Tennessee
Tennessee Children’s Home names new president to start in April
The Tennessee Children’s Home has selected Mike Yuhas as its new president, who will take over for longtime president Brian King, who plans to retire in June.
While the position will be new, Yuhas has been involved with the Children’s Home since 1995, serving many positions, such as emergency shelter shift worker, houseparent, residential counselor, principal and program director. He is also a graduate from Freed-Hardeman University with a bachelor’s degree in business administration.
Yuhas’ transition into the position will begin April 1 and will commence no later than June 30, according to a press release.
More: ‘Long journey’: Children’s home opens new Spring Hill campus; open house, Oct. 30
“Tennessee Children’s Home is a great organization made up of people who are passionate about helping kids,” Yuhas said. “I am thankful for the opportunity to lead these efforts into the future.”
According to a press release, the Children’s Home currently serves 96 children and young adults as of October 2023.
“Mike has proven himself strong and capable at every level,” Board of Tennessee Children’s Home Chairman Bruce Gibbs said. “We are confident that he is the person to lead the Tennessee Children’s Home organization to an even brighter future for the children in our care.”
King will be retiring after serving the Children’s Home for 42 years, beginning as a social worker and later being named president in 1998. During his time, the Children’s Home underwent many improvements and expansions.
Its largest expansion occurred in October of 2021 when the Children’s Home opened its new campus on approximately 45 acres off Dr. Robertson Road.
“I know Mike Yuhas will do a great job,” King said. “He has an extensive background in childcare and business management. It’s a good feeling to know that Tennessee Children’s Home is being left in good hands.”
The Children’s Home was founded in 1909 as the Tennessee Orphans Home. Its services provide group home residential treatment, child and family counseling and after-care programs for children who are victims of abuse, dependent neglect, as well as orphans. In addition to Spring Hill, the nonprofit currently has campuses in Henderson, Knoxville and Clarksville.
For more information, visit the Children’s Home’s website at www.TennesseeChildrensHome.org.
Jay Powell is a general reporter for The Daily Herald. Get up-to-date news in your inbox by subscribing to The Daily Herald newsletter at www.ColumbiaDailyHerald.com.
Tennessee
South Carolina women's basketball holds on for 70-63 win at Tennessee
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — One quarter to adjust, two to take over, one to hold on.
South Carolina women’s basketball had a feeling out process on the road against Tennessee’s unique style of play, a similar situation to what everyone who has faced first-year coach Kim Caldwell has.
Unlike the rest of Tennessee’s opponents though, South Carolina adapted and overwhelmed its opponent.
No. 2 South Carolina turned an early 14-5 deficit around and went on a 31-7 run to put a stranglehold on proceedings, eventually holding on for a 70-63 win after a late Tennessee run to complete a perfect five-game stretch against ranked SEC opponents.
Tennessee’s (15-5, 3-5 SEC) 40-minute full court pressing, consistent pressure defense, regular 3-point launching and full line change substitution every other minute is a curveball for opponents. There is no way to really simulate it, and it hits quickly once the ball is tipped. Sure enough, Tennessee fed off its home crowd, forced turnovers in the press and took a nine-point lead early.
But once the Gamecocks settled down, the rally was furious. Freshman point guard Maddy McDaniel had a lot to do with it. She checked into the game late in the first quarter after not playing at all against Tennessee. True to form, she dribbled the ball out of bounds against the press the first time she saw it. But for the rest of the first quarter, she smoothly broke it and created some instant offense.
McDaniel consistently broke the press, had a steal and a transition layup late in the first quarter and knocked down a jumper early after the quarter change to help stem the tide. Her ability to push the ball into the frontcourt also triggered South Carolina’s (20-1, 8-0 SEC) post players, especially Joyce Edwards. The fellow freshman scored nine in the first quarter and 18 in the game, taking advantage of an undersized and often out of position Tennessee front court for several easy looks and lead the Gamecocks in scoring for the fourth consecutive game.
Defensively, a Tennessee offense built for quick movement and outside shooting could not find much of either, shooting a ghastly 3-of-26 from 3-point range and turning the ball over 13 times. MiLaysia Fulwiley fought through foul trouble — she played the final six minutes of the first half with two — and knocked down a pair of corner 3-pointers as part of a 14-0 South Carolina run which flipped Tennessee’s slim lead into a double-digit advantage the other way.
