When you have two legitimate Top 20 teams testing each other, it’s never inevitable.
Tennessee
Just how diverse is Tennessee? See how the Volunteer State ranks compared to other U.S. states
Population in southern states grew by 1.4 million in 2023
The population growth was measured between July 1, 2022 and 2023 and considered factors like birth and death rates and international migration.
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A new report has just revealed the most and least diverse states in the country. According to WalletHub, California, Texas and Florida rank as the nation’s most diverse states, while New Hampshire, West Virginia and Maine rank as the least diverse. Tennessee landed among the middle, ranking as the 27th (65.11/100) most diverse state.
While Tennessee did rank in the top or bottom, the state has experienced an over 10% increase in diversity between 2010-2020, according to the latest data from the United States Census Bureau. In 2020, the Volunteer State’s Diversity Index reached 46.6%, a 17.1% increase from 39.8% in 2010.
That figure is only expected to rise, as the state is projected to become even more racially and ethnically diverse by 2040 when the state is projected to be home to eight million residents, according to research from the University of Tennessee Knoxville.
Beyond racial diversity, WalletHub also analyzed states’ economic, religious and political diversity.
“Race and gender are probably the first things that come to mind when people think about diversity, but there’s plenty more that makes this nation diverse,” said WalletHub analyst Chip Lupo. “The most diverse states have above-average variety when it comes to people’s ages, birthplaces, languages, jobs, family structures and more. Moving to a diverse state can be an extremely enriching experience as it exposes you to new ideas and new ways of living.”
Which Tennessee cities grew the most? See how population shifted according to the U.S. Census
How has Tennessee’s diversity changed within a decade?
Between 2010 and 2020, Tennessee experienced an 8.9% increase in population, or an additional 564,735 more residents. During that same time frame, the following groups experienced the highest population increases:
- Some other race alone or in combination (260,000)
- Hispanic or Latino (189,128)
- American Indian or Alaska Native alone or in combination (106,562)
- Black/African American alone or in combination (88,936)
The white alone (68,990), Asian alone (65,285) and Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander alone or in combination (3,233) populations experienced the lowest increases.
The most diverse states in the country, according to WalletHub
- California (70.77/100)
- Texas (70.48/100)
- Florida (69.88/100)
- New Mexico (69.83/100)
- Hawaii (69.77/100)
- Nevada (69.72/100)
- New Jersey (69.71/100)
- New York (69.62/100
- Maryland (69.12/100)
- Arizona (69.10/100)
The least diverse states in the country, according to WalletHub
- Wisconsin (63.45/100)
- North Dakota (63.42/100)
- Utah (63.27/100)
- Iowa (62.88)
- Wyoming (62.81/100)
- Kentucky (62.63/100)
- Montana (62.15/100)
- Vermont (61.51/100)
- New Hampshire (60.42/100)
- Maine (60.10/100)
- West Virginia (59.72/100)
Methodology
In order to determine the most and least diverse states in the country, WalletHub compared the 50 states across six dimensions: socio-economic diversity (20 total points), cultural diversity (20 total points), economic diversity (20 total points), household diversity (20 total points), religious diversity (10 total points), and political diversity (10 total points).
WalletHub then evaluated those dimensions using 14 metrics, which include:
- Household-income diversity (13.33 points)
- Educational-attainment diversity (6.67 points)
- Racial and ethnic diversity (10 points)
- Linguistic diversity (6.67 points)
- Birthplace diversity (3.33 points)
- Industry diversity (12 points)
- Occupational diversity (4 points)
- Worker-class diversity (4 points)
- Marital-status diversity (5 points)
- Generational diversity (5 points)
- Household-type diversity (5 points)
- Household size diversity (5 points)
- Religious diversity (10 points)
- Political diversity (10 points)
Each metric was graded on a 100-point scale. Each state’s weighted average was then determined across all metrics to calculate its overall score and the resulting scores were used to rank-order the states. A total score of 100 represents the most diverse state.
Diana Leyva covers trending news and service journalism for The Tennessean. Contact her at Dleyva@gannett.com or follow her on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, at @_leyvadiana
Tennessee
Tennessee football QB Jake Merklinger plans to enter transfer portal
Tennessee quarterback Jake Merklinger plans to enter the transfer portal, Knox News has confirmed.
On3.com and Rivals.com were the first to report Merklinger’s decision. The transfer portal opens on Jan. 2.
Merklinger has also opted out of the Music City Bowl. No. 23 Tennessee (8-4) plays Illinois (8-4) on Dec. 30 (5:30 p.m. ET, ESPN) in Nashville. Starter Joey Aguilar will play in the bowl game, so Merklinger was not expected to be a factor. Freshman George MacIntyre will serve as the backup.
Merklinger spent two seasons at Tennessee but barely played and failed to win the starting job. He played six games and went 19-of-33 passing for 221 yards and two touchdowns.
In 2024, Merklinger was a third-string freshman when Nico Iamaleava started. In 2025, he competed for the starting job but lost to transfer Joey Aguilar.
By the end of the 2025 season, Merklinger was neck and neck with freshman George MacIntyre for the backup job. And it didn’t appear that Merklinger would factor in the starting job in 2026.
Merklinger, a native of Savannah, Georgia, was a four-star recruit in the 2024 class. He has three seasons of eligibility remaining.
Adam Sparks is the Tennessee football beat reporter. Email adam.sparks@knoxnews.com. X, formerly known as Twitter@AdamSparks. Support strong local journalism by subscribing at knoxnews.com/subscribe.
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Tennessee
Seedy K’s GameCap: Tennessee
But this U of L task in Knoxville against tall favorite Tennessee sure seemed close to that heading in.
Well coached top level foe at its sold out home.
One whose strength — inside scoring and rebounding — made it a bad matchup for the Cards, whose lack of inside depth and strength has been an Achilles heel from the get go.
That the Vols were hungry and angry coming off three straight Ls made a U of L victory seem an almost impossible task.
Then we learned that back issue of Mikel Brown’s is a problem.
Cards were toast before tip.
It was all evident by halftime — actually well before then.
It just takes a peek at a couple statistics.
Tennessee led by only 7, thanks to some tough Cardinal D. And UT’s woeful FT shooting.
That inside game issue: Volunteers 28 points in the paint. Cardinals 10.
That’s right, Tennessee had more points in the paint at the break than Louisville had points total.
That lack of point guard issue: U of L had 9 FGs at intermission. Tennessee had that many assists on 15 buckets.
Louisville’s strength is depth. At least usually.
During the first 20 Tuesday, the Cards had zero points off the pine. Vols 22. (For the game, the disparity was 34-3. Khani Rooths hit a FT. Wild Man Zougris a garbage time slam.)
Another opening stanza reality that might have you feeling the need to clean your glasses.
Only three guys scored. Adrian Wooley with 12, Ryan Conwell with 11, and Sananda Fru with 4.
Louisville’s second half performance is not worth the bandwidth, my time to write about, nor your time to read.
The final, in a lopsided disappointing loss: 83-62.
There is no sugar frosting this. Against teams with major size and inside presence, Louisville has and will continue to struggle.
When your most talented player doesn’t suit up, it makes it more impossible to overcome.
Tennessee
A look at new laws proposed in Tennessee
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