Tennessee men’s basketball guard Jaden Springer spoke to the media in the postgame after the Vols won at the Texas A&M Aggies 68-54 on Saturday.

The Tennessee at South Carolina and Vanderbilt at Missouri men’s basketball games of Jan. 12 have been postponed due to a combination of positive tests, contact tracing and subsequent quarantining of individuals within the Missouri and South Carolina basketball programs, consistent with Southeastern Conference COVID-19 management requirements. Makeup dates for the two games have not been determined at this time.
With the cancelation of those two games, Tennessee will now play at Vanderbilt at 7 p.m. ET Tuesday, Jan. 12, on ESPN2. The Volunteers and Commodores will meet again in Knoxville on Saturday, Jan. 16, in a previously scheduled game at 6 p.m. ET on SEC Network.
At this time, Tennessee has no game scheduled for Wednesday, Feb. 24 (the original date of its game at Vanderbilt).
The SEC’s COVID-19 management requirements, as developed by the SEC’s Return to Activity and Medical Guidance Task Force, are available on SECsports.com (PDF).
-UT Athletics
BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION, Texas – A career-high 23 points from sophomore guard Santiago Vescovi and a smothering defensive display propelled the ninth-ranked Tennessee basketball team past Texas A&M, 68-54, on Saturday at Reed Arena.
Tennessee (9-1, 3-1 SEC) held Texas A&M (6-4, 1-3 SEC) to 34 percent shooting from the field (16-of-47), while converting on nearly 60 percent of its own field-goal attempts (27-of-46).
The Vols .587 shooting percentage was a season-high, narrowly eclipsing their .583 performance in the home victory over Tennessee Tech last month.
Vescovi’s 23 points came on a career-high eight made field goals and a career-high-tying six made attempts from 3-point range. Vescovi also reeled in five rebounds, dished off three assists and recorded a pair of steals.
Senior Wooden Award candidate John Fulkerson scored 11 points, pulled in five boards and blocked three shots for the second consecutive contest.
Vols freshman Jaden Springer made his first career start and posted 10 points and a season-high-tying six assists.
Josiah-Jordan James continued his consistent stretch of play in all areas of the gmae, grabbing a pair of rebounds, nabbing a pair of steals and dishing out five assists with no turnovers.
The opening eight minutes were highlighted by Vescovi’s hot shooting, as he knocked down his first four attempts from 3-point range to help give UT a 16-9 advantage at the under-12 media break.
The Vols maintained control for the remainder of the half, never relinquishing the lead and taking a 37-30 lead into the locker room.
Tennessee used its stifling defense to fend off A&M through the duration the second half, stretching its lead to as many as 18 before walking away with the 68-54 triumph.
Vols Assist Vols: Tennessee assisted on 23 of its 27 made field goals, marking a season-high assist percentage of .852.
PDF Box Score | Highlights | Barnes Postgame | Vescovi Postgame | Springer Postgame | Postgame Quotes
-UT Athletics
Have you ever been so touched by a song that it made a major impact on your life?
Do you think if you ever met the singer, would you share that story with them?
Well, if it’s a Michael Ray song, let him know!
In fact, Michael says that hearing how fans connect with his music is one of the coolest parts of his job, “Been fortunate to meet with a lot of fans…either meet and greets, or after shows, or just randomly, see somebody out…they come up and talk to you. One of the coolest things that I think you can do as a fan of anybody’s music is tell your story of that song.”
When it comes to fans sharing their stories with him, there’s one that always sticks out in his mind. Michael shares one time when a fan told him how his heartbreak song “Her World or Mine” actually saved the fan’s relationship, “This guy came up to me…with his wife…I’m at a meet and greet, and was like ‘Man, that song saved our marriage,’ and he said ‘We were both done, and hearing the lyrics of that song kind of put us in the place of…OK, this is how life is going to be without each other. And we didn’t want that.’ So, they worked it out, and they were happier than ever.”
