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Law Enforcement continues search for Wanted man

Billy S Dykes

Area law enforcement is needing your assistance locating Billy S. Dykes. We reported earlier this month that Dykes is wanted for aggravated burglary, aggravated kidnapping, aggravated assault and violation of order of protection.
Dykes, is believed to be armed and is considered dangerous. He has also apparently made specific threats toward law enforcement.
Dykes, is 32 years-old and his last known address was in the Boynton Valley area in Coffee County. He is 6’5” around 205 lbs with brown hair and blue eyes.
Dykes, who was last seen on Barksdale Lane near Bedford Manor Apartments in Shelbyville earlier this month after his ex-girlfriend and her children escaped after she says Dykes was attempting to force her to drive to Manchester.
If you know the whereabouts of Billy S. Dykes please call the Shelbyville Police Department at 931-684-5811. If you see him in Coffee County please the Communication Center at 931-728-9555.

Warren County School Teacher accused of Buying Drugs on School Property

An elementary school teacher in Warren County has been arrested for buying drugs on school property. An investigation by the Warren County Sheriff’s Department led to an undercover drug deal, resulting in the arrest of 45 year old Jason (Hawk) Moore, who is a fifth grade teacher at Hickory Creek Elementary School.
Authorities say Moore purchased $225 of the painkiller Percocet from an undercover operative in the Hickory Creek School parking lot.
Investigators say the sheriff’s department has received numerous complaints from parents who suspected the teacher was buying drugs on school property.
Moore has been charged with possession of schedule III drugs in a school zone. Authorities say the investigation is ongoing.

Franklin County Sheriff’s Office attempting to Identify a Male Subject

The Franklin County Sheriff’s Office and its investigators are attempting to identify a male subject. He is believed to be involved in what was allegedly an attempted robbery at S&W Market on Wednesday, April 19th.
If anyone has information regarding the man’s location or his identity you are asked to call Investigator Nick Watson at the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office (931) 962-0123.

Unemployment Rate Drops in Tennessee

Tennessee’s unemployment rate for the month of March was 5.1 percent, down from the February rate of 5.3. That’s according to Tennessee Labor Commissioner Burns Phillips. This progress matches the U.S. rate’s decline of two-tenths of a percentage point to 4.5 percent. Phillips said the report shows Tennesseans are finding work in a growing workforce. Over the past year, Tennessee’s unemployment rate increased by half a percentage point from 4.6 percent while the national rate decreased by half a point.

Prep Sports This Week on Thunder Radio

Prep Sports This Week on Thunder Radio
(Times and coverage subject to change)
Monday – CHS Softball at Tullahoma – Game Time at 7, Pregame at 6:50
Tuesday – CHS Baseball hosts Tullahoma(Senior Night) – Game Time at 6, Pregame at 5:50
Wednesday – CHS Baseball at Tullahoma – Game Time at 6, Pregame at 5:50
Thursday – CHS Softball hosts Cascade(Senior Night) – Game Time at 6, Pregame at 5:50
*Friday – CHS Softball hosts Forrest – Game Time at 5:45, Pregame at 5:35
*Saturday – CHS Softball hosts Gibbs – Game Time at 4:30, Pregame at 4:20
*tentative

Weekend Cancellations and Schedule Changes

Friday’s Cancellations/Schedule Changes
WMS Softball vs. Riverside Christian at Shelbyville(DRVC Tourn) – PPD until April 26
CHS Softball at Warren County – Thunder Radio broadcast – CANCELLED
WMS Soccer HOSTS Fayetteville – CTSC Tournament semifinals – PPD until April 28
CHS Tennis HOSTS Franklin Co(Senior Night) – PPD, Makeup is TBD
CHS Soccer HOSTS Tullahoma – PPD until April 27

Saturday’s Cancellations/Schedule Changes
Coffee County Youth Bass Club tournament – PPD until April 30
Terry Floyd Benefit Softball Tournament – PPD until May 13
Westwood soccer/CTSC Tournament Finals – PPD until April 29
Westwood baseball vs Huntland – DRVC Tournament – PPD, Makeup is tentatively April 24

Instant Analysis: Preds, Blues Clash in Round Two

Stanley Cup Playoffs(courtesy of NHL.com)

by Thomas Willis @TomAWillis / Digital Manager & Producer – Nashville Predators

Both the Nashville Predators and St. Louis Blues raced through their Round One series in the Stanley Cup Playoffs, and now the Central Division rivals will meet in the postseason for the first time ever.

