Hoops Preview: #10 Tennessee at Vanderbilt

Hoops Preview: #10 Tennessee at Vanderbilt

Vols G Santiago Vescovi / Credit: UT Athletics

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – The No. 10 Tennessee basketball team hits the road for a newly scheduled Tuesday night bout with Vanderbilt. Tipoff from Memorial Gymnasium is slated for 7 p.m. ET on ESPN2.

Fans can catch Tuesday’s game on ESPN2 and online or on any mobile device through WatchESPN. WatchESPN can be accessed through the ESPN App, or online at espn.com/watch. Dave Neal and Jimmy Dykes 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 rolled past Texas A&M, 68-54. The Vols were led by Santiago Vescovi who poured in a career-high 23 points on a career-high eight made field goals and a career-high-tying six made 3-point attempts.

Tuesday’s game will be the 200th meeting between Vanderbilt and Tennessee on the hardwood and a victory would keep every current Vol with an unblemished record inside Vanderbilt’s Memorial Gym.

Up next, the Vols will take on Vanderbilt again in the second of the programs back-to-back matchups, when the Commodores make a return trip to Knoxville. The opening tip from Thompson-Boling Arena is set for 6 p.m. ET on SEC Network.

THE SERIES
• Tennessee leads its all-time series with Vanderbilt, 124-75, dating to 1922.
• The programs are meeting for the 200th time Tuesday. Longtime Tennessee athletic trainer Chad Newman has been on the Vols’ bench for 25 percent of those games. Tuesday marks his 51st Tennessee-Vanderbilt game.
• Tennessee has won eight of the last nine meetings in this series, including each of the last six and four straight at Memorial Gym.
• Just 181 miles separate UT’s Thompson-Boling Arena and Vanderbilt’s Memorial Gymnasium.
• No active Vol has ever lost a game at Vanderbilt’s Memorial Gym.

A WIN WOULD…
• Tie Rick Barnes with Phog Allen and Don Haskins for 20th on the all-time Division I wins list (719).
• Extend UT’s win streak over Vandy to seven games.

LAYUP LINES
• Tennessee is set to host Vanderbilt Saturday in Knoxville.
• Tennessee made history in its last trip to Memorial Gym (Jan. 18, 2020), as it held Vanderbilt without a 3-pointer for the first time since the 3-point line was introduced (snapping Vandy’s streak of 1,080 games with at least one make). See Page 3.
• Tennessee has forced nine of 10 opponents to turn the ball over on 20 percent or more of their possessions.
• In their two road games this season, the Vols are shooting .540 as a team with a +5.5 turnover margin.
• Santiago Vescovi is shooting .650 (13-20) from the field and .643 (9-14) from 3-point range in UT’s two road wins while averaging a team-best 19.0 points.
• Senior John Fulkerson was named to the Wooden Award’s Midseason Top-25 List last week.

DEFENSE WINS
• Tennessee ranks second in the NCAA in scoring defense, allowing just 56.8 points per game.
• According to KenPom, the Vols rank second in the NCAA in adjusted defensive efficiency, allowing only 87.0 points per 100 possessions so far this season. College teams average close to 70 possessions per game.
• The Vols are forcing 17.4 turnovers per game while converting those turnovers into 19.2 points per game. Tennessee’s turnover margin stands at +7.4 (fourth nationally).
• Tennessee has blocked 18.2 percent of its opponents’ two-point field goals this season.
• Tennessee has yet to allow an opposing player to score 20 points this season.
• Reigning SEC Defensive Player of the Year Yves Pons has an incredible 15 blocks through UT’s first four SEC games.
• Pons has 95 blocks in his last 41 games.