Michael admits it’s hearing stuff like that, that makes him realize how much his music connects with people in such a special way, “It’s funny because that song is a heartbreak song about a break-up, but you hear songs the way you’re meant to hear them at that time, and that’s probably one of the coolest ones that sticks out to me.”
So, now you know if you have a story about Michael Ray’s new song “Whiskey and Rain,” please share it with him!
Photo Credit: Sean Hagwell
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee (7-1, 1-0 SEC) heads to Baton Rouge, La., where it will meet LSU (4-5, 2-1 SEC) in the Lady Vols’ first road test of the conference season.
UT, which is receiving votes in the AP and USA TODAY Coaches Polls, will face off vs. the Tigers in a contest slated for a 2:02 p.m. ET (1:02 CT) tip at the Pete Maravich Assembly Center.
The contest will feature a meeting of former Lady Vols and native Tennesseans in Kellie (Jolly) Harper and Nikki (Caldwell) Fargas. Harper, who hails from Sparta (White County H.S.), played for Pat Summitt from 1995-99, while the Oak Ridge (Oak Ridge H.S.) product Fargas was a player for Summitt (1990-94) and later served on Summitt’s staff as a graduate assistant (1998-99/Harper’s senior year) and then assistant coach (2002-08). Harper and Fargas join Kentucky’s Kyra Elzy and Mississippi State’s Nikki McCray-Penson as the four former Lady Vols holding head coaching positions at SEC schools.
Tennessee is coming off an impressive 88-73 home victory over No. 13/13 Arkansas in its SEC opener on Thursday night. It marked UT’s second victory over a top-15 team this season, following a 66-58 win at No. 15/15 Indiana on Dec. 17. It also stood as the Lady Vols’ first game since Dec. 28, after the program paused team activities from Dec. 29 to Jan. 4 due to COVID-19 contact tracing. UT had conducted only two full team practices (Jan. 5 and 6) in the past 18 days prior to playing the Razorbacks.
LSU, which is at home for the first time since opening SEC play on Dec. 31, comes into Sunday’s match-up on the heels of a 67-59 loss at Alabama on Thursday night.
The Lady Vols and Tigers have one common opponent thus far in West Virginia. LSU lost to the Mountaineers in Las Vegas, 62-42, on Nov. 28, while UT fell to WVU in overtime in Morgantown, 79-73, in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge on Dec. 6.
BROADCAST INFORMATION
TENNESSEE IN SEC PLAY
NCAA NET RANKINGS & MORE
QUICK GLANCE AT THE LADY VOLS
RECAPPING UT’S LAST GAME
UT-LSU SERIES NOTES
ABOUT LSU
RECAPPING THE TIGERS’ LAST GAME
THE LAST TIME UT AND LSU MET
WHAT’S NEXT
-UT Athletics
BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION, Tx. – The ninth-ranked Tennessee basketball team returns to action for a road matchup with Texas A&M on Saturday afternoon. Tipoff from Reed Arena is slated for 2 p.m. ET on ESPN2.
Fans can catch Saturday’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. Karl Ravech 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, UT needed a second half rally to push past Arkansas on Wednesday, 79-74. The Vols were led in scoring by junior Victor Bailey Jr. and a career outing from sophomore Josiah-Jordan James who poured in 17 points apiece.
Senior John Fulkerson was all over the stat sheet in the win, dropping in 16 points, grabbing eight rebounds, blocking three shots and dishing off a trio of assists.
A victory on Saturday would preserve the Vols perfect road record this season, while leaving head coach Rick Barnes just one win shy of tying Phog Allen and Don Haskins for 20th on the all-time Division I wins list.
Up next, the Vols will remain on the road, when they head south for a Tuesday night matchup with South Carolina. Tipoff from Columbia is slated for 7 p.m. ET on ESPN2.
THE SERIES
• Tennessee leads its all-time series with Texas A&M, 8-6, dating to 1951. The Aggies joined the SEC for the 2012-13 season.
