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3/31/18 — Michael Wayne Phillips

Funeral services for Mr. Michael Wayne Phillips, age 51, of Manchester, TN will be conducted at 12:00 PM on Saturday, March 31, 2018, at Coffee County Funeral Chapel. Burial will follow in Restlawn Memorial Gardens in Franklin, KY. The family will receive friends from 5:00 PM until 8:00 PM on Friday, March 30, 2018. Mr. Phillips passed away surrounded by his family on Tuesday, March 27, at St. Thomas – Rutherford in Murfreesboro, TN.

Michael was born in Nashville, TN, the son of Nathaniel and Pamela Phillips. He worked at Batesville Casket Company. Michael was a very caring person. He never met a stranger, and he would do anything for anyone. He had a way of making everyone feel special. Michael was a huge Alabama and Dallas Cowboy’s fan, and he loved to cook. He was a wonderful and loving husband, father, son, and brother.

Michael is preceded in death by his father, Nathaniel. He is survived by his loving wife, Melissa Phillips; son, Michael Phillips; two daughters, Brooke (Cole Gaultney) Phillips and Elizabeth (Lee Richards) Phillips; mother, Pamela Phillips; four sisters, Michelle Phillips Minton, Danielle Phillips, Kelly Kell, and Holly (Scott) Troglen; one grandson, Kace Richards.

Coffee County Funeral Chapel is honored to serve the Phillips family.

3/30/18 — Edward Shirley Hawkersmith

Edward Shirley Hawkersmith of Tullahoma passed this life on Tuesday, March
27, 2018 at his residence at the age of 91 years. Graveside Services are
scheduled for Friday, March 30, 2018 at 2 PM at Oakwood Cemetery.
Visitation with the family will be from 12 PM – 1:30 PM at
Daves-Culbertson
Funeral Home.

Mr. Hawkersmith, a native of Franklin County, was the son of the late
Clarence and Onzlee Austell Hawkersmith. He was a U S Navy veteran and
served in WW II. He was a pilot and loved flying, even owning his own plane.
He also enjoyed fishing, listening to Blue Grass music and watching old
western TV shows and movies. He was also a Mason.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his wives, Betty
Ryans Hawkersmith and Mildred Gwen Hawkersmith; sister, Pauline Casteel and
two great grandchildren.

He is survived by his son, Gary Hawkersmith of Tullahoma; three daughters,
Sherry Lee Baltimore and her husband, Randall of Tullahoma, Patty McGaha
and her husband, Tony of Lebanon and Becky Hawkersmith of Tullahoma; nine
grandchildren and twenty five great grandchildren.

Daves-Culbertson Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements

3/28/18 — Birthdays

Birthdays:
Thomas Hargrove — Pizza Winner!

Cathy Socha

Randy Lowery

Chris Robinson

Thursday Prep Schedule(Weather Permitting)

> WMS Baseball at Cascade – CANCELLED, Makeup date is TBD
> CHS Softball HOSTS Tullahoma – CANCELLED, Makeup date is TBD
7:30 PM – CHS Boys’ Soccer vs. Seneca, SC at Myrtle Beach Tournament

Vol Report: Pruitt, Staff Continue to Evaluate on Day 2 in Pads

KNOXVILLE, TN – MARCH 27, 2018 – Wide receiver Alontae Taylor #6(in white) of the Tennessee Volunteers during spring practice on Haslam Field in Knoxville, TN. Photo By Austin Perryman/Tennessee Athletics