ABOUT VANDERBILT
• Through nine games, the Commodores are 4-5 overall and 0-3 in SEC play. Their most recent games have ended in narrow three-point losses to Kentucky (77-74) and Mississippi State (84-81).
• After a tough 2019-20 season that ended in the first round of the SEC Tournament (11-21, 3-15 SEC), second-year head coach Jerry Stackhouse is relying on the abilities of returners Scotty Pippen Jr. and Dylan Disu to help lead Vanderbilt to a much improved 2020-21 campaign.
• Pippen Jr. has started his sophomore year with nothing short of a bang. The son of NBA Hall of Famer Scotty Pippen, Pippen Jr. leads the team and ranks second in the SEC in both points (21.6 ppg) and assists (5.8 apg). He has scored at least 25 points on four separate occasions and has scored 18 points in each of Vanderbilt’s three SEC games. On the defensive end, he leads the Commodores with 1.6 steals per game.
• His classmate, Disu, has been a steady presence as well, ranking second on the team with 12.7 points per game. Disu’s 8.8 rebounds per game lead both the team and the SEC through nine games. He, too, has been solid on the defensive end, recording more than one block per game.
• Vanderbilt University is named after Cornelius Vanderbilt, the railway magnate who gifted the school its initial $1 million endowment in hopes of healing the sectional wounds left by the Civil War.

LAST MEETING WITH VANDERBILT
•  Tennessee defeated in-state rival Vanderbilt for the sixth consecutive time on Feb. 18, 2020, 65-61, at Thompson-Boling Arena.
•  The Vols fended off a furious late push by the Commodores to secure the home victory.
•  Senior Jordan Bowden and junior John Fulkerson led the Big Orange with 17 points each.
•  Fulkerson, who recorded 16 of those points in the second half, also accounted for seven rebounds and three blocks.
•  Jordan Wright came off the bench to lead Vanderbilt in scoring, posting 23 points.
•  Tennessee shot 42 percent from the field on the night.
•  While both teams struggled early from the field, the Vols held a 9-2 advantage after six minutes of action. Along with providing strong defensive play, Josiah-Jordan James corralled four rebounds during that early stretch.
•  The game was tied, 28-28, after 20 minutes, with Bowden leading the Vols with 12 points at the break. Yves Pons was 3-of-5 from the field at the half.
•  In a back-and-forth start to the second stanza, a Commodore basket six minutes into the half tied the game for the fifth time.
•  Just prior to the under-12 media timeout, a Santiago Vescovi jumper snapped a 9-0 run by Vanderbilt.
•  Midway through the second half, Bowden and Fulkerson converted three-point plays on consecutive possessions. Then, quick, scoring cuts to the basket by Jalen Johnson and Fulkerson allowed the Vols to maintain momentum.
•  Thompson-Boling Arena came alive after Tennessee blocks on two straight possessions and a nifty layup by Fulkerson off a feed from Vescovi. That series was followed by a 3-point make by Vescovi, giving Tennessee an eight-point lead.
•  Vescovi darted to the rim and finished with a finger roll with just over four minutes remaining. He finished the game with 14 points on 5-of-11 shooting.
•  Tennessee clinched the victory on a pair of made free throws from Bowden in the closing seconds.

THE NIGHT THE STREAK ENDED…
• Nearly one year ago, on Jan. 18, 2020, Tennessee ended Vanderbilt’s decades-long 3-point streak during a 66-45 win at Memorial Gym.
•  The Vols held Vanderbilt to an 0-25 night from 3-point range. It was the first time since the 3-point shot was introduced in the 1986-87 season (spanning 1,080 games) that the Commodores failed to knock down at least one 3-point attempt.
• The 0-for-25 effort represented one of the worst 3-point-shooting performances by a men’s Division I team in 20 seasons. According to ESPN Stats & Information research, only Northwestern State’s 0-for-26 effort in a game in 2012 was worse during that span.