• The Aggies won last season’s lone meeting, 63-58, in Knoxville. It was the first head-to-head coaching matchup between Rick Barnes and Buzz Williams.
• Tennessee holds a 3-2 advantage when the series is contested in Bryan-College Station and has won the last two meetings at Reed Arena. The last time Tennessee visited Reed Arena, the Vols were the nation’s top-ranked team (Feb. 2, 2019).
A WIN WOULD…
• Leave Rick Barnes one win shy of tying Phog Allen and Don Haskins for 20th on the all-time Division I wins list.
• Preserve the Vols’ perfect record on the road this season.
LAYUP LINES
• Rick Barnes once interviewed Aggies head coach Buzz Williams for an assistant coach position during Barnes’ tenure as the head coach at Texas.
• Senior John Fulkerson was named to the Wooden Award’s Midseason Top-25 List Wednesday.
• In the second half of the Arkansas win, Fulkerson totaled 12 points, five rebounds, three assists and no turnovers.
• Five-star freshman Keon Johnson made the first start of his career Wednesday vs. Arkansas and scored a season-high 14 points. He was 6-for-6 from the foul line in the game’s final two minutes.
• Santiago Vescovi’s 2.2 assist/turnover ratio is the best in the SEC.
• Overall this season, Tennessee leads the SEC in five team statistical categories, including scoring defense, scoring margin, turnovers per game, turnover margin and assist/turnover ratio.
DEFENSE WINS
• Tennessee ranks fourth in the NCAA in scoring defense, allowing just 57.1 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 17.7 turnovers per game while converting those turnovers into 19.3 points per game. Tennessee’s turnover margin stands at +7.8 (second nationally).
• UT leads the nation in percentage of two-point field goals blocked on defense (18 percent).
• 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 13 blocks through UT’s first three SEC games.
• Pons has 93 blocks in his last 40 games.
ABOUT TEXAS A&M
• After struggling through non-conference play to start last season, Texas A&M began to piece things together during SEC play, recovering to finish 10-8 in league play and in the top half of the conference standings. Through nine games this season, the Aggies sit at 6-3 and 1-2 in the SEC after dropping conference contests to LSU and South Carolina.
• Second-year head coach Buzz Williams aims to build off the momentum built toward the end of last season, as he has five of his top seven scorers from last season returning.
• One of those returners is sophomore forward Emanuel Miller. In eight played games, Miller has been a force in both scoring and on the glass, holding the team lead in points with 18.5 per contest, and rebounds, hauling in 8.3 boards per game. His 18.5 points per game are more than a 12-point jump from the 6.4 he averaged as a freshman last season.
• Senior guard Quenton Jackson has also upped his scoring production from last season, ranking second on the team with 12.1 points per game, an increase of more than three points per game.
• Joining Jackson in the backcourt is guard Andre Gordon. Gordon ranks third on the team in scoring (8.9 ppg) and first in assists. In the Aggies’ most recent victory last Saturday against Auburn, Gordon knocked down the game-winning shot with just under a second to play, to down the Tigers, 68-66.
• Bryan-College Station, where Texas A&M University is located, is a metropolitan area centering on the twin cities of Bryan and College Station in the Brazos Valley region of Texas. The estimated 2019 population of the three-country metro area was 273,101.
LAST MEETING WITH TEXAS A&M
• Despite four Vols scoring in double figures, Tennessee fell to Texas A&M, 63-58, on Jan. 28, 2020, in Thompson-Boling Arena. The contest featured seven lead changes and 10 blocks by UT.
• John Fulkerson led the Vols with 15 points and a team-high six rebounds. Jordan Bowden was right behind him with 13 points, followed by Yves Pons and Santiago Vescovi, who each scored 10.
• The Aggies were paced by freshman Wendell Mitchell, who recorded 23 points on the night. The Big Orange held Texas A&M to a 30.4 percent shooting percentage and forced 14 turnovers, but the Aggies’ 46-21 advantage in rebounding and 16 second-chance points were enough for them to overcome any offensive shortcomings.
