Tennessee
Formerly unhoused LA teen settles into college life in Tennessee
LOS ANGELES – Dorm curfew is midnight… new guidelines for a school child who spent a lot of his highschool years unhoused.
Jeremiah Armstead is an 18-year-old whose life route modified in a single day when a group got here collectively in Los Angeles to ship him to varsity. He landed at Fisk College in Tennessee.
FOX 11 was the primary to report on Armstead; and Christine Devine paid a go to to him in Nashville simply weeks into the autumn semester.
In August, Armstead was residing in a automobile together with his mom, youthful sister, and brother. The household discovered a secure place via the ‘Do Good Daniels Household Basis’ who function a home violence shelter. The non-profit ‘Sisters of Watts’ stepped in and noticed a greater future for him.
They launched a fundraising effort to pay for faculty and reached out to ‘We Educate Sensible Minds’ which works to get interior metropolis children into HBCUs, Traditionally Black Faculties, like Fisk.
Armstead says he spent a lot of his highschool years unhoused together with his household shifting from shelters and housing places, even staying of their automobile. He spent his final 12 months at Lengthy Seashore Poly Excessive College and graduated in 2022, the place he was the middle on the basketball crew.
He is now a Fiskite and on the basketball crew in Nashville. The coach is former NBA participant Kenny Anderson, a one-time Los Angeles Clipper. At 6’5ft, Armstead discovered a love of basketball when he was 14-years-old.
A spotlight for me was assembly his teammates on the college cafeteria! Scholar Physique President,Daikerra Sweat, gave us a tour of campus and shared her data of the historical past of the varsity which was based in 1866. It is house to Nashville’s oldest constructing, she says.
In a extra haunting second that may follow me… she shared the heartbreaking historical past of the KKK and a bell on campus that might alert college students and college that the Ku Klux Klan was coming.
The bell is now rung when Fisk College wins a basketball or volleyball recreation.
Again to his dorm room the place you will discover Armstead lives by religion and retains a bible on his desk. It is stored open on the e-book of Jeremiah. He attends service in Nashville every Sunday with a household that has taken him beneath their wing.
Armstead says he is having fun with the southern hospitality and says everybody has been welcoming. He says he talks by cellphone together with his mother each day.
Tennessee
Tennessee handles its 2nd half business on a weird day for the program
Top-ranked Tennessee had an unexpected scare thrown into them tonight in the first half against MTSU before the Vols regrouped and controlled the second half in an 82-64 win.
After the first 10 minutes of play it felt like Tennessee was putting together a little pre-Christmas blowout, leading 25-14 and cruising.
Suddenly without warning, MTSU put together the best offensive stretch that any opponent has slapped on Tennessee this year, outscoring the Vols 26-9 in the final 9:31 of the first half to lead 40-34 at the break.
It was a wake-up call for the Vols who watched the Blue Raiders’ Camryn Weston put up 17 first half points on 7-of-9 shooting.
“At the start of the game, they did what I thought they would do,” Barnes said of MTSU, who he clearly had some respect for.
“I think we’re up eight, missed a couple of layups that we need to make, and then we turned it over four or five times in a row. Changed the whole momentum of the game in the first half.
MTSU didn’t wilt in the second half, but Tennessee took control of the game the way you’d expect to see from the No. 1 team in the nation.
The Vols didn’t look like the top team in the country for the first 30 minutes of the game, but they did for the last 10.
It was still a tie game at 51-51 with 12:21 left in the game when the Vols hit the turbo button.
Tennessee outscored MTSU 31-13 from there on out and when the smoke had cleared on the second half the visitors had been outscored 48-24 and held to 29% shooting.
The Vols also got a helping hand from the crowd, which turned out in force two days before Christmas for this non-conference affair.
With the Vols down six at the half the crowd cranked it up significantly in the second half, almost creating a big SEC-game like environment.
The energy in the building translated onto the court and Tennessee just completely dominated the final 10 minutes of the game.
“I thought at halftime we were locked in and came out and obviously played a lot better,” Barnes said of his team’s second half. “But I told them, this won’t be the last time we would be behind at halftime. (It’s) Good for us, and let’s see if we can handle it. I thought they did a good job coming out and doing that.”
Chaz Lanier—who led the Vols with 23 points—got that final spurt going with a three pointer that put Tennessee up 55-51.
Zakai Zeigler—who had a double-double with 17 points and 15 assists, found Cade Phillips for back-to-back dunks to make it 59-54 with 10:43 left on the clock.
MTSU would make three more shots the rest of the way and get out-scored 25-10.
It was a master class from Tennessee on locking down on defense and finding your groove on the offensive end.
Zeigler had six of his career high 15 assists in the final 11:55 tonight, and just orchestrated the offense at a crazy high level in the final quarter of the game.
He’s playing the point guard position at a high, high level right now, to say the least.
“He’s starting to really understand his teammates. I think the more that he’s out there, he and Chaz are starting to get a little bit more of a connection to it,” Barnes said of Ziegler’s play.
Thanks to the way they regrouped and just throttled MTSU in the second half, barring an absolute stunner next week against Norfolk State Tennessee will start SEC play as the No. 1 team in the country.
But they’ll also start it with (as of now) nine available scholarship players thanks to a strange development on Monday.
The Vols learned today that sophomore Cam Carr plans to redshirt to maintain a year of eligibility and enter the transfer portal. He is no longer with the team.
Carr has been sidelined since suffering a broken thumb against Austin Peay on Nov. 17. He was expected to be out 4-6 weeks, so would have been returning at or near the start of SEC play in a couple of weeks.
