Tennessee
How Tennessee basketball, Nate Ament pushed through Vanderbilt’s physicality
NASHVILLE — Tennessee basketball coach Rick Barnes often calls the SEC the most physical league in college basketball.
The Vols and Vanderbilt amped up the physicality to a higher level on Feb. 21. The referees largely allowed the players to push, trip and grab each other throughout the game. Splashes of orange repeatedly fell on the hardwood at Memorial Gymnasium.
The Vols (20-7, 10-4 SEC), however, continued to pick themselves back up in a 69-65 win over No. 18 Vanderbilt (21-6, 8-6), tying a program record of five consecutive 20-win seasons. The Vols last achieved the feat under Don DeVoe from 1980 to 1985.
Tennessee coach Rick Barnes called the game “pretty physical.” Sophomore guard Bishop Boswell agreed.
“I think it’s pretty high up there,” Boswell said about where this win ranks for the team. “A rivalry game like this, you’re going to have to grind it out. It’s not always going to be easy and I think we did that.”
The increased intensity bothered Nate Ament through much of the game. The freshman, who scored 13 points on 3-of-13 shooting, often found himself challenging a sea of Commodores at the rim or attempting to regain his balance.
On one play, Ament blew past a defender and had his easiest shot attempt of the game. Instead of a highlight dunk fueling Tennessee’s second-half comeback, the 6-foot-10 forward slammed the ball into the rim. He would redeem himself, though, with an impossible jump shot against blanket coverage that gave the Vols a 66-65 lead with 54 seconds remaining.
“He struggled,” Barnes said. “They had a lot to do with that, obviously. But he made that one when it counted. He stayed with it.”
Tennessee basketball’s ‘other’ players were key
Although Ja’Kobi Gillespie led the Vols with 17 points, and Ament buried the picture-perfect shot, Barnes made sure to credit the role players.
Before Ament’s bucket, Boswell made two baskets that erased Vanderbilt’s three-point lead in the final 90 seconds.
“It was important because I do think Ja’Kobi and Nate were winded,” Barnes said. “Vanderbilt did a great job of guarding them all night long, like we guarded their guys. It’s going to come back to where those other three guys have to be able to make the plays. The steals that we had on the other end were important to get us back into the game. Ethan (Burg) had a great night. Amari (Evans) and Bishop, and DeWayne (Brown II), those guys were the key to the game today.”
Brown and Burg specifically made several plays to bring Tennessee back from a 49-42 deficit 10 minutes into the second half. Brown started the half for Felix Okpara, who was in foul trouble, and closed the game. He made a layup that brought Tennessee within four points, then made another that gave the Vols a 53-51 lead.
“DeWayne was really good,” Barnes said. “He played a lot of minutes. The more he’s out there, the better he’s going to be. He’s been the biggest surprise on the team this year. We talked about it earlier in the year when we got everybody together for the first time. Somebody is going to surprise you and somebody is going to disappoint you. No question DeWayne Brown has been the biggest surprise of the team this year.”
Burg re-entered the Vols’ rotation after his performance against LSU, and he further cemented his role against Vanderbilt. He drew an offensive foul, got a steal, and made a layup that tied the game.
As March approaches, Boswell feels better about the Vols’ depth after every win.
“Everybody might not have their best night every game,” he said, “but I think we have 15 guys that can come in and make an impact.”
Wynton Jackson covers high school sports for Knox News. Email: wynton.jackson@knoxnews.com
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Tennessee
Tennessee baseball adds pitcher Ricky Ojeda, UC Irvine transfer
Tennessee baseball received a commitment from UC Irvine pitcher Ricky Ojeda on June 19.
Ojeda, who is eligible for the MLB draft in July, announced his decision on social media. He visited Tennessee on June 15-16.
The lefthanded Ojeda had a strong 2026 season primarily as a reliever, posting a 3.77 ERA with 62 strikeouts and 20 walks in 62 innings. In 2025, he became the first reliever to be named Big West Pitcher of the Year after going 13-1 with a 3.55 ERA and 83 strikeouts in 66 innings, which also earned him a third-team all-American nod from the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association and Perfect Game.
Whether Ojeda makes it to Tennessee remains an open question. Perfect Game ranked him as the No. 179 prospect for the draft. That would place him in the sixth round.
Should Ojeda join the staff, however, he would instantly become one of the team’s top options out of a bullpen that struggled immensely in 2026. The pitching staff is also under new leadership under pitching coach Austin Knight, who was hired from ECU.
Ojeda is the fourth player to announce they will transfer to Tennessee this offseason, joining two-way Mercer transfer Braydon Kersey, Northwestern State pitcher Brody Trosclair and Air Force infielder Wyatt Hanoian.
