Author's posts
December is National Drugged and Drunk Driving Prevention Month
Now through December 31, the Tennessee Highway Safety Office is partnering with state and local law enforcement agencies to increase enforcement of drunk-driving laws.
The campaign will include increased public messaging and more sobriety checkpoints state-wide.
December is National Drugged and Drunk Driving Prevention Month. According to data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, an average of 300 people have died each year in drunk driving crashes the week between Christmas and New Year’s Day.
At this time in 2016, there had been 208 deaths related to impaired-driving. So far this year, there have been 167 in Tennessee.
Some Areas of Tennessee Showing High Job Growth Rates
A new study says four Tennessee metro areas are among the top 10 metro areas for job growth in the southeast so far this year.
The Chattanooga Times Free Press reports that a study of employment trends by 24/7 Wall Street found Nashville, Morristown, Chattanooga and Johnson City ranked fifth, sixth, ninth and 10th among Southern cities for employment growth.
The study found Tennessee’s jobless rate fell to 3 percent this fall, which is the lowest level on record.
From January to October, Nashville added 43,392 jobs, Morristown added 2,043 jobs, Chattanooga added 9,377 jobs and Johnson City added 3,147 jobs. The study ranked the cities based on rate of growth. Nationally, Nashville, Morristown, Chattanooga and Johnson City ranked 11th, 14th, 21st and 22nd, respectively.
Lawmaker looking to Change Frivolous Lawsuit Law in Tennessee
Rep. Mike Stewart says the legislature needs to repeal the law, which was aimed at reducing frivolous lawsuits aimed at public officials. The bill forces people who sue public officials to pay their legal fees if they lose in court.
Stewart worries the bill would discourage victims from suing lawmakers, fearing they may lose and be liable for thousands in legal fees.
12/16/17–Danny L Gann
Danny L Gann, of Tullahoma, passed this life on Tuesday, December 12, 2017
at the Waters of Winchester at the age of 56 years. A memorial service will
be held on Saturday, December 16, 2017 at 4 PM at Daves-Culbertson Funeral
Home. The family will receive friends beginning at 3:00 PM.
Mr. Gann, a native of Tullahoma was born on March 8, 1961. He enjoyed
working on electronic devises, helping people and walking. He also loved
his cat, Bubba
He was preceded in death by his parents J R and Mattie Lee Tatum Gann and
brothers, James Gann Jr, Ricci Gann and Teddy Gann.
He is survived by two sons, Jason Gann and his wife, Ashley of Winchester
and Ronnie Gann and his wife, Irene of Estill Springs; brothers, Terry Gann
(Ann) of Linden and Toni Gann(Reba) of Lebanon; sisters, Carolyn Sawyer
(Bobby) of Lynchburg, Teresa Taylor (Charlie Horton) of Brush Creek, Donna
Gann(Rick Eakes) of Lavergne and Rosann Salyer (Steve Cummings) of
Murfreesboro; sister-in-laws, Connie Gann of Lascassas and Kathy Gann of
Tullahoma and nine grandchildren, Matthew, Michael and Malachi Gann,
Briseida, Shalena and Sebastian Hernandez and Isaiah, Kingston and Khloe
Gann.
Online condolences may be made at www.davesculbertsonfuneralhome.com
12/18/17–Archie W Harris
Archie W Harris, of Tullahoma, passed this life on Tuesday, December 12,
2017 at his residence at the age of 47 years. A memorial service will be
held on Monday, December 18, 2017 at 3 PM at Daves-Culbertson Funeral Home.
The family will receive friends beginning at 2:00 PM.
Mr. Harris, a native of Tullahoma was born on March 23, 1970. He enjoyed
reading his Bible.
He was preceded in death by his parents Robert Taylor Harris and Betty Spry
Baxter and sister, Samantha Walden.
He is survived by two children, Alan Harris and his wife, Katie of
Manchester and Ashley Majors and her husband, Christopher of Bay City, WI;
partner, Chad Prince of Tullahoma; brothers, Bobby Harris and his wife,
Karen of Shelbyville, Charlie Harris and his wife, Chassity of Manchester
and Dee Harris and his wife, Brianne of Mira Loma, CA; three sisters, Betty
Jean Ferrell of Estill Springs, Melinda Dudley of Tullahoma and Gail Evans
of Lynchburg and four grandchildren, Atticus and Crixus Majors and Allison
and Alexa Harris.
Online condolences may be made at www.davesculbertsonfuneralhome.com.
