Here are interviews from the Big Orange Connect Event hosted by Bob Kesling presented by the University of Tennessee Athletics Department.

Darius Rucker performed a cover of Randy Travis’ “Forever and Ever, Amen” on CMT Celebrates Our Heroes: An Artists of the Year Special on June 3.
Penned by Paul Overstreet and Don Schlitz, “Forever and Ever, Amen” is featured on Randy’s 1987 sophomore album, Always & Forever. Randy scored a No. 1 single with tune in June 1987.
Watch Darius’ performance below.
photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com
Thomas Rhett performed his new single, “Be a Light,” on CMT Celebrates Our Heroes: An Artists of the Year Special on June 3.
Thomas Rhett co-penned the song with Josh Miller, Josh Thompson and Matt Dragstrem. TR and the song’s collaborators have been donating all proceeds from “Be a Light” to the MusiCares COVID-19 Relief Fund, which was created by The Recording Academy to help people in the music industry affected by the coronavirus disease outbreak and subsequent cancellation of music events.
The studio version of the tune, which also features Reba McEntire, Lady Antebellum’s Hillary Scott, Chris Tomlin and Keith Urban, is currently No. 19 on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart after nine weeks.
“I wrote ‘Be A Light’ last year as a way to process negativity and sadness I was seeing in the world,” said Thomas Rhett in March. “The voices who join me on this track are some of the brightest lights I know. I hope this song serves as a reminder that we are all in this together.”
Watch TR’s performance of “Be a Light” below.
photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com
UT Athletics has shared a wonderful short video of the refections of legendary University of Tennessee player and coach Johnny Majors, who passed away Wednesday at the age of 85. Watch that below.
Read the statement from the Majors family here. We also have so many special guests joining our station shows to reflect on the life and career of Johnny Majors. Find those podcasts here.
Tennessee football legend Johnny Majors passed away early Wednesday in Knoxville. He was 85.
A 1987 inductee of the National Football Foundation and College Football Hall of Fame, John Terrill (Johnny) Majors played for the Volunteers from 1954-56 and later served as Tennessee’s head football coach from 1977-92.
Majors’ collegiate playing career alone places his among the pantheon of Tennessee’s all-time greats. His No. 45 was retired by his alma mater in 2012—one of only eight to earn that distinction.
Called Johnny “Drum” Majors during his playing days, he did it all for the Vols as a collegian—running, passing, kicking and defending. When they call the roll of the game’s great single-wing tailbacks, Majors stands at or near the top of the list.
A native of Lynchburg, Tennessee, and a graduate of Huntland High School, Majors finished his Tennessee playing career with 1,622 rushing yards and 15 touchdowns on 387 carries while also completing 54.1 percent of his passes (80 for 148) for 1,135 yards and 11 scores. He rushed for 549 yards and seven touchdowns on 108 carries in 1956.
Tennessee was 20-10-1 during his time as a Vol. Majors returned 36 punts for a 12.2-yard average and one touchdown in his career along with 15 kickoff returns for a 22.9-yard average. Majors also intercepted two passes at Tennessee and punted 83 times for a 39.1-yard average.
He earned both SEC Player of the Year honors and All-SEC selection at tailback twice, in 1955 and 1956. A unanimous All-American under coach Bowden Wyatt in 1956, he finished second in the Heisman Trophy balloting after leading the Vols to a 10-1 record, an appearance in the Sugar Bowl and a final national ranking of No. 2.
Majors was named to the Quarter-Century All-SEC team (1950-74) at running back, along with LSU’s Billy Cannon and Alabama’s Johnny Musso. When his Tennessee playing career ended, he ranked in the SEC’s all-time top 10 in total offense (2,757) and rushing (1,622) and was the league’s single-season record holder for completion percentage (61.0 percent in 1956).
The 1957 UT College of Education graduate was selected as Tennessee’s SEC Football Legend in 2002.
“I didn’t know I was a legend,” Majors said at that time. “Whatever my biography may say is good, I know why it happened… I had great support from home, unconditional love from my parents, my siblings, my wife, Mary Lynn, and children.
“I had exceptional coaching as a player from my father, Shirley Majors, and from Harvey Robinson and Bowden Wyatt, and their staffs. No man could have had a better mother than I did in Elizabeth Majors. I had special teammates who were helpful in me being as effective as I might have been. I had no excuses to fail based on the people I just mentioned whatever favorable accomplishments there might have been. I’m not the one to judge that.”
