Legendary Major League Baseball figure Henry Louis Aaron, also known as Hammerin’ Hank, has died at the age of 86.
Hank Aaron started his MLB career in 1954 with the Braves baseball team when they were located in Milwaukee. When the Braves moved to Atlanta in 1966, Hank went with them. With already a spectacular career to his credit, Hank cemented his place in Baseball history on April 8th, 1974, when in front of a record hometown crowd of 53,775 people, he broke Babe Ruth‘s career homerun record in the fourth inning with his own 715th dinger. The next season he was back in Milwaukee with the Brewers. Hank ended his baseball career after the 1976 season with a career total 755 homeruns. He was a first ballot Hall of Famer in 1982, and his career homerun record stood until 2007, when it was broken by Barry Bonds.
Georgia native Trisha Yearwood posted her memories of Hank Aaron after learning of his passing… “Our dad, Jack never missed watching an Atlanta Braves game. We were raised on baseball. I was 9 years old when Hammerin’ Hank hit 715 in Atlanta, surpassing Babe Ruth’s home-run record, and I remember cheering loudly with my family, watching that historical moment on tv (thank you Ted Turner and TBS!). When I was invited to sing the National Anthem in game 4 of the World Series in 2007, I took my young nephews with me and we all got to meet Hank. I became that 9 year old kid again, and Mr. Aaron couldn’t have been more gracious. Thank you for the memories, Hank. RIP and say hi to my dad.”
Tim McGraw also shared a tribute to Hank – relaying a story about his dad, Major League Baseball pitcher Tug McGraw, and what he said about facing Aaron during his career… “We lost a great American Hero. Hank Aaron broke records and he broke barriers. He played the game with such a wonderful style and grace. And what a hitter, still holding records to this day! My dad, Tug McGraw, gave up 4 career home runs to Hammerin’ Hank! When asked how he would pitch him if the bases were loaded, Tugger said ‘I’d pitch just as I would to any other hitter, but I wouldn’t be damned fool enough to let go of the ball.’ God speed Hank.”
Headline Tim McGraw Photo Credit: Robby Klein
Headline Trisha Yearwood Photo Credit: Russ Harrington
Carly Pearce is headed to the “frozen tundra” of Lambeau Field in Wisconsin this Sunday, January 24th, to sing the National Anthem before the NFC Championship Game.
The Green Bay Packers, led by Aaron Rodgers will face Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the NFL title game to see who represents the NFC in this year’s Super Bowl.
Tune into Fox TV at 2:05 (CT) this Sunday for all the action.
You can see Jake Owen make his major motion picture debut in the movie Our Friend – which is in theaters and on-demand right now!
Jake says “Can’t believe this is the big day.. my movie debut. You’re going to laugh, you’re going to cry, and so glad y’all finally have the chance to see this movie”
Our Friend tells the inspiring and extraordinary true story of the Teague family—journalist Matt (Casey Affleck), his vibrant wife Nicole (Dakota Johnson) and their two young daughters—and how their lives are upended by Nicole’s heartbreaking diagnosis of terminal cancer. As Matt’s responsibilities as caretaker and parent become increasingly overwhelming, the couple’s best friend Dane Faucheux (Jason Segel) offers to come and help out. As Dane puts his life on hold to stay with his friends, the impact of this life altering decision proves greater and more profound than anyone could have imagined.
When it came to being on-set and filming his scenes, Jake shares “I’ve never been in a ‘movie’ before so I won’t lie.. sitting down in front of Dakota Johnson, Jason Segel, and Casey Affleck and acting like I knew what I was doing, was a bit of a challenge. I’ve always loved a good challenge.”
Check out this sneak peak of Jake Owen appearing in the movie Our Friend – which is in theaters and also available on-demand right now.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — No. 25/RV Tennessee (9-3, 3-1 SEC) and No. 12/12 Kentucky (11-3, 4-2 SEC) meet Sunday afternoon in a border rivalry game that was originally slated to take place on Jan. 3.
That contest was postponed after the Lady Vols had to pause practices and games because of COVID-19 contact tracing within the program. Sunday’s make-up matinee came about because UK had an open date and UT found itself without an opponent when Vanderbilt opted out of the season. The SEC then waved its wand and checked one postponed game off its list.
This schedule adjustment has resulted in a four-game home stand for the Big Orange, and this marks the second tilt in that stretch with Ole Miss and Florida to come next week.
The Lady Vols come into the match-up on the heels of a nationally-televised barn-burner against No. 3 UConn on Thursday night. Tennessee took a lead into the fourth quarter, fell behind by nine and rallied within two points with just under a minute remaining before falling to the Huskies, 67-61.
The Big Orange women have victories over two top-15 teams, including (then) No. 15/15 Indiana in Bloomington (66-58) on Dec. 17 and (then) No. 13/13 Arkansas (88-73) in Knoxville on Jan. 7. UT’s only setbacks are to No. 3/5 UConn (67-61), No. 22/23 Georgia (67-66) and West Virginia (79-73 in OT).
Kentucky, meanwhile, has righted itself with back-to-back victories over Vanderbilt and Auburn after falling to Texas A&M and South Carolina in consecutive contests. The Wildcats’ only other loss is to (then) No. 24 DePaul (86-82 on Dec. 16).
UT and UK have two common foes. UT beat Arkansas (+15) and Indiana (+8), while UK prevailed over those schools by 11 and four.
THOSE CONNECTIONS, THOUGH
There will be lots of familiar faces on the sidelines for Sunday’s game, and this will mark the first time a Lady Vol head coach has squared off against a former UT teammate leading another program.