• Both teams started slow offensively, but Tennessee went on a 5-0 run to gain its largest lead of the opening half at 14-6. The Aggies then went on an 8-0 run to tie the game at 14-14, but the Vols responded with back-to-back dunks from Pons and Josiah-Jordan James to put UT up by four, 18-14.
• But A&M closed the first half strong and managed to take a 25-24 lead into the break.
• The Big Orange scored the first eight points of the second half, with three free throws from Vescovi, a 3-pointer from Pons and a lay-in from Fulkerson to put Tennessee on top again, 32-25.
• Fulkerson scored the next seven points for UT, but the Aggies kept things close.
• Texas A&M went on their second 8-0 run of the night later in the second half, taking the lead, 40-39, with just over than 10 minutes left to play. Bowden ended a UT scoring drought with a momentum-shifting dunk, giving Tennessee the lead back yet again.
• With less than a minute left in regulation, Bowden delivered a clutch 3-pointer, tying the game at 53-53.
• But the Aggies responded with a triple of their own when Mitchell hit from beyond the arc—a shot that proved to be the game-winner.
IF IT WEREN’T FOR TENNESSEE, TEXAS WOULD BE “NORTH MEXICO”
• There can be no doubt Texas owes a great debt of gratitude for its statehood to the fierce men from Tennessee.
• Before the Alamo fell, 33 Tennesseans, the largest number of defenders provided by any state—nearly four times as many as from Texas—kept Mexican General Santa Anna’s overwhelming army at bay for 13 days against unbelievable odds.
• On March 6, 1836, the brave Tennessee Volunteers and the other Alamo defenders were overrun and breathed their last.
• However, the crucial days the Volunteers slowed down the Mexican army gave another Tennessean, Sam Houston, enough time to gallop through Texas raising an army to defend what would become the Lone Star State. This army defeated Santa Anna in no small part because of the contributions of Tennessee’s Volunteers.
MEMORABLE VOL PERFORMANCES AGAINST TEXAS A&M
• Grant Williams tied Tennessee’s all-time, single-game record for blocked shots with six in UT’s 2018 win over the Aggies in College Station. He also added 12 points and five rebounds in the victory.
• In the longest game in Tennessee basketball history, the Vols posted an epic 93-85 four-overtime win at Texas A&M Feb. 23, 2013, in the first game between the teams as conference foes. Trae Golden tallied 32 points for the Vols, while Jarnell Stokes totaled 20 points and 16 rebounds, and Jordan McRae scored 23.
• Tony White posted the highest points total by a Vol in the series when he scored 34 vs. the Aggies in an 88-70 UT home win on Dec. 7, 1985.
• Herb Neff (13 pts, 14 rebs) and Charlie Hipsher (11 pts, 12 rebs) each logged double-doubles for Tennessee as the Vols downed Texas A&M 60-52 in the first-ever meeting between the programs on Dec. 15, 1951, in Knoxville.
• Houston native Brandon Crump averaged 16.0 points, 9.0 rebounds and 2.0 blocks in two career games against the Aggies.
BARNES VERY FAMILIAR WITH A&M
• As a head coach, Rick Barnes has faced Texas A&M 37 times, compiling a 29-8 (.784) record.
• His Texas teams went 23-7 vs. the Aggies from 1999-2015, and he also led Clemson to a 2-0 record against A&M in the mid-90s.
• The only teams Barnes has faced more than the Aggies are Oklahoma (41 meetings), Oklahoma State (40) and Baylor (39).
AGGIES KNOW ENGLISH
• As a college star at Missouri from 2008-12, Vols assistant coach Kim English faced Texas A&M six times. He averaged 11.3 points in those six games, but his Tigers only won twice.
20 ELUSIVE FOR OPPOSING SCORERS
• Through 1,800 minutes of basketball this season, no Tennessee opponent has managed to score 20 points.
• Only three opposing scorers have scored more than 15 points—J.D. Notae (Arkansas) scored 19, Tommy Bruner (USC Upstate) scored 18 and John Petty Jr. (Alabama) scored 17.