Majors was an assistant coach at Tennessee and Mississippi State before beginning a head coaching career that saw him rebuild programs at Iowa State, Pittsburgh, Tennessee and back to Pittsburgh. He won a national championship at Pitt in 1976. Majors finished with a record of 185-137-10 in 29 seasons of coaching.
Twenty-one years after his playing days were over, Majors came marching home to rebuild Tennessee’s football fortunes, much the way he did at Iowa State and Pittsburgh, and the results indicated that the coaches’ son from Huntland (Franklin County) had not lost his touch. He was 116-62-6 as head coach at Tennessee, with three conference championships (1985, 1989 and 1990) and 12 bowl appearances. He produced 15 All-America selections.
There were more great moments on Majors’ resume than could be recounted in a series of stories. As a player, he was involved in the classic Tennessee-Georgia Tech game in 1956, voted the second greatest game of all time by the Associated Press a few years later. Majors had the key pass completion to Buddy Cruze and sent Tommy Bronson hurdling the line for the game’s only score at the north end of Grant Field in Atlanta.
His 1991 Tennessee team came back from what appeared to be certain defeat in 1991 at Notre Dame, rallying from a 31-7 halftime deficit to take a 35-34 decision. His 1985 team defeated Miami in the Sugar Bowl, 35-7, a game Vol fans remember fondly to this day.
“I can safely say that playing for Johnny Majors was one of the greatest experiences of my life,” VFL and NFL television analyst Charles Davis, a member of UT’s 1985 team, said. “I have literally thought about him in some form or fashion every single day of my life since the first day I got to Tennessee. You’ll never be able to say the word ‘Tennessee’ without the name ‘Majors’ coming up very quickly in your mind. He is Tennessee and Tennessee is him.
“I was just fortunate enough to have played for him, fortunate enough to get to know him not just as a player, but as a person. He’s had a profound influence on my life and always will. I can easily say that I love the man.”
Tennessee Director of Athletics Phillip Fulmer was an assistant coach on Majors’ UT staff from 1980-92.
“It’s a sad day,” Fulmer said. “He gave many of us coaches our start in big-time college football. He mentored us, pushed us and allowed us to be part of the proud resurgence of Tennessee football. He touched and changed many lives for the good, and our thoughts are with his family, former players and great fans who are remembering him today.”
Majors’ list of honors is extensive and includes the Walter Camp Coach of the Year Award, the AFCA Coach of the Year Award, the Sporting News College Football Coach of the Year Award and an SEC Coach of the Year Award. In addition to legendary UT gridiron stars such as Reggie White, Willie Gault, Harry Galbreath and Dale Carter, he also coached Hall of Famer Tony Dorsett, who won the Heisman Trophy in 1976 as he and Majors guided Pitt to the national championship.
The Majors family issued the following statement Wednesday morning:
John Terrill Majors passed away peacefully at his Knoxville home early this morning. He was 85 years old.
“It’s with a sad heart that we make this announcement,” said Mary Lynn Majors, his wife of 61 years. “John passed away this morning. He spent his last hours doing something he dearly loved: looking out over his cherished Tennessee River.”
Majors’ son, John Ireland Majors, recognizes that his father’s legacy extends well beyond the football field. “Dad’s passions and friendships were so diverse. He loved the symphony, travel, history and almost any type of museum.” Mary Elizabeth Majors, his daughter, added, “my dad was a strong and determined person. Our family will all try to live up to that legacy as we mourn his loss – and celebrate his life.”
A memorial service at St. John’s Cathedral will be held at a later date. In lieu of flowers, please consider contributions to the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra or the charity of your choice.
-UT Athletics
The notebook.
John Majors carried that notebook in his back pocket like we carry our cell phones.
During a football drill at practice, he would pull it out and jot down a reminder.
During a scrimmage, he would enter a route run poorly or a quarterback decision he wanted to revisit.
If a reporter asked him a question he didn’t know the answer to, out came the notepad.
He would make a note to himself and, without fail, get back to the reporter.
How many coaches today would do that?
Majors understood the media as well as any coach I’ve covered.
Majors was meticulous when it came to detail. That’s what made him a great player and a great coach. The fact that he played both ways in high school and college only contributed to his overall knowledge of the game.
He was a teacher, a historian. He liked the symphony. He liked to travel. He liked to read.
But it was his playing and coaching at Tennessee that made the Majors name synonymous with Tennessee football.
Majors died early Wednesday morning of heart failure after suffering a stroke last year.
