The Grand Ole Opry tallied its 4,954th consecutive Saturday night broadcast on Dec. 12 with a showcase featuring Scotty McCreery, Brett Young, Dennis Quaid and Chris Young.
Earlier in the day on Dec. 12, news broke that Charley Pride, 86, died in Dallas, Texas, due to complications from Covid-19.
Chris Young decided to honor Charley during his Opry performance by singing “Kiss an Angel Good Mornin’.” Penned by Ben Peters, “Kiss an Angel Good Mornin’” became Charley’s signature hit. He released the tune in 1971, scoring his eighth No. 1 single.
The Americana Music Association announced the winners of the 2020 Americana Honors & Awards on Dec. 15.
Winners included The Highwomen (Album of the Year, Song of the Year and Duo/Group of the Year), the late John Prine (Artist of the Year), Black Pumas (Emerging Act of the Year) and Brittany Haas (Instrumentalist of the Year).
John Prine, 73, died on April 7, 2020, from complications of COVID-19.
The ceremony is usually the centerpiece of AmericanaFest, which typically features more than 100 artists performing at different venues throughout Nashville. However, this year’s AmericanaFest was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Next year’s AmericanaFest dates have been set for Sept. 21–26, 2021.
See the full list of winners and nominees below.
Album of the Year
“And It’s Still Alright,” Nathaniel Rateliff, Produced by James Barone, Patrick Meese and Nathaniel Rateliff
“Country Squire,” Tyler Childers, Produced by David Ferguson and Sturgill Simpson “The Highwomen,” The Highwomen, Produced by Dave Cobb WINNER
“Jaime,” Brittany Howard, Produced by Brittany Howard
“While I’m Livin’,” Tanya Tucker, Produced by Brandi Carlile and Shooter Jennings
Artist of the Year
Brandi Carlile
Brittany Howard John Prine WINNER
Tanya Tucker
Yola
Duo/Group of the Year
Black Pumas
Drive-By Truckers The Highwomen WINNER
Buddy & Julie Miller
Our Native Daughters
Emerging Act of the Year Black Pumas WINNER
Katie Pruitt
Aubrie Sellers
Billy Strings
Kelsey Waldon
Instrumentalist of the Year
Ellen Angelico
Annie Clements Brittany Haas WINNER
Zachariah Hickman
Rich Hinman
Song of the Year
“And It’s Still Alright,” Nathaniel Rateliff, Written by Nathaniel Rateliff
“Bring My Flowers Now,” Tanya Tucker, Written by Brandi Carlile, Phil Hanseroth, Tim Hanseroth and Tanya Tucker “Crowded Table,” The Highwomen, Written by Brandi Carlile, Natalie Hemby and Lori McKenna WINNER
“My Love Will Not Change,” Aubrie Sellers featuring Steve Earle, Written by Billy Burnette and Shawn Camp
“Stay High,” Brittany Howard, Written by Brittany Howard
“Thoughts and Prayers,” Drive-By Truckers, Written by Patterson Hood
Sam Hunt has been indicted by a Davidson County (Tennessee) grand jury to face charges of DUI and an open container violation. Sam was arrested for driving under the influence and having an open container in Nashville on Nov. 21, 2019.
The indictment means there is probable cause to charge Sam with a crime(s). Court records note that the case has been transferred to Criminal Court.
According to the arrest warrant, police were notified that a driver was traveling the wrong way on a Nashville road. Officers located the vehicle going the wrong way and pulled the car over. The driver, identified as Sam Hunt, had bloodshot eyes and smelled of alcohol. A field sobriety test was administered. Sam had a blood alcohol content of .173. The legal limit in Tennessee is below .08.
Sam released a statement via Twitter on Nov. 22, 2019, saying: “Wednesday night I decided to drive myself home after drinking at a friend’s show in downtown Nashville. It was a poor and selfish decision and I apologize to everyone who was unknowingly put at risk and let down by it. It won’t happen again.”
Jimmie Allen will help ring in 2021 as part of Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve event in New York’s Times Square on Dec. 31.
Jimmie will be joined by artists Billy Porter, Cyndi Lauper and headliner Jennifer Lopez.