Jobs are wide open and position battles continue as the Tennessee football team began its second week of spring practice on Tuesday at Haslam Field.
UT head coach Jeremy Pruitt told media following the Vols’ second practice in pads, and fourth overall, that everything a player does on the field is being evaluated.
The new staff has given each Vol an opportunity for a fresh start. Some players are even experimenting at new positions for the first half of the spring session.
Everybody has an opportunity to play – they just have to prove it on the field.
“Every day we evaluate all four groups,” Pruitt said. “We don’t have any starters. We don’t have any second or third team guys. We have a rep chart. Everything is being evaluated.”
Pruitt said the team will scrimmage twice before the DISH Orange and White Game on April 21 (1 p.m., SEC Network) – giving the Vols three chances to replicate what a game will be like this fall.
It’s clear, he wants to test his young team.
“(The coaches) are not there to encourage you,” Pruitt said about scrimmages. “They’re not there to correct you. You’re playing just your 11 guys on one side of the ball, so that in itself is new. You definitely have to do that. It’s kind of like a test. You go to class for a certain period of time, you get the information and then they test you on it to see what kind of knowledge you’ve retained. That’s what a scrimmage is.
“To me, when you have the Orange and White game, you add the element when you create a game-like atmosphere. There’s a little more excitement, a little more anxiety, a little more pressure, butterflies. Some guys perform better in those situations, some guys perform worse.
“We need to find out who those guys are.”
Offense “Kicks Defense’s Tail”
Pruitt said he was ‘ticked off’ walking off the field, but didn’t know if he was mad at the whole team or just the defense because “the offense kicked the defense’s tail.”
A defensive coordinator the last five years at Alabama, Georgia and Florida State, Pruitt is used to only coaching the defense and adjusting to managing the entire squad.
Still he knows effort when he sees it and the Vols’ coach wants more out of his team.
“One thing I did notice today was that we had a lot of guys that had two days off and did not respond the right way,” Pruitt said. “We have to fix that….I wish we had 30 of them (spring practice) so we could, but we only get 15. I’m not sure everyone took advantage of their opportunities today. We will watch the tape and see if that’s right or not.”
Head Coach Jeremy Pruitt Press Conference Transcript – March 27, 2018
Opening Statement:
“It was an interesting day out there today for me. Coming off of the field I was ticked off, I don’t know if it’s because I am mad at the way the whole team practiced or if it’s because the offense kicked the defense’s tail. I haven’t figured it out yet, so I have to watch tape and see. One thing I did notice today was that we had a lot of guys that had two days off and did not respond the right way. We have to fix that. We need to be having spring practice every day. I wish we had 30 of them so we could, but we only get 15. I’m not sure everyone took advantage of their opportunities today. We will watch the tape and see if that’s right or not.”
On the offense making big plays against the defense today:
“Sometimes you get beat because the other guy is better than you. Sometimes you get beat because you don’t execute the right way. If the other team beats us because they are better than us, that’s one thing. When you make mental errors, it’s another. We made a lot of mental errors out there today. It was not very focused in the meetings. We did not take what we went over in the meetings onto the field. That probably contributed to some of it.”
On the progression of the players who are testing different positions:
“We will look at their whole body of work. We are still installing. We will install for five days before we really slow it down. We will see after seven days if we want to let those guys scrimmage on the ninth day or if we should go ahead and move them back to their original position. They are learning both right now.”
On preparing for the Orange and White game:
“Every day we evaluate all four groups. We don’t have any starters. We don’t have any second or third team guys. We have a rep chart. Everything is being evaluated. There is only so much pressure a coaching staff can put on guys to see how they respond in adverse situations. When you go to a scrimmage, I have seen guys that practice really well, then go to a scrimmage situation so it’s new and they have anxiety so they don’t perform well at the stadium. You have guys that perform fine in all of the practice situations and then go to the stadium and there is 102,000 people in the stadium and they have anxiety there and they don’t respond in the right way. Sometimes you find guys who rise to the occasion. I want to create a game like situation for the team to see who the competitors are. That’s one of the things we talked about going into spring practice, it was finding the guys who love to compete when the game is on the line. The only way to figure that out is to put them in a game like situation and pick sides and let’s go. My goal is to treat it just like it’s a game for us. We want to prepare and get used to our expectations because everything is new. Everything is new to what these guys have been accustomed to. I don’t want our first time to be when we are heading to Charlotte. We want to get it the way it’s going to be the night before a game. That’s what we are going to do.”
On if there are any position groups that have stood out:
“I’d say every group does some things well at times and then some things poorly at times. That’s really the thing you’re trying to do is kind of create a standard, be detailed about what we want to get done and try to get the guys to do it over and over again. A lot of our guys are trying to figure out exactly what the standard is. We’re improving and they’re willing, but we’ve gotta continue to make strides and we’re definitely not good enough to go backwards in a day.”