He was 85.
He will be sorely missed by the Vol Nation.
Majors had diverse interests that made him unique and interesting.
He also had a great sense of humor.
I remember the time that Majors got into an argument with former Tennessee Sports Information Director Gus Manning over Majors not winning the Heisman Trophy in 1956.
Majors lost to Paul Horning of Notre Dame, the only player from a losing team – the Irish were 2-8 – to win the award.
In later years, Majors accused Hornung of buying mint juleps for Manning at the Kentucky Derby.
“I can’t believe you let a guy with a losing record beat me out for the Heisman Trophy,’’ Majors told Manning. “What kind of SID were you?’’
“I had to work like hell to get you second,’’ Manning responded.
Majors could dish out a barb, but he could take one as well.
In 1997, Majors was critical of the Tennessee coaching staff for not starting Jamal Lewis, a gifted running back, against Florida.
That led to a colorful exchange with the late great Bobby Denton, former public address announcer at Neyland Stadium.
“I know a dumb (butt) coach that didn’t start Lewis against Florida,’’ Majors said.
Denton fired back: “I know a dumb (butt) coach that redshirted Chuck Webb and Carl Pickens.’’
Touche’.
After Majors was fired by Tennessee’s during the 1992 season, he took a job trying to rebuild Pitt for the second time.
I flew to Pittsburgh to do a feature on Majors.
Majors had to delay one interview to attend an auction.
I asked if Majors won any auction items. He had. He bid a substantial amount to get gas for a year in his company vehicle.
But Majors seemed upset that he won the bid.
I asked why?
“I found out the University provides me free gas for a year,’’ Majors said. “I just wasted a bunch of money.’’
In more recent times, there was the incident in which Majors, visiting the Tennessee football offices, parked illegally on campus on John Majors Blvd.
UT police unwittingly gave Majors a ticket.
The irony: Majors getting a ticket on a street named after him on UT’s campus.
The ticket was disposed.
Majors was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a player in 1987.
He should have also been inducted as a coach. He did a wonderful job rebuilding Iowa State and Pitt, then Tennessee. Iowa State and Pitt were atrocious when Majors arrived, yet he led the Hawkeyes to a bowl game and won a national title at Pitt in 1976.
It took him longer to rebuild Tennessee, but he won SEC titles in 1985, 1989 and 1990.
In my 40-plus years of being in the media, I can’t think of a coach I enjoyed covering more than Majors.
He was honest, open, funny, and a bit mischievous.
He was a regular guest on SportsTalk, WNML Radio during football season for about four years. His memory was remarkable. His wit keen. His story telling superb.
We kept in touch through the years.
Our last conversation was last month.
I called to say hello on May 21. I didn’t know it was his birthday.
He had just turned 85.
“I didn’t think I’d live to be 60,’’ he said.
At the end of the conversation, he said he wanted to treat me to lunch, once the virus cleared up.
He made me promise not to forget, to call him in a couple of weeks.
I’m sorry I won’t get to have that lunch with Coach Majors.
I lost a friend.
Tennessee lost a treasure.
Sponsored by Big Kahuna Wings: The wings that changed it all
Mickey Guyton released a powerful new ballad, “Black Like Me,” at midnight on June 2.
Co-penned by Mickey, Nathan Chapman, Emma Davidson-Dillon and Fraser Churchill, “Black Like Me” addresses racial inequality in America—delivered with soaring vocals from one of the few minority artists in the country genre.
“It’s Here!!!!” says Mickey, in part, via Instagram. “I have rewritten this caption several times because even I don’t have words that can properly express my emotions over the last few weeks. Our world is on fire right now. There is so much division and hate. I wrote this song over a year ago because I was so tired of seeing so much hate and oppression. And yet here we are in the exact same place! We must change that. I hope this song can give you a small glimpse into what my brothers and sisters have endured for 400+ years.”
Mickey ended the Instagram post by quoting the song’s chorus, before thanking Champman, Davidson-Dillon and Churchill for their contributions.
“‘It’s a hard life on easy street. Just white painted picket fences far as you can see. If you think we live in the land of the free, you should try to be black like me’ #BlackLikeMe is OUT EVERYWHERE RIGHT NOW🖤 Thank you @nathanchapmanofficial @etothedd @fraserchurchill for taking my heart and putting it in a song.”
Listen to “Black Like Me” below.
photo by NCD
Carrie Underwood and husband Mike Fisher open up about their faith, love, family, marriage, friendship and more in a new four-part digital short film, Mike and Carrie: God & Country.
