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Five people Injured after Shelbyville Graduation
Police are investigating after five pedestrians were hurt in a parking lot accident after a graduation in Shelbyville Saturday.
It happened in the parking lot of the Calsonic Arena as graduation attendees were exiting the arena after Shelbyville Central High School’s graduation ceremony.
Police said a total of five people were hurt. Of those, one refused medical treatment. Three others were taken to St. Thomas Rutherford and another to Tennova Healthcare of Shelbyville.
The driver, who police say is from Cedar Rapids, Iowa but is not being named at this time, was cited for failure to exercise due care.
All of the injured are said to be non-life threatening.
Two people Busted for Multiple Auto Burglaries and Theft of Property in Shelbyville
On Thursday, the Shelbyville Police Department Criminal Investigations Division arrested Dalton Tyree and Brittney Matthews of 400 Barksdale Lane in Shelbyville. They are charged with multiple counts of auto burglary and theft of property.
Thousands of dollars in property was recovered from their apartment that links the pair to multiple burglaries and thefts occurring within the city over the last few weeks.
The Criminal Investigations Division got the break they needed after Patrolman Nathan Everhart stopped Tyree and an associate walking suspiciously through a residential area in the early morning hours of May the 18th.
Both Tyree and Matthews are in the Bedford County Jail under a $150,000 bond each.
Unemployment Drops in Tennessee
Tennessee’s unemployment rate for the month of April was 4.7 percent, down from 5.1 percent in March. That’s according to numbers from the Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development.
The national unemployment rate for April was 4.4 percent, a drop of one-tenth of a percentage point from March.
Tennessee’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate has not declined this much since January of 1984.
Over the past year, Tennessee’s unemployment rate experienced a slight uptick of a tenth of a percentage point, increasing from 4.6 to 4.7 percent. The national rate decreased from 5.0 to 4.4 percent.
Benefit held for Former Lady Raider Coach
As many of you local sports fans know, former Coffee County Central High School softball coach Terry Floyd has battled serious health issues over the last couple of years. Coach Floyd experienced liver failure and anxiously waited on a liver for transplant. His condition forced him to stop working and give up the sport he loved to coach due to poor health and hospital visits. In April Terry received the call that a donated liver was available for transplant. Coach Floyd went through the surgery and is now recovering in Birmingham at the University of Alabama-Birmingham Hospital.
Before the surgery he went through many tests and treatments in preparing him for the surgery and this caused considerable expense for coach and his family. Currently Coach Floyd is having to stay in Birmingham, AL for continued treatments and tests.

BB Brown (middle), Mark Messick (far left), Betty Superstien (left), Ross Simmons (left) and Gene Taylor (right) worked the auction… Photo by Barry West
The doctors have allowed him to come home for short visits and on Saturday Terry was able to attend a fundraiser for him and his family at Coffee County High School. A large crowd attended and enjoyed a BBQ dinner and participated in a live auction.
Coach Floyd said he wanted to thank everyone for their generosity and support. Terry also said he is feeling better and stronger, but knows this a long process. For those of you that know Coach Floyd’s coaching style, it’s all about team and his famous words “One Team One Fight”. On Saturday night everyone showed that they are part of “Team Terry Floyd”.
Lady Raider Softball is State Bound!!!

The Coffee County Lady Raiders “dogpile” Kaylee Skipper following Friday’s sectional win at Soddy Daisy
For the 5th time since 1999, the Lady Raider softball team is heading back to the TSSAA state tournament. Coffee County punched their ticket courtesy of a dominant 3 to 0 win over Soddy Daisy on Friday night on the Lady Trojans home field. Using an effective short game, 2 double plays triggered by outfield assists and a flawless pitching performance, Coffee County earned their first trip to the Spring Fling since 2014 and their first trip coach Steve Wilder.