The No. 3 and No. 4 finishers in the division, the Preds and Blues dominated their opponents – the Chicago Blackhawks and Minnesota Wild, respectively – en route to pulling off upsets in the First Round. Rivals for close to 20 years, the two clubs will now square off in a best-of-seven series that will begin in St. Louis sometime next week (with the schedule to be announced at a later date).

In the interim, let’s dive into the clubs’ five-game, regular-season series, four things that will define the playoff matchup and X-factors for both teams.

Season Series Refresh:

Nashville’s regular-season record versus St. Louis: 3-2-0

Scoring Leaders:

Goals: Nashville: Mike Fisher, Filip Forsberg, Calle Jarnkrok, Ryan Johansen, James Neal, Mike Ribeiro (2); St. Louis: David Perron, Vladimir Tarasenko (2)

Assists: Nashville: Filip Forsberg, Mike Ribeiro, Colin Wilson (3); St. Louis: Vladimir Tarasenko (3)

Points: Nashville: Filip Forsberg, Mike Ribeiro (5); St. Louis: Vladimir Tarasenko (5)

November 10, 2016, at Bridgestone Arena: Predators 3, Blues 1

After the Blues grabbed an early 1-0 lead, Calle Jarnkrok bookended the game-winning goal from James Neal with his second and third tallies of the campaign.

First, Colin Wilson threw a backhand feed into the slot where Jarnkrok rifled a shot by former Preds goaltender Carter Hutton at 18:26 of the second. Later, Neal and Jarnkrok both found twine in a 66-second span, with No. 18 netting the winning score by receiving a feed in tight and lifting it high over Hutton.

“It feels good,” Captain Mike Fisher, who returned from a three-game absence, said. “It was a big game against a really good team, and we got better as the game went on. It was a big win for us.

“We’re starting to play the way we know we can play. We’re just playing a lot better. We still feel like there’s room to improve in a lot of areas. It’s definitely a good sign that we’re finding ways to get points, and it’s nice to get a couple in a row.”

November 19, 2016, at Scottrade Center: Blues 3, Predators 1

Nine days after dropping a 3-1 contest in Nashville, the Blues returned the favor in their own barn.

A 1-1 score held until late in regulation when Kyle Brodziak scored with less than 13 minutes remaining in regulation. Four minutes later, Vladimir Tarasenko recorded his first of a team-leading two goals during the season series.

In an interesting note, this contest was the only matchup in the five-game season series that both teams’ No. 1 goalies, Jake Allen and Pekka Rinne, started and finished a game (Allen was pulled twice, while backup Juuse Saros started two games for Nashville and Carter Hutton did once for St. Louis).

“I thought we were good for two periods,” Nashville Head Coach Peter Laviolette said. “They seemed to grab some momentum off of that power play to open the third period, and shortly after that, we just couldn’t seem to corral it. They gained some momentum… to start the third and we just couldn’t get going.”

“It was a close, tight game,” defenseman Roman Josi said. “It’s always tight games against St. Louis, not a lot of room out there. It was close, and they played better in the third.”

December 13, 2016, at Bridgestone Arena: Predators 6, Blues 3

Perhaps the most dramatic comeback of the Predators 2016-17 season, Nashville rallied from a three-goal deficit by scoring six unanswered goals.

Now on the Preds roster after being claimed on waivers, Brad Hunt’s first career goal put St. Louis up 3-0, less than two minutes into the second period. Roughly two minutes later, the comeback began in earnest, however, as James Neal netted his second of the season series with a wrister off the faceoff.

Filip Forsberg cut the deficit again, to 3-2, before the middle frame was out, and in the third, Mike Fisher scored twice, along with goals from Ryan Johansen and Mike Ribeiro.

