Tennessee
Titans Identify ‘Important Days’ for Will Levis’ Return
The Tennessee Titans are hoping to get second-year quarterback Will Levis back on the field in Week 9 after suffering a shoulder injury that’s knocked him out for the past two games.
Levis hurt his shoulder back in Week 4 against the Miami Dolphins, and even though he briefly returned for the team’s Week 6 game with the Indianapolis Colts, he has been sidelined for the past two weeks trying to heal.
Titans coach Brian Callahan gave an update regarding Levis’ status ahead of Week 9 against the New England Patriots.
“We’ll try to get a feel for where he’s at after some rest, see how he feels throwing the ball, see how it looks,” Callahan said via team reporter Jim Wyatt. “The more important part for Will right now is going to be not just today, but Thursday, Friday, days consecutive, throwing to see how that goes. If he’s feeling good and feeling up to it, we’ll ramp (his throwing) up and see where he’s at.”
Levis’ injury is a tricky one because there isn’t really much of a solution other than rest. Surgery would likely cost him the season, but it isn’t serious enough to warrant that. Healing for the injury requires patience, which the Titans don’t have too much of.
This season is all about Levis and seeing if he’s capable of being the franchise’s quarterback moving forward. While he hasn’t been successful yet this season, the sample size still isn’t large enough to fully determine if the Titans should keep him or move on. That’s why Tennessee needs him as healthy as possible for the second half of the year.
The Titans are likely going to have a pretty high draft pick after starting 1-6, which could mean some high-profile quarterback prospects could be available. That’s why the Titans need to know exactly what they have in Levis before potentially making another franchise-altering decision.
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Tennessee
There’s No Gray Area For Dobie In Tennessee – SPEED SPORT
SWEETWATER, Tenn. — Devon Dobie traded the lead twice with the defending Hoosier Racing Tire United Sprint Car Series Presented By XC Gear National Champion Dale Howard to win Night 2 of the North vs. South Shootout at I-75 Raceway on Saturday night.
The event was co-sanctioned by United Sprint Car Series and the Great Lakes Sprint Car Series.
Dobie led the first five laps of the 30-lap feature race, but Howard grabbed the lead on a lap six restart. Dobie was able to wrestle the lead back from Howard in lapped traffic on lap 18 to lead back the rest of the way. Chase Dunham of Leipsic, OH finished second and Howard, who was the Friday night winner, took the third spot.
Ryan Turner started 10th and finished fourth, while Jac Nickles was fifth.
The finish:
Feature (30 Laps): 1. 23 Devon Dobie, Wapakoneta, OH (1); 2. 66 Chase Dunham, Leipsic, OH (5); 3. 47 Dale Howard, Byhalia, MS (2); 4. 15 Ryan Turner, Dunnville, ON CAN (10); 5. 31 Jac Nickles, Harrod, OH (4); 6. 13 Van Gurley Jr., Valparaiso, IN (11); 7. 10m Morgan Turpen-Havener, Gallatin, TN (3); 8. 6 Ryan Coniam, Burlington, ON CAN (6); 9. 16 Ryan Ruhl, Coldwater, MI (8); 10. 48 Coen McDaniel, Gaffney, SC (13); 11. 71h Max Stambaugh, Lima, OH (12); 12. 20i Kelsey Ivy, Fremont, OH (7); 13. 9 Tyler Blankenship, Bakersfield, CA (18); 14. 24 Kobe Allison, Lima, OH (14); 15. 23m Lance Moss, Cherryville, NC (15); 16. 87xs Skyler Evans, Scotland, ON CAN (17); 17. 22 Aaron Shaffer, Tekonsha, MI (23); 18. 12 Corbin Gurley, Hebron, IN (22); 19. 00 P.J. Reutimann, Zephyrhills, FL (19); 20. 19w Jackson Wellman, Belmont, NC (21); 21. 28 Jeff Willingham, Ripley, MS (20); 22. 10 Terry Gray, Bartlett, TN (16); 23. 94 Hayden Wise, Huntersville, NC (9); 24. 11h Caleb Harmon, Elida, OH DNS.
Tennessee
One injured after boat wreck on Tennessee River in Morgan County
One person was injured Saturday afternoon after a boat wreck on the Tennessee River in Morgan County, according to the Morgan County Rescue Squad. Emergency crews were dispatched around 1 p.m. to the river near mile marker 306, close to the GE plant on the south side. While responders were in route, dispatchers confirmed the incident involved a boat crash with at least one reported injury. Rescue squad boats located the vessel and those involved shortly after arriving on scene. Officials said the injured person was transported by a nearby boater to the GE plant boat ramp, where Decatur Fire and Rescue and Decatur Morgan Ambulance took over medical care. The patient was then taken by ambulance to Decatur Morgan Hospital for further treatment. Information gathered from individuals involved in the incident indicates the boat may have struck an object beneath the water’s surface, causing it to overturn multiple times. All three people on board were thrown into the water. Nearby boaters stopped to help those involved and called 911. Multiple agencies responded to the incident, including Morgan County Central Dispatch, Decatur Fire and Rescue, Decatur Morgan Ambulance and the Alabama State Trooper Marine Patrol Division.
The Alabama State Trooper Marine Patrol Division is handling the investigation into what caused the crash.
Tennessee
New strain of tuberculosis cases in Tennessee is resistant to treatment options
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — More than 10,000 Americans and 141 Tennesseans tested positive for tuberculosis in 2025, according to recently released data from the CDC.
We spoke with Dr. Schaffner, a Professor of Infectious Diseases at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, about the impact this bacterial infection has on Tennesseans.
FHO TUBERCULOSIS CASES IN TN 4.11.26
“It’s a bacterial infection spread through close personal contact. It mostly involves the lungs, but can get to other parts of the body. Now, once infected most of the time, most people fight off the infection. They never get sick. Some do, we call that acute tuberculosis, but the bug can live within us, quietly, hibernating like a bear in a cave, and then it can wake up after 10,15, 20 years, and cause what we call reactivation tuberculosis, said Dr. Schaffner, Professor of Infectious Diseases, Vanderbilt University Medical Center.”
One misconception many people may not be aware of is that there is no readily available vaccine for tuberculosis, as it’s not commonly administered in the U.S.
It’s intended to protect young children from severe forms of TB disease, as it offers limited protection for adults.
Many tuberculosis strains are now resistant to the 60-plus-year-old antibiotics that remain a common first-line treatment.
“We don’t have a vaccine against tuberculosis, yet. People are really working on that, because tuberculosis continues to be the major infectious disease killer around the world. So there would be a global need for this vaccine. Here in the United States, we try to identify cases, get them treated, examine all their contacts to make sure that they did or did not get the illness, and if they did, treat the contacts also, said Dr. Schaffner, Professor of Infectious Diseases, Vanderbilt University Medical Center.”
The overall message that health experts want to reiterate is the importance of knowing your status and talking with your primary care doctor if you come in contact with this disease.
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