Hoops Preview: #6 Tennessee vs. #19 Missouri

Hoops Preview: #6 Tennessee vs. #19 Missouri

Josiah-Jordan James / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – The No. 6 Tennessee basketball team returns to its home floor for a rematch with the 19th-ranked Missouri Tigers on Saturday night. Tipoff from Thompson-Boling Arena is slated for 8:30 p.m. ET on SEC Network.

Fans can catch Saturday’s game on SEC Network and online or on any mobile device through WatchESPN. WatchESPN can be accessed through the ESPN App, or online at espn.com/watch. Paul Sunderland and Joe Kleine 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 fell on the road to Florida, 75-49. The Vols were led in scoring by senior John Fulkerson who dropped in 15 points and dished out a career-high-tying five assists.

A victory would give the Vols a 6-2 series lead when the games are played in Knoxville and would be the Vols sixth consecutive win when taking on the Tigers on Rocky Top.

Up next, the Vols will play the middle of three consecutive home games when they welcome Mississippi State to Knoxville on Tuesday night. Tipoff from Thompson-Boling Arena is set for 7 p.m. ET on SEC Network.

THE SERIES
• Tennessee leads its all-time series with Missouri 10-7, dating to 1961. The Volunteers own a 5-2 advantage when the series is contested in Knoxville and have won five straight over the Tigers on Rocky Top.
• The Volunteers have won four straight games against Mizzou—the longest win streak of the series by either team.
• Vols head coach Rick Barnes is 5-1 in head-to-head meetings against teams coached by Cuonzo Martin.
• Tennessee’s 20-point win (73-53) at then-12th-ranked Missouri to open SEC play on Dec. 30 stands as UT’s largest margin of victory on the road against a top-25 opponent in program history.
• Saturday’s contest marks the second time in the series that both teams enter the game ranked.

LAYUP LINES
• Freshman Jaden Springer missed the Florida game with an ankle injury suffered against Vanderbilt last Saturday.
• Tennessee leading scorer Victor Bailey Jr. is the son of a Mizzou gridiron great. See Bailey note below.
• Tennessee assistant coach Kim English was a 1,500-point scorer and an All-Big 12 performer during his collegiate playing career at Mizzou from 2008-12. The Tigers won 107 games during the NBA Draft pick’s career. See English note below.
• Tennessee is No. 6 in the latest NCAA NET ratings, with wins over three teams in the top 40.
• The Vols are giving up a league-best 64.7 points per game in SEC play.
• Tennessee owns a +8.3 turnover margin during its home SEC games.
• During SEC play, only 6.3 points per game separate Tennessee’s top seven scorers.
• In their two losses, the Vols shot .569 (29-51) from the free-throw line.
• Vols senior John Fulkerson  has been named to the Wooden Award’s Midseason Top-25 List.

DEFENSE WINS
• Tennessee ranks sixth in the NCAA in scoring defense, allowing just 58.7 points per game.
• According to KenPom, the Vols rank second in the NCAA in adjusted defensive efficiency, allowing only 87.5 points per 100 possessions. College teams typically average close to 70 possessions per game.
• The Vols are forcing 17.1 turnovers per game while converting those turnovers into 18.8 points per game. Tennessee’s turnover margin stands at +6.5 (third nationally).
• Tennessee has forced 10 of 12 opponents to turn the ball over on 20 percent or more of their possessions.
• Tennessee has yet to allow an opposing player to score 20 points this season.
• Reigning SEC Defensive Player of the Year Yves Pons has 17 blocks through UT’s first six SEC games. Pons has 97 blocks in his last 43 games.

ABOUT MISSOURI
• After beginning conference play with two tough losses to Tennessee and Mississippi State, Missouri experienced a team shutdown due to COVID-19 through the second week of January. When the Tigers returned, they responded with two conference victories over Texas A&M (68-52) and South Carolina (81-70). The Tigers currently sit at 9-2 overall and 3-2 in league action.
• The Tigers’ 9-2 record ties the best 11-game start for Mizzou since the arrival of fourth-year head coach Cuonzo Martin in the spring of 2017.
• Through 11 games, Xavier Pinson has continued to be the glue for the Tigers in the backcourt, leading the team in both scoring and assists, pouring in 12.9 points per game and dishing out 3.4 helpers per contest. His assists average ranks ninth in the SEC.
• In the paint, senior Jeremiah Tilmon has been a beast on both the score sheet and the glass. Tilmon is currently averaging 12.0 points and a team-leading 8.0 rebounds. His eight rebounds per contest rank fifth in the SEC. In conference play, he’s pulling in 8.2 rebounds per night, which ranks third in the league.
• On the defensive end, the Tigers continue to be led by senior guard Dru Smith, who ranks second in the SEC in steals with 1.9 takeaways per night. In league action, he’s creating turnovers at a similar rate, nabbing 2.0 per game through five SEC contests. He also ranks second on the team in scoring (12.1 ppg).
• The University of Missouri was established in 1839 when the state legislature passed the Geyer Act to establish funds for a state university. The citizens of Columbia and Boone County pledged more than  $100,000 in cash and land to win the location of the university, making UM the first public university west of the Mississippi River.