Ryan Seacrest will host the five-plus-hour event from New York City, while Lucy Hale and Billy Porter will handle emcee duties in NYC, and Ciara will call the shots from Hollywood. This year’s broadcast event is closed to the public
In 2018, Jimmie released his debut album, Mercury Lane, which features No. 1 hits “Best Shot” and “Make Me Want To.” Jimmie released a new collaborative EP, Bettie James, in July 2020. The seven-song EP features a host of guest artists, including Brad Paisley, Charley Pride, Darius Rucker, Mickey Guyton, Nelly, Noah Cyrus, The Oak Ridge Boys, Rita Wilson, Tauren Wells and Tim McGraw.
Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve begins live from New York City at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.
Garth Brooks stopped by The Kelly Clarkson Show on Dec. 14 to chat with the titular host and perform a few songs, including his new single, “Shallow.”
The new single, which Garth duets with wife Trisha Yearwood, is featured on his new album, Fun. However, Kelly Clarkson filled in for Trisha—since she was not in attendance on Monday’s show—as Garth sang and provided guitar accompaniment.
Penned by Lady Gaga, Andrew Wyatt, Anthony Rossomando and Mark Ronson for the 2018 movie, A Star is Born, “Shallow” was recorded as a duet by Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper. The tune garnered widespread critical acclaim and netted numerous awards.
Before recording the song for Fun, Garth and Trisha performed “Shallow” during his Facebook Live series, Inside Studio G, in March, with an encore during their CBS TV special a few days later on April 1.
Watch Garth and Kelly sing “Shallow” below.
photos: Kelly Clarkson by Arroyo/O\’Connor, AFF-USA.com; Garth Brooks by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com
Gabby Barrett’s “I Hope” is No. 1 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart (streaming, sales and airplay-based) for the 20th week, which is the longest run by a solo female artist in the history of the chart.
“I Hope” surpassed Maren Morris’ “The Bones,” which reigned for 19 weeks atop the chart. The longest run on the Hot Country Songs chart is Bebe Rexha’s “Meant to Be,” featuring Florida Georgia Line, which spent 50 weeks at No. 1 in 2017-2018.
Penned by Gabby, Zachary Kale and Jon Nite, “I Hope” is featured on Gabby’s 2020 debut album, Goldmine. “I Hope” topped the Billboard Country Airplay chart in April.
Gabby’s “I Hope” won the Breakthrough Video of the Year at the 2020 CMT Music Awards, while also garnering nominations at the 2020 CMA Awards, ACM Awards and American Music Awards. “I Hope” is also the No. 1 song on Billboard’s 2020 Year-End charts for Hot Country Songs, Country Digital Song Sales and Country Streaming Songs.
Listen to Gabby’s “I Hope,” featuring Charlie Puth.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – The Tennessee women’s basketball team has added a road game at Indiana to its schedule this week.
The Lady Vols (3-1) and 15th-ranked Hoosiers (2-1) will meet in a 4 p.m. ET contest on Thursday at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall in Bloomington. The game will be streamed live on Big Ten Network Plus.
UT and Indiana have played only one time previously, meeting in the Communiplex Classic in Cincinnati, Ohio, on Nov. 27, 1987. No. 1/3 Tennessee cruised to a 91-52 victory on that occasion. The Lady Vols carry a 79-14 all-time record vs. current members of the Big Ten Conference into Thursday’s contest.
Indiana is directed by head coach Teri Moren, who is 129-75 in her seventh season with the Hoosiers and has guided them to five-straight 20-win campaigns. LVFL Briana (Bass) Schomaeker is the director of player development for IU.
The Hoosiers, who have been picked for the first time ever to win the Big Ten, return four starters and nine total letterwinners from a 2019-20 squad that posted a 24-8 overall record and 13-5 league mark to place fourth. The squad is led by a trio of players scoring in double figures, including 6-3 sophomore forward McKenzie Holmes (18.3 ppg.), 6-0 junior guard Grace Berger (17.0 ppg.) and 5-11 senior guard Ali Patberg (12.7 ppg.).Berger and Patberg were selected by the coaches and media to the Preseason All-Big Ten Team.
