Category: Sports

New Era of Tennessee Football Gets Underway

Tennessee football head coach Jeremy Pruitt and the Vols officially kicked off a new era with their first practice of the season on Friday afternoon at Haslam Field.

Pruitt was impressed with what he saw on Day 1 and noted the addition of a third full length outdoor practice field at Anderson Training Center. With the addition of the third field, the Vols have the ability to practice side-by-side, giving coaches a better opportunity to evaluate.

“It was good to get out there on the grass today,” Pruitt said. “One of the big things I was excited about was the extra practice field that we had.

“That made it a lot easier to do our drills the way we wanted to. It will help our football team over the course of the season. Being able to practice the way we wanted to practice was a really good positive.”

On top of the addition of practice space, the Vols also welcomed nearly 30 players to the field who did not participate in spring practice.

Pruitt touched specifically on the boost provided by the return of linebacker Darrin Kirkland Jr. Prior to missing the 2017 season and most of spring practice due to injury, Kirkland Jr. recorded 111 tackles and 11.5 tackles for loss during the 2015 and 2016 seasons combined, capturing Freshman All-SEC honors in 2015.

“[Kirkland Jr.] didn’t participate very much in the spring, but he picks things up really fast,” Pruitt said. “Today’s really the first day that I saw him out there and practice.

“I think the guy’s got instincts, and I’ve watched him play back in old film. You don’t play in this league as a true freshman unless you’ve got something about you, and he did so I think he’s got a chance to really help us.”
Jeremy Pruitt Quotes
(Opening statement)
“It was good to get out there on the grass today. One of the big things I was excited about was the extra practice field that we had. That made it a lot easier to do our drills the way we wanted to. It will help our football team over the course of the season. Being able to practice the way we wanted to practice was a really good positive.

“Just like the first day of any practice, there are some things that really excite you. You see some guys flash for the first time. We had a lot of guys that it was their first time together. For me, the positives on offense was our huddle organization, getting in and out of the huddle and getting the plays run. We didn’t have any problems with the verbiage, which is good because we have two new quarterbacks out there. It felt like the communication on the defensive side carried over from the spring.

“You can see a lot of our young guys have worked this summer. I think our older guys have done a good job of trying to prepare them. The one thing you can’t do during the summer is matching the intensity once practice starts, the coaches are out there and the tempo. The players can’t get that done on their own during the summer. Obviously, it was a shock to guys who were out there for the first time. Some of these guys probably thought we were halfway through practice, and we hadn’t even finished flex yet. That’s always the case with these young guys because they have lots of nerves and anxiety, but I thought it was a good day. Anybody can look good with head gear and shorts on. To me, right now is about learning what to do and how to do it. When we get closer to putting on the pads, that tells about who you really are.”
(On having a third field)
“It allows you to practice side-by-side. In the spring, we had two fields that were running long ways. That makes it hard to two-spot and go back and forth with swapping in drills. Having two fields side-by-side, you can run parallel with each other and go back and forth.”
(On Austin Pope working with the fullbacks)
“When you look at tight ends, the good ones can play in the c area, in the backfield off the ball or they can flex out and play in space. Only a few of them can do that, but if you get smart guys who play with toughness, they give you an opportunity and know what to do. I think Austin is that way. He is a guy who knows what to do, and that give him a chance, which is half the battle. When you play football, it’s amazing how much knowledge gives you an edge. The guys who pick things up and understand what you and the other team is trying to do and know how to play situational football, it doesn’t take them as many steps to get to one spot as it sometimes takes others.”
(On the 20 offensive linemen in the spring and how much more confident he feels today)
“Well, we’ve got to develop some depth there. At least we’ve got numbers, that would be the start. In the spring, we didn’t have numbers. At least we have a few more. Now, we’ve got to develop some football players, and it’s hard when you’ve got head gears on either side of the ball. Just learning to step with the right foot, play with the right pad level, getting your hands in the right spot and learning how to finish. But you also have to be smart as you do it.”
(On Darrin Kirkland Jr.’s situation and what he’s seen from him since the spring and how much of a “veteran presence” he has)
“I think Darrin is a fast learner. He didn’t participate very much in the spring, but he picks things up really fast. Today’s really the first day that I saw him out there in practice. I think the guy’s got instincts, and I’ve watched him play back in old film. You don’t play in this league as a true freshman unless you’ve got something about you, and he did so I think he’s got a chance to really help us.”
(On Emmit Gooden and how his body type will benefit his position)
“He is a big body. I think you need big bodies in this league. We don’t have enough, so everyone that we can get that know how to play and knows the intangibles that we want to play with will help us. He’s got a lot to learn and a long way to go, but we’re glad to have him.”
(On having more guys this fall instead of spring)
“I just think the longer they have been in the program, the more they are used to the expectations that we have, rather if it’s in the classroom, study hall, weight room, on the field, or how we practice. We are nowhere close to where we want to be, not even close to it, but at least we do have an idea. We do have an understanding of what we are trying to get done, so that is half the battle.”
(On organization after spring practice)
“I think during the summertime when you have player-led practices, I think it gives a chance for people to step into leadership roles. You know nobody is out there but the players, so when you get a group in there sometimes you get people that can get everybody to do things a certain way, and then you have people that just talk about it, and they don’t have an effect on anybody else. I think it gives guys a chance that are true leaders to kind of start doing that. It gives guys that are going to be in support roles, where they can help to support the leaders, which I think is important. I think they have done a good job of that this summer. You can obviously see by some of our young players they know kind of what is going on they aren’t used to the intensity or the length of practice, but they do know what is going on so that is positive.”
(On the corners and Bryce Thompson, Kenneth George, and an alpha dog)
“Bryce and Kenneth for their first practice, they showed some promise. They both have good feet, are heavy handed, play the ball well, have instincts and have to learn what to do. I think we got several guys that have the abilities to be leaders on defense. You know it takes a while for everybody to get in their place a little bit and kind of feel each other out, but it’s hard to do that until you put the pads on and everybody is out there. We have some guys that didn’t participate in spring that I think have really good leadership ability. We have some guys that participated in spring that do, so I think it all kind of works its way out, and probably the closer we get to the first game, hopefully some of those guys will kind of step forward.”