LAST MEETING WITH MISSOURI
•  A dominant defensive effort and an efficient shooting mark of .500 (27-54) from the field pushed the seventh-ranked Tennessee basketball team past 12th-ranked Missouri, 73-53, to open SEC play Dec. 30, 2020, at Mizzou Arena.
•  The Vols held Missouri to just .364 shooting from the field and forced 21 turnovers on the defensive end.
•  Sophomore Santiago Vescovi led UT in scoring, pouring in a game-high 15 points on 5-of-6 shooting and a 3-of-4 mark from 3-point range
•  National Defensive Player of the Year candidate Yves Pons was impressively versatile, totaling 13 points, six rebounds, four blocks and two steals.
•  Freshman Jaden Springer also scored 13 points while grabbing four rebounds and nabbing a season-high three steals off the bench for the Vols.
•  Senior John Fulkerson was the fourth Vol to reach double-figures, scoring 11 points and pulling down six rebounds.
•  Sophomore Josiah-Jordan James—despite scoring just two points—was all over the stat sheet, grabbing three offensive rebounds, dishing off a game-high four assists, tallying a career-high-tying three steals and recording a blocked shot. James posted a game-high-tying plus/minus rating of +25.
•  UT came roaring out of the gates, knocking down its first seven shot attempts en route to a commanding 21-4 lead at the under-12 media timeout.
•  Tennessee withstood each counter punch from the Tigers, extending its first-half lead to as many as 19, heading into the halftime break with a 38-25 advantage.
•  UT came out of the break with much of the same energy, continuing its stifling defensive effort and efficient night from the field on offense throughout the second half to walk away with the 20-point victory.

ENGLISH PART OF WINNINGEST CLASS IN MIZZOU PROGRAM HISTORY
• Vols assistant coach Kim English and two of his Missouri teammates were part of a program-record 107 collegiate wins during their careers as Tigers (2008-12).
• English was named Most Outstanding Player of the 2012 Big 12 Tournament after averaging 23.0 ppg.

MARTIN LED VOLS FOR THREE YEARS
• Fourth-year Missouri head coach Cuonzo Martin was the head coach at Tennessee for three seasons from 2011-14.
• Martin led the Vols to a 63-41 (32-20 SEC) record and a memorable 2014 NCAA Tournament run that began in the First Four and ended in the Sweet Sixteen (one possession away from the program’s second all-time Elite Eight appearance).
• On April 15, 2014, it was announced that Martin had accepted the head coaching job at Cal, where he spent three seasons before transitioning to Mizzou.

MEMORABLE VOL PERFORMANCES AGAINST MISSOURI
• Knoxville native Rob Jones totaled 14 points, 11 rebounds, one assist and a team-high three blocks against the Tigers Dec. 10, 1984, in Columbia, but it wasn’t enough, as Missouri posted a 70-61 victory. Five Tigers scored in double figures in the win.
• Mizzou had no answer for the great Bernard King, as the legendary Vols forward recorded a double-double with 32 points and 18 rebounds in a 99-77 Tennessee triumph at the Big Sun Invitational on Dec. 21, 1974 in St. Petersburg, Florida.
• Two-time first-team All-SEC honoree Mike Edwards tallied a team-high 19 points against Missouri during a 67-57 loss to the 12th-ranked Tigers in the 1972 Vol Classic title game in Knoxville on Dec. 16, 1972.

VJ BAILEY HAS TIGER BLOODLINES
• Tennessee’s second-leading scorer, Victor Bailey Jr., is the son of one of the greatest football wide receivers ever to play at Mizzou.
• Victor Bailey (Sr.) was a star receiver for the Tigers from 1990-92 and finished his career as the school’s all-time receptions leader (128). His three-year Mizzou totals also included 2,116 receiving yards and 12 touchdowns.
• Bailey Sr. was selected by the Philadelphia Eagles in the second round of the 1993 NFL Draft, and he played three seasons for the Eagles and Kansas City Chiefs.

SECOND TIME’S A CHARM
• Since 2018, Rick Barnes and his staff have guided the Volunteers to a 12-3 record in regular-season rematch games (SEC Tournament games not included).

20 ELUSIVE FOR OPPOSING SCORERS
• Through 2,400 minutes of basketball this season, no Tennessee opponent has managed to score 20 points.
• Only five opposing scorers have scored more than 15 points. The high is 19, attained by both J.D. Notae (Arkansas) and Scotty Pippen Jr. (Vanderbilt).
• Tennessee’s opponents’ top scorer this season averages 14.5 ppg.

-UT Athletics

Transcript: Kim English Media Availability Previewing Mizzou

Transcript: Kim English Media Availability Previewing Mizzou

Vols AC Kim English / Credit: UT Athletics

Tennessee basketball assistant coach Kim English met with the media on Thursday morning to discuss the Vols weekend matchup with Missouri.

On if Jaden has been practicing and any idea of his status for Saturday:
“Well, we were off yesterday – typical to what we do on a Saturday, Tuesday, Saturday, slate. He’s day-to-day and been spending time with Chad (Newman), our trainer, and G (Garrett Medenwald), our strength coach.”

On how he would rate yesterday’s film session yesterday on a scale of brutality:
“Well, we’ll watch film today. Yesterday was scheduled to plan the day off. I think it’s good to kind of let everyone, players included, kind of let the game happen and watch it on film. I always believe things are never as good as they seem, and things are never as bad as they seem. We’ve all watched the film multiple times, as we’re preparing for Missouri. We’ll scrub this film out today and move on, and see as we have to get better in and no different than we would after a win, after an ugly win, after a great win again. When you meet with triumph and disaster, you want to treat those two impostors just the same.