“I think when it swung back the other way – and it was clearly evident – was James Neal’s goal just to get us on the board and get us going in the right direction,” Preds Head Coach Peter Laviolette said. “From that point, I thought our guys did an excellent job of playing the way we want to play.”

“It’s huge, confidence-wise,” forward Colton Sissons said. “We were coming in confident at home with a pretty solid record, but to have a comeback win like that against a team like the St. Louis Blues is huge for us.”

December 30, 2016 at Scottrade Center: Predators 4, Blues 0

The division rivals played another pair of closely grouped contests to end 2016, facing each other 17 days after Nashville’s 6-3 win in Music City.

It was rookie goaltender Juuse Saros and the goal-of-the-year by Viktor Arvidsson that defined Nashville’s shut out of St. Louis on the road. Saros made 25 saves to preserve a three-goal outburst in the second period for the Preds and kept the door shut for the first blank sheet of his career.

Late in the second period, Arvidsson pulled the puck back between his skates, while using speed to beat Jay Bouwmeester and then tucked the puck around Jake Allen. If the 3-0 lead for Nashville wasn’t enough to set the tone for the rest of the contest, Arvidsson’s goal was.

“I’ve tried it before in practices and stuff, some games, but I haven’t been able to put it in the net,” Arvidsson told NHL.com. “So it was nice to see it go in. I just felt I had a little more speed than the [defense]. That was it.”

“I think we just played a really smart game,” said Saros. “I think it really gives us hope in the future and kind of shows just what kind of team we are, so it’s a big thing.”

For the second consecutive meeting, the Preds chased Blues netminder Jake Allen.

April 2, 2017 at Scottrade Center: Blues 4, Predators 1

The final regular-season contest between the Preds and Blues likely holds more value than some of the others, due to it being the clubs’ only meeting in the last four months and it standing as the only time the Blues faced Nashville under new head coach Mike Yeo.

After Ken Hitchcock was fired on Feb. 1, Yeo ramped up the Blues’ emphasis on defense, guiding the club to 22-8-2 record down the stretch and third place in the Central Division.

Juuse Saros was in net for Nashville, who was playing their second game in two days. Ryan Johansen tallied with the Preds on a 5-on-3 power play to even the contest at one prior to the close of the first.

The Blues struck twice in the middle frame to take the lead for good and used the two points gained in the standings to ensure they finished one spot ahead of the Preds in the final season standings.

“I thought we played hard,” Preds Head Coach Peter Laviolette said. “The chances were in our favor, shots in our favor, made a couple mistakes… couple of mistakes or tough bounces and the game doesn’t go our way. There’s a lot of numbers that do go our way tonight, just not the scoreboard. I thought our guys played hard in the back-to-back situation.”

Moment of the Series: Dec. 30, 2016

It’s already been talked about once, but Viktor Arvidsson’s highlight-reel goal has to be the top image from the five-game season series.

Arvidsson’s move around a Blues’ d-man before depositing the puck into the back of the net helped put the energetic forward on the map – outside of just Nashville. Thirty-one goals for Arvidsson tied him for the Preds lead in the regular season, and two more in the playoffs (so far) has done the very same thing.

Game of the Series:  A three-goal comeback? Yes, that will do.

Nashville erased a 3-0 advantage for St. Louis when Mike Fisher’s first of two on the night found twine at 9:02 of the third for a 4-3 lead. Impressively, the three-goal comeback was not the Preds only example of the season, Nashville also rallied from three down to defeat the Stars, 5-3, on Feb. 12 at Bridgestone Arena.

Wins like that can serve as a rallying cry, and it’s possible the Preds comeback win on Dec. 13 even helped affect the outcome of their game against the Blues on Dec. 30.

It’s a small sample size, but the Preds have trailed just once so far in this postseason, a two-goal deficit they recovered from in Game Three (a 3-2 win in overtime).

Series Analysis: Four Things

New Coach: The 2016-17 campaign is one of two halves for the St. Louis Blues.

Previously two wins away from the 2016 Stanley Cup Final, a 24-21-5 record on Feb. 1 wasn’t good enough for Ken Hitchcock to finish out his sixth season behind the bench in St. Louis.

