Vols turn to Vescovi, Johnson for clutch free throws

Vols turn to Vescovi, Johnson for clutch free throws

By Jimmy Hyams

Santiago Vescovi had been in a shooting slump the past two games.

The sophomore guard hit only five of 15 shots in a loss to Alabama, and he was one of seven against Arkansas as the Vols clung to a late lead Wednesday night.

But with the game in the balance, Vols coach Rick Barnes didn’t care what Vescovi had shot from the field.

He cared what Vescovi shot from the foul line.

That’s why Barnes designed a play for Vescovi to get the ball in the final 15 seconds against Arkansas.

Vescovi caught the in-bounds pass, was fouled with 14.1 seconds left, then calmly sank two free throws to give Tennessee a 3-point lead en route to a 5-point win.

Vescovi is now an impressive 25 of 26 from the foul line in the final four minutes or overtime during his UT career.

“Absolutely, 100 percent,’’ UT associate head coach Mike Schwartz said of UT’s confidence in Vescovi at the foul line late, even if he is struggling from the field.

Schwartz said UT has confidence Vescovi will “make the right play, make big plays, make big shots, make the right decision’’ at key moments. “We absolutely have confidence in him and we were glad he was at the line.’’

Vescovi wasn’t the only Vol to come through at the free throw line against Arkansas.

True freshman Keon Johnson was making 58.3% of his free throws on the season when Arkansas decided to put the unproven guard on the line.

Johnson responded, making six of six in the final 1:46 to help the Vols put away the game.

“It says a lot,’’ Schwartz said. “He’s spent a lot of time in the gym. … He knows that he needs to become a better shooter, a better free throw shooter. … He wanted the ball and he wanted to be at the free throw line.’’

Schwartz said players need to look in the mirror and say “I need to be better here’’ and Johnson has down that.

 

Blocks, steals make the difference

Schwartz felt Tennessee played one of its worst defensive games of the season in the close win against Arkansas.

He pointed to two numbers that bailed out the Vols: 10 steals, nine blocks. That’s a combined 19, compared to a total of four for Arkansas.

“That stat is really important,’’ Schwartz said. “… That was the difference on defense.’’

Schwartz said UT also had 29 deflections – a really high total.

UT defensively has forced eight of nine opponents to turn the ball over on at least 20% of their possessions.

Also, Tennessee leads the nation by blocking 18% of an opponent’s 2-point field goal attempts.

Schwartz said some of the blocks and steals are “fix it plays where guys are making up deficits, making up for errors where we didn’t do our job schematically. Those plays were really big for us and really was the only highlights of our defense that night.’’

 

SEC road woes

SEC teams have won about 50% o their games on the road – including Tennessee’s 20-point win at Missouri Dec. 30.

Schwartz said he thinks that has a lot to do with smaller crowds due to the pandemic.

“You can never underestimate what a home crowd is,’’ Schwartz said. “We have the best one in the country,’’ Schwartz said. “You can’t even come close to trying to fathom the impact of no crowd. Momentum is such a big thing in sports and it takes such a short span to change momentum.

“Our crowds at Thompson-Boling have won us many games.’’

Tennessee has already lost a home SEC game, falling to Alabama last Saturday.

Tennessee visits Texas A&M Saturday at 2 pm


Sponsored by Big Kahuna Wings: The wings that changed it all 

Vols Sign Graduate Transfer Quarterback Hendon Hooker

Vols Sign Graduate Transfer Quarterback Hendon Hooker

Hendon Hooker / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee head football coach Jeremy Pruitt announced the addition of graduate transfer quarterback Hendon Hooker on Friday.

Hooker, a native of Greensboro, N.C., spent the last four seasons at Virginia Tech, playing in 25 games with 15 starts. He completed 197-of-312 passes for 2,894 yards with 22 touchdowns through the air, while rushing for 1,033 yards on 247 carries and 15 touchdowns on the ground.

“We look forward to Hendon joining the Tennessee football family this semester,” Pruitt said. “Hendon is a very talented and dynamic quarterback with multiple years of Power Five experience. He will be a great addition to our quarterback room and make a positive impact with two years of eligibility remaining.”

The 6-foot-4 signal caller played in eight games with seven starts during the 2020 season, finishing 98-of-150 for 1,339 yards and nine touchdowns, while adding 620 yards and nine scores on the ground.