IU STATEMENT ABOUT FAN ATTENDANCE
Consistent with IU Athletics’ ongoing efforts to protect the health and safety of students, coaches, staff, spectators and the local community, all men’s and women’s basketball games scheduled at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall will be played without fans indefinitely. IU Athletics’ decision is in response to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and is consistent with what has transpired on all Big Ten campuses during the 2020 football season.
IU Athletics will continue to work with local and state health officials, the Big Ten and campus leadership to determine if and when fans will be permitted to attend men’s and women’s basketball games at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall during the 2020-21 season.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – The 10th-ranked Tennessee basketball team hits the floor for a Tuesday night bout with Appalachian State. Tipoff from Thompson-Boling Arena is slated for 7 p.m. ET on SEC Network.
Fans can catch Tuesday’s action on SEC Network and online through WatchESPN. WatchESPN can be accessed through the ESPN App, or online at espn.com/watch. Tom Hart 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, the Vols battled past Cincinnati, 65-56, in a tightly contested defensive affair. UT was led by senior John Fulkerson who poured in a game-high 15 points and reeled in a career-high-tying 12 rebounds, with four of them coming on the offensive glass.
The two main differences Saturday came on the boards and at the charity stripe. Tennessee out rebounded Cincinnati 45-34 overall, with a punishing 14-6 ledger on the offensive side of the floor. The Vols also went 25-30 from the line, while the Bearcats attempted just seven free throws the entire game.
A victory would be the Vols 399th inside Thompson-Boling Arena, while also improving head coach Rick Barnes‘ record to 31-0 against current members of the Sun Belt Conference.
Up next, Tennessee returns home for its fourth consecutive game to take on in-state foe Tennessee Tech on Friday night. The opening tip is scheduled for 7 p.m. ET on SEC Network+.
THE SERIES
• Tennessee is 5-0 all-time against Appalachian State, dating to 1986. All five meetings took place in Knoxville.
• The most recent meeting took place in year two of the Barnes era, with the Vols winning a shootout, 103-94, on Nov. 15, 2016. Current Vols staffer Bryan Lentz was then an assistant coach with App State.
• Another UT staffer, I.J. Poole, spent two seasons on staff at App State. He was the director of basketball operations in 2017-18 before being promoted to assistant coach for the 2018-19 campaign.
• Vols head coach Rick Barnes is a perfect 30-0 against Sun Belt opposition.
A WIN WOULD…
• Give Tennessee 399 wins at Thompson-Boling Arena.
LAYUP LINES
• Tennessee has won 77 percent of its games a ranked team during the Barnes era (57-17). The Vols are 12th in this week’s AP poll.
• App State head coach Dustin Kerns hails from Kingsport, and his coaching résumé yields a brief stint on Rocky Top. Kerns spent the 2003-04 season at Tennessee as a graduate assistant under then-head coach Buzz Peterson. Interestingly, Peterson had two stints as head coach at App State.
• A preseason media poll predicted Tennessee to win this year’s SEC championship.
• Seniors John Fulkerson and Yves Pons were both named to the Wooden Award preseason top-50 watch list. Pons also earned a spot on the preseason watch list for the Naismith Trophy College Player of the Year.
• Tennessee’s starting lineup this season has featured five left-handers.
DEFENSE WINS
• According to KenPom, the Vols rank fourth nationally and first in the SEC in adjusted defensive efficiency, allowing 86.8 points per 100 possessions so far this season.
• Tennessee also ranks among the NCAA leaders in scoring defense, allowing just 51.5 points per game.
• The Vols are forcing 20 turnovers per game while converting those turnovers into 15.0 points per game. Tennessee’s turnover margin stands at +7.0.
• The Vols’ .339 shooting percentage ranks 303rd nationally. Among teams that have played multiple games and are ranked 300 or worse in field-goal percentage, Tennessee is the lone undefeated team. That is what stellar defense makes possible.
• Reigning SEC Defensive Player of the Year Yves Pons has 75 blocks in his last 33 games.
ABOUT APPALACHIAN STATE
• Appalachian State comes to Knoxville with a 4-1 record, fresh off back-to-back victories over North Carolina Wesleyan (81-57) and at Charlotte (61-57).