Left to right, Katie Rutledge, Kaylee Skipper and head coach Steve Wilder following Friday’s sectional win at Soddy Daisy
“She did the same job she has done all year” said Coach Steve Wilder when asked about the performance of his senior pitcher Kaylee Skipper. Skipper tossed a 3 hit shutout with 3 strikeouts as she pitched out of a bases-loaded jam in the 4th inning to grab her 17th win on the year. Slappers Raven Rogers and Katie Rutledge each had 3 singles and each had an outfield assist. Rutledge drove in 2 runs on a 4th inning single. Rutledge and Skipper were named the Crazy Daisies co-players of the game for Coffee County.
After loading the bases in the 2nd inning, and stranding a runner at 3rd in the 3rd inning, Coffee County once again used a 2 out rally to take a 2 to 0 lead in the 4th. inning. After a pair of outs, Lauren Tomberlin was hit by a pitch before Rogers got aboard on a bunt single and pinch hitter Sarah West drew a walk. That brought Rutledge to the plate. The sophomore centerfielder calmly laced a fastball to center field for a 2 RBI single to give the Lady Raiders all the runs Skipper would need. “Sarah had just had a good at-bat and I wanted to keep the momentum going” said Rutledge following the game. Lucky Knott called the RBI single and it sounded like this…….
Coffee County got an insurance run in the 5th when Haley Hinshaw blasted a double off the centerfield fence and scored on a textbook slide after a Soddy Daisy error at first base…..
Skipper got the final out on a called 3rd strike and initiated the celebratory dogpile….
The win advances the Lady Raiders to this week’s TSSAA Spring Fling. Coffee County will open play on Tuesday night at 5:30 PM against Gibbs at Murfreesboro’s StarPlex complex, Field #1. Win or lose on Tuesday night the Lady Raiders will come back for a game on Wednesday morning. As always, Lucky Knott will be on hand to bring the action to you LIVE here on Thunder Radio
Download the broadcast at: http://www.thunder1320.com/downloads/
You can view the state tournament bracket(Should be posted by Sunday) at: http://brackets.tssaa.org/bracket.cfm?id=20160503
CCMS Track Athletes Compete at State Meet

CCMS track athlete Macy Tabor on the awards podium at the 2017 TMSAA state meet(Photo provided by Travis O’Kelley)
Facing the best middle school athletes in Tennessee, Macy Tabor and Lexie Hosea competed in Saturday’s Tennessee Middle School Athletic Association(TMSAA) Track & Field State Championships at Fortera Stadium on the campus of Austin Peay State University in Clarksville, Tennessee. Competing in the large school division, Hosea competed in the discus while Tabor jumped in the high jump.
Tabor jumped a new personal best of 4’10” in the high jump to capture a 2nd place finish. Tabor came in at 4’ and cleared each height without a fault through 4’10” to capture a medal. Zhordan Shannon of Stewarts Creek captured first place with a jump of 5’.
Hosea earned a 15th place finish in the discus. Hosea had a toss of 49’ 4” on her second attempt for her best throw. Hosea picked up her only scratch on her fourth and final throw as she was looking to move up in the standings. Hallie DeArman of Rhea Middle School won the discus with an unbelievable throw of 102’6”.
The Lady Raider duo’s accomplishments gave Coffee County 8 team points. That was enough to earn the Lady Raiders a 19th place team finish out of the 35 teams in the meet. Liberty Bell Middle School from Johnson City won the meet. The Coffee County track team is coached by Travis O’Kelley.
Depth Comes Through, Preds Take 3-2 Lead in Western Conference Final
In Game Five of the Western Conference Final, the Nashville Predators faced their biggest bout of adversity yet. No problem.
Pontus Aberg tallied the winner in the third period and the Predators defeated the Anaheim Ducks by a 3-1 count in Game Five to take a 3-2 lead in the series. Nashville is now just one win away from reaching their first Stanley Cup Final as they gutted out one of their most complete victories of the postseason without their two top centerman.
After Ryan Johansen suffered a thigh injury in Game Four that ended his season, and with Captain Mike Fisher out for Game Five as well, the Preds regrouped up front and found new ways to shut the Ducks down.
“You’d like to have a full and healthy lineup, but that’s not what happened,” Nashville Head Coach Peter Laviolette said. “We had guys show up and play extremely hard today and hard fought. This is a tough building to play in against a good team, a veteran team, and we’re able to walk away with a win.”