Hooker delivered a standout performance against Louisville, completing a perfect 10-of-10 passes for 183 yards, while rushing for 68 yards and three touchdowns in the victory. He racked up a season-high 373 yards of total offense and four touchdowns against Liberty.

Hooker took the reins of the starting quarterback role in 2019 after redshirting as a true freshman in 2017 and seeing action in six games as a redshirt freshman in 2018. The 2019 season saw Hooker lead Virginia Tech in total offense (1,911 yards), passing yards (1,555) and total touchdowns (13 passing, five rushing).

In his six victories as the Hokies’ starter as a redshirt sophomore, he completed 68-of 108-passes for 1,126 yards with 10 TDs and no interceptions (181.1 rating). His six consecutive wins in his first six starts for Tech tied for the third-longest streak by a Hokies’ starting signal-caller at the beginning of his career dating back to 1999.

Hooker set a program record with 124 consecutive pass attempts without an interception to begin his career. He fired 13 touchdowns to only two interceptions in 2019, good for a 6.50 touchdown-to-interception ratio, a mark that led all ACC players with 150 or more pass attempts.

Only five Power Five quarterbacks with 300 or more pass attempts registered a touchdown-to-interception ratio of 6.50 or better than Hooker in 2019 – Ohio State’s Justin Fields (13.67), Alabama’s Tua Tagovailoa (11.00), LSU’s Joe Burrow (10.0), Oregon State’s Jake Luton (9.33) and Arizona State’s Jayden Daniels (8.50).

Hooker earned his undergraduate degree in public relations from Virginia Tech in December.

-UT Athletics

Chris Young Gets a Special Delivery For a Special Performance

Chris Young Gets a Special Delivery For a Special Performance

Chris Young shared on social media that his CMT Award for Performance of the Year for “Drowning” arrived.

 

Along with the picture of the trophy, Chris added, “First award finally here! Cheers you guys and thank you again!!! CMT Music Awards”

Maybe there’s a musical collaboration award in his future for this track with Kane Brown…check out Chris and Kane on “Famous Friends”

 

 

 

Photo Credit: Jeff Johnson LR

Additional images courtesy of Chris Young

Florida Georgia Line Rolls Out A New Song From Life Rolls On

Florida Georgia Line Rolls Out A New Song From Life Rolls On

Florida Georgia Line‘s Life Rolls On is still a little over a month away from being released on February 12th, but the guys are sharing with fans today one of the new tracks from album!

“New Truck” is all about the excitement of getting a new ride!

FGL’s Tyler Hubbard says “With ‘New Truck’ we were like, ‘Man, this feels good. I just want to ride around in my truck, listen to this, and have a song to jam to.’” Tyler adds, “When any of our buddies get a new truck now, we can send it to them and say, ‘Yo, bump this in the truck!’”

FGL’s Brian Kelley agrees, “It feels really different and fresh. It’s got a fun innocence about it too.”

Check out the lyric video for “New Truck” right here…

Florida Georgia Line’s Life Rolls On — available February 12th — includes “New Truck”, along with their current Top 20 single “Long Live” and their latest number-one (the 17th of their career) “I Love My Country.”

Check out the track list for the rest of the album…
1. “Long Live” – Tyler Hubbard, Brian Kelley, Corey Crowder, David Garcia, Josh Miller
2. “Life Looks Good” – Tyler Hubbard, Brian Kelley, Corey Crowder, Jaren Johnston
3. “Countryside” – Blake Redferrin, Jake Rose, Michael Whitworth
4. “Always Gonna Love You” – Tyler Hubbard, Brian Kelley, Ross Copperman, Corey Crowder, Michael Hardy
5. “I Love My Country” – Kane Brown, Corey Crowder, Chase McGill, Ernest Keith Smith, Ryan Vojtesak, Will Weatherly
6. “Hard To Get To Heaven” – Tyler Hubbard, Brian Kelley, Corey Crowder, Josh Thompson
7. “Long Time Comin’” – Tyler Hubbard, Brian Kelley, Jordan Schmidt, Canaan Smith
8. “Interlude” – Tyler Hubbard, Brian Kelley, Corey Crowder
9. “Ain’t Worried Bout It (Album Version)” – Tyler Hubbard, Brian Kelley, Corey Crowder, Dallas Davidson, Ben Hayslip    
10. “Beer:30” – Tyler Hubbard, Brian Kelley, Corey Crowder, Canaan Smith, Ernest Keith Smith
11. “New Truck”* – Tyler Hubbard, Brian Kelley, Corey Crowder, Jeff Gitelman, Raysean Hairston, Blake Redferrin, Priscilla Renea
12. “Eyes Closed” – Tyler Hubbard, Brian Kelley, Ross Copperman, Corey Crowder, Michael Hardy
13. “Second Guessing (From Songland)”** – Tyler Hubbard, Brian Kelley, Corey Crowder, Ester Dean, Andrew DeRoberts, Shane McAnally, Griffen Palmer, Ben Simonetti, Ryan Tedder, Geoff Warburton
14. “Good To Me” – Tyler Hubbard, Brian Kelley, Corey Crowder, Canaan Smith
15. “U.S. Stronger” – Tyler Hubbard, Brian Kelley
16. “Life Rolls On” – Ben Burgess, Alysa Vanderheym, Emily Weisband