UT’s Kellie (Jolly) Harper (1995-99) was teammates from 1996-99 at Tennessee with Kentucky head coach Kyra Elzy (1996-2001) and assistant coach Niya Butts (1996-2000). The trio played together on the second and third of UT’s three-consecutive titles in 1996, 1997 and 1998.
Elzy served a tenure on UT’s staff that included roles as assistant coach and associate head coach from 2012-16.
This season, Elzy took over at Kentucky following the retirement of former head coach Matthew Mitchell, who was a graduate assistant at UT in 1999-2000.
UK assistant Amber Smith was a G.A. at Tennessee in 2013-14.
Wildcat reserve Jazmine Massengill played at Tennessee from 2018-20 before transferring to UK after last season.
Massengill is one of four Tennessee residents on the 2020-21 Kentucky roster. UT has no residents of the Bluegrass State on this year’s roster, but it has signed one of the top prospects in the state in Brooklynn Miles of Franklin County High School in Frankfort, Ky.
Tennessee junior Rae Burrell and Kentucky redshirt sophomore Dre’Una Edwards are former teammates and graduates of Liberty High School in Las Vegas, Nev.
BROADCAST INFORMATION
Sunday’s game will be televised by ESPN2 with Courtney Lyle (PxP) and Carolyn Peck (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, by audio stream and on SiriusXM SEC Channel 374, 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.
Single game tickets are on sale, starting at just $5. Go to AllVols.com to purchase.
QUICK GLANCE AT THE LADY VOLS
Tennessee has posted two victories over ranked teams (No. 13/13 Arkansas, No. 15/15 Indiana), marking the most by the program in a season since 2017-18 when it had seven.
Against No. 3/5 UConn, the Lady Vols were in a battle that included 17 lead changes and 12 ties. UT trailed UConn by two, 63-61, with 55 seconds remaining when Paige Bueckers hit a three-pointer as the shot clock expired to help lift the Huskies to a 67-61 win.
Just a quick reminder that the Lady Vols start a freshman, two sophomores, a junior and senior. They have played together as a quintet for eight total games, with Key and Horston being inserted into the starting lineup for the contest at Indiana. The group has demonstrated improvement with each game.
In SEC play, four Tennessee players are scoring in double figures.
UT is led in scoring by junior guard/forward Rae Burrell, who is putting up 16.8 ppg. and shooting 48 percent from the field, 45.1 percent on threes and 80.6 percent from the free-throw line in all games. She averaged 10.5 ppg. and shot 41, 33 and 60 percent, respectively, a year ago in those categories.
Burrell is averaging 17.0 ppg. and shooting 50.9 percent in SEC games with a 26-point effort vs. Arkansas on Jan. 7 as her top effort.
Senior Rennia 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 second in scoring (13.9 ppg.) and is first on the team in boards at 8.3 rpg in all games. In SEC play, she is putting up 17.5 ppg. and 8.5 rpg. to lead UT in both categories.
Davis has climbed to 19th on UT’s all-time scoring list with 1,567 points and surpassed Cindy Noble (19th, 1,561) vs. UConn. She is five away from Nikki McCray (18th, 1,572), 13 behind Debbie Groover (17th, 1,580) and 30 back of Mercedes Russell (16th, 1,597).
Sophomore Tamari Key (10.8 ppg./5.0 rpg. in SEC play) has elevated her game as the season has gone on. She has scored in double figures the past four contests (12/14/15/10) and is shooting 65.5 percent vs. league opponents and 69.0 overall. She had a solid 10-point, nine-rebound, three-block effort vs. UConn.
Sophomore Jordan Horston, an SEC All-Freshman performer a year ago is third on the team in scoring at 8.9 ppg. and is first in assists average (3.9) and steals average (1.7). She has started the past eight games after coming off the bench the first four, tallying double figures in four of UT’s past five games with season bests of 14 points and seven assists vs. Alabama.
Horston’s numbers in SEC play this season include 11.8 ppg., 4.8 rpg., 4.3 apg. and 1.5 spg. She is shooting 47.5 percent from the field and 85.7 at the line.
Freshman guard/forward Marta Suárez, joining Burrell and Davis as UT’s only starters in every game this season, is second on the Lady Vols in rebound average (5.8) and is fifth in scoring at 6.4 ppg. after tallying 10 points and six boards vs. UConn.
Reserve senior center Kasiyahna Kushkituah (5.8 ppg., 4.5 rpg.) and redshirt junior guard Jordan Walker (5.7 ppg., 3.7 rpg., 2.5 apg.) continue to be consistent contributors off the bench. Freshman Destiny Salary (2.9 ppg., 3.4 rpg., 1.2 apg.) also is supplying quality minutes at the guard position.
RECAPPING UT’S LAST GAME
The No. 25/RV Lady Vols took a four-point lead into the final quarter but couldn’t hold on, falling 67-61 to No. 3/5 UConn in Thompson-Boling Arena on Thursday night.
Tennessee (9-3, 3-1 SEC) was led by junior Rae Burrell who had 18 points and eight rebounds. Senior Rennia Davis narrowly missed a double-double with 11 points and nine rebounds, and sophomore Tamari Key and freshman Marta Suárez each turned in 10 points.
Christyn Williams led UConn (9-0, 7-0 Big East) with 20 points, and Evina Westbrook and Aubrey Griffin managed 15 and 10, respectively.
THE NCAA’S LARGEST CROWD
An NCAA women’s basketball season-high crowd of 3,553 turned out to cheer the No. 25/RV Lady Vols on vs. No. 3/5 UConn.
That mark surpassed the 3,500 that South Carolina has drawn to six contests this season.
The Thursday night showdown between UT and UConn was the first match-up between the teams in Knoxville since 2006, when an NCAA regular-season record throng of 24,653 packed Thompson-Boling Arena and saw No. 1 UT prevail, 89-80, over the the No. 7 Huskies.