“It was a great win,” forward Austin Watson said. “Missing Joey and Fish, two incredible hockey players for our team… those are two tough guys to miss out of our lineup. But it’s next man up in here, [we’re] ready to go and I thought it was a great win.”
A scoreless first period led to a change to start the second, with Jonathan Bernier taking over in goal for the Ducks in place of John Gibson, who left with a lower-body injury. It was Anaheim who got on the board first when Chris Wagner capitalized on a rebound in front, but just before the frame was out, No. 33 in white cashed in. On a late power play, Colin Wilson backhanded his second of the postseason home past Bernier at the 19:19 mark to even the score, a big boost for Nashville before the intermission.
Then, it was Filip Forsberg who led a rush midway through the third, and after Bernier stopped the initial shot, Aberg followed it up with a reach around the Ducks goaltender to slide the puck over the line to give Nashville the lead. Pekka Rinne put on a show during the 60 minutes – just as he’s done so many times in these playoffs – and Watson threw home an empty-netter to put the Preds one win closer to the ultimate prize.
“I think we said it all year; whatever 20 guys go out there, we’re fully confident in the group we have going,” Watson said. “For guys like Freddie Gaudreau to come in and play the way that he did, for guys to just step up and maybe take on some more minutes; that was a huge win for us tonight.”
There’s no sense in refusing to think about it – the Predators know what will be at stake on Monday in Nashville, and while they don’t want to get ahead of themselves, the longest-tenured member of the club says it’s not a bad thing to ponder what might be next.
“I think it’s good to think about those things and visualize,” Rinne said. “You think about it, and we all know that it’s nothing but a Game Six for us. If we win it, we’re in the Final. If we lose it, we come back here, and we don’t want to do that. It’s a big game for us, and it feels good to go home to play in front of our own fans.”
Depth Comes Through:
Prior to Game Five, Pontus Aberg only had 25 games of NHL experience to his name, including the playoffs. But that’s the captivating aspect of this time of the year – when one player goes down, another steps up.
The Predators were without the services of Ryan Johansen and Mike Fisher on Saturday in Anaheim, a blow that wouldn’t have been easy for any team to overcome. However, Nashville found a way to put the Ducks on the brink of elimination without their leading scorer or their captain.
“I think facing adversity today, we knew that coming into tonight, we knew that we had to just come together, play well defensively, grind it out and I felt that’s what we did,” Rinne said. “[We] showed a lot of character. I feel like for us, the first couple of rounds were fairly smooth sailing and things were going our way and every series you deal with adversity. Right now, it’s something that every team is going to face and I think we handled it really well.”
It was thanks to players like Aberg, who scored the winner at 11:01 of the third period, the first playoff goal of his career. It’s been said that good things happen when one goes to the net, and after losing a tooth on the shift before, that’s all Aberg had to do.
“I just tried to bring my game up there,” Aberg said. “We’re missing two huge players for this team, and I played with really good players today, [Forsberg and Colton Sissons], and it felt pretty good.”
Frederick Gaudreau was another who got the call, skating in the first postseason game of his career and looking like he had done it a hundred times before.
“I had goosebumps,” Gaudreau said after the game. “It’s just a dream, and to be able to be part of that, it’s really special for sure.”
The dream will continue for the Predators. And in the biggest game in franchise history – until the next one – Nashville simply found a way, just as they’ve now done 11 times in the 2017 postseason.
Notes:
Preds Captain Mike Fisher did not play in Game Five after he left Game Four. After Game Five, Head Coach Peter Laviolette called Fisher’s injury day-to-day.
Forward Frederick Gaudreau made his Stanley Cup Playoff debut in Game Five, skating 11:40 of ice time and going 10-for-14 in the face-off circle.
Game Six between the Predators and Ducks is set for Monday night at 7 p.m. (CT) at Bridgestone Arena. If necessary, Game Seven would come on Wednesday evening in Anaheim.