Westwood Scrimmages Under the Lights to Kick Off Football Season

Konor Heaton(in white) turns up field on Thursday night as Zac Waller(in blue) closes in for the tackle during Westwood’s Blue-White Game.

The Westwood Rockets football team squared off in the 22nd annual Blue/White Game on Thursday.  Before a good sized crowd at Dyer-Bouldin Field, the fund-raising inter-squad scrimmage featured the first action under the lights for Coach Chad Dyer’s team.  At the end of the night, the White Team edged the Blue Team 5 TD’s to 4 in the 50 play controlled scrimmage.

Konor Heaton scored 4 of the 5 TD’s for the White team as he had touchdown runs of 40, 45, 10 and 15 yards.  Ian Weldon scored the other White TD on a 15 yard run.  For the Blue team, Chris Deal scored a pair of TD’s on runs of 50 yards and 10 yards.  Connor Smith added a bruising 5 yard TD run and Jayden Carter scampered around the right end for a 15 yard TD run.  Andrew Thompson added an interception for the Blue Team defense.

The Rockets travel to Wartrace on Friday night to take part in the Cascade Jamboree.  The Rockets will take on Eagleville in their scrimmage half which gets underway at 5:30 PM.   The Rockets will open the regular season on Thursday at home when they welcome Cannon County to Dyer-Bouldin Field.  Kick-off is set for 6:30 PM.

Middle School Volleyball Play Day is Saturday

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The Coffee County CHS volleyball team will be hosting their annual Lady Raider Middle School PLayday on Saturday.  Originally scheduled to be played at the Joe Frank Patch Memorial Gym, a plumbing problem has forced the movement of the event to 3 sites.  The tournament, featuring Westwood Middle and Coffee County Middle, will take place at the Coffee County Raider Academy, the Coffee County Middle School and Westwood Elementary.

A pair of Lady Rocket squads and the Lady Raiders of Coffee Middle will each play 3 games.  The games will get underway at 9 AM at all 3 venues and will conclude with games beginning at 2 PM.  Folks are encouraged to come out to either, or both, venues to catch some of the action.

CHS Lady Raider Soccer Hosts Scrimmage Play Day on Saturday

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The Coffee County CHS Lady Raider soccer team is hosting their annual Lady Raider Soccer Play Day on Saturday at the Coffee County Raider Academy.  Featuring 6 varsity and 6 JV teams, the play day will take place on Carden-Jarrell Field and the Raider Soccer Field behind the Coffee County Raider Academy.  Games are set to get underway at 9 AM and conclude with the last game starting at 4:20 PM.

The Lady Raider varsity will play games at 9 AM, 11:40 AM and 2:20 PM.  The JV Lady Raiders will play at 10:20 AM, 1 PM and 3:40 PM.

Sounds Walk Off on Grizzlies to Clinch Series

The Nashville Sounds used a walk-off suicide squeeze bunt from Boog Powell to defeat the Fresno Grizzlies 2-1 Thursday night in front of 8,551 fans at First Tennessee Park. The win clinched the Sounds’ three-game series against the Grizzlies.

The Sounds loaded the bases with no outs in the ninth inning and the game tied at one run apiece. Beau Taylor struck out and Anthony Garcia grounded into a fielder’s choice at the plate to leave it up to Powell to be the hero for the Sounds. Powell came through in an unconventional way. The speedy right-fielder bunted down the first base line and beat out the attempted glove flip from first baseman A.J. Reed as BJ Boyd crossed home plate for the game-winning run.