ABOUT KENTUCKY
UK is led by three players scoring in double figures, including 2019-20 SEC Player of the Year Rhyne Howard (19.8 ppg., 16.9), Chasity Patterson (12.9 ppg.) and Dre’Una Edwards (12.6 ppg.).
Lady Vol alum (teammate of UT’s Kellie [Jolly]Harper) Kyra Elzy is in her first season as head coach of the Cats.
Elzy, who was an assistant coach at UT from 2012-16, is joined by another UT teammate of hers and Harper’s, Niya Butts, and former UT graduate assistant and now UK assistant Amber Smith.
Former Lady Vol Jazmine Massengill transferred to Kentucky in the offseason and is a reserve.
RECAPPING KENTUCKY’S LAST GAME
Junior Blair Green scored 18 points, as 12th-ranked Kentucky won at Auburn, 76-71, Thursday night.
Green, who set a new career high with 22 points on Sunday, continued her strong play on Thursday, hitting seven of nine from the field, including two of three from behind the arc.
UK All-American Rhyne Howard had 14 points, five rebounds, four assists, two steals and a blocked shot in the game. Robyn Benton and Dre’una Edwards each had 10 points for the Cats.
UT-KENTUCKY SERIES NOTES
This marks the 70th edition of UT vs. UK, with the Lady Vols leading the series, 55-14.
UT has faced only two other teams as many times as the Wildcats – Vanderbilt in 84 meetings and Georgia in 70 games.
The Lady Vols have won six of the last 10 games in the series, but Kentucky brings a three-game winning streak to The Summitt.
The Lady Vols own a 24-4 mark against UK in games played in Knoxville, with the Wildcats winning on Rocky Top in 1983, 1985, 2014 and 2019.
Tennessee is 21-9 vs. UK in Lexington and 10-1 at neutral sites. The Lady Vols are 9-1 in postseason tournament games.
Tennessee is 20-7 all-time at Memorial Coliseum and 1-2 in Rupp Arena. where the teams will meet on Feb. 11.
UT is 3-1 in overtime games vs. Kentucky, including 3-0 in Lexington and 0-1 in Knoxville, with the last OT contest coming in 1994.
Since Feb. 16, 2014, a four-point Tennessee win in Knoxville, six of the past 11 meetings have been decided by four or fewer points.
THE LAST TIME THESE TEAMS MET
Freshman Jordan Horston poured in a career-high 24 points, but it wasn’t enough to fend off a hot-handed #16/18 Kentucky team that shot 51 percent from the floor to seize an 86-65 victory in a No. 3 seed vs. No. 6 seed match-up in the SEC Tournament Third Round on March 6, 2020.
Junior Rennia Davis and senior Lou Brown were also in double figures for Tennessee (21-10), posting 14 and 10 points, respectively.
Kentucky (22-7) was led by Rhyne Howard who finished with 24 points, Tatyana Wyatt with 14 and Sabrina Haines with 12.
The game ended up being UT’s finale, as the NCAA Tournament was canceled shortly afterward.
THE LAST TIME IN KNOXVILLE
The No. 13-ranked Tennessee Lady Vols fell, 73-71, to the 16th-ranked Kentucky Wildcats on Jan. 10, 2019, the last time these teams played at Thompson-Boling Arena.
The Lady Vols (12-3, 1-2 SEC) trailed by two points after a pair of free throws from Meme Jackson with one minute remaining, but a three-pointer from Wildcats guard Jaida Roper put the game out of reach for the Big Orange.
WHAT’S NEXT
Tennessee continues its four-game home stand with a Thursday night contest vs. a much-improved Ole Miss squad. The Lady Vols face off vs. the Rebels at 7 p.m. ET in Thompson-Boling Arena (SECN+).
Kentucky will be in Tuscaloosa on Thursday evening to face Alabama at 6:30 p.m. CT (SEC Network).
KNOXVILLE, TN – January 22, 2021 – Director of Athletics Danny White during his introductory press conference of as Athletic Director in the Ray and Lucy Hand Digital Studio in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Andrew Ferguson/Tennessee Athletics
University of Tennessee, Knoxville Chancellor Donde Plowman introduced new Director of Athletics Danny White Friday afternoon at the Ray & Lucy Hand Digital Studio.
University of Tennessee, Knoxville Chancellor Donde Plowman
Opening statement:
“I want to thank everyone for being here with us today. To be in front of you twice in one week, truly says something about the sense of urgency we have in the leadership here at UT to move Volunteer athletics forward to greatness. Today, we are here to formally introduce Dr. Danny White, who we announced yesterday as our new vice chancellor and director of athletics. Before I hand it over to Danny, first I want to thank president Randy Boyd and chairman John Compton for their support in helping me find our new athletic director. More importantly, helping me convince him he wanted to come here. Their guidance and support has been absolutely invaluable. I also want to thank the many others in Vol Nation who have offered great advice and great support.
“I want to give you all some insight into how this all transpired over the last few days. We retained Parker Executive search firm on Saturday and they began to compile a list of potential AD candidates. I spent Monday evening and all-day Tuesday taking calls and talking to different groups inside athletics such as head coaches, senior leadership teams, student-athlete advisory council, the faculty-senate committee on athletics and groups of donors, just try to try to find out what we should be looking for in our next athletic director. We were confident that the position would be attractive and attract robust interest. We were immediately proven correct. Our search firm presented us with an impressive and diverse list of prospects, but it was clear who the top candidate was. It was Danny White. We moved swiftly, and I had my first conversation with Danny on Tuesday night over Zoom during the Tennessee-Florida basketball game actually, we both missed that. On Wednesday morning, president Boyd, chairman Compton and I had a 90-minute Zoom meeting with Danny, and that evening, the three of us flew to Orlando to meet with Danny and his lovely family. We were blown away by his ideas, his character and his commitment to both academic and athletic success. Shawn, Aidan, Molly, Caitlin and James, welcome to Knoxville. We are so happy that you can be here today to help us celebrate this great day for your husband and father and our next athletic director. Danny is a leader, an innovator, a builder. He comes from an extraordinary family of college athletics administrators, including the renowned and respected athletic director at Duke University, his dad Kevin White.