Late Rally Not Enough Despite Garcia’s 8 K’s
Stephen Strasburg delivered his best start of the season and Daniel Murphy homered off an effective Jaime Garcia as the Nationals snapped their longest losing streak of the season (4 games) with Sunday afternoon’s 3-2 win over the Braves at SunTrust Park.
Strasburg notched a season-high 11 strikeouts and surrendered two runs over 7 2/3 innings while helping the Nationals avoid being swept by the Braves, who lost for just the third time in their past 10 games.
“Well, we needed every bit of it,” Nats manager Dusty Baker said. “He was very sharp. All his pitches were sharp. He threw a bunch of strikes, and they played us tough. Every game here was tough. It’s never easy.”
Murphy provided early support as he opened the second inning by drilling a low 2-0 fastball over the right-field wall. Washington added two more unearned runs during a two-run third inning fueled by Nick Markakis’ inability to secure Trea Turner’s fly ball.
Murphy’s ninth homer of the season stood as one of the few blemishes on the line produced by Garcia, who allowed three runs — one earned — and seven hits while not issuing a walk over eight innings. The left-hander entered having issued 14 walks over his past three starts. His only support came courtesy of Dansby Swanson’s two-run double in the eighth inning.
“I just missed with the sinker on the first pitch and threw a four-seamer trying to get back into the count,” Garcia said of the Murphy home run. “He put a good swing on it, and I am not trying to take anything away from him. I didn’t execute, and I paid the consequences. I knew I had to still make pitches after that.”
Markakis dropped Turner’s relatively routine fly ball near the right-field warning track to begin the third, and Garcia bobbled the Wilmer Difo grounder that followed. This set the stage for the Nationals to extend their lead to 3-0 with Bryce Harper’s RBI single and Ryan Zimmerman’s double-play groundout that scored Difo.
“This shows you one play makes the difference in the game,” Markakis said. “I should have caught that ball. It tipped off my glove, and they scored a couple runs right there. There’s no excuses there. That ball should have been caught.”
Swanson’s perseverance: After seeing just 10 pitches while striking out in each of his first three plate appearances, Swanson provided a glimpse of his determination and confidence when he looked at a low 2-2 curveball that just missed the outside corner.
“I was just emptying the tank. I knew the situation, and I made a good pitch there but didn’t get the call,” Strasburg said. “Oh, well. So you got to go out there and make the next pitch.”
The rookie shortstop then fouled consecutive heaters before drilling a 97.6 mph fastball off the right-field wall for the two-run double that ended Strasburg’s 118-pitch effort.
“Strasburg had been unbelievable all day,” Swanson said. “You look up and he’s thrown like 85 percent strikes, and you look at how many balls were put in play and it was very, very limited. He mixed up his pitches well and put them where he wanted. When a guy has that good of stuff and that good of command, you’ve just got to grind out at-bats. Luckily, I was able to come through and get us a little closer.”
Baker added: “[Swanson] was tough this series. He was probably the toughest .201 hitter in the league.”
Mike Foltynewicz will take the mound when Atlanta hosts Pittsburgh in the opener of a four-game set on Monday at 6:35 p.m. CT. Foltynewicz has allowed fewer than two earned runs in three of his past five starts.
Cotton’s Gem Helps Sounds Blank River Cats
A dominant performance from Jharel Cotton and a three RBI day from Matt Olson propelled the Nashville Sounds past the Sacramento River Cats 4-0 Sunday afternoon. Cotton was electric all game long as he matched his season-high with nine punch outs to lead the Sounds to their first Sunday victory in 2017.
Cotton’s nine strikeouts and seven innings pitched were both season-highs for any Sounds pitcher in a game this season. The River Cats scattered just three hits in those seven innings against Cotton and drew just one walk against him.
Offensively for the Sounds Olson did the heavy lifting with three runs batted in. The 23-year-old slugger went 4-for-4 including a two-run double in the third inning and a solo blast in the eighth. His three runs driven in on the day gave him 27 on the season which is tied for the team lead with Franklin Barreto.