Enter associate coach Mike Yeo, who most recently had the lead job in Minnesota, and the Blues have looked like a very different team down the final two months of the regular season. Add in the Blues defensive domination of Yeo’s old club in Round One, and it would appear Nashville and St. Louis are looking at a lot of future one-goal games in their series.

Since Yeo took over in St. Louis, the Blues are allowing less than two goals a game on average, a mark that’s No. 1 in the NHL. Before that, they were giving up more than 3.1 goals per game.

Team Game: The Predators sweep of the No. 1 seeded Blackhawks in Round One is currently the story of the Stanley Cup Playoffs. How Nashville so effectively shut down the Hawks’ stars probably shouldn’t have come as much of a surprise.

The Preds’ top-four defensemen (Roman Josi, Ryan Ellis, Mattias Ekholm and P.K. Subban) did a brilliant job of forcing Chicago to the outside in the offensive zone and rarely allowed the opposition a second-chance opportunity. Josi and Ellis also chipped in timely scoring with Josi scoring twice in Game Four and Ellis burying the game-winner in Game Two.

Still, it’s been a five-man system that’s helped these four stars on the blue line keep the puck out of the net. Players like Colton Sissons, Austin Watson and Mike Fisher have helped front the attack up toward the blue line and in the neutral zone and the results have been stunning. In four playoff games, Nashville has given up one 5-on-5 goal (three total), including two shutouts.

“I’ve said it before, but I think as a team, we defend so well,” Preds goaltender Pekka Rinne said after Game Two. “They box out, let me see the puck, and tonight, there wasn’t probably one shot where I didn’t see it. The guys have been doing a really good job in front of me, and personally, [I’m] feeling good, just seeing the puck pretty good right now.”

Pekka Rinne: Yes, the Finnish netminder deserves his own section.

Rinne turned aside 123 of 126 shots in the Round One playoff series, for a gaudy stat line of a .976 save percentage and 0.70 goals-against average. Can Rinne maintain that kind of production? It may seem like an outlandish request, but his opponent for Round Two isn’t far behind.

Jake Allen has a .956 save percentage to go with a 1.47 goals-against average after his stellar performance (through four games) in the First Round. If Rinne stole Game One for Nashville (with a 29-save shutout), then Allen did the same against Minnesota, by making 51 saves in the Blues’ overtime triumph.

“He was amazing,” defenseman Josi said after Rinne’s Game One shutout. “What a great game by him. I thought we played pretty solid in the first, played a good first period, but after that they were all over us. Especially in the second, Peks made some unbelievable saves and he was great, not much more you can say.”

Offensive Wild Cards? With all the talk about defense, you may be surprised to hear the Preds and Blues each finished in the top half of League scoring during 2016-17.

Nashville averaged 2.90 goals per game (11th) through 82 regular-season games, while St. Louis was immediately behind them in the rankings (2.84 goals per game for 12th). The defensive gap isn’t much wider either, with the Blues ranking 13th (2.63 goals against per game) and the Preds 15th (2.68 goals against per game).

It may be reinforcements that swing the series for either team. For the Blues, Vladimir Sobotka has three points (1g-2a) in the playoffs after returning from the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL) in April from a three-year absence. The forward left during the summer of 2014 to play with Avangard Omsk, but returned to St. Louis just before the end of the regular season and signed a three-year contract with the Blues.

The Blues may also get an added boost from top-center Paul Stastny, who returned from injury at the end of their First Round series against the Wild.

Likewise, Nashville is hoping to see the return of power forward Colin Wilson, who missed the entire Round One series with a lower-body injury. Wilson is yet to join the club for a team practice, but if he is able to take to the ice in Round Two, he would do so as one of the team’s most-proven postseason scorers.

Wilson paced the Preds with 13 points (5g-8a) during the 2016 playoffs and notched a team-high five goals in a 2015 Round One series versus the Chicago Blackhawks.

X-Factors: Special Teams (St. Louis) and First Line (Nashville)

The overall offensive and defensive numbers in the regular season are quite similar for the two teams – as was detailed above – but there’s a clear winner in the special teams edge.