“As a matter of fact, a little side note. As I was reaching out and asking people for input about what we should be looking for in an athletic director, I was speaking with Peyton Manning and he said ‘I called coach Cutcliffe and said ‘what should I tell her about qualities in an athletic director?’ And he said tell her to pick someone exactly like our athletic director, Kevin White.’ And that was just really amazing because we did our best because we hired his son. The irony is, Peyton had no idea that Danny was on our short list. Danny has a stellar record of hiring great coaches and winning championships. His first task will be to hire a new head football coach and then to support the hiring of assistants and others in the athletic department. In these searches, he will of course be looking for fierce competitors and proven champions. But he will also be looking to assemble a team with diverse backgrounds and talents, a team with character and integrity, and a team that reflects his own commitment to all of our student-athletes and to the best traditions of the University of Tennessee. It is my sincere honor and privilege to welcome Dr. Danny White to the great University of Tennessee.”
Director of Athletics Danny White
Opening statement:
“Good morning, good afternoon—what time is it? I don’t even know what day it is right now. I appreciate you guys for making the time to join us this afternoon. I’m really excited to be here and so proud to be able to step into this unbelievable opportunity. I want to thank Chancellor Plowman, Chairman John Compton and President Randy Boyd. I just met these guys in the last couple days and its been an absolute whirlwind. I’m so impressed with their leadership, their commitment and their obvious love and passion for this place.
“When I finished the Zoom on Wednesday morning, I got a call from the search executives and they said it went pretty well. I said, ‘Okay, what are the next steps?’ They said, ‘They’re going to be in your living room this evening.’ At that point I thought that they were being pretty aggressive and I like that. I would like to think that I’m pretty aggressive and we need to be aggressive here at Tennessee to get to where we need to be and to get this athletic department where it belongs at the very top of college athletics nationally.
“I will be remised if I didn’t talk about some folks that gave me an incredible opportunity at UCF. Dr. John Hitt, the president that hired me there. President Whittaker and President Cartwright who is the current president there. The student athletes, the coaches, the staff and the staff that bought into a vision that five years ago people thought we were insane. We talked about doing some things that had never been done before and it’s all been accomplished and it’s only going to continue. I’m very proud of all of the work we did there and proud of the folks that contributed in that effort.
“Our success and any success that I’ve been fortunate to be a part of at both UCF and Buffalo starts with building a strong plan. And I really look forward to doing that with student athletes and coaches here at Tennessee and other key contributors. I just had the opportunity to meet with folks that have invested not only financially, but also emotionally and in every way possible in this place for many, many years. I can’t wait to get to work with everyone on what that vision is. What does Tennessee athletics need to look like five and 10 years from now? How do we regain our stature as a dominant college athletics brand in the Southeastern Conference and across the country?
“Chancellor Plowman had mentioned about my background a little bit. I would like to consider myself a product of college athletics. I grew up around student athletes and around coaches. I was on campuses and had donors and teams over to our house. Like these guys, I was probably pulling on players jerseys and trying to get them to give me piggy back rides as a kid. My mom incidentally was telling me the stories of when she was a track coach, and she would bring her team here to spend a week in Knoxville for big meets back in the day. We have a long history in college athletics. I would like to say that we’re not smart enough to do anything else. We’ve all kind of found ourselves working in this profession, but it’s really because it’s such a unique industry, but it’s bigger than that. On our staff we talk a lot about college athletics not being a job, but a lifestyle and you have to be bought into it. You have to believe in it and you have to believe in the student athlete experience. Before anything else I am extremely student athlete centric and I want the student athletes here at Tennessee to hear that from me as the Director of Athletics. Call the student athletes at UCF, they’ll confirm it. Every single decision we make will start and stop with their best interest. That’s what we’re going to be all about and if we do that, we’re going to see greater and greater success and will help them become the best version of themselves as an athlete, a student and a person, so that they will leave here and have every success in life.”
“Integrity is an enormous part of who I am, of the people that we hire. I want a head coach that I can trust unequivocally, and I know that person will hire a staff full of high-character people. That goes beyond just staying within rules and following regulations, whether they be university, conference or NCAA. It’s bigger than that. It’s having the right moral compass that’s going to rub off on our student-athletes. Be a role model for our student-athletes and make sure that we’re developing them in every way possible, that their parents will be proud of, that all of us will be proud of. Integrity is huge.
“I believe college athletics is all about the people. Recruiting and retaining talented student-athletes, coaches and staff to surround them. I think the same coach can be successful or not based on how they are supported from an administrative standpoint. Everything that needs to happen from a day-to-day basis, the energy that we approach our job with every day to support our programs, it’s the people that make the difference. Great facilities like this and the benefactors that invest in things like this are game-changers obviously in recruiting. But if we don’t have the right people, it’s for not. We have to be very intentional about recruiting, retaining and developing our talent here in all facets at Tennessee athletics.
“Building a championship culture, we talked about this the other night. There are a lot of different ways to define culture. The way we’ve defined it at UCF is when I see student-athletes realizing, any team, understanding that they’re not going to be successful if the team goal is not bigger than themselves. Beyond that, the overall athletic department’s success and the success of all the teams around them is bigger than their individual team. When I see student-athletes going to support each other at different events and caring about what Tennessee athletics is as a whole, what that brand is that they’re all representing on the national stage, and taking pride in building that brand, that’s championship culture to me. That tells me that they know they are a part of something big, a part of something special and I think that’s where we can achieve greater and greater success.