MEMORABLE VOL PERFORMANCES AGAINST VANDERBILT
• Grant Williams (now with the Boston Celtics) erupted for a record-setting performance as the No. 1-ranked Volunteers held off Vanderbilt, 88-83, in overtime in Nashville on Jan. 23, 2019. Williams finished with a career-high 43 points and also tallied eight rebounds, four blocks, two assists and a steal. The junior forward was 10-of-15 from the field and a program-record 23-of-23 from the free-throw line.
• Josh Richardson (now a starter for the Philadelphia 76ers) helped the Vols rally from two separate double-digit deficits in the second half by scoring 15 of his game-high 22 points in the final stanza to lift Tennessee to a 67-61 comeback win over Vanderbilt in the 2015 SEC Tournament in Nashville on March 12, 2015. In what was the second-to-last game of his career, Richardson also led all players with three steals and was a perfect 6-for-6 from the foul line.
• Dyron Nix (17 points, 18 rebounds) and Doug Roth (10 points, 10 rebounds) recorded double-doubles and Tennessee beat Vanderbilt 79-69 in overtime in Stokely Athletics Center Feb. 4, 1987, in Knoxville.
• Dick Johnston made six free throws in double overtime to lift UT to a 77-72 win over the Dores in Nashville on Feb. 2, 1970. Jimmy England led the charge with 27 points, and Bobby Croft had an 18-16 double-double.
• Tennessee All-Century Team member Paul “Lefty” Walther (1948-49) never lost to Vanderbilt during his career as a Vol. The Covington, Kentucky, native helped lead Tennessee to a 4-0 record over the Dores, beating Vandy by an average of 9.8 points.

VOLS SUCCESSFUL ON THE IN-STATE CIRCUIT
• Tennessee has won its last three games against in-state opponents and is 18-5 vs. in-state foes under coach Rick Barnes.
• Those 18 wins include triumphs over Chattanooga, ETSU (twice), Tennessee State, Vanderbilt (8x), Tennessee Tech (3x), Lipscomb (twice) and Memphis.

-UT Athletics

Dan + Shay Show You How To Make Your Own Bed

Dan + Shay Show You How To Make Your Own Bed

With technology these days, more and more people can make studio quality music right at home.

This was very helpful to Dan + Shay during 2020’s quarantine when it came time to make their song “I Should Probably Go To Bed.”

First, when it came to the writing of the song, the guys say that it actually was started on the West Coast, and finished in Nashville with some time in between.

Dan Smyers explains, “We wrote this song in Los Angeles during Grammy week, I think we had about 4 hours to spare…we jumped into the studio with our friends. And I think we got a verse and a chorus down…we didn’t have the whole song written. We were back in Nashville a few weeks later…maybe a few months later…Some time had passed, at my house working on some other songs, and we sat down at the piano…just kind of messing around and the rest of the song just kind of wrote itself. This song has one of the most impressive vocals I’ve ever heard in my life, your vocals on this…absolutely insane.” 

Shay Mooney graciously responded to the compliment with, “Thanks man.”

After listening to the final version of the song, both Dan + Shay shared, “So proud of the way it turned out”

But between it being written cross country and then it being played on country radio, a little production happened.

Dan recently shared a step-by-step tutorial of how he put the song “I Should Probably Go To Bed” together, “Starting from scratch, here’s how we produced ‘I Should Probably Go To Bed’ at home during quarantine. check it out and comment your favorite part! thanks for all the love on this song. we’re so proud of the way it turned out and your kind words mean the world! 

check out the video here…

Photo Credit: Catherine Powell

Ashley McBryde Was Inspired To Head To Nashville By the Boys On 16th Avenue

Ashley McBryde Was Inspired To Head To Nashville By the Boys On 16th Avenue

Before she was a “Girl Goin’ Nowhere” in “A Little Dive Bar In Dahlonega” with “One Night Standards” Ashley McBryde was a little girl who was inspired to find her way to Music City because of Lacy J Dalton‘s “16th Avenue,” “‘God bless the boys, that make the noise on 16th Avenue,’ inspired me at 12-years old to want to move to Nashville.”

Ashley recalls listening to the song and being enthralled by not only the lyrics, but the structure of the story within the track that Lacy J sang, and Thom Schuyler wrote, “I think the way the songwriter…set it up, ‘From the corners of the country, From the cities and the farms. With years and years of living, Tucked up underneath their arms. They walk away from everything, Just to see a dream come true. God bless the boys who make the noise, On 16th Avenue.’ This inspires me to ask my mother ‘Where are they going with everything they own tucked up underneath their arms?’ ‘They drove to town with all they own, In a hundred dollar car’…all of this. Where is that? Because I’ve been told that they will go there, they will walk away from everything they know to go there.”