12/14/17–Joseph Grzych
Joseph Grzych, 92 of Manchester, TN passed away December 11, 2017 at the home of surviving daughter Diane (James) Nunley of Hillsboro, Tennessee. “Pops”, as he was known by all, is survived also by son Michael (Cherie) Grzych of Brighton, Michigan and their children, Michael Grzych of Ann Arbor, Michigan and Haley Grzych of Aurora, Illinois, as well as brother Henry Grzych of River Rouge, LA. He was preceded in death by his wife Constance of 65 years, and 8 siblings. He served during WWII in the US Coast Guard as a signalman on destroyer escorts and troop transport vessels as was proud to serve as a guard at the Statue of Liberty. Upon discharge he returned home to Detroit, Michigan where he worked in his own graphic arts business for 30 years, then worked an additional 25 years in his son’s digital print business. Love of color showed through the flowers he planted during retirement for his neighbors at the St. Charles condominium complex. His six cats and springtime tulips brought him great joy. The family wishes to extend their gratitude to his wonderful neighbors and the Servants Heart ministry from FBC Manchester for their encouragement, and to Marsha Collins who helped him remain independent up to the final week of life. Please make condolent contributions to the Coffee County Humane Society.
Westwood Rockets Season Ends in Conference Tournament
The Westwood Rockets saw their season come to an end on Wednesday night at the Duck River Valley Conference postseason tournament. The Rockets took on Cascade in the quarterfinal round at Community Middle School. Missed shots at the rim halted one of the best Rocket seasons in years as they fell 50 to 35.
The Rockets came out to a sluggish start as Cascade outscored Westwood 15 to 7 in the first period and trailed by 10 at the half. In the second half, Westwood began to find their shooting touch but Cascade was able to keep pace and hold off the Rocket charge.
Westwood was led in scoring by Trent Thompson who had 16 points. Will Partin added 9 points and John Dobson scored 7 for Westwood who finished the year with a record of 8 and 6.
The Lady Rockets will be in action tonight beginning at 5:30 PM as they take on Cascade in the semifinals. That game will be held at Community Middle School.
Alontae Taylor Re-Commits to Tennessee

Alontae Taylor’s Twitter post on December 13th as he makes public is commitment to Tennessee football
Quoting a scripture from the Book of Jeremiah, Coffee County CHS football alum Alontae Taylor announced his commitment to play football at the University of Tennessee on Twitter on Wednesday. Taylor had reopened his recruitment after an unofficial visit to Knoxville in September. After the firing of Tennessee football coach Butch Jones, Taylor agreed to take an official visit to Knoxville this past weekend. On that visit, Taylor became the first commitment to new Vols coach Jeremy Pruitt.
Coach Jeremy Pruitt and Tennessee athletic director Phil Fulmer were in Manchester on Wednesday to speak with Alontae and his family. An informal meet and greet session took place for about an hour as more than 75 local folks attended the event held at the Coffee County football field house. Thunder Radio was able to talk to Alontae following their visit.
Here the interview here:
2017 Year in Review – CCMS Tennis
As 2017 draws to a close, Thunder Radio Sports looks back at some of the highlights of the calendar year for each of the 40 prep teams we follow and report on. Today we look back at the year for the CCMS tennis teams. Playing on the newly remodeled courts at the Raider Academy, the Raiders and Lady Raiders NEARLY finished with perfect seasons. The Raider team had a record of 10-0-1 while the Lady Raiders forged a 10 and 1 record.
Thunder Radio reported on their final match of the year as Coffee County split with Lewisburg in the following story we published on May 3rd.
The Coffee County Middle School tennis teams hosted Lewisburg on Tuesday in their final match of the year. The Raiders and Lady Raiders were each looking to finish out the season with an undefeated record. The Red Raiders won by a final score of 5 to 2. The Lady Raiders lost 5 to 4.
The Red Raiders got wins in singles play from Jaden Talley(6-3), Luke Irwin(7-5), Landon Booth(6-4) and Tyler Rigney(6-3). The doubles team of Rigney and Booth won their doubles match 6 love. The Red Raiders finished the season with a final record of 10-0-1.
The Lady Raiders struggled in singles play only capturing 2 wins out of 6 matches. Jayda Wright(6 to 3) and Wren Lawson(6 to 4) had the wins for Coffee Middle. The teams of Sydney Bell/ Lucy Riddle(6 to 6/7 – 4 in tiebreaker) and Wren Lawson/Paige Meadows(7-5) got doubles wins. The Lady Raiders finish the season with a record of 10 and 1 on the year.
Coffee County Middle School tennis is coached by Tiffany McCormick.
Preds Show No Mercy, Blast Canucks 7-1
P.K. Subban scored twice and the Nashville Predators blasted the Vancouver Canucks by a 7-1 final on Wednesday night at Rogers Arena. The victory gives the Preds points in five consecutive games and 14 wins in their last 18 tries.
It was the perfect start to a three-game Western Canadian swing, as Nashville started strong and finished even stronger to complete one of their best efforts of the season, something that was built over the past three days with some time away from game action.