“Some of that, a lot of that may already be in place. There are a lot of great things happening in Tennessee athletics. There are unbelievable Olympic sports that have accomplished so much. There is a great and storied history. We obviously have some work to do on our football program as the chancellor mentioned from a leadership standpoint, and candidly from a competitive standpoint from where we have been. We need to get to work on that.
“The Tennessee opportunity, I saw an opportunity and I am flattered by the chancellor’s comments about classifying me as a builder. That’s how I have always thought of myself. I have never worked at the big-brand place until now, and I actually like the fact that the brand needs to be polished a little bit. Needs to be elevated back to where it was not that long ago in the college athletics space. I am really excited about the prospect of doing that and bringing Vol nation together. Bringing the fan base together from a positive support standpoint, a collaborative effort. It’s not just the big donors, the medium-sized donors, all the donors. It’s not just the season ticket holders. It’s not just our student-athletes and staff. It’s everybody that cares about this place.
“If you’re upset or you’re negative, text your buddy, don’t put it on social media. Let’s build some positive momentum. We’re going to have new leadership in our football staff. We have great leadership across the board in all of our sport programs. They need all of our support, and positive momentum comes from everybody that cares about UT athletics. I’m really looking forward to the charge of hopefully doing my part to inspire that. It’s an all-hands-on-deck type of deal. There is no one person that can do that.
“If we all work together and get the right people as I mentioned on the bus here, I couldn’t be more excited about the success that we can have here. We can compete. This place has already shown and is showing in many sports that we can compete for Southeastern Conference championships, which means we can compete for national championships. In the future, we want to do a whole lot more of that. Just a few comments from me, and again I appreciate everybody coming to join us today. I know we have folks virtual in the COVID era that we’re in. Whether you’re virtual or in person, thanks for being here and I look forward to answering any questions you may have.”
On what Donde Plowman and Randy Boyd said to him in Florida and why the football investigation didn’t deter him from the job:
“One of the things I think I mentioned that evening, or maybe it was in the Zoom earlier in the day at some point; if everything was humming here and going great, I wouldn’t be standing here. It wouldn’t be an attractive proposition for me. I was really proud and excited about what we were building kind of from the ground up at UCF, and this isn’t a ground up because it’s been there. But there is a lot of building that needs to happen. The challenges in terms of the NCAA investigation, the challenges in terms of not being where we want to be competitively in football—that excites me, that energizes me and I want to be a part of fixing it and building it. Going back to what they said, I think it’s probably more about how they said it. When I saw the alignment of the leadership of this university and how they connect with each other and as I mentioned, the obvious love that they have for this institution, it’s hard to identify. But my wife and I talking, we just felt like it was something that we want to be a part of. We knew, and I’ve known coming through the college athletics ranks, what Tennessee Athletics is and can be on the national stage in college athletics and again; I just want to be a part of it.”
On his message to the football student-athletes for a timeline on the head coach hire and the balance of innovation and tradition at Tennessee:
“There is no knocking on the tradition at UCF, and they take pride in the fact that they are so young, so yeah, it is different. I’ll touch on the first question first, I am meeting with the football team later this afternoon. I have never started a coaching search without hearing from the student athletes. They know a whole lot what’s going on, what’s going well, what’s not going well. I’ll ask them to vote, if they’re watching this they’re learning right now and I’ll tell them again this afternoon. I’ll share a little bit about my philosophy and how I will be approaching things here. I want them to vote on team leaders. I can’t meet with over 100 people and have a meaningful meeting. I want to meet with six, seven, eight, nine of them and give them a little bit of time, and give the rest of the team some time after they’ve voted on their team representatives, and give them time to download everything they’re thinking. I’ll ask that group to share with me, represent to me what the thoughts are, what’s the tenor of the roster, what they think they need in terms of attributes. We are not going to be going over candidates, that’s not fair to potential candidates. That has helped me in every search that I have been a part of and have led. I think it has been a big part of why the vast majority, if not all of those searches, have led to a better-than-expected first year, which allows a new leader of a program to get some momentum early on.
“In terms of tradition, I have a lot to learn about Tennessee. I want to continue to be innovative, I want us to be a place that comes up with that new idea. I love it when other athletic departments follow what we did at UCF and steal our ideas, I take great pride in that. But we are not always going to have great ideas, we are going to have some bad ideas too. We have to make sure that we don’t have too much pride to stick that one in the trash can because it didn’t work. But you are right, and I do acknowledge it’s a different place. The same things that we did at UCF aren’t necessarily going to be applicable here and I recognize and honor the vast tradition here, so it’s a balancing act.
On what his process looks like in hiring a coach:
“Ideally, in the age of social media and everything, it starts and it ends with the student-athletes. I’ve been able to accomplish that in all three of my football searches. I want to hear from them first, and I want them to be the first ones to find out who their new coach is. What happens in between – there is a whole lot going on there. I’m going to do a lot of homework. I’ve spent a lot of time researching and calling. I’m fortunate to have a pretty significant network in intercollegiate athletics, and I realize it is probably because of the way I grew up. I can get a candidate’s opinion from folks, and really understand who they are from a character standpoint. I don’t want to even be interviewing someone if I have questions about that. We need to make sure the person we’re bringing in to run our program is going to do it the right way, is going to do right by these kids, and is going to have an aggressive vision to get us highly competitive. So, I don’t know if I can offer any more detail than that because it’s a pretty fluid situation.”