The Blues registered a Top 10 power play and penalty kill during 2016-17, ranking third on the penalty kill (84.8 percent) and eighth on the power play (21.3 percent). In what’s likely to be such a tight series on the scoreboard and on the ice, can the Blues rely on their special teams to win them a game or two?

The JOFA line was very, very good for Nashville in Round One. When the Preds needed a goal late or wanted to hold a lead, Preds Head Coach Peter Laviolette looked no further than Filip Forsberg, Ryan Johansen and Viktor Arvidsson.

The advanced analytics for the Preds first line were second-best in the NHL during the regular season and the trio didn’t slow down in Round One either. Johansen recorded at least one point in every playoff contest, while Forsberg and Arvidsson each scored twice.

Can they dominate against the Blues stout defensive front?

History:

Despite being divisional rivals for close to 20 years, the Preds and Blues, who are celebrating their 50th season in the NHL, have never met previously in the playoffs. Neither franchise has a Stanley Cup title to their credit.

In last year’s Stanley Cup Playoffs, both clubs lost to the eventual Western Conference Champion San Jose Sharks. Nashville fell in seven games in Round Two, while St. Louis lost in six in the Western Conference Final.

Foltynewicz Solid Though 7; Bullpen Falters

The Phillies are not a home run-hitting team, but they showed some serious muscle late in Sunday afternoon’s 5-2 victory over the Braves at Citizens Bank Park.

They hit back-to-back-to-back home runs to break a tie and sweep the Braves. Cesar Hernandez hit a two-run home run off Arodys Vizcaino to hand the Phillies a two-run lead. Aaron Altherr followed and ripped a solo homer into the Phillies’ bullpen in center field, and Odubel Herrera hit a solo shot to left-center field against Ian Krol to make it a four-run game. The Phillies have won six of their last eight games to improve to 9-9.
“Very fun,” Herrera said through the Phillies’ interpreter. “You can imagine. That doesn’t happen very often.”
In fact, the Phillies had not hit back-to-back-to-back home runs since June 13, 2008, when Chase Utley, Ryan Howard and Pat Burrell accomplished the feat in St. Louis. It was the first time they did it at Citizens Bank Park since May 18, 2004, when Bobby Abreu, Burrell and Jim Thome did it.
“It definitely motivated me,” Herrera said about following Hernandez and Altherr with another homer. “I wasn’t trying to hit it out of the park, but I wanted to make good contact.”
Vizcaino had never previously allowed two home runs in a game, but he has now allowed three home runs within his past three innings. Before this stretch, he had surrendered six homers over 100 2/3 career innings.
“I think it was a good pitch [to Hernandez],” Vizcaino said of a knee-high slider through an interpreter. “I think he was just sitting on it. He just went down and got it.”
Despite receiving nine strikeouts over seven strong innings from Mike Foltynewicz, the Braves suffered a sixth straight loss. They loaded the bases after Matt Kemp scored Freddie Freeman with a ninth-inning single. But Phillies closer Hector Neris notched shut the door when Tyler Flowers grounded out to end the game.
“Those guys in that room never quit,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said. “Eventually this thing is going to turn, and we’re going to get the hits and be on the other end of this kind of thing. But you’ve got to handle something like this in order for it to happen on the back end.”
Kemp knocked his first home run since returning from the disabled list the opposite way into the first few rows of stands in right field to break a scoreless tie in the seventh inning. Phillies right-hander Zach Eflin was cruising up to that point, with the homer his only blemish on the afternoon. He pitched seven innings of one-run ball, allowing just four baserunners while striking out three.
“I felt really good today,” Eflin said. “I did a good job of getting ahead in the count and getting early contact, trusting my sinker, and I stuck with that the whole game.”
A GIDP preserves outing filled with Ks: After showing off his nasty slider while notching his final three strikeouts during a perfect sixth inning, Foltynewicz surrendered three straight one-out hits, including Freddy Galvis’ RBI single, in the seventh inning. After receiving a visit from pitching coach Chuck Hernandez, the Braves’ young hurler was fortunate that his elevated 2-0 fastball to Andrew Knapp resulted in a groundball double play that kept the game tied, 1-1.
“A lot of pitches were up in that inning and they found the grass out in the outfield,” said Foltynewicz, who allowed four hits and one run over his seven innings. “But that double play was huge. It could have ended up much worse. It was just a big pitch at a big time.”
Julio Teheran will attempt to extend his dominance of the Mets when Atlanta opens a three-game series at Citi Field on Tuesday at 6:10 p.m. CT. Teheran has a 0.63 ERA over his past six starts against the Mets.