• Second-year head coach Dustin Kerns is coming off a year in which he made an instant impact, increasing the Mountaineers’ win total by seven from 2018-19, along with a four-place jump in the Sun Belt, moving from 10th to sixth.
• One of three returning starters from last season’s team, Adrian Delph, has been the team’s top scorer, pouring in 13.6 points per contest. Delph scored a career-high-tying 21 points in App State’s victory over Charlotte Friday night. He has also been active on the defensive end, tallying at least one block in each of the Mountaineers’ four victories.
• Sophomore forward Kendall Lewis has also taken huge strides already in 2020-21. Last season, he was the squad’s fifth-leading scorer at just more than seven points per game. This year, he is scoring at a clip of 11.8 points per game and has been solid on the boards, pulling in a team-leading 5.4 rebounds per game.
• 2020 first-team All-Sun Belt honoree and App State’s 2019-20 leading scorer, Justin Forrest, is off to a bit of a slow start in his senior campaign but is still expected to be a key contributor for the Mountaineers this season. Last year, Forrest averaged 17.3 points and 2.8 helpers per game.
• Located in the Blue Ridge Mountains of northwestern North Carolina, Appalachian State sits at one of the highest elevations of any university in the United States east of the Mississippi River—3,333 feet.
LAST MEETING WITH APP STATE
• Tennessee used a balanced attack to race past Appalachian State, 103-94, on Nov. 15, 2016, at Thompson-Boling Arena for its first victory of the 2016-17 season.
• Robert Hubbs III led six players in double figures with 16 points, as the Volunteers eclipsed the century mark in points for the first time since a 104-84 win against Memphis in 2011.
• Redshirt freshman guard Lamonté Turner scored 13 of his then-career-high 15 points in the second half and was one of five UT players to set career-highs in scoring. UT shot 56 percent (35-of-63) from the floor, including a 42 percent (8-of-19) clip from long distance.
• The Big Orange also passed the ball well, recording 26 assists, their most since 2009.
• Freshman point guard Jordan Bone led the Vols with eight assists while also chipping in seven points. Kyle Alexander also had a big game for UT, leading the team with seven rebounds and scoring a then-career-high 13 points.
• Freshman guard and Knoxville native Jordan Bowden made his first career start and led the Vols with 12 points at the break on 4-of-7 shooting. All four of Bowden’s made field goals came from beyond the arc, as UT shot 50 percent (6-of-12) from 3-point range in the first half.
• App State outscored the Vols, 56-53, in the second half. The Mountaineers went on a 23-7 run to cut the lead to seven with less than a minute to play before UT iced the game at the free-throw line. App State’s Ronshad Shabazz and Isaac Johnson led all scorers with 21 points.
FORMER UT HEAD COACH PETERSON SPENT TIME IN BOONE
• Buzz Peterson, who was Tennessee’s head coach from 2001-05, served as head coach at Appalachian State prior to his tenure on Rocky Top and again in 2009-10.
• Peterson guided the Mountaineers to three Southern Conference division titles in four years before spending one season as head coach at Tulsa. Tennessee then hired the Asheville, North Carolina, native following Jerry Green’s departure following the 2000-01 campaign. He returned to Boone for a second head coaching stint there for the 2009-10 season.
• Peterson is now the assistant GM of the NBA’s Charlotte Hornets.
LITTLE RICKY FROM HICKORY
• A native of Hickory, North Carolina, Rick Barnes has lined Tennessee’s schedule with several opponents from his home state.
• Barnes’ Vols have played 10 games against North Carolina-based schools. The Big Orange are 8-2 vs. teams from his native state.
• And for the sixth straight season, Barnes’ Tennessee roster includes at least one player from North Carolina (Jaden Springer and Kent Gilbert this year).
THESE VOLS RELENTLESS ON D
• This Tennessee squad has a genuine passion for playing elite team defense. The Vols’ love of getting stops is reflected in its national defensive rankings.