Ashley remembers her mom’s answer, “Mom said ‘Oh, 16th Avenue is in Nashville, Tennessee’, I said ‘Then that’s where I’m going to go. That’s what I want to be.'”

Ashley McBryde is the one making noise on 16th Avenue now…and this Wednesday, January 13th, she’ll be bringing her latest song “Martha Divine” to The Ellen DeGeneres Show–her first performance on the popular talk show.

Check out the music video for the “killer” track from her album Never Will, right here…

Photo Credit: Daniel Meigs

Al Wilson Named to 2021 College Football Hall of Fame Class

Al Wilson Named to 2021 College Football Hall of Fame Class

Al Wilson – Credit: UT Athletics

IRVING, Texas – Al Wilson, one of the most decorated defensive players in Tennessee history, has been named to the illustrious 2021 College Football Hall of Fame Class, the National Football Foundation (NFF) announced Monday prior to the national championship game.

Wilson, who led the Volunteers to their sixth national championship in 1998, will officially be inducted with the 2021 and 2020 classes during the 63rd NFF Annual Awards Dinner on Dec. 7. The 2020 event was canceled due to COVID-19.

“It’s truly a blessing to be considered one of the best to play the game at the collegiate level,” said Wilson. “To my teammates, coaches and all of Vol Nation, this is our award!”

Wilson is one of 11 first-team All-America players being inducted in 2021 along with two standout coaches – Rudy Hubbard (Florida A&M) and Bob Stoops (Oklahoma).

Wilson becomes the 25th Vol to be enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame and first since Peyton Manning in 2017. Of the 25 inductees, 21 were enshrined as players and four as coaches. The 25 inductees are the most in the SEC and sixth-most nationally.

“I am so proud of Al Wilson being selected into the College Football Hall of Fame,” said Tennessee Director of Athletics Phillip Fulmer, a 2012 College Football Hall of Fame inductee and Wilson’s former coach. “He is so deserving, not only for the passion and effort he played with but for his leadership as captain of our 1998 national championship team.

“Al was the epitome of a competitor. He knew the importance of preparation to be great, and he influenced others to follow his lead during the offseason, spring practice, summer workouts and certainly through the fall of that wonderful 1998 season. He was the ultimate teammate and respected by everyone for his dedication, hard work, love of the game and physical play. He found a way to connect personally with everyone on the team on and off the field.”

Wilson was a consensus first-team All-American in 1998 from the perfect 13-0 Vols squad that won the inaugural BCS National Championship at the Fiesta Bowl against Florida State. He also guided Tennessee to three other bowl games, including consecutive wins at the Citrus Bowl in 1996 and 1997. During his career in Knoxville, Wilson led the Vols to back-to-back Southeastern Conference titles (1997, 1998) and four top 10 finishes (No. 3 in 1995, No. 9 in 1996, No. 7 in 1997 and No. 1 in 1998).

A finalist for the 1998 Nagurski Trophy, Wilson earned first-team All-SEC honors as a senior and second team all-conference laurels as a junior while losing only three conference games in four years. The 1998 team captain posted 12 tackles and a school-record three forced fumbles in the Vols’ win over No. 6 Florida that season. The heart of the UT defense, the linebacker tallied 77 tackles during the 1998 undefeated season despite missing three games to injury.

A 1999 Senior Bowl participant, Wilson finished his stellar career with 272 total tackles. The Jackson, Tennessee, native was enshrined in the University of Tennessee Athletics Hall of Fame in 2016 and the state of Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame in 2017.

A first-round pick by the Denver Broncos in the 1999 NFL Draft, Wilson was a five-time Pro Bowl selection while playing for the team from 1999-2006.

Wilson co-founded Project FANchise, which previously established the first-ever fan-controlled professional sports franchise, the Salt Lake Screaming Eagles, and operated the Colorado Crush to play in the Indoor Football League. Off the field, he has annually hosted children’s football camps and resides in Atlanta.