By the time the dust settled on the flurry the Gamecocks had allowed just two made field goals in 13 minutes of play and scored 31 of the last 38 points, turning a tough road game into the equivalent of a mid-major buy game for most of the first half.
A sloppy, disjointed and at times downright senseless fourth quarter full of questionable shot selection, mental mistakes and turnovers let a 22-point lead dwindle all the way down to six in the closing seconds.
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Tennessee
South Carolina women's basketball: Five Things to Watch – Tennessee
South Carolina women’s basketball wraps up the first half of the SEC season with a trip to Tennessee. Find out how to watch and what to watch for against the No. 17 Lady Vols.
1. Run Run Run
Tennessee is the highest-scoring team in the nation, averaging 93.4 points per game. That is nothing new for South Carolina, who is coming off of games against teams ranked fourth, 15th, fourth, and third entering the game.
Tennessee is different from those other teams, though. Tennessee leads the country with 33.9 three-point attempts per game, and the Lady Vols want to run and shoot for 40 minutes.
On offense, they want to get up as many shots, especially threes, as possible. On defense, Tennessee presses and traps full court to make everything difficult. It wears opponents down physically and mentally, and all five players have to be on the same page.
“Being decisive and just going to the ball, meeting passes,” Te-Hina Paopao said. “Just being really decisive with the ball and knowing what you want to do with it.”
Against the Lady Vols, you have to be patient on offense, protect the ball, and not get sped up. Defensively, you have to stay glued to your player. The Lady Vols have issues scoring in the halfcourt when they aren’t getting stops.
“There are certain things we need to take care of,” Dawn Staley said. “The ball is one. Two is defending our turnovers if we do turn the ball over. Three is obviously transition and the three-point line. Four is we’ve got to defend. Although you’re not going to disrupt them so much because they space you out, we’ve got to handle being able to guard one-on-one.”
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2. Depth
Both South Carolina and Tennessee use a lot of players. Tennessee has 10 players playing between 13 and 25 minutes.
The Lady Vols aren’t afraid to substitute all five players at once. It’s all designed to make their press feel relentless and wear down opponents physically and mentally.
South Carolina did that earlier in the season, but more recently, Dawn Staley has preferred to frequently substitute one or two players at a time to stay fresh.
South Carolina’s 10-player rotation has shortened to eight recently due to injuries to Ashlyn Watkins and Maddy McDaniel. McDaniel has been slow to get back to where she was before suffering a concussion. She and Maryam Dauda have only gotten brief playing time lately, but this might be a game where Staley expands the rotation, especially if she needs another ball-handler like McDaniel.
“Good two days of practice,” Staley said. “I think she’ll play. I do think she’ll play. Her speed, her ability to be a little bit different than all of our guards, will pay dividends. We’re going to need that against Tennessee.”
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3. Three-point shooting
South Carolina shot just 2-13 against LSU and was 0-6 in the second half. That continues a recent trend. The Gamecocks were 10-28 against Oklahoma, but just 3-20 against Alabama and 3-7 against Texas.
That comes out to 26.5% (18-68) over the last four games. South Carolina has shot around 35% for most of the season.
The strangest part of the recent slump is that most of the attempts have been open looks from Te-Hina Paopao, Tessa Johnson, and Bree Hall. That group normally shoots over 40%, but they are a combined 33.3% over the last four games.
They seem due for a breakout.
4. Availability report
South Carolina remains as healthy as it will be for the rest of the season. Only Ashlyn Watkins (Out) is listed on the availability report.
For Tennessee, Kaiya Wynn is Out. She’s been out all season with an Achilles injury.
The biggest availability question heading into the game doesn’t involve players, it involves Tennessee coach Kim Caldwell.
Caldwell said on Sunday that she plans to coach the Lady Vols Monday night, just seven days after giving birth to her first son, Conor Scott Caldwell, on Jan. 20. Caldwell returned to practice on Friday.
Caldwell missed the Lady Vols’ last game at Texas. Assistant coach Jenna Burdette led Tennessee in her absence.
