) and the staff have really urged him to do and keep his focus on. He needs to continue to do it because we need it. If he does that, he will really help our ball club on both sides of the ball.”

On Keon Johnson and Jaden Springer stepping up and making winning plays in the game against Mississippi State:
“Yeah, I think always, and it does not matter if you are a freshman or a senior. Anytime you make winning plays in crunch time, winning free throws, offensive rebounds, defensive plays, it is huge. That’s huge for the team’s confidence, and it’s huge for the individual’s confidence. So, for two freshmen to do that, they were on the floor quite a bit late in the second half together which is another step. We know we had some turnovers—and you are always going to go through some things as they develop as you are talking about—but for them to make big plays down the stretch is really important for our team, because we know how talented they are, and we know some of the things they can do on offense. So yes, that is a big deal. That is a big deal. And a good point that they can make crucial clutch plays that are not just scoring. We know that in the game earlier, Keon went up to the free-throw line late game and went six-for-six from the line. Those kinds of moments are really big for our team, and it was good to see two freshmen do it. And honestly as exciting as everything is that Jaden was on the floor last game because we know we have missed him.”

On how Coach would evaluate the team’s performance this month:
“We need to be better. Obviously, those two losses were difficult, and the loss to Alabama earlier in the month. You know, we know that we need to be better. Alabama has proven to be one of the best teams in the country right now and obviously the best team in the SEC at this moment. And when you look back at that game we have taken some things from it. And we got rocked. We got rocked by Florida and Missouri—there is no other way to say it. We went up to Gainesville, and they played a great game. They really hurt us, and they hurt us in a lot of different ways. They spread us out, and we had to adjust. We came back, and in the Missouri game they did the same thing. And they really played a much faster, more physical brand of basketball over those two games. We tried to get back to it against Mississippi State. We got off to a really good start, and the whole point is that we have to build on Tuesday night’s game against Mississippi State, and we have to continue to build on that. Learn from those other three and build on the successes that we had against Mississippi state going into Saturday and the rest of the month in February.”

On who is the best perimeter defender on the team right now:
“Well, you would probably have to say, Yves Pons, because Yves can guard all different positions. And it is funny because that is another area that he has gotten better at. You know it is not that he ever struggled with it, but being able to guard on the perimeter versus dynamic smaller divers is something that is always difficult for everybody. And he has been able to do that this year in switch situations. In a situation where we put him on the opposing team’s best player—even if he is at the four spots, we will put him on the opposing team’s two and three and point guard—just to defend that drive. He has gotten better with it, but as a whole, it is an area that we need to be a lot better at—our team staying in front of the ball because that is where a lot of our breakdowns occur is our on-ball defense. It is a give and take because we want to pressure the ball. So, we have to find that happy medium. He has probably been the most consistent, but he has not been on it nearly as much as some of the other guys because he plays inside. I think Keon has done a nice job on the ball until recently. He knows that he has to get back to it. Same with Josiah Jordan James, he had really been solid on the ball until the Florida game, and then in the Florida and Missouri game, he would be the first to say that he really struggled to defend on the perimeter. The other guy that people may not talk about could be our best overall defender on the perimeter consistently is Santiago. Because Santiago really does a nice job of disrupting other teams’ perimeter play. He does it in a little bit different way than Yves or Keon would do. But he is just in and out on the ball, he attacks it, he has quick feet, he knows how to read plays because he is very savvy. So, Santiago is a guy, but collectively we have to get a lot better at guarding the ball. And we cannot rely on one guy, and we definitely cannot rely on Yves shot-blocking to fix those mistakes when we do get blown by. We have to continue to improve there.”

On if he is confident in Santi when goes to the free throw line, and also if he thinks he is confident in himself even if he is isn’t shooting well:
“I think he is confident in himself, and as coaches, anytime your players are confident in themselves, you are going to be confident in them. That’s what we all want, and we want all of our guys to be like that. Santiago, from the day he stepped on campus, has carried himself that way, in many ways, but particularly on the free throw line. When he goes up there to shoot free-throws – that was an aberration when he missed four free-throws that game. So, absolutely we have the upmost confidence in him. When did one of these a few weeks back, someone asked me the same question about Santiago getting up to the line, as he had a tough game, and he got up to close it, and we said we wouldn’t want anyone else up there. So, we have the ultimate confidence in him, and he has it in himself, and we were glad he was up there.”