Photo Credit: John Shearer
Additional images courtesy of BMLG Records

Morgan Wallen’s Dangerous: The Double Album is Available Now!

Morgan Wallen’s Dangerous: The Double Album is Available Now!

The sophomore effort from Morgan Wallen is available today!

Dangerous: The Double Album arrives with 30 tracks, and Morgan says each one will give the listener something different, “I felt every song is unique and told a unique story, and I was proud of all of them…so, we just kind of said ‘Why not’.”

Morgan shared that when the idea for the double album was originally brought up, he didn’t think there was anyway he could complete something like that — then 2020’s quarantine hit, and he did have the time.

Morgan thinks that the same time at home that gave him the opportunity to create the 30 songs for Dangerous: The Double Album, is the same thing that will create a demand in fans for new music.

So, having a maximum offering of songs at this moment in time, might be just what fans are searching for, Morgan says “Especially right now, I think people are really eager for music and they need music…I need it. So, I don’t know, it just seemed like the right time to do something like this. It was a lot of work, but it’s been very rewarding so far, and I’m really proud of what we came up with.”

The double album’s title is taken from a very personal song for Morgan, “I wrote that song after I got into a little bit of trouble. We added a love interest story, into the song, just to make it…hopefully relatable to a larger amount of people, but it’s honestly a song that I wrote to myself a couple of weeks later, it was…I felt like I learned some things. I wanted to write it to myself, like a letter almost. That song is unique in that perspective.”

Turning that lesson song into the name of this project just made total sense to him, “It just felt right…in a way, to be able to write a song to myself. It just seemed like this album…what a better way to describe the album too. Lessons I’ve learned, and things I want myself to know so it felt just appropriate to title the whole project that.”

When it comes to lessons learned in life, and lessons learned with his status as a public figure, Morgan is doing the best he can, “I wasn’t raised up to understand how to handle it…I don’t think my mom cultivated me to be famous, I’m just…still just figuring it out. Most of the time I feel like I got my hands on the reigns pretty good.”

Dangerous: The Double Album from Morgan Wallen is available now–featuring 30 tracks which includes his latest smash hit that is climbing the charts…”7 Summers” which you can check out right here.

Photo Courtesy of Big Loud Records/Republic Records

Tenille Arts Thinks It’s Hard To Love Without Limits

Tenille Arts Thinks It’s Hard To Love Without Limits

In her song “Somebody Like That” Tenille Arts sings “the real thing won’t be easy, it may take a while,” which she says has some truth in it, “It’s very hard to love without limits, because I think if you are hurt in the past by certain things, you immediately put up a wall or…for me in a new relationship it always takes me a minute to be like ‘Why do I feel that way? Oh yeah, it’s because this happened in the past.'”

Tenille says it’s not just about dealing with your past when you’re in a relationship, but it’s also working through the other person’s as well, “It’s also trying to figure out, why does that person feel that way. If they get upset about something, you have to dive in past and be like ‘Oh, this is why they feel that way.'”

When pasts collide, Tenille admits, “I think that does put up kind of barriers in everybody.”

“Somebody Like That” lists all the things that can go wrong with love, but then pivots to the promise of uncompromising love, Tenille says “Hopefully you find somebody who can just knock all of those barriers down.”

Check out Tenille’s Top 20 hit “Somebody Like That.”

Photo Credit: Rachel Deeb

UT Takes SEC Opener Over No. 13 Arkansas 88-73

UT Takes SEC Opener Over No. 13 Arkansas 88-73

Rennia Davis – Lady Vols / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee opened SEC play with a victory over No. 13/13 Arkansas at home on Thursday night, winning 88-73 via an impressive 53.6 shooting percentage.