On if he has talked to Tennessee defensive assistant Kevin Steele, if Steele is a candidate for the head coaching job, and if he feels he needs to have someone in place before Feb. 3 (signing day):
“I hadn’t thought as far as in terms of the Wednesday signing day, as I am kind of operating on about three hours of sleep for the last six days combined trying to figure this all out. I’m scheduled to visit with Kevin later this afternoon. Everybody is a candidate – everybody in this room is a candidate as this point. We have not narrowed this thing down at all, and we’re working through it. We are going to move quickly, and I think there is way, just as I have witnessed, with how quickly our leadership moved and moving us a lot quicker than we thought we would in terms of making decisions. There’s definitely a way, and I have done it before, to move very quickly and make sure that we’re not taking shortcuts and we’re getting the right person.”
On what he would tell head coaching candidates and recruits who want to know what the future holds for the football program:
“I’ve already learned and will continue to learn more, working with outside counsel that’s involved in the investigation. Just looking at case precedent with other NCAA cases. Until it is done, nobody will know exactly what the final results are. We will be very transparent and honest with the candidates involved in this search, and give them a good forecast for what that will look like.”
On what has allowed him to find outside the box, big-time hires that other ADs may not have considered:
“I think that what I’ve tried to do is similar to how we market our program, in terms of building a brand. Whether it be in a community, building a compelling case for support and philanthropy, I think the same is true for hiring a coach. How are you landing in a space where it’s distinctive? What is different about this person that’s going to change things in a positive way for your program? It’s going to change the type of kid or the type of talent you can get from a recruiting standpoint. What’s their vision from a scheme standpoint that makes sense for your institution geographically, recruiting-wise? At the end of the day, what I would like to do and what I typically do is narrow a list to those that I feel comfortable with from a character and integrity standpoint, that I feel like there is something distinctive. That makes them stand apart, that’s different about the prospect of their leadership. On paper, on video, you can do a whole lot of research online, as I do. At some point, it comes down to a gut feeling. The interviews matter and winning the job really matters. That’s where the final decision comes.”
On building back Tennessee fans’ trust as a new athletic director coming in:
“I’ll repeat what I said to our chancellor a couple nights ago: I hate to lose. And I imagine our fans hate to lose maybe as much as I do, but there aren’t many people who hate to lose as much as I do. I want the same thing they want. I want us to get extremely competitive, I want us to be competing for championships. If that could happen tomorrow, I would snap my fingers and make that happen. I am asking for their trust, to know that they have an athletics director that is going to work his tail off to figure out how to get the right leadership, the right staff and the right support around our football program. To make sure that happens as quickly as possible while doing it the right way. Because if we don’t do it the right way, it is not going to be sustainable. We need to build a football program like this University has had in the past, that is sustainably and consistently competitive on the national stage. I want our fans to know how bad I want that. I would not have signed up for this if I didn’t think we could deliver that. It’s going to be a lot of work, and we need their support. We need them to be positive, we need them to be bought in and supporting our student athletes. Imagine being a 19-year-old kid, getting out of bed in the morning in their dorm or apartment, and its 50 degrees outside and you have to go hit the weights and your Twitter feed is filled with a bunch of negativity. We can’t have that. We need all of Vol Nation to be bought in, be positive, and support this program because they are a big part of the momentum that we need to build from this point forward.
On if he needed assurance from the NCAA on its investigation into the football program:
“I don’t know that I ever considered that (the investigation) would be crippling. I don’t think a university, an athletics department and a football program with this much history and this much going for it is going to be crippled by something. I think it’s a matter of how long it’s going to take to climb out of it. I didn’t make this decision in a short-term type of way. I view this, hopefully, if you all will have me. Might be running me out of here in six months, I don’t know. (laughs) Hopefully, this is something that I’m building and being a part of for the long term. I’m not contemplating some of the short-term scenarios. I think in any reasonable scenario, as you look at case precedent with other issues that we’ve seen across the country, nothing is insurmountable. We can get through this, and we’ll get through it the right way, and we’ll get the program right back to where it needs to be.”
On what excited him about coming to the University of Tennessee and if he sought any outside counsel for advice:
“I talked to folks in my immediate family that are uniquely positioned to help me. Obviously, my dad [Kevin White] and my brothers [Brian and Michael], one’s an AD and one’s a basketball coach. There weren’t a whole lot of people that I could talk to, because of how quickly it was moving and just how confidential the process needed to be for my sake and for the sake of Tennessee. The more I learned about it, and what gelled it and sealed it for us, were these three individuals [Chancellor Donde Plowman, President Randy Boyd and UT Chair of the Board of Trustees John Compton]. The leadership, as I mentioned earlier, they really care. I really felt like I have and I would have their support unequivocally. It’s a big job. It’s going to be a big challenge. There’s strong leadership here. I was in a great situation [at UCF]. Never thought I would leave. If you would’ve asked me seven days ago, I would’ve said ‘Nope, never leaving.’ So I’m not walking away from something, I’m running towards something that I think is a unique, once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to restore one of the most iconic brands in college athletics.”
On the fan reaction during the first few weeks of 2018 as UCF capped a 13-0 season in football:
“It was all amusing. There was more than one national champion that year. I look forward to a better postseason [for the sport of college football]. I think everybody knows that, and I think we’re on the right track towards getting it. I think it’s going to be awesome for college football. It’s going to be awesome for Tennessee. It’s going to be awesome for all of college football, for the student-athletes that compete, participate in it and should have the ability to settle it on the field. It’s kind of funny, I’m on the other side of that conversation now. Have been for a few hours now, but if I had to do it all over again, I’d do the same thing. What those kids [at UCF] accomplished that year needed to be defended. I felt like in the role that I was in, I needed to fight for them and what they had accomplished which was phenomenal. An undefeated season is really tough to do. I’d do it again for any of our teams here. That’s just who I am. As I mentioned, I believe in student-athletes and I believe in the true spirit of competition.”