On what jumps out to him personnel wise when scouting Kansas and what concerns him about them:
“Well, the first thing is, they have a few different layers of that. Their inside play and paint play with David McCormack – he is averaging 11.5 points per game and basically a little over 20 minutes on the season. Then he gets into conference play and it goes up to 15 points a game, and 23 minutes. So, it’s his efficiency scoring the ball and his ability to create for others, because he is a really good passer. It doesn’t get talked about enough how good he is out of the post – whether it’s double teams, or him finding guys out on the perimeter. So, once you get beyond that, with his ability to score out of the paint and rebound, now they have some high percentage shooters. Agbaji is shooting 43 percent, Christian Braun is a dynamic shooter, and then they have one of the most versatile players in the country in terms of both sides of the ball in Marcus Garrett. He is a very good driver, and a really good shooter, even though he doesn’t shoot it with the volume the other guys shoot it, he is a very good shooter with catch and shoot, and an elite defender that can guard multiple positions. Then a freshman that came out of nowhere, in Jalen Wilson – he absolutely has added a dynamic to their team, that is the way he shoots the ball, he plays the four or the five for them. So, their talent really jumps out in terms of how they can score the ball – they do it in the paint, they shoot the ball efficiently from the perimeter, and one of our biggest problems is rebounding. We gave up 15 offensive rebounds to Mississippi State the other night, and we are going to have to a good job of keeping McCormak and their players off the offensive glass on Saturday.”

On if the fact that how Yves can change the offense ever get lost, and what’s the next step for him to round out his offense:
“I don’t know if it gets lost, he wasn’t in rhythm, and he wasn’t making shots the way he knows he can. If he was sitting up here right now, he wouldn’t say anything in terms the offense that was affecting him, but he would say my play is affecting the offense. So, I don’t think it gets lost, but it’s an enhancement that he is doing what Coach Barnes has seen him do, he does it in practice, he’s done it for the majority of the last two years. So, what’s he doing? He is shooting the ball with confidence, he’s making shots from the perimeter, he’s making more aggressive drives as we talked about earlier, he is ready before he catches the ball which Coach Barnes and everyone preaches to him to be ready to make a play. It doesn’t matter if you are playing Kansas, Mississippi State, or a non-conference game. It makes no difference and if you aren’t ready to make a play on the catch, teams at this level are too good, and they are going to sit and the defense is going to shrink. When the ball sticks, it really makes a difference. What’s happened is, Yves is become more decisive, more aggressive, and it has affected our offense because when we get five guys playing like that on the floor, we’re better and it’s simple. It’s no rocket science, and he’s done that, got a little groove and rhythm, and hopefully he stays in it.”

On if they track field goal percentage on good and bad shots:
“No, we really don’t look at that. One thing we know about our guys is, we don’t think we will take bad shots. So, we don’t spend time with that, because we feel like for the most part we’re going to get good shots. We will get in trouble sometimes and we know this. Sometimes we pass up good shots a little bit earlier in the clock, and it leads to late shot clock possessions. High quality shots are difficult to get late in the shot clock, they just are. Your best chance late shot clock becomes a difficult shot on an offensive rebound. So, more tracking field goal percentage, it’s a fine line between passing up a good shot early in the clock. Just because it’s early doesn’t mean it’s not a good shot, but it’s also the mentality that we don’t want to come every time and just play defense for 25 seconds, and then we come down and take the first good shot we get. So, it is a fine line with the flow of the game and the rhythm of the game is what’s going to dictate that. As long we keep taking good shots and getting shots within the parameters of our offense, we feel good about it. Just like we talked about with Yves, they are going to start to drop. Ebb and flow in sports is normal, but we’re going to get it.”

On how a team’s ability to make open shots can improve the radiuses, especially if you are not making them at a high clip early in the year:
“I think it can improve, I really do. We have good shooters on this team. Do we have four or five guys who are 45-50% three-point shooters? No, that is not the makeup of this team. But, we have guys who have made it consistently at 35%, a couple guys at 40% or above, and I love talking about sports in general. It doesn’t matter if it’s a baseball player, it doesn’t matter if it’s in sports in fighting like MMA or boxing. It doesn’t matter if its football and a quarterback; one good throw, one good swing, one good swing by a golfer, it can change everything. And that’s the beauty of sports. And you know what, that’s why I got guys going every day doing their daily vitamins, shooting the ball. I mean, if Yves Pons decided, ‘you know what, I haven’t shot the ball well in the first four or five games, I might as well hang it up,’ you know, you don’t know if he comes back the last two games and does it. So, this is what makes sports great. And it is January something, you lose time you don’t even know what day it is these days but, there’s a lot of time. And we’ll be in the gym, our guys will be shooting, and that ball is going to go through the hoop. We feel very confident about it.”

On speaking with the SEC about whether or not the Vanderbilt and South Carolina games are going to be rescheduled:
“No, we haven’t heard anything about it. It is kind of a wait-and-see on that.”