On what he hopes to learn from scheduled scrimmages:
“Your practice is kind of like you go in there and have meetings, you go over what you’re gonna go over and then you go out to practice and you do walkthroughs, then you make your individual practice around the things that you plan on doing that day. Then you have, whether it’s half-line, tray drill or man to man drills, so you kind of take the next step. Then, whether it’s seven on seven, it kind of works its way into teams. From there, that’s practice. There’s a little difference when you go out there and the coaches aren’t out there on the field with you, and you gotta make the calls, you going get lined up. They’re not there to encourage you, they’re not there to correct you. You’re playing just your 11 guys on one side of the ball, so that in itself is new. You definitely have to do that. It’s kind of like a test. You go to class for a certain period of time, you get the information and then they test you on it to see what kind of knowledge you’ve retained. That’s what a scrimmage is. To me, when you have the Orange and White game, you add the element when you create a game-like atmosphere. There’s a little more excitement, a little more anxiety, a little more pressure, butterflies. Some guys perform better in those situations, some guys perform worse. We need to find out who those guys are.”
On if there are any position groups that are better than when he originally evaluated the team:
“When I watched the film when I first got here, I’m just trying to get an idea, first of all how to kind of go about the recruiting class, to have an idea. Can you move guys around? Can other guys play different positions? Because certain guys that were recruited here might not necessarily fit what I want to do with them. I didn’t really look at it as a group. I just kind of looked at it from an individual basis.”
On what he is looking for from defensive backs:
“We need all our defensive backs to be able to play more than one position. First of all, it helps them create value in themselves. If you’re going to play five defensive backs, you want your sixth best defensive back to be the first guy in the game if one of those five guys gets hurt. So, if your left corner gets hurt, and you got 10 guys, and it just so happens that the backup left corner is the 10th best player, it doesn’t make a whole lot of sense to put the 10th best guy in before you put the sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth guy in. We want all our guys to learn multiple positions, and we teach things by concepts, so we’re working a lot of guys there.”
On how the process of installing new schemes has gone through four practices:
“I think the big thing for our guys is the meetings. I think the meetings are a little different than what they’re accustomed to. I do think the guys are trying hard to grasp it. Obviously it’s a different defense, so there’s not a lot of familiarity when you cross over. It’s a lot of new concepts, but it’s no different in any other place I’ve been. When you start in the spring and you start installing for the guys, if you have freshmen out there, which everybody’s like a freshman because it’s the first time they’ve ever heard it, usually it’s the second time through in the second week before they kind of start grasping everything.”
On who has stood out on offense:
“When we do a good job protecting, our guys have made some good throws. When we step in the right direction and play with good pad level up front, all of our runners are capable of creating positive plays. It’s hard to single anybody out, but when everybody is on the same page, good things have happened.”
On special teams:
“We are doing a lot of drills right now, a lot of fundamentals. For us to go out there and do a certain amount of teams as far as first team, second team, third team, we don’t even know who the best football players are yet. We don’t know who’s going to get on the bus and go to the first game, so for us, we need to teach as many fundamentals as we can. Stay with the basics, whether it’s how to protect and punt or hold up in punt return, how to stack kick-off return, how to press the ball in the cover game. We’re doing as many things as we can that way, and then as we build after the next couple of practices, we’ll get into more teamwork.”
On behind honored in his hometown of Rainesville, Ala. with the key to the city:
“I have a lot of pride in where I’m from, and I think the people in our community do. I was fired up about it and very appreciative of it, but the main thing I was fired up about is my old high school team won the state championship in basketball. That was a big deal to me and our community.”
On what he does to show his team they are picking up in things:
“Offenses create a lot of multiples when you talk about the defensive side and the way they move around. That’s the way the game is in college. Everybody is going fast, snapping the ball. You get a lot of rocket motions and unusual formations. You have to recognize formations, splits, backfield locations, whatever it is, so they’re creating multiples. The more multiples you have and the more multiples they have, it just becomes a lot of stuff. Communicating is a big deal. You have to be a good communicator if you’re going to play good defense, because the first thing nowadays is you have to get lined up, and everybody has to be on the same page. We’ll tell a lot more of that. There may be guys out here right now that can make the calls, do this and do that, but when we roll out there the first time to scrimmage, they may not can do it. When we have the Orange and White game, and hopefully we have the crowd that I’m expecting, the may excel or they may not. We’ll see, but we need to know that.”