On his decision to leave UCF for the Tennessee AD job:
“What makes this one different is the opportunity to build. You saw in the Orlando market, that where we were five years ago and what I was fortunate to be a part of there … I just think that being a change agent takes a whole team. It’s not one individual and it’s not a small group of individuals that are going to be responsible for what needs to happen here. But I want to be a part of things like that. I’m not a placeholder type of leader … If there’s not an opportunity to build and fight for something, I’m going to be bored to tears. I don’t golf, don’t have a lot of hobbies. I love college athletics and I love trying to impact positive change, and there is a great opportunity here to do that.”
On social media and fan influence on a coaching hire decision:
“The last few coaching searches I’ve done at UCF, there was that list of one-two-three-four-five. Everybody is debating who it should be, and the people we hired weren’t even on that list. I’m not paying attention to that list. If I am, then I don’t know why you hired me. You might as well just go look at the list, start calling them up and see who wants to do it. It’s way more in depth than that, and we’re going to be expansive in our search, make sure that we turn over every single stone and look for what makes this place distinctive. We’d love to excite our fan base with whatever the hire is, and hopefully we do. Sometimes as I think about it, when I’m in a room with people with opinions. All of them have jobs, and they’re way smarter than me. They could be a doctor or an electrician, and they can all do all sorts of things that I would not be able to do in a million years. But I’m a reasonably smart person, and I’m going to be really, really close to this. I’m going to have all the facts at hand and do my very best to make the best decision for the University of Tennessee and its football program.
“I ask our folks to know that I’m going to put everything I have into this search and make sure that we’re making the best decision with everything that we know. I think that they’re going to like the outcome. Most importantly, I think our football program is going to thrive as we move forward on whatever that solution is.”
On an up-tempo brand of football and how a new hire would win the press conference:
“Schematically, that’s a more complicated conversation. I’m not at a place yet where we’ve identified [candidates]. I need to talk to these student athletes and do a lot of work, starting today, on what type of recruiting plan, scheme, and vision we think is going to give us the best opportunity to compete in the Southeastern Conference. You always want to win the press conference because you want people to be excited and celebrate. I hope we’re winning the press conference today. You guys are going to tell about that later or tomorrow. Why would we want people to not be excited and positive about what we’re doing? But we’re not going to try to win the press conference by making a decision we don’t feel good about in the short and long term as the best leader to take us where we all want to be.”
University of Tennessee, Knoxville Chancellor Donde Plowman
On identifying Danny White as a candidate and how they are going to search for a new football head coach:
“I wanted to find a builder; Someone who has built a strong program and would want to come here and join me in that same task. That’s what I see. What I’m doing is trying to help build this university and take it to the next level. Building this athletic department and the brand as Danny talked about, that was probably the single most important thing that I was looking for. The second thing was [Danny] had already been an athletic director. Experience in the role and successful experiences in hiring coaches.”
On what stood out about Danny White and why he was hired:
“I can think of two things. The search firm said when they called to see if [Danny] was interested, he said ‘I can win a national championship there.’ I don’t know if that’s true, but that’s what they told me. And the way he talked about this has been the iconic brand. It might not be flourishing like it has in the past, but let’s get that luster back. That was sort of a drop-the-mic moment for me. His experience, energy and positivity were all things that made it seem like a no-brainer.
On the vetting process in hiring a new director of athletics:
“A couple of ways to answer that question. I’ve said to people before, I have a really good track record of hiring effective leaders. They just haven’t happened to be in athletics. I feel confident about that judgement of mine. The search firm really did a great job of bringing forth candidates and they shared research with me. When I saw the ranking of the 20 best athletic directors in the country, and this guy Danny White was number four, that looks interesting to me. It was a fast process, but that’s why you hire a search firm, to really bring the people from the industry, the domain of athletics. I feel confident in my judgement about leaders, builders, and changemakers.”
On if she has any update on when the investigation may conclude:
“I wish there was. No. I don’t know any more than I said on Monday. I can’t believe we were here just Monday.”
On what the plan is with current assistant football coaches going forward:
“Those plans will be made by our new athletic director. So when he tells me what they are, I’ll be able to tell you. We have an athletic director and those are his decisions and responsibilities.”
On how difficult it was to convince someone to take the Tennessee athletic director job:
“I had a small search committee of three people – me, John Compton and Randy Boyd – and I decided that we were just going to take the big guns, go down to Orlando and put on the hard sell. And it seemed like it worked. In seriousness, I think that the alignment of the leadership at the University of Tennessee right now – I’m sure there have been well-aligned leaders in the past, but maybe not the recent past. I felt like that was a selling point of this place. I said to Danny, I think not of three-legged stools, but four-legged stools. We have three of the legs, and I think we need the fourth. He really seemed like he would be well-aligned with this team that we have.”
On bolstering positivity surrounding the athletic department:
“I love what Danny said. We need to be positive. It’s hurtful when you see those things on social media. I’m a grown-up, so I can’t quite imagine what that’s like for a 19-year-old. I think that would be a great starting point for us today, is to try to think about positivity on social media. Social media can be great but it can also be painful. So let’s move in a positive direction.”
New University of Tennessee Director of Athletics Danny White was introduced at a press conference Friday and fielded questions. Chancellor Donde Plowman spoke and took questions as well.
Lady A was taping their performance for the upcoming NBC special, Grand Ole Opry: 95 Years of Country Music when Opry member Darius Rucker surprised them by extending an invite to the trio to become the newest Opry members!
