Tennessee
Adam Sparks addresses Greg Sankey involvement in Tennessee's NCAA case
Tennessee Vols SWINGING BACK At The NCAA Over NIL Allegations
As Tennessee buckles up for a battle with the NCAA over NIL and whether it was used as an inducement to get athletes to sign with the Volunteers, lines are being drawn.
So far it’s been a relatively small contingent setting up shop against the NCAA: Tennessee, along with its chancellor Donde Plowman and the athletics department, as well as some attorneys general who have filed suit against the NCAA.
Could others, like the SEC commissioner, get involved?
“Greg Sankey is the one I think everyone is waiting to hear from,” the Knoxville News’ Adam Sparks said on the Paul Finebaum Show on Wednesday. “I think we have this sort of picture in our head that all these schools are going to lock arms and just charge headlong at the NCAA. That seems like sort of a neat way to do it. I doubt that that’s going to happen. Maybe it does happen and maybe it’s sort of a proxy war of using these attorneys general, as Tennessee is benefiting from right now.
“But you’re not going to get a coalition of schools that goes after the NCAA like Tennessee is trying to do right now unless you have the conference behind you. And I just don’t know if Greg Sankey is going to take that major, major step.”
Sparks was careful to note that he doesn’t want to speak for Sankey, but he expects Sankey to have at least some level of loyalty toward the existing NCAA system.
“Because I think he does want the NCAA to exist,” Sparks said. “I think he would like to move forward in a different way than it’s been. I don’t think he wants to burn the house down. I don’t want to speak for him, but that’s sort of been the approach that you’ve seen from him over the years.”
The Knoxville News writer did raise an interesting point on the Finebaum Show, though, noting that Sankey had been involved in some capacity in Tennessee’s last interaction with the NCAA.
So at a minimum he’s likely well-briefed on the current Tennessee situation.
Does Sankey already know about Tennessee’s plans and how the Volunteers plan to go about battling with the NCAA?
“The easy answer is I don’t know,” Sparks said. “The reasonable answer is I can’t imagine that they would plunge headlong into this approach without running it by the commissioner’s office. Back even again to the (Jeremy) Pruitt hearings, it was just what, seven, eight months ago, Greg Sankey was there as his duty as commissioner. He was in the room. He met with Tennessee’s attorneys. He was in the loop. He even helped a lot with strategy, as he’s supposed to do as the conference commissioner.
“I have to think Tennessee at least ran this by and said, ‘This is how we’re going to approach this.’ I don’t know that they asked for permission, but I have to think that they ran it by the commissioner’s office, and now we just wait to see if he’s going to come out in full support or wait till things settle.”
Part of waiting for things to settle could involve waiting to see what other programs might be targeted by NCAA enforcement. To date Florida State has been hit with NIL penalties, while Florida is under NCAA investigation over its recruitment of quarterback Jaden Rashada.
Would other schools emerging as targets get them to jump into a fight against the NCAA with Tennessee?
“I think Greg Sankey is probably sitting on the sidelines and watching this play out,” Sparks said. “Tennessee will not be the last one. I’ve heard in the last 24 hours anywhere from five to 20 or more schools that allegedly are on the list that are going to get hit with NIL.
“If your school in the last two to three years had a high-profile NIL signing that was in the media and it was celebrated or you had a recruiting class with a high-dollar figure in NIL over the past two or three years you can expect the NCAA will be snooping around soon.”
Tennessee
Tennessee Republicans unveil monument honoring unborn children at State Capitol
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WZTV) — On the fourth anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, Tennessee Republicans unveiled a new monument at the State Capitol honoring unborn children.
The Roe v. Wade decision allowed states to set their own abortion laws and triggered Tennessee’s Human Life Protection Act, which bans nearly all elective abortions in the state. The law has saved about 10,000 lives each year since taking effect, according to Tennessee Right to Life.
The Tennessee Monument to Unborn Children is located on the southeast side of the Capitol grounds. Lawmakers say it recognizes unborn children whose lives ended through abortion and serves as a place for reflection and remembrance.
The monument was approved by the General Assembly in 2018 and was paid for entirely through private donations.
Republican leaders said the monument reflects Tennessee’s commitment to protecting unborn children and honoring the value of human life.
Tennessee
Dolly Parton makes surprise public appearance amid health battle
See Dolly Parton celebrate Tennessean Travel Stop grand opening
The country music legend opened the first location of her Tennessean Travel Stop in Cornersville, Tennessee.
CORNERSVILLE, Tenn. — Out on the street, the traffic started jumpin’ as travelers made their way to Dolly Parton’s Tennessean Travel Stop on opening day.
“Dolly is on her way,” Tennessean Travel Stop owner Gregory Sachs told the media gathered at the new truck destination in Cornersville, saying Parton would cut the ribbon at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, June 24.