Episode 1 of the four-part weekly series was released on May 27 via iamsecond.com, a nonprofit that features athletes and entertainers “who have found hope through a relationship with Jesus.”
“We wanted to do this to share some of our personal journey in hopes that viewers will be inspired by it, and maybe even take one more step in pursuing a relationship with God,” said Carrie.
Episode 2 will be released on June 3 at 7 p.m. CT via iamsecond.com. In Episode 2, Mike and Carrie open up about her miscarriages—before the birth of their second son in January 2019—and how their faith helped them get through a difficult time.
The remaining two episodes of the four-part digital short series will launch over the next two Wednesdays on June 10 and 17 at 7 p.m. CT.
Carrie, 37, and Mike, 39, will celebrate their 10th wedding anniversary on July 10, 2020. They have two sons, Isaiah, 5, and Jacob, 1. In 2018, Mike retired from the NHL after 18 years, including eight for the Nashville Predators. Carrie, of course, is a seven-time Grammy winner who has become one of country music’s biggest stars since winning American Idol in 2005.
Watch a preview of Episode 2 below.
photo by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com
By Jimmy Hyams
Tennessee legend and Hall of Fame coach John Majors passed away early Wednesday morning. He was 85.
Coach Majors was a terrific player who was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1987. He also rebuilt three programs and deserved to be in the Hall of Fame as a coach as well.
I happened to call Coach Majors on May 21 — his 85th birthday.
We had a great talk, and he made me promise to call him for a lunch date after the virus cleared up.
I enjoyed covering Coach Majors as much as any coach. He was honest, a great story teller, and he had, well, pizzazz.
Below is a statement from the majors’ family.
COACHING LEGEND JOHNNY MAJORS PASSES AWAY
Family, friends mourn loss of coach and teacher
KNOXVILLE, TENN., June 3, 2020 – John Terrill Majors passed away peacefully at his Knoxville home early this morning. He was 85 years old.
“It’s with a sad heart that we make this announcement,” said Mary Lynn Majors, his wife of 61 years. “John passed away this morning. He spent his last hours doing something he dearly loved: looking out over his cherished Tennessee River.”
Majors’ son, John Ireland Majors, recognizes that his father’s legacy extends well beyond the football field. “Dad’s passions and friendships were so diverse. He loved the symphony, travel, history and almost any type of museum.” Mary Elizabeth Majors, his daughter, added, “my dad was a strong and determined person. Our family will all try to live up to that legacy as we mourn his loss – and celebrate his life.”
A memorial service at St. John’s Cathedral will be held at a later date. In lieu of flowers, please consider contributions to the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra or the charity of your choice.
#
Majors, who turned 85 on May 21, was head football coach at Iowa State (1968-1972), the University of Pittsburgh (1973-1976 and 1993-1996) and the University of Tennessee (1977-1992.) He engineered major turnarounds at all three programs, leading Iowa State to its first ever bowl game, Tennessee to three SEC titles (including its first in 16 years) and Pittsburgh to the 1976 National Championship.
As a player at the University of Tennessee (1953-1956), Majors was an All-American, runner-up for the Heisman Trophy and was twice named the Most Valuable Player in the SEC. General Neyland once referred to Majors as “the greatest single-wing tailback in Tennessee history.” He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1987.
It was as a teacher that Majors likely had his biggest influence on football. His coaching tree, thought to be the most extensive in college football history, includes 33 assistant coaches who later became head coaches in the college or professional ranks. His former assistants include future head coaches who would win multiple Super Bowls, NCAA national championships, conference championships and national coach of the year awards. Once asked about the surprising large number of his former assistants who later became head coaches, Majors explained, “I’m a teacher. My father was a teacher. That’s what coaches do: teach.”
John Majors is preceded in death by his parents, Shirley and Elizabeth Majors; and two brothers, Bill Majors and Joe Majors. In addition to his wife, Mary Lynn (Barnwell) Majors, Coach Majors is survived by his two children, John and Mary; seven grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. He is additionally survived by his sister, Shirley Ann Husband; brothers Larry and Bobby; and numerous nieces and nephews.
From artists and honorees to TV stations and times, here’s everything a country music fan needs to know about CMT Celebrates Our Heroes: An Artists of the Year Special.
photos: Miranda Lambert by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com: Carrie Underwood, Blake Shelton, Keith Urban by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com