That is obviously no longer the case and the already thin Vols are even more short-handed.
Tennessee began the year with 11 scholarship players and have lost JP Estrella (foot) for the year in addition to Carr.
It was even more extreme tonight against MTSU with freshman point guard Bishop Boswell sidelined with a shoulder injury (he’s day-to-day).
Playing with what will apparently be a nine-man bench is hardly ideal, but Barnes wasn’t playing ‘poor me’ over the Vols’ roster situation.
“We have pretty much played eight or nine guys all year, right? Pretty much,” Barnes said of the situation. “I tell everybody, back when I first got into coaching, you ask questions trying to learn all I could about this game and talking to some of the old legendary guys. They always told me, ‘you want to play six, maybe seven, eight only if you have to.’
Barnes was taking the fact that his roster had shrunk to nine guys with equanimity. But he had some thoughts on Carr’s decision to leave the program, which happens to be ranked No. 1 in the nation, during the middle of the season.
Transfers are very much a part of the game in college athletics. But a midseason basketball transfer from a player who was almost certainly going to be in the rotation on a final four contender checking out?
That’s some next level stuff.
“It’s like Jahmai Mashack and Zakai Zeigler said a year ago when we lost some guys,” Barnes said of Carr’s departure.
“They said plain and clear, ‘if they don’t want to be here then we don’t want them here.’ We want guys that want to be here and guys that really care about being part of the team. They said that. That’s how I think we all feel.”
Tennessee is off now for several days for Christmas. They’ll return to the court on Dec. 31, hosting Norfolk State in the final non-conference game of the year. Make a note, that Tuesday game tips off at 3:00 p.m.
Tennessee
Bishop Boswell out for Tennessee basketball vs MTSU with shoulder injury
Bishop Boswell is out for Tennessee basketball against Middle Tennessee State on Monday with a right shoulder injury.
He is considered day to day.
Boswell was injured in the second half of Tennessee’s 84-36 win against Western Carolina on Tuesday. He did not return and had a sling on his right arm following the game.
The No. 1 Vols (11-0) have two nonconference games remaining starting with the matchup with MTSU (9-3) on Monday (7 p.m. ET, SEC Network+).
Tennessee has eight scholarship players available against MTSU. Forward J.P. Estrella is out after season-ending foot surgery and guard Cam Carr left the program Monday.
Bishop Boswell has right shoulder injury
Boswell collided with a screen from WCU’s Vernon Collins midway through the second half Wednesday.
The freshman guard immediately grabbed his right shoulder and crouched down to the court when play stopped. He checked out with 12:02 to play.
Boswell did not play in Tennessee’s season-opening win against Gardner-Webb while in concussion protocol.
Tennessee’s guard rotation is senior-dominated
Tennessee relies heavily on a veteran group of guards.
The Vols start the senior trio of Zakai Zeigler, Jahmai Mashack and Chaz Lanier. Jordan Gainey is the sixth man and has been dynamic the past two games.
Carr elected to leave the program Monday. He likely will enter the transfer portal when it opens in late March. He could pursue a medical redshirt because he played in four games this season before suffering a left thumb injury.
Mike Wilson covers University of Tennessee athletics. Email him at michael.wilson@knoxnews.com and follow him on Twitter @ByMikeWilson. If you enjoy Mike’s coverage, consider a digital subscription that will allow you access to all of it.
Tennessee
Lions QB Makes Sense for Titans
If there is one thing clear about the Tennessee Titans right now, it is that they badly need to make a move for a legitimate starting quarterback.
Will Levis has done nothing to show development and improvement, while Mason Rudolph is also clearly not a starting caliber NFL quarterback. Heading into the offseason, the Titans will be tasked with finding a new option.
There is a chance that Tennessee could look to get aggressive in the NFL Draft to land one of the top quarterback prospects. Cam Ward looks like an ideal fit if the Titans could get him.
However, there is also a chance that Tennessee could explore the free agency and trade market for a new quarterback.
Should they opt to go the trade route, they could target a quarterback who would not cost them an arm and a leg. Perhaps a younger backup quarterback from another team would make sense.
One potential option could be trading for Detroit Lions’ backup quarterback Hendon Hooker.
Hooker was originally selected by the Lions with the No. 68 overall pick in the third round of the 2023 NFL Draft. He has played in three games in limited action this season, completing six of his nine pass attempts for 62 yards.
At 26 years old, he could be a long-term franchise quarterback option if things pan out.
Bringing in Hooker would have no downside to it. The Titans would not feel pressure to play him like they would by bringing in a veteran option. Also, Hooker would be able to compete with Levis and the best man would win the job before the 2025 campaign.
Throughout his career, Hooker has shown off immense talent. In his draft class, some thought that he had top-tier potential to be an NFL starter down the road.
In five college seasons, including his last two with the Tennessee Volunteers, Hooker completed 67 percent of his passes for 8,974 yards, 80 touchdowns, and just 12 interceptions. He also picked up 2,083 yards and 25 touchdowns on the ground.
Acquiring Hooker also would not be too expensive. Tennessee could likely flip a late pick in the middle rounds for him.
All of that being said, something has to change for the Titans. They can’t afford to stand pat and hope that Levis will figure things out.
Trading for a piece like Hooker could be the move that motivates Levis, or Hooker himself could end up being the team’s starter moving forward.
Make sure you bookmark Tennessee Titans on SI for the latest news, exclusive interviews, film breakdowns and so much more!
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