On what he missed most about Jordan Springer not being on the court:
“Yeah, you know it really is wild. One player, you think a team we talk about our depth, and missing one player you would think we’d have depth, but he’s a unique player. You think about it and we’ve talked in here about it before. His shot selection is so good. He shoots the ball at such a high percentage from three because of his shot selection, so that was one. He spaces the floor in a different way because when he’s out there, the other team is very concerned about him as a shooter because of his numbers. Number two, he is such a controlled driver. So, when we were struggling, and we couldn’t get to the paint and not having him and his ability to get to the paint—and I think we’ve alluded to this before that he almost plays the guard spot like a post player. He can get where he wants to get on the floor under control. He’s got a physicality and a power about him that he can shoot in the midrange, shoot in the paint, deliver passes from the paint like he did at Texas A&M. So, that combination right there, just his ability to keep the floor spaced as a high percentage three-point shooter, and then his ability to drive it under control, as well as anyone we have on this team, was a big piece. And, you know, it was as big as missing anybody those two games that we didn’t have him. And you look back to Alabama, the other game we lost, he sprained his ankle that game and we didn’t have him the majority of that game. So, he brings a very unique style of play to our team. Again, like a post player that plays the guard spot with what he can do once he gets the ball to the paint. And then just depth on defense. It’s hard to play the way we want to play on defense when we can’t go into our bench. And having him playing, Olivier the other night, getting Ticket (Davonte Gaines) going because Ticket is really doing a good job right now and he’s getting close, that allow us to play defense the way we want to. We’re a team, we need everybody. We’re not a team that can rely on one player on either side of the ball and we need everybody. So, when we got our full allotment of players outside of injuries and things like that, we’re a much better ball club.”

On how one win will swing the team:
“We’ll see. It seems like losses can affect you more than wins can. Especially when you take two the way we did versus Florida and Missouri, but we knew getting off to a good start versus Mississippi State was really big. We took two on the chin pretty hard and we were staggered a little bit, but we had to answer. We came back and we got off to a good start against Mississippi State and the game turned into a possession game. I think that was good for us. It was good to have a possession game after two games we really got beat handely. So, to come back and to do that, to come back into film today, to get back into practice today; we were just really pleased to find a way to win. We hope to build on that momentum but like you said, you just have to keep building. I said this on the radio earlier, you could come into film today and you probably won’t know if we won or loss. You could come into a game where we won by 20 or more, and still not be 100 percent sure if they really won that game. Coach Barnes from the day he got here six years ago, it is going to be about this and just get better today. Win, lose, doesn’t matter; just get better today. Be better for the next game, be better for the next practice. That’s the honest truth. That’s the program culture, that’s the DNA that he has. We are going to try and do that for today, tomorrow, and leading into Saturday. You will see where those results take you, you’ll see that process takes you.”

On if he thinks John Fulkerson can bust out of his slump:
“Yeah, absolutely. You know, one of the biggest signs was that last tip he had in the Mississippi State game to get us that offensive rebound. When John Fulkerson is at his best, he’s not just standing in one place with the ball in his hand and scoring. He’s obviously a skilled post scorer and he can do things like that. He’s at his best when he’s using his motor, his activity, his speed, his ability to get extra possessions on offense, and tip outs like he did. That play that didn’t get talked about a whole lot. That’s a big of play as any. When he tipped that shot out and Santiago got that offensive rebound and they had to foul him which put him on the free throw line. You look back at the Kansas game last year, some of the extra possessions he got. Sprinting in from the 3-point line, saving the ball, that’s when he’s at his best. So, you know what? If we are going to be literal about it, that last play in the Mississippi State game, that was big. He had a couple of them in that game because they are a dynamic front line. He had to find ways. When he’s moving around, active, and high energy; that’s when John’s at his best. We are challenging him to get back to that. Most importantly, he wants to get back to that. So, we are going to continue with that today and that’s what we need him to do down the stretch in January and February.

On why the guards have been reluctant to get into the paint on offense:
“I don’t if it is a reluctance to do it. I think defense has a lot to do with it. Teams that play us know we want to play inside out. Whether it’s to John or posting our guards, whether its Yves, they know we want to play inside out. So, teams do have a tendency sometimes to back off, sag a little bit, use a little bit of switching defense to take away some of the allies to drive the ball. So, a lot of it is the defense, but people wouldn’t talk about driving the ball as our guards posting up. However, that is one-way Coach Barnes does it. If you look in our six years here, there has never been a time that we have posted more guards than we have this year between Keon, Jaden, Josiah, we even have Victor this year. So, I don’t believe it is a reluctance thing but then the flip side is this; turnovers the last 3 games have been a problem. So, what happens when you start turning the ball over? Yeah, maybe that creeps in a little bit. You don’t want to over dribble, you’re trying to move the ball, trying to find a way to shift the defense side to side, to create an alley to drive. So, I think it goes hand in hand. You have to give the defense credit; they know we want to get the ball downhill. They know we want to get the ball in the paint. We just have to be stronger doing it. That’s why we missed Jaden. He’s one of those guys that can drive through contact. There are drivers with speed and then there’s drivers who know how to drive through contact. He’s one of those guys who knows how to handle that contact. That’s what makes him a really good player.”