Nashville’s James Naile and Fresno’s Rogelio Armenteros, both top 30 prospects in their respective organizations, did not disappoint and found themselves locked in a pitcher’s duel. Armenteros spun five shutout frames while racking up six strikeouts. Naile allowed just one run on three hits in six innings to collect his team-leading 10th quality start of the season.

Fresno broke the scoreless tie in the fourth inning. The Grizzlies loaded the bases against Naile with no outs. Naile then induced three ground outs, one of which drove in a run to put the Grizzlies out in front 1-0. The score would remain 1-0 until the bottom of the eighth inning when the Sounds finally found the breakthrough. Taylor worked a one-out walk and moved to third on Garcia third. Sheldon Neuse then blooped the ball into no-man’s land in shallow right field. The ball hit off the glove on the outstretched arm of second baseman Jack Mayfield and trickled to right-fielder Kyle Tucker who threw out Garcia at second but allowed Taylor to score.

Nashville looks for its second series sweep of the season and the 3,000th win in franchise history tomorrow when the two ball clubs meet in the series finale.

The final game of the three-game series is scheduled for Friday night at First Tennessee Park. Right-hander Frankie Montas (2-5, 3.91) starts for the Sounds against right-hander Brady Rodgers (1-1, 7.24) for the Grizzlies. First pitch is scheduled for 7:05 p.m.

Post-Game Notes

  • With tonight’s 2-1 win, the Sounds improved to 54-55 on the season.
  • Jorge Mateo committed his 18th error of the season in the second inning to snap a career-long 23-game errorless streak.
  • For the third straight game the Sounds matched a season-high by leaving 13 runners on base.
  • The Sounds are now 7-3 in walk-off games this season.

The 2018 season is the Sounds’ 41st in franchise history and fourth as the Oakland Athletics’ top affiliate. Single-game tickets are available now by calling (615) 690-4487 or by visiting www.nashvillesounds.com.

Westwood Blue-White Game is Thursday Night

The Westwood Rockets football team will host their annual Blue/White game on Thursday night at Dyer-Bouldin Field.  The Rockets football team will be broken up into 2 teams for an intersquad scrimmage and the public is encouraged to attend.   The 22nd annual Blue/White Game is not only a chance to see the Rockets in person, but serves as a major fundraiser for the team.  Kickoff is set for 7 PM.  Admission is $5 for adults and $2 for students.  Concessions will also be available.

The Rockets travel to Wartrace on Friday night to take part in the Cascade Jamboree.  The Rockets will take on Eagleville in their scrimmage half which gets underway at 5:30 PM.   The Rockets will open the regular season on Thursday at home when they welcome Cannon County  to Dyer-Bouldin Field.  Kick-off is set for 6:30 PM.

Coffee County Youth Soccer League Signups are Ongoing

The Coffee County Soccer League is holding sign-ups from now through August 11th for the upcoming fall season.  Folks will need to register online at the Coffee County Soccer League website: http://www.coffeecosoccer.com/ . Late signups will be from held from August 12th through August 18th.

Established in 2000, Coffee County Soccer League, also known as CCSL, is a recreational soccer organization for boys and girls ages 4 to 18 years.   Members of the board will be at the Manchester Recreation Center on Saturday, August 4th and Saturday, August 11th for 9 AM to 1 PM to provide assistance with registering online.  Folks can also find information at the CCSL website or on their Facebook page at:   https://www.facebook.com/ccsoccerleague

Balanced Attack Leads Sounds Over Grizzlies

The Nashville Sounds used a balanced attack at the plate and a strong pitching performance by starter Eric Jokisch to top the Fresno Grizzlies, 5-2, in front of 7,451 fans at First Tennessee Park Wednesday night.

Eight different hitters collected at least one hit for the Sounds, including multi-hit games from Steve Lombardozzi and Jorge Mateo. On the bump, Jokisch turned in his seventh quality start of the season as he allowed two runs over six innings.

Nashville jumped out to an early 1-0 lead when Lombardozzi sparked a rally with a bunt single in the first inning. He moved to second on a walk and scored on a two-out single up the middle by Boog Powell.

Fresno took a brief lead in the fourth when Nick Tanielu belted a two-run homer off Jokisch to give the Grizzlies a 2-1 lead. It didn’t last long as the Sounds put a pair of runs on the board in the fifth and sixth innings.

Ramon Laureano drew the game even at 2-2 with his 14th home run of the season – a solo blast to deep left field. Lombardozzi followed with a walk and eventually came around to score the go-ahead run on J.P. Sportman‘s sacrifice fly.

Pinch-hitting for Laureano in the sixth, BJ Boyd sparked a two-out rally with an infield single. Lombardozzi, Beau Taylor and Anthony Garcia followed with three consecutive singles to give the Sounds a 5-2 lead.