•Tennessee closed out the Cincinnati win on Saturday with a 14-3 run. After UC took a 53-51 lead with 6:14 to play, the Vols forced four late turnovers and held the Bearcats to just three points the rest of the way.
• Cincinnati head coach John Brannen had this to say after the game on Dec. 12: “I’ve seen what I could call two great defensive teams in my career. The Texas Tech team that made national championship game two years ago, and potentially this (Tennessee) team.”
VOLS’ DEPTH A WEAPON
• The stars have aligned for the Vols, as Rick Barnes‘ boasts the deepest roster of his Tennessee tenure during a year in which COVID-19 could sideline players at any time.
• 10 Vols saw action in the season-opener vs. Colorado, and nine of them scored. Against Cincinnati, eight Vols played double-digit minutes—with only one logging 30+ minutes (Fulkerson).
Sophomore point guard Santiago Vescovi on Dec. 8: “It feels really different with the depth we have in the team right now (compared to last year), knowing that you can go 100 percent every possession on offense or defense and know that the guy coming in will give their all and play at a high level.”
VESCOVI CLUTCH AT THE FREE-THROW LINE IN CRUNCH TIME
• Sophomore guard Santiago Vescovi has proven to deliver at the free-throw line in crunch time for the Vols.
• For his career, Vescovi is 23 of 24 from the foul line in the final four minutes of regulation and all of overtime. That’s a near-automatic percentage of .958.
• Vescovi has yet to miss at the stripe this season, with all four of his attempts coming in the final four minutes of regulation.
Tennessee basketball head coach Rick Barnes sat down with the media over Zoom on Monday afternoon to recap the Vols opening contests against Cincinnati and Colorado and to preview the next few weeks of action.
On how important the next four games are, to establish a rotation:
“I think it’s important, and obviously we’re just hoping we can get them in. I do think the more we can play right now—before the last game we talked about how long it seemed like we had practiced, how long it had been since we played, so it’s going to be important. These minutes are going to be very important, and the guys have to understand that it’s about us getting better and having great respect for our opponent. But those minutes aren’t going to be given to anybody. They’re going to be minutes that are earned starting in practice. That’s how we’re going to move forward.”
On what attributes are valuable in a sixth man:
“Once you go to that player, they elevate everything. They bring an energy to the court. You know they’re going to make something happen, whether it’s offensively or defensively. Versatility, and again often times that’s the guy that’s the quote un quote sixth man. He’s a guy that at the end of the game is going to finish the game for you as a starter because of the fact that he can do so many things and make so many things happen for you.”
On what makes Jaden Springer and Keon Johnson good sixth and seventh men:
“Again, we’ve talked about it, and we don’t care who starts. I think our lineup will change, because we’re going to keep basing it on performance. We really are still trying to figure out how to get the rotation the right way where everybody can be the most effective. When you look at what’s going on with the minutes, we’re more concerned about that. Guys keeping it between 26 to 28 minutes. To answer your question about those two guys, once they figure out everything—do they know everything about our scheme offensively and defensively? They don’t, and that’s something that they’re going to have to do. I mentioned that they have been hurt more so by the stops and starts than anybody. It’s not that we’re doing a whole lot of different things than we’ve done in the past. It’s something that most of the older guys have seen so they have great recall with it. The younger guys are still learning the base package. I do think their minutes will go up. I don’t think there is any question about that. I can see them starting at one point. It can be both of them or one of them. What we’ve harped on with these guys is just do your job when you go in the game. Players, I’ve always believed they will determine who’s going to be there. Who’s going to play the minutes? They’re going to determine who’s going to finish the game, and I think these next couple of games before we get into the conference are critical to these guys to understand, regardless of who we’re playing, it’s about us and each and everybody doing their job so we can get to the point where we know what we’re going to get night in and night out.”