“They say you play how you practice,” Preds Head Coach Peter Laviolette said. “I thought our guys practiced hard for two days, they came here and just continued on. Even the skate this morning was sharp. I thought the guys were ready to play. The last time we played Vancouver, I didn’t think the execution was great and we lost some of the energy. Tonight, it was great to have energy and execution from start to finish.”
It took Subban less than two minutes to get his first of the night to go, a floating shot that eluded goaltender Anders Nilsson for a 1-0 advantage. Viktor Arvidsson gave the Preds a two-goal lead when he finished off a shorthanded, 2-on-0 break by depositing Ryan Johansen’s feed into the cage. It appeared the Canucks had cut the lead in half in the last minute of the opening frame, but Nashville successfully challenged the play for offside to keep Vancouver off the board.
As the second stanza opened, it was Subban again, this time converting on a blast from center ice that fooled Nilsson, and right after the Canucks got on the board, Filip Forsberg’s pass deflected off of a Vancouver defender and over the line for a power-play tally and a 4-1 Nashville lead after 40 minutes.
A team that has had their share of third-period mishaps this season, including against these same Canucks on Nov. 30 in Nashville, the Predators weren’t about to let their opponent back into the contest.
Nashville tallied three more times in the final frame, with Craig Smith, Kevin Fiala and Calle Jarnkrok all finding the twine.
“I thought we did a really good job of getting pucks deep and wanting to attack the game,” Subban said. “I felt the last time we played against them, we sat back too much and took our foot off the pedal. We’re the type of team that when we attack we’re really tough to defend against. We saw some of the skill as the game went on. We have some really skilled players on this team that can make plays and we saw that.”
The return of Johansen and Scott Hartnell from injury enabled the Preds to roll four lines throughout the night, exactly what they were hoping for with the forward reinforcements.
“It gave really good balance,” Laviolette said. “We kept the Turris line intact, and I told you that I liked the Aberg-Jarnkrok-Forsberg line after last game, I just thought they played really well… It was just a solid night. Especially in a back-to-back situation, you like a game like that where you can roll the bench a little bit and try to control the minutes. Sometimes they get a little out of hand and you have to go play the next night. It sets up where the guys were in control of the minutes tonight.”
Member’s Bounce(s):
The first one was odd – a shot that P.K. Subban didn’t get nearly enough of, but nevertheless, it floated through the atmosphere and over the shoulder of the goaltender. Those happen from time to time.
But a slap shot from center ice? The oddsmakers wouldn’t take that bet nearly as often.
It didn’t matter on Wednesday night in Vancouver, however, as Subban blasted one from just in front of the red line, a shot that goaltender Anders Nilsson simply failed to corral with the glove. The tally gave the Nashville blueliner his first multi-goal outing of the season and the fifth of his career.
“The first one, I kind of saw what happened,” Subban said. “I just tried to put it back toward the net and their player had kind of – as soon as the puck went – he just skated right by, so I think that’s why the goalie didn’t see it. And then on the second one, I just tried to shoot as hard as I could on net and sometimes when you do that, the pucks are just tough to handle. It was a fortunate bounce. I can think of a couple times this year on more of an honest play were the puck should have gone in and it didn’t, so I’ll take it.”
“They say, ‘put the puck at the net,'” Laviolette grinned. “I don’t know who says it, but they say, ‘put the puck at the net.’ The first one was kind of funny, it just got lost for a second and floated up and the second one was tough. I think it got directed and hit [the goaltender’s] glove funny. It’s one of those things. I think that’s why everyone says it: ‘just keep shooting.'”
Shorthanded Stunner:
The Predators were just trying to kill off a penalty, but all of a sudden, Ryan Johansen found himself with the puck and Viktor Arvidsson to his left – a 2-on-0 break while shorthanded.
Say what, now?
Johansen, who returned to the lineup after missing three games with an upper-body injury, was so surprised at the situation that he almost didn’t get a handle on the puck in time. But players with his skill usually find a way, and the Vancouver native found Arvidsson just in time for the Swede to slam the biscuit home for his sixth shorthanded tally in the past two seasons, tops in the League.
“No, I did not expect to be on a 2-on-0,” Johansen laughed. “But the way Arvi skates, I guess I should expect it.”
Notes:
Ryan Johansen and fellow forward Scott Hartnell both returned to the lineup on Wednesday night after being activated from Injured Reserve.
Nashville has scored at least four goals in 13 of their 30 games this season and have recorded at least three goals in 17 of their last 18 outings.
The Predators will now travel to Edmonton for a date with the Oilers on Thursday night (at 8 p.m. CT) before finishing their Western Canada swing on Saturday night in Calgary.
Pete Weber’s Postgame Report