• Tennessee’s opponents’ top scorer this season averages 14.3 ppg.
-UT Athletics
Tennessee basketball associate head coach Michael Schwartz met with the media on Friday morning to preview the Vols weekend matchup with Texas A&M.
On some of the defensive breakdowns seen in the past two games:
“We came in knowing that these two teams (Alabama and Arkansas), a little bit like Saint Joe’s was, really wanted to play either behind the 3-point line or right at the rim – not as much midrange and not as much post. Most of the teams we’ve played haven’t been exactly that. It all starts with guarding the ball. We haven’t done a great job over the last two games guarding the ball. Give them credit. They were able to get to the paint. As you really start to be concerned with that 3-point line, what happens is that the defense starts spreading out. Our defense, as much as we want to pressure the ball and do that, is predicated on guys helping and five guys moving as one. What’s happened over the last two games, as we’ve broken it down on film and talked to the guys about it, is we’ve gotten into this ‘You’re on an island’ mentality. You guard your guy. I’ve got to make sure my guy doesn’t do what he’s supposed to do. We stopped helping each other and moving cohesively a little bit over the last two games. But again, two really talented teams, good offensive teams – Arkansas and Alabama. They were able to get to the paint. Once they start getting into the paint and getting us into rotations, we’ve talked about that a lot, they were able to shoot the ball from behind the arc much better than teams have up to that point.”
On freshman Jaden Springer’s basketball IQ:
“Coming in, people were probably questioning, ‘What kind of shooter is Jaden Springer? Is he a great three-point shooter?’ This would be the ultimate telltale sign of someone who has a really high IQ. He’s leading our team in 3-point percentage because he takes great shots. One of the hardest things for any freshman, and sometimes any aggressive basketball player particularly on offense, is to understand shot selection. If you look at the shots that Jaden Springer takes as a freshman, he takes his time, he’s got rhythm and tempo when he shoots the ball from beyond the arc. He knows how to get where he wants in the paint. He’s developed a really physical driving game. He almost plays the guard like a post player. He knows where he wants to get on the floor. He uses his shot in the midrange. But the biggest things I would say is that his shot selection from beyond the arc has allowed him to shoot such a high percentage. That’s really impressive for a freshman, especially when you consider that people were questioning what kind of three-point shooter he really is. He’s proven it, but a lot of that is because of his shot selection.”
On if South Carolina’s cancelled game on Saturday due to COVID-19 protocols will impact Tennessee’s matchup on Tuesday and if the team would consider adding a replacement game should Tuesday’s game be cancelled:
“I don’t know. I don’t have an idea about Tuesday yet. As far as what that would entail next week, meaning Tuesday, I think that’s more up to the conference in terms of what they would do. That’s just a wait and see. Right now, obviously you just hope that everybody is good at South Carolina. That’s most important. You feel for them in terms of some of the situations they’ve had – the shutdowns they’ve had. They had a really difficult December. They played fantastic the other night. You could see the excitement of their players in their game versus Texas A&M. It’s a wait and see and we’ve got all hands-on-deck for A&M tomorrow.”
On Keon Johnson going 6-6 from the free throw line down the stretch of Wednesday’s win over Arkansas:
“It says a lot. That’s something that Coach (Rick Barnes) has been on him about, whether it’s shooting the ball from behind the arc or free-throws. Here’s what it also says – he’s spent a lot of time in the gym. All of our guys do, but he really has. He’s dedicated himself and he understands. Sometimes the hardest thing in getting better is when you can’t look in the mirror and say, ‘I need to be better here.’ That says a lot about Keon from a maturity standpoint. He knows that he needs to become a better shooter, a better free throw shooter. He’s such a dynamic driver. He gets fouled a lot. That was really impressive the way he closed out that game. He wanted the ball and he wanted to be at the free throw line. That’s a great momentum builder for him. Really, it says that he’s been putting the work in and he understand where he wants to be better. He’s very coachable in that standpoint.”