On what he has liked the most about his team after the first two games:
“I think our defensive effort has been good. We’ve played two really good basketball teams who do some really good schemes, and they’ve got players. We know, because it’s no different than what we’ve done in the past. We play defense initially the way we should, and we lock in with our scouting report. We’re going to force teams into driving the ball. Then, we’ve got to be able to guard whoever’s in front of us. You stay in front of them. We can’t let them get on our hips and get to the rim. Through the first two games, I think we’ve done a good job for the most part doing what we’ve asked them to do. We talked a lot after the Colorado game, because Colorado started driving the ball. We said Cincinnati is going to drive it and they did. Offensively, we want to get fouled. We are a strong team. We are an athletic team. We’ve got a nice shooting percentage, but in-game I still think that some of those guys need to see it go through the basket a couple of times, and they’ll settle down that way. On nights when we don’t shoot the ball well, we proved the other night that we can still win a basketball game against a high-level team by doing it different ways. When it all comes together is what we’re working for, but if not, we still want to be a better rebounding team and a consistent rebounding team. We rebounded the ball great the other night. That has got to be a major emphasis. Every single night we’ve got to rebound the ball, we’ve got to take care of the ball. I mentioned the other night; the Colorado turnovers didn’t hurt us. The other night, our turnovers hurt us. Those are the plays that we have to eliminate. So, we need to take care of the ball better. It’s going to help us with our defense. Just take good shots. Take the shots that we practice, and I’m confident and I want them to shoot them whether they’re going in or not.”
On how important these next two weeks are for the guys getting some confidence behind Yves Pons and John Fulkerson:
“These guys want playing time. They want to play, and every day in practice the get a chance to do that. The games are important, but the bottom line is they aren’t going to get in the game if they don’t get it done in practice. I’ve told them that over and over. If they want a chance to have more rope, they have to go in a game and do what we see them do in practice. The word is consistency. We want consistency. One of the last things I tell them every day, every game, is we do what we practice. Simply do what we practice, and we’re going to be okay. If guys don’t practice well, they’re probably not going to get a chance to play as much as they would like to play. Over these next couple of games, I’d like to get guys minutes, but again those minutes aren’t going to be given out. They’re going to be earned. If a guy goes into a game and right off the bat, he makes a mistake that we see him make over and over again in practice, he won’t get much of a chance, because he hasn’t earned it. We don’t want anybody to think they have a sense of entitlement. Our team works hard. They play hard. I think they like direct, honest answers. They want to know where they stand, and the way I’m talking to you is the way I’m going to talk to them. If they want those minutes, they’re going to have to earn them.”
On Davonte Gaines and what he must do in practice to earn minutes in game
“Going back to the word consistency. You know? What are we going to get? Does he understand the scheme with everything we do? Shooting the ball. We just know what they’re going to do, and it goes back to the consistency. For the guys that you haven’t seen play, that’s the word that I would put with all of them, consistency. The guys that are playing have shown more of a consistent type performance day-in and day-out where we have an idea and that’s not to say they’re perfect. Guys that probably get their names called too much in practice for not doing the right thing. There’s not a guy this team that we don’t believe in that we don’t think can get better. Some guys want to be stubborn. Some guys want to keep fighting it and if they keep fighting the system, then they won’t play. I mean it’s plain and simple. We have a proven formula here that we believe in and the quicker guys buy into it, the quicker they will play.”
On where Santiago Vescovi has made strides
“I think the big thing with him is that he’s deceptive. I think when you look at certain guys on the team, they get down and guard that’s impressive but he’s a very deceptive and very intelligent defender. Same thing offensively. Terrific with pass fakes, ball fakes. Quicker than you think. He understands angles better than most guys, but defensively again, he understands the mental preparation, he understands what he needs to do. He does his work early. Very clever in the gaps. He’s in that gap and you think he’s kind of just there but he’s playing, he’s active in the gaps most of the time. Offensively he has a solid idea of what we are trying to get done. What is good about him, I think as time goes on, it’s going to give him a chance to play off the ball too which I think will help him because he’s so good with moving without the ball. It’s more that we can get guys settled in, handling the ball where you can get him away from it is going to help him add to his game.”
On Yves Pons and his production in the first few games of the season
“Probably pressing a little bit because you know again Yves is one of those guys. He’s a perfectionist. he puts so much time into the game and he works at it. I don’t think he can work any harder to be quite frank. He’ll make it, he’ll get it going. You guys have watched him over time. He rebounded well the first game. I didn’t think he had the same mindset rebounding in the second game as he needs to. Maybe that’s pressing a little bit, because he went one-for-nine in the first game, but he’ll be fine. We don’t worry about Yves because he’s going to give you everything he’s got and there’s not a better fix it guy in the country. I mean it’s things that he cleans up and the things that he does defensively a lot of people don’t notice that are really valuable to our team.”