Senior Rennia Davis and junior Rae Burrell paced UT (7-1, 1-0 SEC), each turning in 26 points. Davis recorded her 33rd career double-double with an all-around effort, adding 11 rebounds, five assists and two steals to go along with her season-high point total. Senior Kasiyahna Kushkituah and sophomore Jordan Horston were also in double digits, chipping in 11 each.

UA (10-3, 1-2 SEC) was led by Chelsea Dungee who finished with 30 points and seven rebounds. Destiny Slocum and Amber Ramirez were also in double digits with 17 and 15, respectively.

Marta Suarez put Tennessee on the board first with a layup in the first 30 seconds, but Arkansas wasted no time catching up with Daniels pouring in five straight points and Ramirez topping it off with a layup to put the Razorback up 7-2 just over two minutes into the game. Burrell heated up two minutes later, scoring on back-to-back possessions to pull UT within one at 9-8 by the media break. Dungee hit a layup immediately following the break to stretch UA’s lead to three, but Davis followed it up with a layup of her own, setting off an 8-0 run to put UT up by five with just over a minute left in the quarter. Arkansas closed out the period with five straight points to trail by just one, heading into the second at 18-17.

Both sides came out of the break hot, with each team scoring on its first three possessions. Arkansas hit three straight treys while Tennessee countered with seven points of its own before forcing two stops that Davis and Burrell punctuated with buckets on the other end, putting the Lady Vols up 29-26 by the 7:26 mark. Dungee broke the drought for the Razorbacks, converting on an old-fashioned three-point play and following it up with a single free throw on the next possession to give Arkansas a one-point lead. Burrell converted on a jumper just before the media timeout, and Kushkituah followed it up after the break, fueling an 8-0 run that put the Lady Vols up 37-30 with 3:23 remaining in the half. UA rallied back with five straight points from Dungee and Ramirez, but Burrell responded by knocking down a contested trey, and Davis followed it up with a layup on the next possession to put UT back up by seven with a halftime score of 42-35.

Tennessee carried its momentum through to the second half as Burrell and Tamari Key combined for the first five points of the period, stretching UT’s lead to 12 by the 8:11 mark. Dungee converted on a three-point play and followed it up with a trey on the next possession to single-handedly fuel a 6-2 Arkansas run that made the score 49-41 with seven minutes remaining in the quarter. The teams then traded buckets until Jordan Walker knocked down a trey with just over four minutes remaining. Davis followed it up with a fast-break layup, and Horston capped it off with a block that resulted in three points on the other end, moving the score to 60-44 less than a minute later. Slocum countered with a trey for the Razorbacks, but Kushkituah hit a layup and Burrell came up with the steal and the score on the next possession to stretch the margin to 17. UA rallied back within 12 with one minute to go, but
Burrell and Davis closed out the quarter with a combined six points while holding the Razorbacks to three to send the game into the final stanza with a score of 70-55.

Arkansas kicked off the fourth with five quick points by Slocum and Taylah Thomas, but Davis hit a layup to set off a 6-0 run that put the Lady Vols back up by 16 with 6:27 to play. UT would build its lead to as many as 20 before Arkansas rallied back with a 7-0 run to pull within 13 with just under two minutes to go. Tennessee, however, closed things out with a comfortable advantage, winning 88-73.

Up Next: Tennessee hits the road to face LSU on Sunday in a 1 p.m. CT/2 p.m. ET matchup. The game will be streamed on SECN+.

Dominating the Paint: The Lady Vols out-rebounded the Razorbacks 49-36 and outscored them in the paint, 52-20. Tennessee has now out-rebounded every opponent, besting them by an average of 48.8 to 32.1.

“Re” Making Moves: Rennia Davis’ 26 points moved her past the 1,500-point mark to a total of 1,512 career points, surpassing Daedra Charles (1,495), Michelle Snow (1,497), Gwen Jackson (1,508) and Bashaara Graves (1,509) to move into 20th place on UT’s all-time scoring list. Additionally, she recorded 11 rebounds to push her career total to 803 and become just the 19th Lady Vol to join the 800-rebound club.

Big-Time Bench Play: Tennessee’s bench outscored UA’s bench, 20-0. It’s the seventh time this season UT’s bench has outscored the opponents’ and the first time it has held an opponent’s reserves scoreless.