On how important steals and blocks are to Tennessee’s defense:
“It’s really important. We talked about it. We felt like, defensively, Arkansas may have been the worst we’ve played all season. Probably, that side of the ball was what helped us win the game. On offense, our guys are making shots, making plays and making free throws. That’s why in the end, we were able to come out with the victory. But from a defensive standpoint, you’ve heard us allude to it all of the time. Coach Barnes talks about it – ‘fix it’ plays. In that game, those statistics – forcing 20 turnovers, nine blocks and 10 steals – that was the difference on the defensive side. That was the one area defensively that we were able to execute and do what we feel like we should be attempting to do every night. We also had 29 deflections in that game, which is a statistic that we actively track and really put a lot of emphasis on. The ‘fix it’ plays, the plays where guys were making up deficits, making up areas where we really didn’t do our job schematically, those plays were really big for us and really was the only highlight of our defense that night.”
On sophomore Santiago Vescovi’s start to the season:
“You’ve got to think that Santi’s really one year into his career. He is really in the beginning, because obviously he only got half of a season last year. This is his second round in conference. He’s basically one-year in. The message has been this. As we get into conference play – and we’ve talked to the whole team about this and that it’s not just Santiago that’s going to deal with this – scouting goes to a whole new level. These players, these coaches, they know what we’re trying to do on offense they know what we’re trying to do on defense. We know what they’re trying to do on offense. We know what they’re trying to do on defense. You really have to understand that. That’s a big deal. Now, this is the second time, third time around that teams have played against Santiago. They’ve watched film on him from the preseason. They’re doing things like trying to keep him on his right hand. They understand what a dynamic shooter he is. They understand the areas where they can maybe make it a little bit more difficult for him. It’s no different for any player, but for Santiago it’s to stay in the gym, continue to work on your right hand, continue to work on being a dynamic shooter and understand that teams are going to try and expose all of our weaknesses. It doesn’t mater if it’s individually or team. Back to the question about Keon, he’s able to look in the mirror and say, ‘I know I need to be better here. Teams are going to pressure me. Teams are going to sit on my left hand and not let me get to it.’ That’s it. It’s nothing to be concerned about but it’s something that you have to hit head on and he’s working at it every day. He’ll improve. He’ll continue to improve and he’ll get back in rhythm in terms of that. It’s normal what he’s going through.”
On the difference in the sideline this year, with COVID-19 protocols in place:
“The first two things that come to mind is, number one, the masks. Obviously, communication during a game is paramount – between the bench and from the bench to the court. The masks make that a little bit of a challenge. You’re trying to do the right thing and I think our staff pays attention to it. We don’t want to be pulling our masks down. You’re trying to communicate with the masks and, believe it or not, sometimes you’re talking to guys in the huddle and you’re talking at a fairly normal voice and they can’t hear, but they also can’t read your lips. That’s probably the first thing that I’ve thought of. Watching film, talking to each other in high-intensity environments, reading lips and things like that become a big deal. You just know facial expressions, whether a guy gets it or not. The masks sometimes make it a little bit hard for the players, as well as us communicating with them while they’re on the court. Number two would be for the coaches to talk to each other, the space is OK. No big deal. We can get up and move around. The other day, I remember during the game I wanted to go down and talk to one of our guys and it felt different. You got up, leave the action, go down to the end of the bench or you go to the stanchion where the stands are and you’re talking to the guys there. That’s a little different. It’s what it is and we’re fortunate to be playing. Probably the communication aspect with the masks is the biggest challenge, but it’s nothing big.”