2021 College Football Hall of Fame Class
Harris Barton – OT, North Carolina (1983-86)
David Fulcher – DB, Arizona State (1983-85)
Rudy Hubbard – Head Coach, Florida A&M (1974-85)
Dan Morgan – LB, Miami (Fla.) (1997-2000)
Carson Palmer – QB, Southern Cal (1998-2002)
Tony Romo – QB, Eastern Illinois (1999-2002)
Kenneth Sims – DT, Texas (1978-81)
C.J. Spiller – RB/KR, Clemson (2006-09)
Darren Sproles – RB, Kansas State (2001-04)
Bob Stoops – Head Coach, Oklahoma (1999-2016)
Aaron Taylor – OT, Notre Dame (1990-93)
Andre Tippett – DE, Iowa (1979-81)
Al Wilson – LB, Tennessee (1995-98)

Tennessee All-Time College Football Hall of Famers (year inducted)
Doug Atkins, T (1985)
George Cafego, QB (1969)
Steve DeLong, G (1993)
Doug Dickey, Coach (2003)
Bobby Dodd, QB (1959)
Nathan Dougherty, T (1967)
Frank Emanuel, LB (2004)
Beattie Feathers, B (1955)
Phillip Fulmer, Coach (2012)
Herman Hickman, G (1959)
Bob Johnson, C (1989)
Chip Kell, G (2006)
Steve Kiner, LB (1999)
Hank Lauricella, TB (1981)
Johnny Majors, TB (1987)
Peyton Manning, QB (2017)
Gene McEver, HB (1954)
John Michels, G (1996)
Ed Molinski, G (1990)
Robert R. Neyland, Coach (1956)
Bob Suffridge, G (1961)
Reggie White, DT (2002)
Al Wilson, LB (2021)
Bowden Wyatt, E (1972)
Bowden Wyatt, Coach (1997)

-UT Athletics

Jake Owen Is Headed To the Big Screen In the Movie Our Friend

Jake Owen Is Headed To the Big Screen In the Movie Our Friend

Jake Owen is a pro at making music, but now he’s in a major motion picture for the very first time!

He has a role in the upcoming movie Our Friend.

Jake talked about his film debut, “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.”

He also posted a preview of the movie Our Friend with the message, “Wanted to share a little clip of a film I was a part of.”

 

Our Friend, which is out in theaters and available on streaming January 22, 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.

Check out the trailer for the movie that includes Jake Owen, right here…

Photo Credit: Robby Klein

Dan + Shay Celebrate 3 Years of Tequila!

Dan + Shay Celebrate 3 Years of Tequila!

Sunday, January 10th, was the 3 year anniversary of Dan + Shay releasing their mega-hit “Tequila.”

In a couple of special social media posts, the duo shared messages with fans…

The first featured Dan Smyers playing “Tequila” on a piano with the caption, “We dropped TEQUILA 3 years ago today 😭 and y’all just took it to 6X platinum in the US. thanks to everyone who helped us make this song, and everyone who has listened. y’all changed our lives and continue to change our lives in more ways than you know ❤️ we’ll be sitting here in our feelings all day, so feel free to drop a comment about the song, or use this video to record your own version. please make sure to tag us so we see ‘em all. 🙏

Later, Shay Mooney added his vocals, with this message, “OK we dueted each other 😂 since we can’t be on the road to celebrate the 3 year anniversary of TEQUILA, this is the next best thing, right? in case u missed it, i posted a 🎹 video this morning for y’all to sing on and we’ve been watching amazing covers all day. we figured it’d be fun to try our own (both parts recorded at home with iPhone). hope ya like it! and thanks for all the kind words about the song. it’s been an emotional day. ❤️

Dan + Shay are currently knocking on the door to the number-one spot on the country airplay charts with “I Should Probably Go To Bed”…

Photo Credit: Catherine Powell

Loretta Lynn Announces Release Date for New Album, Still Woman Enough

Loretta Lynn Announces Release Date for New Album, Still Woman Enough

Country music icon Loretta Lynn is getting ready to release her 50th studio album, Still Woman Enough, Friday March 19th, 2021.

The new project celebrates women in country music as Loretta pays tribute to the founding mothers, while singing new interpretations of her songs along side current female country music hit makers.