Too Little Too Late for Sounds in Sunday Matinee

The Nashville Sounds rallied for five runs with two outs in the ninth inning but it was not enough as they were upended 6-5 by the Colorado Springs Sky Sox. Nashville is now 0-3 and has been outscored 18-7 in Sunday contests.

After being silenced for much of the day by the Sky Sox pitching staff, the Sounds finally broke through with two outs in the top of the ninth inning. Chris Parmelee ripped a double to get the rally started. The next six batters to come to the plate would reach base. Renato Nunez was then walked, followed by a two-run double by Bruce Maxwell to light up the scoreboard for the first time.

Ryan Lavarnway was next in line for the Sounds and he promptly singled up the middle to bring Maxwell home and cut the Colorado Springs lead in half. Next, Kenny Wilson beat out an infield single to the shortstop, then he and Lavarnway came around to score on a two-run double from Matt McBride. The rally finally came to an end when the lineup card flipped back over. Franklin Barreto hit a little flare right to the second baseman for the final out of the ball game.

The team from Music City mustered just four singles against Sky Sox starter Paolo Espino (3-0, 3.42), two of which were infield singles. On the day Espino struck out five Sounds hitters in his 6.2 innings of shutout baseball.

The Sounds found themselves facing an early deficit as Ryan Cordell blasted a home run in the first inning against them for the second time this season. After his hiccup to Cordell, Zach Neal (1-2, 4.87) settled in for the next four innings, inducing a plethora of ground balls.

The Sky Sox pounced on Neal in the sixth inning after Tyler Heineman got the frame started with a double off the third base bag. Kyle Wren lifted a fly ball into right field, which allowed Heineman to advance to third, then Lewis Brinson did the same thing to drive in the second run of the game for the Sky Sox. Two more Sky Sox would reach base via walk and a single, which set the table for Garrett Cooper to provide the dagger. Cooper launched an 0-1 pitch from Neal over the center field fence to make the score 5-0 Sky Sox.

Colorado Springs added what would turn out to be the game-winning run in the bottom of the seventh when Nate Orf doubled, advanced to third on a ground out, and came in to score on a wild pitch from Aaron Kurcz (2-1, 4.82).
The Sounds continue a four game set with the Colorado Springs Sky Sox Monday night for game three of the series. Right-hander Daniel Gossett (0-1, 6.92) takes the mound for the Sounds against right-hander Brandon Woodruff (3-0, 2.20) for the Sky Sox. First pitch is scheduled for 7:40 p.m.

Braves Lose Fifth Straight on Phillies’ Walk-off in 10th

Second baseman Brandon Phillips gave the Braves the lead with a one-run double. After the Phillies took it back, Phillips homered with two outs in the ninth inning to give the Braves another chance on Saturday.

But Braves closer Jim Johnson couldn’t survive a bases-loaded situation in the bottom of the 10th inning. The Phillies hit three consecutive singles, two of them to infielders, before Maikel Franco won the game on a two-run, walk-off single with two outs.

The Phillies beat the Braves 4-3 to secure the series victory. The Braves (6-11) lost their fifth straight game after winning five straight.

The Braves had scored an unearned run for the in the top of the 10t inning. Dansby Swanson went to third base on first baseman Tommy Joseph’s throwing error and scored when third baseman Franco scooped Adonis Garcia’s two-out ground ball but threw wide to first base.

Phillips tied the game 2-2 when he smashed Edubray Ramos’s 1-0 pitch into the left-field seats in the ninth inning. His two-out double against Jerad Eickhoff in the fourth inning put the Braves ahead 1-0 before the Phillies scored two runs in the sixth inning against left-hander Jaime Garcia.

Game #3 of the series will get underway on Sunday at 12:35 PM CDT.  Thunder Radio will bring you the broadcast as part of the Atlanta Braves Radio Network beginning at noon.