On when the coaching staff began to see sophomore Josiah-Jordan James emerge as the voice of the team:
“You started to see it some last year when he first arrived on campus. I think that’s a confidence he has about himself and he’s a team first player. He was always deflecting to other guys. He was always, in terms of anything that was coming his way credit wise or anything that he was doing well, it was always deflected off to his teammates. He did that as a freshman. He did that in high school. He’s always been that guy. He’s always been something with that pass first mentality. You earn a lot of kudos with your players when you’re like that. The guys know that he’s not out there thinking, ‘Score, score, score.’ It’s to the point where Coach Barnes, our staff and his own teammates are telling him, ‘Jo, you need to think about scoring more. We need you to do it. It makes us better.’ That’s one thing. The other thing, which is the biggest thing and we’ve talked about it as a team, is when we go in the film room and we go in areas where we’re on the court and it’s getting intense, or Coach is getting on guys and we as a staff are getting on guys, whether it’s on the court or in the film room, Josiah unequivocally always takes it on himself. ‘That was me, Coach. I should have done that.’ We know that sometimes it’s not him, but he’s got this element of really looking around and knowing who might be a little bit down, who might be struggling physically or mentally in the film room. They may be going through it and he finds a way to put it on himself. That’s a very strong quality. Grant Williams did it at a very high level when he was here. Coach Barnes has had great players in the past do it. T.J. Ford did it for him. When we were at Texas, he was like that. It’s really a confidence thing and an ability to help your teammates. If the guys know one thing about Josiah, it’s that he is all about his teammates.”
On the expectations for Texas A&M on Saturday:
“It’s going to be a game that’s going to be determined in the paint. That’s probably the best way to say it. They want to keep teams out of the paint and they’re a very good rebounding team. We want to get to the paint and we want to be a great rebounding team. If you look at last year’s game, they shot just over 30 percent from the floor and they beat us 63-58 and we shot in the 40 percent range, maybe in the mid-40’s. But, it all came down to one thing. They had 23 offensive rebounds that night. It’s going to be an extremely physical and hard-nosed game. They’re a great and well-coached team that puts a huge emphasis on playing hard, playing physical, rebounding and they absolutely came into our building last year and got the better of us in all of those areas and that’s why they won.”
On Josiah’s house being destroyed in a fire and what it says about him being able to play through it:
“He’s a really high character kid in terms of who he is as a person. The stuff we were just talking about with him really speaks to his mental toughness that he can handle it. You all know that there is going to be a high expectation on the court and in the film room here from coach Barnes and sometimes guys get it good. For him to take that on and take more of it, because he has it as hard as anybody in terms of expectations and the standard is for him. So, for him to be able to deal with something personal like that and to continue doing what he’s doing, it absolutely says a lot about him and his family. His family didn’t tell him right away. They wanted him to get through a couple of games and once we got through the Alabama game, he found out and it was difficult. It says a lot about him and Josiah has done a really good job of asking, ‘How can I help other guys.’ This would definitely be a time where he could put himself first and he hasn’t alluded to it at all. He has continued to try to help the young guys. He helps the guys on the court with what we’re trying to execute, because he really understands what we’re trying to do on both sides of the ball. He also understands the intangibles when guys may be struggling emotionally or mentally, he tries to help them there too, while also going through something like was alluded to. So, it says volumes about him.”
On if they always have confidence in Santiago Vescovi at the free-throw line:
“Absolutely. 100 percent. It goes back to what we talked about with what he’s going through. Teams are going to try to focus in on areas where they can make it difficult for him. It’s no different than what we’re going to try to do to Texas A&M players. Texas A&M is going to try to do it to him and our whole team. This is what sports is, this time of year. This is what college basketball is, in terms of conference scouting. From a stand point of who Santiago is, the confidence we have in him, his ability to make the right play, make big plays, make big shots and make the right decisions or in your example, make free-throws, we absolutely have confidence in him and we were glad he was at the line.”
On SEC teams winning 50 percent of games on the road and why that is:
“You can never underestimate what a home crowd is. We have the best one in the country and when Thompson-Boling is going like it is, and like it would be this season, there’s no better place to be playing. You can’t even come close to trying to fathom the impact that no crowd is. Momentum is such a big thing in sports and it takes such a short span to change momentum and our crowd at Thompson-Boling has won us many games because of that. It’s just not there this year and I think there’s a lot of great venues and fan bases in the SEC. It’s the best conference in the country in terms of fan bases and passion, so I believe that is the exact reason why teams are winning so many games on the road.”