Get the GamecocksW newsletter: Don’t rely on search engines and social media for your South Carolina women’s basketball info
5. Scouting the Lady Vols
Tennessee rolled through the non-conference season undefeated, including a 139-59 win over NC Central, where the Lady Vols made a mind-boggling 30 three-pointers, an NCAA record.
It’s been a different story in SEC play, where the Lady Vols are 3-4. However, those four losses have been by one point to 13th-ranked Oklahoma, two points to No. 6 LSU, one point to Vanderbilt, and four points at No. 7 Texas.
Ten-point margins can seemingly vanish in a flash with Tennessee, who came back from 19 down against Oklahoma and 18 down against LSU. But there are also the dry spells that dug those holes to begin with.
“The different style will probably take a little bit to adjust to,” Staley said. “We’ve got to make them adjust to us. The whole objective is for us to adjust to them. Then, somewhere in the middle, a team is going to have a run. I just hope it’s us.”
Caldwell has remade Tennessee through the transfer portal. The five players who have started and played the most are all transfers. All but one, Jewel Spear (12.8 points), who came from Wake Forest, are in their first season playing for the Lady Vols.
That includes Ruby Whitehorn (13.5 points), the highest-ranked recruit in Clemson history, who has finally realized her potential in Knoxville. Zee Spearman (11.1 points, 5.9 rebounds) was part of Miami’s surprising Elite Eight run in 2023. Samara Spencer (11.3 points, 5.5 assists) was part of the mass exodus in Arkansas following last season.
Lastly, there is former Gamecock Talaysia Cooper. Cooper was a freshman on the Gamecock team that lost to Iowa in the Final Four in Dallas. When South Carolina added Paopao out of the transfer portal the following offseason, there wasn’t much playing time left for Cooper.
Cooper decided to transfer late and missed the window to be immediately eligible. She sat out last season and has blossomed into one of the SEC’s best players this season. At 6-0, Cooper is a long, rangy athlete with a versatile game.
Caldwell’s system has maximized Cooper’s strengths and minimized her weaknesses. It’s a reminder of how much fit matters. Tennessee’s fluid, positionless style and pressing defense are perfect for Cooper.
Cooper is averaging 17.8 points, 5.7 rebounds, 3.4 assists, 3.3 steals, and is Tennessee’s leader in blocks. It’s a throwback to her high school career at East Clarendon when she had multiple quadruple doubles.
“A great player. A great player,” Staley said. “We recruit great players and we had great players in our program. I’m really happy for Coop. I’m happy that she’s found her happy place. She’s a bear to deal with because she can do it all. She can defend. She can score three levels. She can play multiple positions. I think the style of play fits perfectly for her.”
The Ws
Who: No. 2 South Carolina (19-1, 7-0) at No. 17 Tennessee (15-4, 3-4)
When: 7:00 ET, Monday, January 27
Where: Thompson-Boling Arena, Knoxville, TN
Watch: ESPN2
Tennessee
Titans Hire Dolphins Exec
The Tennessee Titans are continuing to build a front office staff to help turn things around in the Music City.
“The Titans continue to add expertise to their front office, as they are set to hire Dolphins executive Reggie McKenzie in a key, senior scouting role, sources say,” NFL Network insider Ian Rapoport tweeted.
“The former Raiders GM and respected personnel man will support Mike Borgonzi, Chad Brinker, and Dave Ziegler.”
McKenzie, 61, interviewed for the general manager position, and while the team elected to go with Borgonzi instead, the Titans appeared to really like him as well.
McKenzie has over three decades of experience in NFL front offices with the Green Bay Packers (1994-2011), Oakland Raiders (2012-18) and Dolphins (2019-24).
McKenzie won two Super Bowls with the Packers in 1996 and 2010, so his championship experience should come in handy for the Titans.
Now, the Knoxville native is coming closer to home as he joins the Titans staff under Borgonzi.
The Titans will continue building their staff as they prepare for the Shrine Bowl this weekend and the NFL Combine, which takes place next month at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.
Make sure you bookmark Tennessee Titans on SI for the latest news, exclusive interviews, film breakdowns and so much more!
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