On if he thought watching film was more x and o’s or effort and intensity:
“I think those things are married. Effort and intensity at this level of basketball and beyond, are married with execution. It’s just so that the point of effort and intensity are the cost of admission. We can’t even talk X’s and O’s it if you don’t have that. Just like our defense is married to our offense – we can say we only scored 49 points, but I’d say it’s because we gave up 14 offensive rebounds. We couldn’t secure clean rebounds to play offense. So, it’s clear, and after film today and practice, it’ll be clear the areas that we need to improve in.”

On how he would assess how the team defended ball screens vs. Florida:
“Our ball screen defense hasn’t been as good as it has been in the past. It was less about the point of the screen, and more about the three guys off the ball. It was pinching the floor, tagging rollers, and they did a great job. They did a great job mixing up fake screen and real screen, and their ball screen offense was good for them, and there’s areas we can improve as a team in.”

On if he has any idea how the lineup will look after Coach Barnes mentioned shaking up the lineup after the Florida game:
“We’ve discussed some things, but that’s ultimately coach’s decision. Bigger than coach’s decision, it’s the guy’s decision. We’ll see today and tomorrow in practice what that looks like. I think that should be the mindset, and I’ve told the guys this all the time that once the season starts, and when practice or training camp is over, I don’t think any player on a team should be satisfied with their role as a starter, rotational player, or a non-rotational player. I think that fighting and scratching and clawing actually only makes our team better. I want the sixth man and the seventh guy to be chomping at the heels of the fifth and the fourth guy. I want the ninth and the 10th guy to be chomping at the heels of the seventh and the eighth guy. That type of iron sharpens iron mentality, just builds in a team. I told Ticket (Davonte Gaines), after our first two games he had DNP’s, and I went to him on the bench and I said, ‘Hey man, one thing is for certain, your name will be called this season for a fact, and how you handle not playing, or how you handle being out of the starting lineup, directly correlates what’s going to happen when your number is called.’ I think all our guys – the starters, the bench guys, non-rotational, need to come to practice with a mindset that they will undoubtedly have today and it’s to fight, battle, and compete.”

On how he can help the guys be better leaders, especially if it is not their character to call guys out and hold everyone accountable and be vocal:
“Leadership or lack of leadership is a buzzword that is thrown around a lot, but I’ve been thinking about it since the game, and what it really means. We’re going talk about it today, and I’m going to have a hard talk with the guys about what it actually means to be a leader on a team. I don’t want to give away too much, but it’s functional. It’s not just leading a team through a stretch. It’s not just what you want coach to hear you say in film. It’s actually when coach is getting on somebody about missing shots, and someone coming up behind them and saying, ‘Listen bro when I pass you the ball, knock it down’ – That is being a leader. It’s who is being a leader in the group messages on their phones. Are they talking about fortnite and whatever 22 year-olds talk about, or are they talking about what we need to do to stop Florida’s pick-and-roll offense. Who is the leader in the locker room to back coach when he is saying the unpopular stuff? That is the leaders. Most importantly, when the game comes, they are playing like a leader. It’s playing with a moxie, confidence, toughness, execution, force, and physicality, and that is what we need. That is what we need in the worst way, and finding out who that is going to be is going to be a great next step for our team.”

On what stands out to him about Missouri as far as the scouting report, and if he thinks they have changed at all since they played them last:
“They have, and they are running some different stuff offensively. They’re running some of the things they were running. Jerimiah Tillman I think is playing the best basketball of anyone in the SEC right now. Drew Smith is now knocking down jump shots from the perimeter. I love Missouri’s basketball team and I love the way they play. They are the eighth oldest team in the country and tied for the oldest in the SEC with nine upperclassmen. I just really like where they are as a group right now. They lost the game to Mississippi State, and they went on pause because of COVID. One of the media members asked Jeremiah Tillman what he learned from that loss, and I thought had a great quote as he said they were too old to still be learning things from losses, and they know what they need to do. They’ve come out since then, and won at A&M, beat South Carolina at home, and it is going to be a really good game here on Saturday.”

On how much of a challenge it is to have some of the most talented players be freshman, and how to push Keon and Jaden to take bigger roles:
“I think talent is overrated in college. They are phenomenal prospects, but I think their college talent meshes in with our top seven guys. Every one of those guys has scored 20, or close to 20 in their college careers. Their upside and potential as prospects is obviously phenomenal, but we lean on those guys and they like it and want it. We lean on our older guys, and they like it and want it, we leaned on Josiah-Jordan James last year. Yves Pons was depended on as a young guy to guard the other team’s best guard. It’s something that is maturation by fire. They’re coming along great, and they’re learning every practice and every game. It is another opportunity for us to show it to them on film today, and hopefully we will put it on the floor during practice.”

On why he thinks Fulky and Yves lack intensity in rebounding and how do they coach intensity:
“Nature vs nurture, and nature helps. We emphasize that every day, and every single possession and practice we’re on the baseline looking not at the flight of the ball, but we’re looking at who is down there banging. Guys run for no box outs in practice, they run for not being physical enough boxing out in practice. Watching the Florida tape, it was a little bit of unfortunate bounces, I’ll say, and I’m a very conservative stickler as I grade defensive rebounding. Some of it was going for block shots we had no chance of getting which put us out of position. Some of it came like I said think things just happened to be married in basketball. Some of our rotations led to some bad close outs, which led to us being out of position for rebounds. We’ll watch it today and we have a rebound and edit, we’ll sit down and we grade it, we grade every single guy, we grade rebound margin and rebound percentage, just like coach Schwartz does with points allowed, we grade every single aspect of the game win loss draw no matter what. You’ll have to ask Fulky and Yves, because being a college basketball player, I couldn’t tell you as it’s low hanging fruit. Every single shot, we look, we hit, and we go get the ball. It’s something we will watch today, and we better do a better job on Saturday.”