Who’s leaving Tennessee baseball
- UTL Jay Abernathy (Oklahoma)
- RHP Nic Abraham
- INF Ariel Antigua (Arizona)
- INF Finley Bates
- RHP Ari Bethea
- OF Hutson Chance
- RHP Sawyer Deering (San Diego State)
- OF Nate Eisfelder
- 1B Evan Hankins (Virginia Tech)
- UTL Hunter High
- RHP Brayden Krenzel (Arkansas)
- INF Manny Marin
- INF Ethan Moore (Missouri)
- UTL Chris Newstrom
- LHP Taylor Tracey
- C Cash Williams (West Virginia)
Who’s joining Tennessee baseball
- RHP/DH Braydon Kersey
- LHP Brody Trosclair
- INF Wyatt Hanoian
- LHP Ricky Ojeda
Emmett Siegel covers Tennessee baseball for Knox News. Email: emmett.siegel@knoxnews.com; X: @EmmettSiegel_
Tennessee
Shooting Hunger event aims to prevent childhood hunger in West Tennessee
JACKSON, Tenn. (WBBJ) – An exciting day of sporting clays in West Tennessee is doubling as a major fight against hunger.
Today’s “Shooting Hunger” event took place at the Carroll County Shooting Sports Park in Huntingdon. It’s a partnership between Tennessee Farm Bureau, Tennessee Farmers Co-Op, Farm Credit Mid-America and Rural First.
Since 2015, Shooting Hunger has helped provide more than three million meals to Tennesseans with money going to food banks, backpack programs, and local hunger relief. A $500 scholarship will also go to the top youth shooter in each flight.
“We’re joining together to raise money for school backpacks to feed hungry kids. We do these, we actually do three of these across the state of Tennessee so at the end of the day we take, we take all the money we put it into a pile and when we divide equally amongst all 95 counties across the state of Tennessee,“ said Bryan Wright, executive vice president for the Tennessee Farm Bureau.
Organizers say events like this matter because one in six children in Tennessee struggle with hunger.
Copyright 2026 WBBJ. All rights reserved.
Tennessee
Inside Tennessee 4×100 relay’s NCAA title, outlasting four botched exchanges
Tennessee director of track and field Duane Ross gauged the hunger of the men’s 4×100-meter relay team to pull off the upset.
“They said, ‘Coach, we’re going to win,’ ” Ross said. “When they bring you that much confidence, you can grab your popcorn and enjoy the meet.”
No popcorn was consumed, but the appetite was there from the start.
Traunard Folson, Davonte Howell, T’Mars McCallum and Elijah Clark finished in a school record time of 37.98 seconds at the NCAA Outdoor Championships on June 12 in Eugene, Oregon. It was the the program’s first national title in the 4×100 since 1983 and the fourth-fastest in NCAA history.
Four other relay teams never crossed the line. Auburn, the two-time defending champion, had run an NCAA-record 37.75 in the semifinal, but had a botched handoff on the last exchange. Arkansas, the reigning SEC champion, also dropped its baton, along with Oregon and Houston.
McCallum said staying clean through a race of chaos starts with a focus on winning, even in practice.
“In the moment we can’t really worry about anything else, just what we can control,” McCallum said on June 18. “We came to practice every time with the idea of, ‘OK, we’ve got to make sure this is fixed, because we know if we run that time, we can win.’ “
It was the final event of McCallum’s college career. It didn’t fully hit until the long flight home to Knoxville.
“I was like, we really did it,” he said. “Now we have a school record, the first team to ever go under 38 seconds here.”
Whether belief had anything to do with what went wrong in those four other lanes isn’t something Tennessee’s runners can answer. It’s exactly what they point to for why theirs didn’t.
Clark, a freshman who ran the anchor leg, said winning was just a matter of starting the race.
“We knew we had it the whole time,” he said. “No matter who did what, what happened, we knew what the outcome would come to.”
Ross said the victory wasn’t a surprise inside the program either.
“I wouldn’t say unsung,” Ross said. “I’ve watched this team all year long, and we were expecting to come out of there with the championship. It was a tight competition down to the last event.”
Tennessee finished third in the men’s team standings with 46 points, its best total since 2002.
Howell, a junior who ran the second leg, said the belief behind the relay team’s confidence was built long before the race.
“Three of the four of us already ran under 10 seconds,” he said. “Last year we all trained together during the summer, all lived together. We already had the bond, and adding the freshman on anchor was just a cherry on top. He figured it out at SECs, ran a 10.1, season’s best, and we trusted him to bring it home.”
Clark said the title is already part of something bigger to him.
“The goal is to always make history,” said Clark, who was hired by Tennessee four years ago after a successful run at North Carolina A&T. “It’s been one of my dreams. To be able to be on the wall, especially at a school like this, I couldn’t ask for anything more.”
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