On Tennessee’s fast break offense
“Well our fast break offense has been good. It can be a whole lot better. It’s important because we want to be an attack team. We want play really good defense and get out and run. Like any team in the country we want to get as many opportunities in the open court as we can. Try to have a place of advantage basketball where we got numbers based on the other team and we’ve been ok with it. We’ve shown some good signs, but there’s so much more that comes with our transition game than we’ve shown. Again, it’s a matter of getting everybody to understand it, but we wanted to advance it as quick as we can. We love to get it down the floor as quick as we can but we want to play out of it. If not, we want to be able to flow where it looks like they were. We just don’t want to do a lot of standing around. The last two games we’ve had to go up against zone more than we probably thought. Certainly, in the first game. We’ve spent some time with it today because Appalachian State will do a little three-quarter court 1-2-2 press back to a 2-3 zone. We expect to see that and we just got to continue to work our zone offense but the fast break is so important to us. Teams are going to work to take it away from us. There’s no doubt about it but we still think we can get it and we certainly have to fight to get it and will continue to do that.”
On shot selections against a zone defense and thoughts on EJ Anosike
“Well, our first game we had open shots against Colorado in the zone. Not exactly in the spot of the floor you know like. Instead of 15-foot jumpers, we want that 8-to-10-foot jumper against the middle of the zone, but they weren’t bad shots. They were shots that guys practice. My biggest problem is guys turning down good shots and then having to settle for one that’s not as good. That’s what we’ve talked about. When we’re open, we want to shoot the ball. Again, I think that’s maybe settling here as the season gets started. E.J. is going to bring the energy. He’s a guy that’s terrific coming off the bench. You know he’s going to rebound; you know he’s going to work hard; he’s going to work as hard as he can on both ends to do things the right way. He’s going to try to make the right plays on the defensive end and he had a couple mistakes on rotations the other night defensively, but it was all the cause of his great effort. Trying to help his teammate, try to make the next play. Offensively, I think he’ll continue to figure how to play at a different level now with the taller players, bigger players and he probably is used to playing against all along. He’s going to keep getting better and better just because he works so hard at it and a guy that when he comes in the game, we have a pretty good idea what we know he’s going to bring to us.”
On Tennessee becoming a top ranked team in the country
“Well I don’t know that rankings matter right now, I don’t. We’ve played two games and other teams have played five, six games. It’s not something we talk about. We talk about getting better. All I will say about rankings is when you have a number in front of your name, it becomes an even bigger game for your opponent because they have a chance to build a resume with it. With that said, our whole philosophy is we’re going to talk about getting better and what do we need to do to improve in every area, every player gets better. Notoriety for our program. Is great notoriety for our players. I think they understand if you’re going to be that kind of opponent you better be ready to bring it every single night and that’s what helps you when you do have that ranking, because if you aren’t tough enough mentally and physically to be ready to play every single night, you’re going to get beat. It’s plain and simple, whether you’ve got a number there or not, but I think the great thing about being a ranked team is to see how guys handle it when you know people are going to give you their best shots night-in and night-out.”
On what E.J. Anosike needs to adjust on offense when going against the better competition:
“One, he needs to slow down a little bit and second, he needs to go back to fighting for his space on the floor to get it where he wants it. He’s going to have to play above the rim. I’m sure he’s used to throwing his body into people, knocking them off and then finishing. He can finish, he’s just got to adjust. It’s a more physical game—and he’s not afraid to be physical, don’t get me wrong, but he’s being guarded in ways he’s never been guarded before night in and night out. I would say for all of those post guys with the exception of Fulky probably, is all about doing your work early. Knowing where you want the ball on the floor. Getting your feet organized and ready to play when you catch the ball as opposed to just standing there wondering what’s next. I think for E.J., Olivier, Uros and all of those guys need to understand that if they get themselves ready to play, especially with the guard penetration we’re getting right now, they’re going to get to do a lot of different things with the ball, because the ball will be passed to them. But, they’ve got to get their feet organized and those three guys are still learning how to do that at a consistent level.”