Watch the moment they are asked unfold right here…
After the invite, an emotional Hillary Scott shared, “This is the best surprise we could ever ask for, I’ve been coming here since I was a little girl so to say we are honored is an understatement. We are so truly grateful to officially be a part of this amazing family.”
Congrats to Hillary, Dave Haywood, and Charles Kelley.
After getting this Opry invite, maybe it was a “Champaign Night”…
If you’re walking around singing songs off of Morgan Wallen‘s Dangerous: The Double Album to yourself…don’t worry, you’re not alone.
Fellow country hit makers Dan + Shay have Morgan’s song “Sand In My Boots” on replay.
In fact, the duo shared a very special quick cover version of them singing the chorus with the message, “can’t stop listening to ‘sand in my boots’ so figured we’d sing it for y’all. congrats to our bud Morgan Wallen on the huge album launch! songs like this are why we fell in love with country music.”
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – The No. 25/RV Lady Vols took a four-point lead into the final quarter but couldn’t hold on, falling 67-61 to No. 3/5 UConn in Thompson-Boling Arena on Thursday night in front of a crowd of 3,553, the largest of any NCAA women’s game thus far in 2020-21.
Tennessee (9-3, 3-1 SEC) was led by junior Rae Burrell who had 18 points and eight rebounds. Senior Rennia Davis narrowly missed a double-double with 11 points and nine rebounds, and sophomore Tamari Key and freshman Marta Suárez each turned in 10 points.
Christyn Williams led UConn (9-0, 7-0 Big East) with 20 points, and Evina Westbrook and Aubrey Griffin managed 15 and 10, respectively.
Tamari Key got Tennessee on the board first with a put-back just over a minute into play, while UConn came out cold and missed its first four shots before Olivia Nelson-Ododa hit a layup at the 7:27 mark. Burrell answered with a trey on the next possession, but Williams countered with one of her own to tie the score at 5-all with 6:29 left in the quarter. Paige Bueckers gave the Huskies their first lead of the game with a pair of free throws 30 seconds later. Key tied it back up with 4:22 on the clock, and the teams proceeded to trade buckets until Burrell and Kasiyahna Kushkituah scored on back-to-back plays while holding UConn to a free throw to go up 16-13 with 1:22 left in the quarter. Each team hit a free throw in the closing minute, and Williams converted on a jumper at the buzzer to send the game into the second period with UT up 17-16.
Williams opened the second with a quick jumper to put the Huskies up by one, but UT bounced back with a 5-2 run to lead by three points two and a half minutes in. The Huskies answered with an 8-0 run of their own to go ahead 26-23 before Burrell broke the drought with a 12-foot jumper on the next possession, putting the score at 28-25 at the media timeout. Following the timeout Marta Suárez came up with the steal and the score to cut the deficit to one with 3:31 left in the half, and she tied it up with a trey a minute later at 30-all. UConn added a point with a Westbrook free throw, but UT reclaimed the lead off a Key jumper on the next trip down the court and stretched it to four with a Destiny Salary 3-pointer by the 1:12 mark. A Westbrook trey 10 seconds later made the score 35-34, where it would remain until halftime.
UConn struck first in the second half, scoring on a Griffin layup before Jordan Horston countered with a jumper on the other end. UConn went up by two by the 7:39 mark, but Suárez and Burrell combined for four quick points that put the Lady Vols back on top at 41-39 a minute later. The lead would change hands two more times before the media break, but four-straight points by Davis following the break put the Big Orange up 45-42 with 4:16 left in the quarter. Williams cut it to one with a fast-break layup, and then both teams hit a scoring slump before Jordan Walker knocked down a three to push the score to 48-44 with 1:09 on the clock. UT would carry a four-point lead through the end of the quarter, entering the final stanza up 49-45.
The Huskies opened the fourth with a 7-1 run, reclaiming the lead at 52-50 with 7:53 left in the game, but Davis tied it with a jumper on the next possession. Back-to-back threes by Westbrook fueled a 9-0 run that gave UConn a 61-52 advantage by the media break, but Suárez hit a long-range three after the timeout to pull the score to 61-55 with 4:26 to play. The Lady Vols scored six unanswered to creep within two with 55 seconds to go, but Bueckers hit a three as the shot clock wound down to put the Huskies back up by five with 25 seconds left in the game, and with Tennessee forced to foul, UConn converted on free throws to take a 67-61 victory.
Up Next: The Lady Vols will host No. 13 Kentucky at 2 p.m. ET on Sunday in a contest rescheduled from Jan. 3. The game will be broadcast on ESPN2 and all tickets issued for the original date will be honored.
Cleaning The Glass: Tennessee out-rebounded the Huskies, 42-38. The Lady Vols have now out-rebounded every opponent this season by an average of 45.9 rpg. to 31.8 rpg.
Rae All Day: Junior Rae Burrell led UT in scoring for the seventh time this season. Since entering the starting lineup 21 games ago, she is averaging 14.9 ppg. as a starter.
Key Being Key: Sophomore Tamari Key narrowly missed a double-double against UConn, finishing with 10 points and a season-high nine rebounds. Key has now been in double figures in four-straight games, averaging 12.8 ppg. and 6.8 rbg. over those contests.
Backing Pat: As We Back Pat Week came to a close, head coaches Kellie Harper and Geno Auriemma each made a personal donation of $10,000 at Thursday night’s Hall of Fame Revival Series game between the Lady Vols and Huskies, benefiting non-profits the Pat Summitt Foundation and the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame. A check for $20,000 was presented by Harper and Auriemma during a pregame announcement.
Tennessee men’s basketball assistant coach Kim English spoke to the media Thursday to review the rough loss at Florida and preview Saturday’s home tilt with the Missouri Tigers.