Raul Alcantara relieved Jokisch and worked the final three innings to earn his fourth save of the season.

Game two of the three-game series is scheduled for Thursday night at First Tennessee Park. Right-hander James Naile (6-10, 4.74) starts for the Sounds against right-hander Rogelio Armenteros (7-1, 3.86) for the Grizzlies. First pitch is scheduled for 7:05 p.m.

Post-Game Notes

– With tonight’s 5-2 win, the Sounds improved to 53-55 on the season.

– Eric Jokisch tallied his seventh quality start of the season (6 IP, 9 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 2 BB, 7 K). His seven quality starts are second on the team to only James Naile’s nine.

– Steve Lombardozzi scored a season-high three runs tonight and has scored at least one run in six straight game and eight of his last nine.

– Ramon Laureano extended his hitting streak to 11 games with a home run in the fifth inning. Laureano went 1-for-3 before being pinch-hit for in the sixth inning and is batting .500 (22-for-44) during his 11-game streak.

– Laureano hit his 14th home run of the season in tonight’s win. His 14 homers are second to only Anthony Garcia’s 19.

The 2018 season is the Sounds’ 41st in franchise history and fourth as the Oakland Athletics’ top affiliate. Single-game tickets are available now by calling (615) 690-4487 or by visiting www.nashvillesounds.com.

Raider Golfers Fall in Matchup with Cookeville

The Coffee County CHS golf team traveled to Cookeville on Tuesday for their first head to head match of the year.   Coffee County took their first loss of the year as they fell to the Cavaliers 293 – 301.

Samuel Prater led the Red Raiders with a 3 under par round of 67.  Austin Farris, Josh Perry and Matthew Hale all shot an 8 over 78.  Chase Hancock rounded out the Raiders scoring with a 91.  Cookeville’s Jared Funderburke had the low round on the day with a 4 under 66.

Coach Mike Ray was upbeat after the match.  “The boys played well but each knew there were some strokes we can get back and it’s a great opportunity for us to play where will have a tournament next Monday.   All in all it was a productive day.”

Coffee County will return to Cookeville on Monday, August 6th for the 18 hole Early Bird Tournament.    The Raiders first home match will be on Tuesday, August 7th at Willowbrook when they welcome Warren County for a 9 hole match.  Tee time is set for 4 PM.

Five Practices, Five Standouts for Titans so Far in Training Camp

by Jim Wyatt, TitansOnline.com

Five practices down, and plenty more to go for the Titans in training camp.

On Tuesday, players are getting a day off in the middle of the grind.

And I’m recognizing the five players who’ve stood out the most to me so far…

Cornerback Malcolm Butler

In my mind, Butler has been the star of camp so far. He’s been a tone-setter at the start of practices, hauling in interceptions and talking trash. Just minutes into the start of Day One, Butler outwrestled receiver Corey Davis for the football in a one-on-one drill, and punted it into the air. Moments earlier he was calling for Davis, and yelling out loud: “Let me show you how I earn my money!” Butler hasn’t been perfect – he’s given up some plays as well. But he has at least three picks so far in camp, and he’s making good on his own words: “A play a day keeps the coach away.”

Left tackle Taylor Lewan

With linebacker Brian Orakpo out, I’ve been watching a lot of rookie edge rusher Harold Landry early in camp – which means I’ve been watching a lot of Lewan. Landry has been lined up across from Lewan a bunch, and the veteran left tackle has been on his game early. Lewan has not only looked good, he’s also been vocal, and he’s been seen giving tips to Landry after plays. And heck, the guy killed the “Boss Hogg” act after getting his new contract, with his white suit, Dukes of Hazzard theme music, and cigar.

Running back Derrick Henry

Henry showed up to training camp a few pounds heavier — and that was by design. He added more muscle to his 6-foot-3 frame, which carries in the 250-pound range. Henry has looked good running the football. He’s been quick to hit the hole. He’s also caught the ball well. On one swing pass a few days ago, he caught a low pass with his fingertips just inches from the ground.

Defensive lineman Jurrell Casey

The defensive line has provided plenty of push in practices, and every play it seems like Casey is busting into the backfield. A three-time Pro Bowler, Casey has been active and very disruptive in run defense and also getting after the quarterback. He looks sturdier than he did after he shed some weight heading into last season, and it’s shown with his play on the field.

Receiver Taywan Taylor

Corey Davis has been good. Darius Jennings has been consistent. Tajae Sharpe looks stronger, and seems to be finding his groove. But second-year receiver Taywan Taylor has really emerged of late, catching passes in the middle of the field, and also deep downfield. He’s made tough catches in tight coverage, and also shown off his blazing speed. Heading into Year 2, it’s looking like he could be a big factor this fall.