On if the veterans struggle to find their roles much like the new guys do:
“Can it be tough? Yeah, but I think all of us early in the year are trying to figure it out. But, when you have a group of unselfish guys like we have—I think our guys really have great respect for the work we put into our program. I think they understand that there’s no one that doesn’t work hard. Are their guys that work harder? Absolutely. Are there guys that put more time in than others? Absolutely. For the older guys, the more versatile they become, the more effective they become for you. I’ve watched Josiah now where he’s gotten to the point where he can play pretty much every position on the floor now, which is going to help him in so many different ways. Is he going to play a bit of a different role? He’s going to do a little bit of everything. Last year he didn’t have the advantage of having someone coming in when things weren’t going well. For the most part, he had to get those lessons taught the hard way. I don’t think we have a team that we have to do that with this year, but I do know that he’s going to buy into whatever we need him to do. We know E.J. will as well. We need to get Olivier going to the point—we know how good he can be and he hasn’t figured it out yet. The last two days he’s been better, but a big part of it is that when you’re coaching guys and you ask about roles and things like that, it all goes back to buying into the program and what you have to do. When Grant Williams started out, we went through all of the same things with him until he realized that he had to do certain things a certain way and once you get a few things down, then you can build on it. It still goes back to that word consistency. No matter what role guys are playing in, they have to show consistency to where they understand what we’re trying to accomplish as a team every possession. We have a saying that ‘Every possession matters.’ The guys that play the most minutes understand that simple fact that every possession matters both offensively and defensively.”
On how he can evaluate Keon Johnson and Jaden Springer:
“I think sometimes as coaches we can overthink it. Going into it, Colorado is a tough opener. We knew it was going to be a high level, high stakes game. You don’t want to put those guys in a position where they don’t have success early, because you don’t want to lose them for a week with them keeping it in the back of their minds. I think what we learned about those guys is that they have short memories which is a good thing and the second thing is just the second game. You have to look at me for this, but I think we should have subbed earlier. I knew going into the game the other night against Cincinnati that we were going to get two or three guys in before the 16-minute mark. I think you’ll see that pattern continuing. Unless I change my mind from now until tomorrow we’ll start the same way, but that doesn’t mean that the game after that we won’t start another way and the game after that another way. We’re still searching through some of these things. Again, that was my decision during the first game not necessarily to baby them, but just to try to make sure—we didn’t want to get them on the floor together. We wanted to get some young guys with older guys. Then, the other night we just said, ‘Hey, we’ll put two guys out there at one time and go.’ And try to get three guys in before the 16-minute mark. Normally that means Fulkerson will come out. We’re going to try to use the timeouts. We’ll get him out at the 16:30 or 16:45 mark and let him use that and the timeout and get him back in and work him down like that. The whole thing is so we can be the freshest and most competitive team we can be in the last six minutes of the game. We don’t want to be tired. We want to be running full speed then. We want to be guarding at a high level then and if we want to do that, we need to manage the minutes in the first half and the first part of the second half.”
On what he’s seen from Appalachian State during scouting:
“They had a really nice win the other night at Charlotte. They’re a really well coached team. I think predominately want to play man-to-man. Even though I mentioned that they have a little three-quarter court press that goes back to a 2-3 zone, which I could see that coming at some point in time. We worked on it today. I think we’ll be better against the zone. It’s also not like we’ve been bad against them. We’ve won two games against two teams that do a pretty good job with their zone defense. I love their offense. They open it up. Sometimes they’ll have a five-out type of spread with a motion offense where they like to play off the elbows. They do some nice scissor actions where they can do some good things. They have two guards that can shoot the ball really well and they’ve got a guy they think they can go through like we do with Fulkerson. Again, they’re a really well coached team and like I said they’re coming off a really nice road win at Charlotte.”
Tennessee men’s basketball head coach Rick Barnes spoke with the media after the Vols first two games of the season and ahead of Tuesday’s home game vs. App. St.