On Jaden Springer’s impact on and off the court:
“I guess the simple answer is the depth in the backcourt. We go from a consistent five-man rotation to four. Then ticket jumps in there at five. I feel it’s the ability to hoop. Games like Alabama, games like Arkansas, games like Florida. When the game gets like this and this like on offense and defense. Having the ability of having a guy that can hoop, right. Keon can hoop. Fulky can hoop for real. VJ hoops but it’s in the jump shot variety. If he’s missing them, it is not great. Having a guy that can hoop and can put pressure on the rim is something that we miss in that type of game.”

On what he likes about having a smaller lineup on the floor:
“I just think of space. I’ve said for a long time, if you’re not mirroring things that are going on in the NBA, you are probably behind the time. They don’t have to worry about class checks. They don’t have to worry about recruiting. They don’t have to worry about parents. So those coaches’ game plan or strategy is pretty sound because they just have to worry about basketball all day. I think as the game is going to a five-out variety. I think if we have that personnel. I get it. I was drafted as a shooting guard in the NBA and I played power forward in college. What I learned quickly was if I fronted the post and if I boxed out; I had the advantage all night long. College big men aren’t talented enough to face you up, play out of post all game long. If they do that, it usually isn’t what the coach wants to do. I think we’re better when our floor is spread. It opens up driving lanes, it opens up space inside for Fulky, it opens space inside for Yves. Texas A&M was the first time we had a lineup out there that was four guards. I think it was Keon, VJ, Santi, Jaden and Yves. It was some of our best offensive possessions of the season.”

On Alabama’s efficient scoring in the paint and shooting threes:
“That has been them. I said it here before I said that Alabama was the Mike D’Antoni Houston Rockets of college basketball. It’s been the truth. That’s been him since he’s got there. He’s taken on that and it works. When you’re making shots, mathematically it makes sense. I’m a little stubborn to it. I think that in a game that is designed to take away layups and open threes, I think there’s some benefit to being able to make mid-range shots. Two seasons ago, Tennessee was the third most efficient offense, and they took far and away more long twos than everyone else in the country. There’s a lot of ways to skin the cat. Pete Carril’s Princeton, Jim Boeheim’s zone, Tony Bennett’s pack line, Mike D’Antoni’s threes. Steve Kerr and the Warriors are three-time NBA champions, and they made a living on long twos. There’s a lot of ways to skin a cat. I think it all comes back to your defense being married to your offense. That has to make sense. We’re going to be a team that forces the eight most turnovers in the country percentage wise, we need to start converting those turnovers in the scores on the other end. I just think it’s important that your offense is married to your defense.”

On pros in cons to having Tennessee’s small ball lineup:
“The downside of that is that John Fulkerson and Yves Pons are both potentially all-conference SEC players. You don’t want to say your best players are on the court and leave out those guys. I think our best five players can change game to game. It can change half to half. I think those top seven guys are really talented players. We just had to find our rotation trusted in spots. Give that small ball lineup a chance. Foul trouble happens and give that small ball lineup a chance and just keep building it. I think Yves Pons can be a small ball four with the best of them. We got to get his swag back and rhythm back so that he’s doing it. When he was at his best last season at Kansas, Kentucky, Alabama; at Alabama Yves Pons played the three and got eight offensive rebounds last season. He made threes, he made two threes in a game. We have weapons, we got to get those guys in the place where they are executing and competing at a high level.”

On missing shots around the rim:
“Maybe I’m not a good coach because of this but there’s something I think you don’t have to coach. We will coach about working on it practice. The guys aren’t trying to miss layups. They blocked seven shots the last game and some of them were absolutely great drives by Keon trying to go dunk it. Watching film, some of them you may want to call fouls. Think Arkansas against Missouri at home was like 6 of 30 from two a few games back. I think that’s a rarity at this level. I think our guys are good finishers. I think we’ll keep working on finishing but it’s nothing I think you want to overcorrect or try to coach. There are other areas we should focus on.”

On Tennessee’s defensive consistency:
“Unfortunately, you can’t be a good defensive team if you don’t get defensive rebounds. Secondly, ironically in both those games Yves Pons went to the bench because he was in foul trouble in the first half. Jaden Springer sprained his ankle in one of those games and the other he didn’t play. You go back to the depth factor. You go back to the factor that you’re able to hoop and the competitive factor with Jaden. Losing two of our best defensive guys obviously doesn’t help us as a defensive group.”

On Tennessee’s chess power rankings:
“I thought about it and I told Keon the other day at breakfast. Where we’re in our team meal all socially distant so it’s only two people at a table. The room is kind of quiet, the adults are speaking, a couple of the kids are talking to each other but there’s giggling, laughter, communicating throughout the room. It’s funny how college basketball or I guess youth and technology are going. When I first got into college our team meals were very talkative and we were laughing. Our bus rides were very talkative, plane rides were talking, and laughing. Then when I got to the end of College in like 2012, and my rookie year in the NBA, there was very little talking. Everyone was on their phones. Everyone was in their own world, Twitter, Facebook or whatever and reading articles. It’s gotten back to now where they are communicating but it is through their phones. So, guys like talking to each other, playing chess or UNO on their phones. It’s kind of like you want to say get off your phone, but they are communicating. I guess the rankings are Brock and Santi at the top and I’m at the bottom. Everyone else is in the middle.”