On team’s physicality and if the Vols are becoming too reliant on ‘fix-it’ plays:
“I don’t know if you worry about them becoming complacent, but you can get over confident in those plays. You can sometimes in a physical game, or a game where fatigue may be setting in, some of those things can slip, because you know you might have an Yves Pons coming over to impact a shot at the rim. So, maybe instead of your first three steps in transition being as hard as they need to be, you’re going to react and know you have someone on the back line that’s going to help you. We talk about the fact that we can’t rely on that. We know that, it has to be an element that’s always there, with the front line of our defense doing what it needs to do. Over the last two games it hasn’t been there, but I don’t think that’s at all the reason why. I would say, give credit to Arkansas and Alabama number one, number two our rotation over the last two games has been a little shorter and that’s normal. We’re in conference play now. In the Missouri game we were able to win with a bit of a cushion and now you get into your first real possession game of the year against Alabama and your rotation shrinks a little bit. This is normal and it will build back up, but our depth has not been a very big factor over the last two games. That goes back to the first point. Up until the last two games, we’ve been a really physical team. We’ve lost a bit of our physicality over the last few games, but I’m going to continue to give credit to Alabama and Arkansas. They both play a five-out game, they space the floor and they make it a bit more difficult to be physical. They don’t always have someone in the paint area. They have the floor spaced out so when its like that, there’s going to be less of a physicality to our game. They did a great job, we were fortunate that we were able to win the Arkansas game, but we do want to get back to being a physical defensive team and our rotation and depth is a big piece of that and we haven’t had that quite as much the last two games. So, I would think that would be the reason why more than anything, not really any complacency on what our schemes or anything like that are.”
On how Jaden is looking with his ankle:
“You know the saying of, ‘I don’t know who is 100 percent, coaches or players.’ He’s fine. We have not been back on the court, but there’s an expectation that he will be a full go today at practice when we’re done here.”
On if Victor Bailey Jr. does as good a job of anyone in ‘hunting’ for his shot:
“Probably, because he’s a really offensive minded and aggressive player. We love that. You’re always searching for the perfect balance. You’re always searching for someone who’s really aggressive, but knows exactly when to pass and when it’s not a good shot, but I’m not sure that exists. We want Josiah to be more aggressive and he over passes. We show VJ some cases where he could have passed it. But at the end of the day in an athletic and fast paced league like the SEC, Victor Bailey is someone that could easily be the type of player we’re playing against at Arkansas or Alabama. One that really puts a lot of fear in your defense, because he is so aggressive, he shoots the ball well, he drives the ball well and he attacks the basket. He is a prototypical, dynamic and offensive SEC guard. I think as coaches and coach Barnes will be the first to say that during a game or in film that you could have done this, or could have done that, but his errors might side on the area of aggression and other players may side on the area of being more conservative. There’s nothing wrong with that, because that’s VJ Bailey. He’s a scorer, he’s an offensive player who knows he has to be better on defense. He wants to understand shot selection a little bit better. He wants to understand when he can create for his teammates a little bit better, because he has that ability, but he’s learning that. I don’t know if I want to say ‘hunt’ his shot, but he’s an offensive player who’s wired to score and that’s not a bad thing at all.”
On if he wants the inside players to be wired that way as well:
“I think John Fulkerson is. I think John Fulkerson is wired to score. He gets that ball and he knows what he wants to do when he gets it. It’s a different game for post players. Post players really have to depend on guards getting them the ball, or being in a position in a much smaller area of space to go to work. I think John is. I think Yves is developing his game and his niche with what he does in the post. I don’t think we’re worried at all about E.J., Olivier or Uros thinking that way, because we need them to do other things to get themselves on the court, which they are very capable of doing. When they have the opportunities to score, we want them to take advantage of finishing and taking shots they are capable of making that come within the offense. But, we don’t need a bunch of guys being wired to score.”
-UT Athletics