Defense Limits High-Scoring Razorbacks: Coming into the contest, Arkansas owned a scoring average of 88.9 ppg. while holding opponents to just 70.3 ppg. The Lady Vols basically flipped the script in beating UA, 88-73. The 73-point total was the Razorbacks’ lowest of the season. A big reason for the lower total was UT limiting Arkansas to only 31.9 percent shooting from the field. It was the seventh time in eight games the Lady Vols had held an opponent to 32 percent or lower.

Another Happy Opener: Tennessee improved to 33-6 all-time in SEC openers, including 18-3 at home. It marked the Lady Vols’ seventh straight victory in a league opener, improved UT to 5-0 vs. Arkansas in conference lid-lifters and pushed the Big Orange’s all-time series margin to 31-5 vs. the Razorbacks.

Make It Two Wins Over Top-15 Teams: After defeating No. 15/15 Indiana in Bloomington, 66-58, on Dec. 17, the Lady Vols picked up their second win over a ranked team with the 88-73 triumph over No. 13/13 Arkansas. It marked the first time Tennessee had recorded two or more victories over a ranked opponent in the same season since 2017-18.

-UT Athletics

Ferguson Tabbed Preseason All-American by Perfect Game

Ferguson Tabbed Preseason All-American by Perfect Game

Vols INF-OF Max Ferguson / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee infielder Max Ferguson was named to the Perfect Game/Rawlings Preseason All-America second team this week.

The sophomore infielder led the SEC with nine stolen bases while batting .333, scoring 12 runs and hitting two homers in 13 games played during the shortened 2020 season.

Entering his third season with the Vols, Ferguson has been tabbed one of the top 2021 MLB Draft prospects by D1Baseball.com (No. 24) and Baseball America (No. 48).

During his two seasons on Rocky Top, Ferguson has totaled 32 hits, 23 runs scored, 15 RBI, 27 walks, and 13 stolen bases despite missing a large portion of his freshman season due to injury.

Ferguson was one of 14 SEC players named to Perfect Game’s three preseason All-America teams. The honor marks the first All-America recognition for Ferguson during his career. The Florida native was named to the SEC Spring Academic Honor Roll in 2019 and 2020.

To see Perfect Game’s complete list of All-America teams, click HERE.

Rennia Davis on Wooden Award Midseason List

Rennia Davis on Wooden Award Midseason List

Rennia Davis – Lasy Vols / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — The Los Angeles Athletic Club announced the John R. Wooden Award® presented by Wendy’s® Midseason Top 25 Watch List, and Tennessee’s Rennia Davis is among the players in consideration.

Chosen by a poll of national college basketball experts based on their performances during the 2020-21 season thus far, the list consists of 25 student-athletes who are front-runners for the sport’s most prestigious honor.

The players on the list are considered strong candidates for the 2021 John R. Wooden Award Women’s Player of the Year presented by Wendy’s. Players not chosen to the preseason or midseason list are still eligible for the Wooden Award™ National Ballot.

Davis, a 6-foot-2 senior guard/forward from Jacksonville, Fla., is averaging 12.3 points and 8.1 rebounds per game while shooting 45.6 percent from the field and 76.9 percent from the free-throw line. After a slow start this season, the SEC’s second-leading returning scorer has put up 15.7 ppg. and 10.7 rpg. with a pair of double-doubles over the past three contests. She has hit 59.4 percent (19-32) from the field, 60.0 (3-5) on threes and 100.0 (6-6) on free throws during that span, which included an upset of No. 15 Indiana in Bloomington on Dec. 17.

In the most recent game vs. Lipscomb, Davis helped UT improve to 6-1 on the season with a 19-point, 11-rebound double-double. It marked the 32nd of her career, tying her for sixth in Lady Vol history with hall-of-famer Tamika Catchings.

Davis is on her way to becoming one of only five Lady Vols who rank in the top 10 in both career scoring and rebounding average. The others are Patricia Roberts, Chamique Holdsclaw, Candace Parker and Catchings.  She also is in the process of becoming only the 13th UT woman to average double figures in scoring all four years of her career.

The National Ballot consists of 15 top players who have proven to their universities that they meet or exceed the qualifications of the Wooden Award. Voters will rank in order 10 of those 15 players when voting opens prior to the NCAA Tournament and will allow voters to take into consideration performance during early round games.