The anticipation had been building all morning at the new roadside destination along Interstate 65. The 80-year-old country legend arrived wearing a blue-and-pink fringe ensemble, complete with her signature stiletto heels.
The “9 to 5” singer used the moment to make a playful quip about travel stop competitor Buc-ee’s.
“I’m sure some of you want to know why I wanted a truck stop,” Parton said. “Well, I couldn’t leave it to beavers.”
Parton ended the brief ceremony with a ribbon cutting, marked by an explosion of multicolored confetti featuring her signature butterfly.
The message drew cheers from guests who had spent the afternoon exploring the property, sampling food from DLY BBQ and trying a “Cup of Ambition” coffee, waiting to see whether Parton would make an appearance. Earlier promotional materials for the grand opening had stated that the country music icon would not attend the public festivities.
The appearance marks one of only a handful of public events for Parton in 2026.
In March, the East Tennessee star returned to Dollywood to launch the theme park’s 41st season after stepping back from several appearances while recovering from health issues and grieving the death of her husband, Carl Dean. During that appearance, Parton told fans she had been rebuilding herself “spiritually, emotionally and physically.”
Parton, who has been open about dealing with kidney stones, said in May that she is working with doctors after “my immune system and my digestive system got all out of whack over the past three years.”
What is Dolly’s Tennessean Travel Stop?
Located at Exit 22 off Interstate 65 in Cornersville, Dolly’s Tennessean Travel Stop officially opened to the public on June 24. The flagship location is a partnership between Parton, her longtime manager Danny Nozell and Gregory H. Sachs, owner of the Tennessean Travel Stop brand.
Inspired by Parton’s decades spent traveling the country by tour bus and her East Tennessee roots, the destination combines fuel services, food, shopping, live music and Tennessee-themed hospitality.
Bryan West is a music reporter at The Tennessean, part of the USA TODAY Network. Follow him on Instagram, TikTok and X as @BryanWestTV.
Tennessee
ESPN updates NBA mock draft for Ja’Kobi Gillespie, Felix Okpara in second round
ESPN projects Tennessee basketball’s Felix Okpara and Ja’Kobi Gillespie to be picked back to back in the second round of the NBA Draft on Wednesday night. ESPN’s updated mock draft has Okpara at No. 41 overall to the Miami Heat and Gillespie at No. 42 to the San Antonio Spurs.
Nate Ament was the No. 13 overall pick in the first round to the Milwaukee Bucks on Tuesday. Tennessee, which has now had players picked in six straight NBA Drafts, could have three players drafted for just the second time in the modern era of the draft, since it went to two rounds in 1989.
Grant Williams was a first-round pick in 2019, ahead of Admiral Schofield and Jordan Bone being picked in the second round.
Where ESPN ranks Felix Okpara, Ja’Kobi Gillespie in NBA Draft
Entering the second round, ESPN has Okpara ranked as the 12th-best player available in the draft. Gillespie is ranked No. 14.
Duke guard Isaiah Evans is ESPN’s No. 1 prospect to start the second round, ahead of North Carolina center Henri Veesaar, Arkansas guard Meleek Thomas, Cincinnati forward Baba Miller, Louisville guard Ryan Conwell and German guard Jack Kayil.
Also ranked ahead of Okpara is BYU guard Richie Saunders, Houston guard Emanuel Sharp, Purdue guard Braden Smith, St. John’s forward Dillon Mitchell and Arkansas forward Trevon Brazile. Ranked between Okpara and Gillespie is Arizona guard Jaden Bradley.
Felix Okpara ‘played his way into the two-way contract mix’
Okpara averaged 8.0 points, 6.3 rebounds and 1.5 blocks in 26.9 minutes per game this season, starting 34 of 35 games. He shot 59.7% from the field, 61.1% on 2-point shots and 63.5% at the foul line.
He played two seasons at Ohio State before transferring to Tennessee and anchoring the Vols on defense, serving as the rim protector defensively and a rim runner on offense.
Okpara had the fourth-highest standing reach at the NBA Draft Combine in May at 9-foot-4. He was measured at 6-foot-10 without shoes, weighed 237.4 pounds and had a 7-2 wingspan.
“Okpara had a good predraft process,” ESPN wrote, “and played his way into the two-way contract mix as a dependable big man who chips in a little bit of value on both ends.”
Ja’Kobi Gillespie ‘profiles as a potential bench option’ in NBA
Gillespie averaged 18.4 points, 5.4 assists and 2.8 rebounds in 34.8 minutes per game while starting all 37 games in his one and only season at Tennessee.
The Greeneville, Tenn., native started his career with two seasons at Belmont, then transferred to Maryland before his homecoming with the Vols as a senior last season.
“After starting his college career at Belmont,” ESPN wrote on Wednesday, “Gillespie had good years at Maryland and Tennessee while playing his way into the NBA picture. He profiles as a potential bench option if his scoring ability can outweigh his size concerns.”
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