On how important it is to spread the floor:
“It is something we want for sure. I don’t know how much of a concern it is. We have good shooters in VJ Bailey, Santi Vescovi, Josiah James. Again, I think Yves Pons is a good shooter. Those four guys being the best. When Jaden is open, he is as good as anyone in the country right now. When he gets his feet set and has an open shot. We got to keep taking them. We’ve got to keep taking our shots. We’ll make them. It is kind of like finishing. I don’t know what to say. Our guys shoot a ton of shots. They work on their game a lot. We are going to keep shooting. We’ll make open shots.”

-UT Athletics

Harper, Auriemma back Pat, WBHOF

Harper, Auriemma back Pat, WBHOF

Geno Auriemma & Kellie Harper / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Thursday evening, the No. 25 Tennessee Lady Vols will host the No. 3 UConn Huskies in year two of the Basketball Hall of Fame Revival Series. Widely regarded as the two most successful programs in women’s basketball history, the teams consistently met from 1995-2007 but did not face each other again until year one of the Revival Series in January 2020.

Tonight’s matchup of the two nationally-ranked teams will be highlighted by head coaches Kellie Harper and Geno Auriemma each making a personal donation of $10,000 to the event’s two benefiting non-profits, the Pat Summitt Foundation and the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame. A check for $20,000 will be presented at tonight’s game televised on ESPN at 7 p.m. EST.

In year one, monies generated by fan attendance supported the event’s donation to the Pat Summit Foundation. With limited fan attendance and challenges faced in year two due to the global pandemic, the Revival Series head coaches stepped-up to support the event’s philanthropic mission.

About Pat Summitt Foundation:
The Pat Summitt Foundation, a fund of East Tennessee Foundation, was established by Pat and Tyler Summitt in November 2011. Its mission is to award grants to non-profit organizations that advance research for treatment and a cure, provide support for patients and caregivers, and educate the public about Alzheimer’s disease. In 2015, The Pat Summitt Foundation formed a strategic partnership with The University of Tennessee Medical Center to create The Pat Summitt Clinic. The clinic, which opened in January 2017, greatly improves access to healthcare services for families and patients facing Alzheimer’s disease in a facility created to advance Alzheimer’s research, detection, treatment, and family caregiver support. To learn more, please visit www.patsummitt.org, like the foundation on facebook.com/patsummittfoundation, and follow it on Twitter and Instagram @webackpat.

About the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame:
The mission of the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame is to “Honor the Past, Celebrate the Present and Promote the Future” of women’s basketball. The Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame, located in Knoxville, Tennessee, opened in June 1999. The WBHOF is an independent, non-profit 501 (c)(3) organization dedicated to preserving the history, celebrating the present and promoting the future of women’s basketball at all levels, both domestically and internationally. Over 170 men and women who have had a significant impact on women’s basketball as players, coaches, officials, and administrators have been inducted into the Hall. The Hall has 32,000 square feet of artifacts and interactive exhibits chronicling the history of the women’s basketball. For more information on the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame, visit www.wbhof.com, follow on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter @wbhof or call 1-865-633-9000.

About the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame:
Located in Springfield, Massachusetts, the city where basketball was born, the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame is an independent non-profit 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to promoting, preserving and celebrating the game of basketball at every level – men and women, amateur and professional players, coaches and contributors, both domestically and internationally. The Hall of Fame museum is home to more than 400 inductees and over 40,000 square feet of basketball history. Nearly 200,000 people visit the Hall of Fame museum each year to learn about the game, experience the interactive exhibits and test their skills on the Jerry Colangelo “Court of Dreams.” Best known for its annual marquee Enshrinement Ceremony honoring the game’s elite, the Hall of Fame also operates over 70 high school and collegiate competitions annually throughout the country and abroad. For more information on the Basketball Hall of Fame organization, its museum and events, visit www.hoophall.com, follow @hoophall #HOFRevival or call 1-877-4HOOPLA.

-UT Athletics

Eric Church Has New Music Arriving This April – Heart & Soul

Eric Church Has New Music Arriving This April – Heart & Soul

Reigning CMA Entertainer of the Year Eric Church sent a message to his Church Choir fan club announcing not one, but three new albums coming in April!

Heart, &, Soul are the names of the three projects, with the &, album coming out Tuesday, April 20th – it’s exclusively for members of the Church Choir.

Everyone will be able to access the other two albums – Heart arrives Friday April 16th, and the following Friday, April 23th Soul will be available.

Pre-orders for all three albums begin next Friday, January 29th.

Here’s Eric’s announcement…

As Eric says in the video, this collection of songs is the result of his 28 days spent in mountains of North Carolina.

When it came to the creative process, Eric says, “I’ve always been intrigued when a song is born in a writer room – there is a magic that happens there.” He adds, “I wanted to put that in the studio form. So, every day, we would write a song in the morning and we would record the song that night. Doing it that way allowed for the songwriters to get involved in the studio process and the musicians to be involved in the creative process. You felt a little bit like you were secretly doing something that was special, and you knew it… You started going, ‘hmm, wait ’til the world finds out about this.’”