Loretta says, “I am just so thankful to have some of my friends join me on my new album. We girl singers gotta stick together.” Those friends include Reba McEntire, Tanya Tucker, Margo Price, and Carrie Underwood.

Loretta adds, “It’s amazing how much has happened in the fifty years since ‘Coal Miner’s Daughter’ first came out and I’m extremely grateful to be given a part to play in the history of American music.”

One of the tracks on Still Woman Enough is “Coal Miner’s Daughters Recitation” — a new version of the song that became Loretta’s calling card, as it not only was the title of her 1971 album, but also her 1976 memoir, and the 1980 Oscar-winning movie adaptation starring Sissy Spacek.

Still Woman Enough is produced by Loretta’s daughter Patsy Lynn Russell and John Carter Cash, the son of fellow country music legends Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash.

The track list for the album includes…

01. “Still Woman Enough” (featuring Reba McEntire and Carrie Underwood) (Loretta Lynn and Patsy Lynn Russell)

02. “Keep On The Sunny Side” (A.P. Carter)

03. “Honky Tonk Girl” (Loretta Lynn)

04. “I Don’t Feel At Home Any More” (Traditional, arrangement by Loretta Lynn)

05. “Old Kentucky Home” (Stephen Foster and Loretta Lynn)

06. “Coal Miner’s Daughter Recitation” (Loretta Lynn)

07. “One’s On The Way” (featuring Margo Price (Shel Silverstein)

08. “I Wanna Be Free” (Loretta Lynn)

09. “Where No One Stands Alone” (Lister Mosie)

10. “I’ll Be All Smiles Tonight” (T.B. Ransom)

11. “I Saw The Light” (Hank Williams)

12. “My Love” (Loretta Lynn)

13. “You Ain’t Woman Enough” (featuring Tanya Tucker) (Loretta Lynn)

Still Woman Enough will ring the bell as Loretta’s 50th studio album — but her total is a little higher, as the 10 duet projects she did with Conway Twitty are not counted in that 50 number.

Loretta Lynn is one of the most awarded musicians of all time. She has been inducted into more music Halls of Fame than any female recording artist, including The Country Music Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame, and was the first woman to be named the Country Music Association‘s Entertainer of the Year in 1972. Loretta also was a recipient of the Kennedy Center Honors in 2003 and a Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013.

Check out the trailer for Still Woman Enough from Loretta Lynn right here…

Still Woman Enough is available for pre-order now in in digital, CD and 12 vinyl LP formats HERE

 Exclusive Still Woman Enough merchandise bundles are also available: HERE

Photos courtesy of Legacy Recordings

Niko Moon’s Good Time Campfire Sessions EP – Available Now

Niko Moon’s Good Time Campfire Sessions EP – Available Now

Niko Moon is climbing the country airplay charts with his debut song “Good Time” – and now he’s giving fans a little something special to listen to in 2021.

Niko released his Good Time Campfire Sessions EP – 6 songs captured live outdoors around a campfire, with accompaniment by guitarist Jared Martin and percussionist Jon August.

The tracks include…

01 “Good Time”

02 “Drunk Over You”

03 “Way Back”

04 “Paradise To Me”

05 “Good At Loving You”

06 “Dance With Me”

Check out Niko Moon’s Campfire Sessions version of “Good Time”…

Photo Credit: Matthew Berinato

Additional images courtesy of Sony Music Nashville

UT fends off LSU, 64-63, Lady Vols 2-0 in SEC

UT fends off LSU, 64-63, Lady Vols 2-0 in SEC

Rae Burrell – Lady Vols / Credit: UT Athletics

BATON ROUGE, La. — The Lady Vols held off a scrappy LSU squad in a back-and-forth affair on the road on Sunday, winning 64-63 in the Pete Maravich Assembly Center.

It was Tennessee’s first win in Baton Rouge in its last four trips, and Kellie Harper picked up her first career victory in the venue as a head coach and former Lady Vol player.

Junior Rae Burrell led Tennessee (8-1, 2-0 SEC), finishing with 18 points and three rebounds. Sophomore Tamari Key turned in a season-high 12 points and six rebounds, and sophomore Jordan Horston also found her way into double figures with 11 points.