For the seventh game in a row the Sounds crossed the plate first. In the third inning Jaycob Brugman drew a walk then Barreto doubled. Olson drove them both in with a double of his own down the right field line to make it 2-0 Sounds. In the seventh inning the Sounds added a little insurance. Kenny Wilson drove in his first run since May 1 with a single through the hole on the left side of the infield to score Matt McBride from second base and extend the Sounds lead to 3-0. Nashville completed the scoring in the eighth inning when Olson flashed some opposite field power by driving a 1-2 pitch over the right field fence.
For the Nashville pitching staff it was the third shutout of the season and second in the series against Sacramento. The Sounds are now 3-2 in shutout games this season.
Brugman extended his season-long hitting streak to nine games with a single in the ninth inning. His career long is ten games which he has reached on three occasions. Wilson and Matt Chapman each recorded a pair of hits for the Sounds.
The Sounds wrap up their eight game road trip with game four of their series in Sacramento tomorrow night against the River Cats at Raley Field. Right-hander Daniel Gossett (1-2, 4.31) starts for Nashville against right-hander Dan Slania (0-5, 8.65) for Sacramento. First pitch is slated for 9:05 p.m.
Kemp, Flowers, Ruiz Homer to Clinch Series
Rio Ruiz hit a memorable first career home run and Matt Kemp also took Max Scherzer deep before stellar bullpen work helped the Braves claim a 5-2 win over the Nationals on Saturday at SunTrust Park.
The Braves took an early lead on the way to winning for the seventh time in their past nine games and extending the Nationals’ season-long skid to four games. Ruiz, who sneaked a two-out, two-run homer over the right-field wall in the second inning, and Kemp, who was 5-for-40 against Scherzer before leading off the fourth with a shot into the left-field seats, put Atlanta ahead, 3-0.
“Freddie [Freeman] went down and these guys have stepped up,” said Braves manager Brian Snitker, whose team has won three of four since Freeman fractured his wrist. “There wasn’t anybody feeling sorry for anybody. They’ve just gone out and played.”
Provided the early cushion, Bartolo Colon ended each of the first four innings with strikeouts and kept the Nationals scoreless until he made an errant throw to second base after fielding Scherzer’s grounder for a potential inning-ending double play in the fifth. The 43-year-old hurler’s miscue helped the Nationals tally a pair runs and cut the deficit to 3-2 before a one-hour, 50-minute rain delay before the start of the sixth.
After Scherzer needed 106 pitches to complete five innings of three-run ball, the Braves’ bullpen preserved the lead by not allowing a hit over 4 2/3 scoreless frames. Atlanta’s relievers have not allowed a hit or run over 8 1/3 innings during this series.
“We’re in a tough period right now,” Nationals manager Dusty Baker said. “Can’t hang your head. I don’t want these guys — they’re probably a little down — but you gotta keep fighting because tomorrow’s another day, and you just got to keep grinding. Nothing lasts forever, good and bad. Every team, every good team, is going to go on a three- or four-game losing streak. Hopefully this is the end of it tonight.”
After throwing Scherzer’s grounder into center field, Colon surrendered consecutive RBI singles to Trea Turner and Jayson Werth. This prompted the entry of Ian Krol, who promptly subdued his former team’s threat to take the lead. Krol induced Bryce Harper’s weak popup, then ended the inning by getting Ryan Zimmerman to look at a 2-2 fastball that painted the inside corner.
“I think a lot of things have bounced against us in the last few days,” Turner said. “It’s not all bad luck. At the same time, a few things here or there gets the momentum our way, we could’ve won a few of the ballgames the last few days. That’s just baseball. You got to roll with it, and keep moving forward.”
Braves catcher Tyler Flowers delivered a one-out single that put him in position to score on a Dansby Swanson fielder’s choice that gave the Braves a 4-2 lead in the sixth inning. Flowers, who is hitting .349, then capped his ninth multi-hit game of the season with an eighth-inning solo shot off Matt Albers.
Jaime Garcia takes the mound when Atlanta and Washington conclude the three-game series on Sunday. Garcia has issued 14 walks over his past three starts (17 1/3 innings). Thunder Radio begins live coverage at noon on the Atlanta Braves Radio Network.