Eric, and his team, including longtime producer Jay Joyce, kept turning out song after song to the point where they weren’t even sure where the end would be, “The interesting thing about this process is that Jay kept asking me the last three or four days, ‘Are we done?’ and at that time I didn’t know what the project was.”

Eric adds, “I kept saying ‘God, this is going to be really hard. There’s a lot here. Is this a double album? And if it’s a double album, how do we leave out these five or six songs?’ I am the hardest critic on making sure every song deserves to be on the record, and I beat this thing to death going ‘this can’t be that good.’ But, it was just a special, special time and a special, special project that I think will be among our best.”

The end result is three albums…

Heart Track List

“Heart On Fire” (Eric Church)
“Heart Of The Night” (Eric Church, Jeremy Spillman, Jeff Hyde, Ryan Tyndell, Travis Hill)
“Russian Roulette” (Eric Church, Casey Beathard, Monty Criswell)
“People Break” (Eric Church, Luke Laird)
“Stick That In Your Country Song” (Davis Naish, Jeffrey Steele)
“Never Break Heart” (Eric Church, Luke Dick)
“Crazyland” (Eric Church, Luke Laird, Michael Heeney)
“Bunch Of Nothing” (Eric Church, Jeff Hyde)
“Love Shine Down” (Eric Church, Casey Beathard, Jeffrey Steele)

& Track List

“Through My Ray-Bans” (Eric Church, Luke Laird, Barry Dean)
“Doing Life With Me” (Eric Church, Casey Beathard, Jeffrey Steele)
“Do Side” (Eric Church, Casey Beathard)
“Kiss Her Goodbye” (Eric Church, Casey Beathard)
“Mad Man” (Eric Church, Casey Beathard)
“Lone Wolf” (Eric Church, Jeff Hyde, Ryan Tyndell)

Soul Track List

“Rock & Roll Found Me” (Eric Church, Casey Beathard, Driver Williams)
“Look Good And You Know It” (Eric Church, Jonathan Singleton, Travis Meadows)
“Bright Side Girl” (Eric Church, Jeff Hyde, Scotty Emerick, Clint Daniels)
“Break It Kind Of Guy” (Eric Church, Casey Beathard, Luke Dick)
“Hell Of A View” (Eric Church, Casey Beathard, Monty Criswell)
“Where I Wanna Be” (Eric Church, Casey Beathard, Jeremy Spillman, Ryan Tyndell)
“Jenny” (Eric Church)
“Bad Mother Trucker” (Eric Church, Casey Beathard, Luke Dick, Jeremy Spillman)
“Lynyrd Skynyrd Jones” (Casey Beathard)

For the latest information and to learn how to join the Church Choir, visit www.EricChurch.com and follow on Facebook and Twitter @ericchurch and Instagram @ericchurchmusic.

Here’s the video for Eric Church’s “Doing Like With Me”

You can also check out the video for “Through My Ray-Bans”…

Headline Photo Credit: Anthony D’Angio

Additional Images courtesy of UMG Nashville

Adopt a Grandparent with Above the Rest

Adopt a Grandparent with Above the Rest

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Complete the 4 easy steps HERE to Adopt-a-Grandparent & send a Loving Balloon Buddy to every Grandparent you adopt.  Adopt as many grandparents as you want–1, 2, 4 or more. Heck, you can even adopt an entire community. 

Current community is Elmcroft West.  They are 68 residents there. 

They are 71% adopted–only 19 to go! 
Thanks for ordering so we can deliver some smiles and joy.

 

Bonuses for business/church sponsorships:

  • For every 10 grandparents you adopt, we will donate 2 adoptions.
  • You will receive social media recognition.
  • When you adopt an entire Assisted Living Community of 50 or more residents, we will also put your company logo on the gift tag that is attached to the Balloon Buddy.
  • Your selected community will move to the top of the list to be started as soon as we complete the one we are currently serving.  If you don’t have a specific community, we will move to the next one on our list.
  • You will receive social media recognition.
  • We will donate 5 Balloon Buddies toward the next community.
  • We will deliver a surprise balloon design to your business to brighten your employees’ day.
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Loving Balloon Buddy

  • Table top Loving Balloon Buddy, features an 18″ smiley face foil and latex body.
  • Delivered with uplifting note of encouragement.
  • Colors will vary based on availability.

 

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Above the Rest is providing free delivery.

Gift tag poem will say:

Here’s a Buddy who’s come your way

With a big smile to brighten your day.

Sent with joy & hugs just for you
Hoping you feel loved through & through!

Love, your secret friend (or your preferred signature)

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We are SO THRILLED to be bringing some smiles to Knoxville’s senior citizens. There are 15 communities so far which means over 400 residents waiting for a Balloon Buddy and some SMILES!  Thats why the word needs to spread.

Link to Adopt a Grandparent Details and order form:

http://bit.ly/AdoptaGranparentBusiness

Link to WATE segment on Adopt a Grandparent
https://www.wate.com/news/assisted-living-residents-surprised-with-balloon-buddies-for-smiles-and-companionship/

Testimonials:
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From Senior Citizen recipient:
“I just want you to know what it means to me and all the others that I’ve talked to.  You know we are in strict confinement because of Covid so those little balloon guys you brought just absolutely brightened everyone’s life and mine especially.  I took a picture of the whole group of the balloons when they came and then took a picture of the one I got.  I sent it to my family.  I can’t thank you enough for doing this.”  Phone call from a 101 year-old-resident.  Ms. C. (photo above)

From a corporate sponsor:
Answer when I asked, “Why is your company choosing to sponsor?”