On how important it is to find that player to snap the team out of cold stretches:
“Yeah, we definitely look at it. I think every coach in America will look at that and wonder who they can go to when we’re struggling. For us, it’s by committee right now. There is still a lot of basketball to be played. If you look at it this year, coach has called John Fulkerson’s number, and he’s delivered when we needed him to. We’ve been in some close games; you go back to Colorado and Cincinnati; those were close ball games. Arkansas was a close ball game. Mississippi State was a close ball game. So, John has delivered, Yves delivered the other night, and the freshman have delivered. He’s called Jaden’s number late; he’s called Keon’s number late. It may not be one person all season, but if we find a way to find three or four guys to where we have confidence in them, and they have confidence in themselves; it almost becomes more difficult to guard. We just have to get to that point and right now we are still building.

-UT Athletics

Lady Vols Projected to Finish Fourth in SEC

Lady Vols Projected to Finish Fourth in SEC

Lady Vols softball / Credit: UT Athletics

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – Tennessee softball was projected to finish fourth on the SEC preseason poll for the 2021 softball season based on the votes of the 13 SEC head coaches, announced by the conference on Thursday.

The Lady Vols, who were ranked 23rd on the ESPN.com/USA Softball preseason poll earlier in the week, received one first-place vote and finished behind No. 8 Alabama, which is projected to win the conference, No. 5 LSU, and No. 6 Florida. In total, Tennessee garnered 129 points on the poll.

The Orange and White is poised for a competitive 2021 with the return of junior ace Ashley Rogers who was temporarily sidelined during the 2020 season due to an injury. Rogers was scheduled to return for the Lady Vols SEC opener March 13, before the season was halted the day before and ultimately canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic.

UT will also get a jolt from junior catcher Ally Shipman who returned in 2020 from a season-ending injury sustained midway through the 2019 season. Shipman co-led UT last year with a .403 hitting clip, 25 hits and seven doubles, alongside middle infielder and redshirt senior Chelsea Seggern, who opted to return for 2021 with the extra year granted by the NCAA.

The Lady Vols open the 2021 season on February 12 in Conway, S.C., at 10 a.m. ET in a first-ever matchup with UConn. UT will also face host-team Coastal Carolina and Akron in the three-day tournament. Official SEC play begins at home against LSU on March 12, but the Lady Vols will see Texas A&M in College Station, Texas, as a nonconference opponent the weekend of March 5.

2021 SEC Softball Preseason Coaches’ Poll
(First-Place Votes in Parentheses)

Place     School                 Points
1.            Alabama (9)        138
2.            LSU (2)                 129
3.            Florida (1)           125
4.           Tennessee (1)    101
5.            Kentucky             97
6.            Arkansas             81
7.            Georgia                78
8.            Missouri              70
9.            South Carolina  68
10.         Mississippi State43
11.         Auburn                39
12.         Texas A&M         30
13.         Ole Miss              15

-UT Athletics

Pons Earns Spot on Naismith DPOY Watch List

Pons Earns Spot on Naismith DPOY Watch List

Yves Pons – Vols F / Credit: UT Athletics

Reigning SEC Defensive Player of the Year and Tennessee basketball senior Yves Pons has been named to the 15-man watch list for the Naismith Defensive Player of the Year Award, the Atlanta Tipoff Club Announced Wednesday.

The watch list is chosen by the Atlanta Tipoff Club’s board of selectors, comprised of leading journalists from around the country, who base their decisions on outstanding on-court defensive performances during the 2020-21 college basketball regular season.

Pons earned last season’s SEC Defensive Player of the Year award after tying Tennessee’s single-season blocks record, with 73. He blocked at least one shot in all 31 of UT’s games last season (2.4 bpg).

He became the first Vol to claim the award and became just the third Tennessee player to earn a spot on the SEC All-Defensive Team.

The Fuveau, France, native has the innate ability to effectively guard all five positions on the floor and makes the Vols virtually matchup-proof while he’s on the floor.

This season, Pons has racked up 27 blocks in 14 games, ranking fourth in the SEC with 1.9 per outing. In SEC play, he’s third among league players with 2.5 blocks per game (20 blocks in eight games).

He currently sits in 13th on Tennessee’s all-time blocks list with 117 for his career. He also has 100 blocks in his last 45 appearances (2.2 per game) dating to the start of last season.

Pons also has enhanced his offensive production since the start of last year. Through Tennessee’s first eight SEC games, he is averaging 9.5 points. He recently dropped a season-high 20 points against Missouri on Jan. 23.

The Naismith Defensive Player of the Year Watch List will be trimmed to 10 semifinalists on Feb. 25. The winner of the award presented to the nation’s best defender will be announced in April.

-UT Athletics

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