LSU (4-6, 2-2 SEC) was paced by senior Khayla Pointer who logged 25 points and five assists. Tiara Young was the next highest scorer for the Tigers with 11 points and three rebounds.

Tennessee came out of the gate hot, jumping out to a 4-0 lead off a Key put-back and a steal and score by Horston in the opening minute. Pointer responded with four quick points for LSU, and the Tigers matched UT bucket for bucket through the next four minutes as the teams went into the media timeout with the score tied at 10. Following the break, Pointer gave LSU its first lead of the game with a 3-pointer, and Young followed it up with a layup to put the score at 15-10 by the 4:30 mark. UT closed the gap to one point in the closing minutes of the quarter, scoring primarily from the free-throw line, but a layup by Young at the buzzer gave LSU a 19-16 lead heading into the second quarter.

The Tigers stretched their lead back to five with an Ajae Petty layup on their first possession of the second period, but Jordan Walker answered with a trey on the other end for UT to cut it to two. The two-point deficit would hold until Pointer and Rakell Spencer combined for four-straight points to put LSU up 29-23 four minutes in. Key countered with a layup before the media break, and Marta Suárez followed it up with another following the timeout to pull UT within two with 3:23 left in the half. The Lady Vols continued to chip away, reclaiming the lead at 31-30 off a Davis jumper at the 1:33 mark.  Young hit a pair of free throws to go back up by one, but Davis closed out the half with a layup to send UT into the locker room with a one-point advantage at 33-32.

LSU shot a hot 61.5 percent in the first quarter, but Tennessee held them to just 33.3 percent in the second. For the half, the Tigers shot 46.4 percent from the floor while UT managed an even 50 percent.

Key once again opened the scoring for UT, hitting a layup 20 seconds into the third period. Burrell followed it up with a layup off a Suárez steal, stretching UT’s lead to 37-32 by the 9:19 mark. The Tigers bounced back with a 5-0 run to tie the score at 37-all with 6:52 to play in the quarter. Kasiyahna Kushkituah hit a pair of free throws to put Tennessee up by two, but Pointer responded with a free throw and a layup to put LSU up 40-39 at the media timeout. Faustine Aifuwa added a layup before Burrell responded with five-straight points to put UT up 46-44 at the 3:14 mark. Pointer answered with back-to-back layups to provide the game’s eighth lead change, but Burrell closed out the period with a trey to send UT in the final stanza ahead 47-46.

Horston opened the fourth quarter with an old-fashioned three-point play, but Pointer and Awa Trasi combined to tie it up at 52-all with 6:36 left in the game. Horston put in a pair of free throws, but Karli Seay hit a jumper to tie it back up before Tennessee launched into a 6-0 run, fueled by Kushkituah and Burrell, to lead 60-54 with 3:19 remaining. The Tigers whittled the deficit to two before Key hit a layup to put UT’s lead back at four, but Pointer also hit a layup on the other end to keep LSU within striking distance. Horston again stretched UT’s lead to four, but Young scored on a 3-point play to put the score at 64-63 with only 28 seconds to play. LSU managed to get up a shot just before the buzzer, but the attempt was no good, and Horston came up with the rebound as time expired to move UT to 2-0 in SEC play.

Next Up: The Lady Vols return home to host Georgia on Thursday in a 6:30 p.m. ET contest that will be broadcast on the SEC Network.

Key Back In Double Digits: Sophomore Tamari Key logged a season-high 12 points, recording her first double-digit point total since scoring 17 against Ole Miss on Feb. 27, 2020.

Big-Time Boards: The Lady Vols out-rebounded LSU, 39-25. They have now won the rebounding battle in every game this season, out-rebounding opponents by an average of 47.7 to 31.3.

Kasi Heating Up: Over the last four games, senior Kasiyahna Kushkituah is averaging 10.3 ppg. and 5.3 rbg., a considerable improvement over the first five games of the season in which she averaged just 3.4 ppg. and 4.4 rbg.

-UT Athletics

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