The Wooden Award All American Team™ will be announced the week of the “Elite Eight” round of the NCAA Tournament. The winner of the 2021 John R. Wooden Award will be presented by Wendy’s following the NCAA Tournament in April.

About the John R. Wooden Award
Created in 1976, the John R. Wooden Award Program hosts the most prestigious honors in college basketball recognizing the Wooden Award Most Outstanding Player for men and women, the Wooden Award All American Teams for men and women and the annual selection of the Wooden Award Legends of Coaching recipient.

Honorees have proven to their university that they meet or exceed the qualifications of the John R. Wooden Award as set forth by Coach Wooden and the Wooden Award Steering Committee, including making progress towards graduation and maintaining at least a 2.0 cumulative GPA. Previous winners include Larry Bird (’79), Michael Jordan (’84), Tim Duncan (’97), Kevin Durant (’07), Candace Parker (’07; ’08), Maya Moore (’09; ’11), Chiney Ogwumike (’14), Breanna Stewart (’15; ’16) and last year’s recipients, Sabrina Ionescu of Oregon and Obi Toppin of Dayton.

Since its inception, the John R. Wooden Award has contributed nearly one million dollars to the universities’ general scholarship fund in the names of the Wooden Award All American recipients and has sent more than 1,000 underprivileged children to week-long college basketball camps. Additionally, the John R. Wooden Award partners with the Special Olympics Southern California (SOSC) each year to host the Wooden Award Special Olympics Southern California Basketball Tournament. The day-long tournament brings together Special Olympics athletes and Wooden Award All Americans and coaches in attendance. It is hosted at the Los Angeles Athletic Club during the John R. Wooden Award Weekend.

For up-to-date information on the Wooden Award, please go to www.woodenaward.com and follow the Wooden Award on Facebook at www.facebook.com/woodenaward and @WoodenAward on Twitter and Instagram.

-UT Athletics

#9 Vols Rally Past Arkansas, 79-74

#9 Vols Rally Past Arkansas, 79-74

Vols G Keon Johnson / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Nine team blocks and an all-around outing from senior Wooden Award candidate John Fulkerson propelled the ninth-ranked Tennessee basketball team past Arkansas, 79-74, on Wednesday at Thompson-Boling Arena.

Over the course of the night, Tennessee (8-1, 2-1 SEC) committed just five turnovers, while forcing Arkansas (9-2, 1-2 SEC) to turn it over 20 times.

Fulkerson stuffed the stat sheet Wednesday, scoring 16 points, reeling in eight rebounds, blocking three shots and dishing off three assists.

National Defensive Player of the Year candidate Yves Pons blocked another four shot attempts, upping his career total to 110 and moving him into 15th on the program’s career blocks list. After turning down an invite to last year’s NBA Draft Combine and returning to Rocky Top, Pons has opened SEC play with 13 total blocks through the first three league games.

Pons also scored six points and pulled in three rebounds in Wednesday’s win.

Tennessee guards Victor Bailey Jr. and Josiah-Jordan James led UT in scoring, pouring in 17 points each.

James added nine rebounds, three blocks and a steal, while Bailey added a block and a steal to his own stat line.

Freshman wing Keon Johnson scored a season-high 14 points on 4-of-8 shooting and knocked down all six of his attempts from the foul line—all of which came in the contest’s final two minutes.

Arkansas controlled a large majority of the opening half, knocking down 57 percent of its shot attempts to take a 40-33 lead into halftime.

Out of the break, the Vols reeled off a 9-2 run, with Fulkerson scoring seven of those points to knot things up at 42 apiece with just more than 15 minutes remaining.

The next eight minutes were a back-and-forth affair, with the programs trading the lead twice as the Vols took a slim, 61-59 advantage into the night’s final 7:48.

Tennessee used a number of timely defensive stops and 10 consecutive makes from the foul line in the final minutes to seal the five-point victory.

Turn Me Up: Tennessee’s five turnovers were the fewest committed by the Vols this season, and the +15 turnover margin was the team’s best of the season.

Up Next: Tennessee hits the road this weekend for a Saturday afternoon matchup with Texas A&M. The opening tip from Bryan-College Station is slated for 2 p.m. ET on ESPN2.

BOX SCORE  |  HIGHLIGHTS  |  QUOTES  |  JOHNSON ON SEC NETWORK  |  BARNES POSTGAME  |  FULKERSON POSTGAME  |  JOHNSON POSTGAME

-UT Athletics

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