“Dianna, I love this idea.  I have been trying to think of ways we could give back to those in our community that are shut in.  My staff and I are still working everyday and interacting with each other and clients.  We see how much this has impacted our co-workers who are not able to report to the office.  Thank you for partnering with us to show our senior citizens we love them and care about them.”  Donnie P., First Bank

 From an adopter:
“What a wonderful thing you are doing for assisted living residents! My Mom lived in Atria Weston Place for fourteen months, she passed away on November 29th. She would have loved this! It haunts me that the last 8 months of her life was spent in lockdown. Thank you for doing this. I hope Atria is on your list. The staff is amazing and the other residents are so sweet. Blessings to you all. As you have done it unto the least of these, you have done it unto me”. Leslie A., Adopter

 

From Assisted Living Director at Morning Pointe:
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“The whole experience with the delivery of the Balloon Buddies and delivering them to our residents was such an absolutely wonderful experience. With last year being so difficult, this act of kindness was so deeply touching.  I will always have fond memories of this day.  Thank you for the smiles.”  Holly S., Director
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Dianna Glandon, CBA

Above the Rest Event Designs
We Put the WOW in Your Special Event
(865) 719-8110
Danny White Named UT Director of Athletics

Danny White Named UT Director of Athletics

Danny White – UT AD / Credit: UT Athletics

Dr. Danny White, recently ranked the fourth-best athletic director in the country by Stadium, will become the new athletic director at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Chancellor Donde Plowman announced today. His consistent record of transforming college athletic programs to win championships, drive growth, and achieve success, have made him a rising star in college athletics.

“Danny White is an innovative leader in college athletics with a strong track record in recruiting and developing leaders. He brings the combination of winning attitude, competitive drive, and dedication to integrity and academics that we are looking for,” Chancellor Plowman said. “We undertook this search with urgency and found strong interest from a robust candidate pool, enabling us to act quickly and with great confidence. I’m proud to say we found our leader, and I’d like to thank President Boyd, our trustees, and our staff for their support and hard work.”

Commenting on his appointment, White said, “I am thrilled to be headed to Knoxville and to a university with a great competitive tradition and a spirited and devoted fan base. Volunteer fans have an expectation to win, and my first task will be taking on the search for a new head football coach. But I want all Vols to know that I am deeply committed to excellence in all of our athletic programs.”

Winning with Integrity
White’s own record of excellence since he took over as athletic director at the University of Central Florida is extraordinary. It includes two consecutive American Athletic Conference football championships, multiple bowl appearances, and a 25-game winning streak. Beyond football, his record includes NCAA tournament appearances for the men’s and women’s basketball teams, the baseball team, and the soccer team. UCF was the only NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision program in which each of its sports produced winning records across several years. He has also been successful in raising funds to improve the quality of athletic facilities.

White grew up around college athletics and comes from a family who are all leaders in college athletics including his father, Kevin White, now vice president and athletic director at Duke University; his brother, Michael, head men’s basketball coach at the University of Florida; his brother, Brian, vice president and director of athletics at Florida Atlantic University; and his sister, Mariah, assistant athletics director for administration at SMU. White has been widely recognized for his achievements. He has been recognized as one of “40 Under 40” by Sports Business Journal as well as the Orlando Business Journal, and he was a finalist for the 2018 SBJ Athletics Director of the Year honor. In 2020, Stadium rated him as number four on the nationwide list of college athletic directors.

He has also emphasized the “student” part of student-athlete. During his tenure at UCF, teams combined for 25 consecutive semesters with a 3.0 GPA or better, and a record 253 Knights earned spots on the 2019 American Athletic Conference All-Academic Team.

“Danny White is a great fit for the programs we are building at Tennessee,” UT System President Randy Boyd said. “He combines a strong vision for competitive excellence with a deep commitment to winning with integrity. The greatest decade in UT Athletics begins now.”

Prior to arriving at UCF in 2015, White was athletic director at the State University of New York at Buffalo from 2012to 2015. White worked with athletics administrators, coaches, and staff to transform the Bulls’ program and culture, shattering previous school records for student-athlete GPAs, NCAA Championship berths, fundraising, and football ticket sales. Prior to his position at SUNY Buffalo, he served as senior associate athletics director at University of Mississippi, assistant athletics director at California State University–Fresno, and assistant athletics director at Northern Illinois University.

White played college basketball at Towson University and the University of Notre Dame, from which he graduated in 2002. He earned master’s degrees in business administration and sports administration from Ohio University, and earned a doctorate in higher education from the University of Mississippi in 2016.

-UT Athletics

Tennessee quickly lands AD, hiring Danny White from UCF

Tennessee quickly lands AD, hiring Danny White from UCF

Tennessee has moved quickly on a new Athletics Director hire first reported by USA Today and now confirmed by the University of Tennessee.

Reaction and discussion continues on 99.1 The Sports Animal, AM 990, here on 991TheSportsAnimal.com, the free WNML mobile app and on your smart speakers.

Neyland Stadium / Credit: UT Athletics
Dolly Parton Remembers Her Brother, Randy, As He Loses His Battle With Cancer

Dolly Parton Remembers Her Brother, Randy, As He Loses His Battle With Cancer

Sad news to report as Dolly Parton shares that her brother Randy has died.