Bucks Stretch Winning Streak to 11, Welcome Chargers to Driver Complex for TCCAA Series

Johnny Mangini, a freshman from Huntsville, and the Dyersburg State catcher and a fan watch the ball Mangini just hit clear the wall for a three-run homer during Motlow’s 5-4 win over Dyersburg State Friday afternoon at the Driver Baseball Complex. Mangini has hit eight home runs on the season and driven in 23 runs. The Bucks as a team lead the nation in home runs with 66. [Photo by Jeff Reed Photography]

The Motlow Bucks stretched their winning streak to 11 consecutive games when they swept non-conference opponent Martin Methodist College JV 11-9, 8-3 Monday at the Driver Baseball Complex on the Moore County campus.

The Bucks (26-11, 9-3) earned that sweep on the heels of a TCCAA conference sweep over visiting Dyersburg State last weekend. Motlow won Friday’s opening game of a doubleheader 5-4, then took the nightcap 6-3. Saturday, the Bucks came from behind a won a 10-inning thriller 9-8.

With the wins, the Bucks have moved into sole possession of second place in the TCCAA standings, 2.5 games behind Walters State, currently ranked No. 2 in the nation. Motlow is one game ahead of Columbia State (20-11, 8-4), with the Chargers scheduled to visit the Driver Complex this weekend. Friday’s single game is set for a 2 p.m. start, with Saturday’s doubleheader beginning at noon.

Monday’s opener against Martin Methodist JV saw the Bucks trailing 9-7 heading into the bottom of the sixth inning. With one out, Chase Dixon doubled to left center field, Tre Bailliez singled and Nathan Sanders hit a three-run homer to center. Two batters later, Troy Weatherly added a two-run homer to give the Bucks the lead. Dallas Bryan pitched a perfect seventh inning to earn his first save of the season. Jordan Burdette (2-1) got the win, following Jase Carvell and Carson Pack on the mound.

Game two saw Motlow jump out to a 4-0 lead in the first inning and lead 6-1 after two innings. Colin Smith (3-0) picked up the win, pitching five innings and allowing six hits with five strikeouts. Chandler Hardiman and Darin Keller pitched the final two innings, with Keller not allowing a hit and striking out two of the three batters he faced.

All three games with Dyersburg were close and hard fought. In Friday’s opener the Bucks led 5-1 heading into the top of the seventh, but the Eagles fought back with three runs to pull within one. Kobe Foster came on and recorded the final out, notching his fourth save of the season. Logan Walters (3-1) got the win, going six innings and scattering eight hits with five strikeouts.

The Bucks took the lead for good on a three-run homer from Johnny Mangini in the third inning. De’Andre Pitts added a solo homer in the fourth, providing much needed insurance. Mangini now has eight homers and Pitts seven, part of the ‘Launchburg’ brigade that has Motlow with 66 home runs on the season, more than any team in the nation.

Foster (6-0) was in complete command in game two against the Eagles, tossing his third consecutive complete game and allowing just six hits and two walks with nine strikeouts. The freshman is among the top five pitchers in the TCCAA in wins, saves, strikeouts and earned run average.

Motlow got two hits each from Paul McIntosh, Colin Smith and Paul Rahman, with Rahman slamming a two-run homer in the bottom of the sixth inning.

Saturday’s single nine inning game was a wild affair that saw the teams tied 1-1 after one inning. Motlow took a 4-2 lead in the third, then led 8-4 after seven innings. Dyersburg tied the game with four runs in the eighth, but Motlow won it on a walk-off single by Patrick Music in the bottom of the 10th to complete the sweep.

Tyler Harmon started on the mound for the Bucks, lasting 6.1 innings and allowing six hits and three runs. Justin Parker and Carvell each tossed an inning before Bryan came on and closed the door on the Eagles, striking out all six batters he faced in the ninth and tenth innings.

Motlow got home runs from Weatherly, who is tied for the nation’s lead with 15, Colin Smith and Jake Chaney. Weatherly drove in three runs and Chaney a pair as the Bucks took advantage of seven walks and three hit batters.

Visit the official website of Motlow Athletics at MotlowSports.com for rosters, schedules, stats and more. Interact with Motlow Athletics on social media at MotlowSports.

Alleged Stolen Vehicle Leads to Arrests of Two People

On Tuesday afternoon (March 27, 2018) 34-year-old Russell Lee Asbury and Erika L Canuto, age 19, both of Autumn Rd., Morrison went into Wal-Mart in Manchester and allegedly removed items without paying for them. They both got into a vehicle allegedly stolen out of Warren County. Asbury was the driver when Manchester Police officers attempted to stop the vehicle on Highway 41 at Exit 114. Asbury was in the turn lane going onto the interstate and officers approached the vehicle, and he allegedly accelerated, almost hitting two officers and hit an officer’s vehicle and then went north on Highway 41. Asbury drove at a high rate of speed in traffic putting other drivers at risk. The vehicle became disabled at O’Reilly Auto Parts. Asbury jumped and ran from officers on foot but was later captured.
Asbury and Canuto were both arrested. Asbury was charged by Manchester Investigator Trey Adcock with theft of property, shoplifting, 2 counts aggravated assault, reckless endangerment, evading arrest, vandalism and resisting stop/halt/frisk arrest non-violent. His bond was set at $17,500. Canuto was charged with theft of property and shoplifting. Her bond was set at $3,500, which she made and was released from the Coffee County Jail. Both subjects are set to appear in Coffee County Court on May 1, 2018.

Haslam Approves Recommendations of School Safety Panel

Gov. Bill Haslam

Gov. Bill Haslam has approved the recommendations of a school safety panel, including a security risk assessment of all Tennessee public school facilities.
Haslam announced the approval Wednesday of the recommendations from the panel that he appointed. Two other immediate priorities identified by the panel included an increase in available resources to help secure school resource officers and providing a statewide technology application for the anonymous reporting of security threats.
Haslam says in a statement the assessment of every public elementary and secondary school to identify risks should begin immediately. He says the assessments should to be finished before students return to school in the fall.
The statement says each school’s emergency operations plan must identify and update specific facility risks on an annual basis.

Motlow has Highest Graduation Rate of any Community College over Three Years

Motlow State Community College led all Tennessee community colleges in graduation rate for the 2014-17 timeframe according to recently announced numbers from the Tennessee Board of Regents College System. The College also had the second highest retention rate for freshmen who enrolled in the fall of 2016.

The Tennessee Board of Regents (TBR) College System recently announced graduation and retention numbers for the 13 Tennessee community colleges that comprise the System. Motlow State Community College had the highest graduation rate of any community college over the past three years. The College also had the second-highest retention rate for freshmen who enrolled for the fall semester of 2016.
The Motlow graduation rate for the 2014-17 time frame came in at 35.5 percent, compared to the system-wide average of 21.8 percent. The next closest college, Roane State Community College, had a graduation rate of 28 percent.
The Motlow retention rate for freshmen enrolled for the 2016 fall semester came in at 61.2 percent, second only to Northeast Community College, which had a retention rate of 63.4 percent. The system-wide retention average for the 2016 freshman class was 55.9 percent. Retention rate is a critical number gauging the success of an institution in keeping students enrolled.

Tennessee Medical Cannabis Bill Passes Next Step

Photo of oil from medical-marijuana.news

In a vote on Wednesday state lawmakers in a key House committee passed a stripped down medical cannabis bill by a vote of 9 -2.
The bill now heads to the Health Committee.
The vote comes after it was unexpectedly postponed last week.
The bill was essentially gutted last week. Instead of a bill full of rules and regulations for growing and distributing medical cannabis, the sponsor amended the bill. The two amendments that were added to the bill: one that takes away the requirement that someone would need a medical card to possess medical marijuana. The second takes chronic pain and nausea out of one of the accepted conditions in the bill.