She posted the following message to social media…

“My brother Randy has lost his battle with cancer. The family and I are grieving his loss but we know he is in a better place than we are at this time. We are a family of faith and we believe that he is safe with God and that he is joined by members of the family that have gone on before and have welcomed him with joy and open arms.
Randy was a great singer, writer, and entertainer. He sang, played guitar and bass in my band for many years. He headed his own show at Dollywood since it opened in 1986. He’s had several chart records of his own, but his duet with me on “Old Flames Can’t Hold A Candle To You” will always be a highlight in my own career.
‘You Are My Christmas,’ our duet on my latest Christmas album, joined with his daughter Heidi, will always be a favorite. It was his last musical recording and he shined on it just like he’s shining in heaven now.
He is survived by his wife Deb, his daughter Heidi, son Sabyn, grandsons Huston and Trent.
We will always love him and he will always be in our hearts”
Those wishing to pay tribute to Randy can make a donation to the Imagination Library in honor of his dad, Robert Lee Parton.
Headline Photo courtesy of Getty Images
Additional images courtesy of Dolly Parton
Cainer’s Corner: Mass Exodus

Cainer’s Corner: Mass Exodus

By: Eric Cain / @_Cainer

Anytime you make a head coaching change, the fear is always roster management. What about the recruiting class? What about the players on the roster? And now in 2021, it’s never been easier to make a move.

Tennessee certainly didn’t help itself with the timing of this mess – the mess being firing Jeremy Pruitt for cause on Monday. Some of it couldn’t have been avoided, as there was (and still is) an ongoing investigation into the program.  

But the program has been in a state of limbo dating all the way back to when reports first surfaced of alleged recruiting violations and more into the program. That first came about right before kickoff against Texas A&M on December 19.

Prior to this week, we’ve seen 13 players who began the 2020 season as Vols enter the transfer portal. There’s been constant rumors and credible reports of more to come, but up until 48 hours following the firing of Pruitt – no Vol had darted away.

Then came 5:58 pm (ET) Wednesday evening. The dominos began to fall.

Senior offensive lineman Jahmir Johnson was the first announced. Three minutes later, star linebacker Henry To’o To’o followed. At 6:20, linebacker Quavaris Crouch was in before finally running back Eric Gray finished off the devastating period by entering three minutes later.

25 minutes is all it took, and a 3-7 roster got a whole lot worse.

Nothing is official. All of these guys could very well come back. But Vol fans should prepare as if they are all gone and how the roster could look like come fall.

Henry To’o To’o / Credit: Sam Forman

Henry To’o To’o – LB

Henry T. was a guy Tennessee fans fell in love with as a true freshman in 2019. He came in and played right away as an 18-year-old and finished the campaign as a Freshman All-American by several publications. In 2020, he was set to be the guy and he was the heart and soul of the defense, but I never saw him improve. Of course, COVID could have played a role in that but I think it was the lack of development from coaches more than anything.

Henry is a stud and would be a WELCOMING addition to any program at the Power 5 level.

Replacements: Jeremy Banks, Aaron Beasley, Solon Page, Bryson Eason, Martavius French, Aaron Willis

 

Eric Gray – RB

Gray came on strong during the 2019 regular-season finale against Vanderbilt as a freshman, notching 366 total yards with four touchdowns. He then took home MVP honors from the Gator Bowl in January and was poised to be the guy as a sophomore. Gray was in fact RB1, finishing 2020 with a team-leading 772 rushing yards with four touchdowns and was also second on the squad with 30 receptions.

Replacements: Jabari Small, Tiyon Evans, Cody Brown, Dee Beckwith, Len’Neth Whitehead, Tee Hodge

 

Quavaris Crouch – LB

Q was a highly-rated prospect, ranked No. 1 in the country at one point, who shocked the recruiting world when he signed with the Vols in the 2019 class. Tennessee spent the bulk of his freshman season trying to find a spot for him. He played in all 13 games in 2019, making one start, while showing up on the edge, inside linebacker and at running back in short-yardage situations.

In 2020, Crouch started every game at inside linebacker, splitting time with Jeremy Banks aside from Henry T. I think he improved the more he played, but he was far from SEC-ready. Crouch was a work in progress and I was intrigued to eventually see how much he could improve.

I’m still a little iffy on where he should play moving forward, but he is a versatile guy who can fit in many schemes.

Replacements: Jeremy Banks, Aaron Beasley, Solon Page, Bryson Eason, Martavius French, Aaron Willis

 

Jahmir Johnson – OL

Johnson was brought in on Jeremy Pruitt’s initial class (patchwork class of 2018) as a JUCO transfer. The plan for Johnson was to plug and play him immediately as the offensive line was a disaster at the time. Johnson did just that, appearing 24 games with 17 starts in three seasons and will be a veteran, versatile presence for whoever signs him.

Replacements: Cade Mays, K’Rojhn Calbert, Ollie Lane, William Griffin-Parker, J’Marion Gooch, Amari McNeill

 

Takeaways: It’s not pretty and some fans are having to say goodbye to their favorite players. The inside linebacker room is depleted, the offensive tackle situation is not great now with the loss of two starters and the Vols’ lost their best two players overall in To’o To’o and Gray.

At the end of the day, Tennessee was still 3-7 and its coach was fired. Not surprised some of these key (still young) players are wanting to leave. As long as the program has a head coaching vacancy, the worry is more could join in exodus.

Listen: Cainer joined Josh Ward on the ‘Locked on Vols Podcast’ to talk Vols in the transfer portal.

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