Tennessee
Tennessee surgeon was shot three times by patient in exam room: police report
New details emerged in the deadly targeted attack on a Tennessee surgeon earlier this week, including about the victim’s injuries and how authorities identified the suspect through exam paperwork.
Dr. Benjamin Mauck was shot three times – including wounds to his neck, chest, and upper abdomen – in an examination room at Campbell Clinic Orthopedics in Collierville on Tuesday afternoon, the police report obtained by WMC said.
Police arrived at the clinic shortly after 2 p.m., where a witness explained that Mauck’s patient pulled out a handgun and started firing, the report said.
Paperwork in the exam room where Mauck’s body was found identified the suspect as Larry Pickens, 29, who was arrested a few minutes later on Popler Avenue near the clinic’s entrance.
At the time of his arrest, Pickens was carrying a backpack containing an empty pistol and two empty magazines, the report detailed.
Pickens, of Memphis, was charged with first-degree murder and aggravated assault, police confirmed on Wednesday.
His bond was set at $1.2 million.
Shortly after Mauck’s killing, Tennessee Senate Minority Leader Raumesh Akbari (D-Memphis) told the press that the shooter had allegedly been threatening a Campbell Clinic staffer for a week before the incident.
Police also confirmed that Mauck’s attacker waited for him for “hours” before firing on the dad of two.
Mauck, who also worked as a surgeon at Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital, boasted a 4.9 rating with patients and was named on Memphis Magazine’s 2023 Top Doctor List just last week.
In addition to his young children, he is survived by his wife, Rhiannon Mauck.
Pickens is expected to be arraigned on Thursday.
Tennessee
Where Tennessee Football Ranks In Recruiting Rankings Following Early Signing Day
Tennessee had a great early signing day. Here are where they stand.
Early Signing Day has officially wrapped up for the Vols and it was an eventful day.
Tennessee has only two unsigned commits at this point however their highest-rated commit David Sanders Jr. did not sign today and postponed his announcement for what seems to be only a few days. The other player to not sign is Onis Konanbanny which is a great sign for the Vols as Konanbanny is fresh off a visit to Florida and would’ve likely signed with the Gators today if he signed anywhere.
Only one commit for the Vols coming into the day flipped away and that commit was Darrion Smith who flipped to Auburn. He is a three-star defensive lineman and the Vols anticipated this to happen and was no shock.
Tennessee did make up for the departure of Smith with a commitment from top-35-ranked defensive lineman Isaiah Campbell. Campbell committed to the Vols over the North Carolina Tar Heels and the school he was previously committed to, Clemson.
Tennessee flipped two recruits on the day as they flipped Timothy Merritt (three-star safety) from Miami earlier in the day and closed the day out by flipping Jadon Perlotte (four-star linebacker/edge).
Tennessee’s class remains in the top 10 following their historic day in the office. They currently rank 9th but that could change as signing day continues.
The Vols are expected to be done for at least Wednesday and will likely be done until a Sanders decision is announced.
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Tennessee
Auburn flips Tennessee football commitment and defensive tackle Darrion Smith
Auburn football flipped three-star defensive tackle Darrion Smith from Tennessee on National Signing Day on Wednesday for the 2025 class.
Smith had been committed to Tennessee since July 30.
The 6-foot-2, 265-pound Smith is a three-star recruit according to 247Sports Composite. A Maryland product, Smith attends St. Frances Academy, with fellow Auburn commits Blake Woodby and Bryce Deas.
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
Cade Phillips is a star role player for Tennessee basketball. How he’s affecting the Vols
Cade Phillips was 40 feet away from the rim when he pointed at it Tuesday.
The Tennessee basketball forward saw what was going to happen when he was still a long ways off. Guard Zakai Zeigler had the ball on the opposite wing when Phillips pointed. He held his left arm high as Zeigler then tossed a lob from the elbow.
Phillips sailed, snared it with two hands and slammed it. The sophomore played it perfectly — just as he has been doing often this season in his increasingly essential role.
“When Cade checks in, it is just like a boost of energy,” senior guard Chaz Lanier said. “He is super athletic — probably one of the most athletic people I have played with. Just a boost of energy and intensity.”
Phillips is a star as a role player for Tennessee, which was on full display again for No. 3 Tennessee (8-0) as it smashed Syracuse (4-3) by a score of 96-70 on Tuesday at Thompson-Boling Arena at Food City Center.
How Cade Phillips is starring in his role for Tennessee
Phillips can define the core of his role well.
“I think is is to be as versatile on both ends of the floor as possible,” Phillips said.
There is something to be said for a player who knows his role. There is even more to be said for a player who does it well. Phillips deserves recognition for both during Tennessee’s torrid eight-game start to the season.
“The more and more he is out there … he is feeling more and more at ease doing some things,” Vols coach Rick Barnes said.
Offensively, Phillips maximizes who he is as a 6-foot-9 forward. He runs and cuts hard. He is strong enough now to bump defenders with a hard dribble and score through contact — he did both in his 10-point first half Tuesday. He’s a solid floor-spacer.
On the other end, the Alabama native is a potentially diabolical defender. Barnes has voiced the Vols view Phillips as a Jahmai Mashack-caliber player. In other words, Phillips can guard all five positions on the court but as a forward. That ability comes from athleticism and length.
He rebounds ferociously on both ends and it is an innate skill for him.
But it all comes back to versatility.
“As the season is progressing, I am getting more and more comfortable I feel like,” Phillips said.
What is next for Cade Phillips?
Phillips wasn’t supposed to play last season. He was going to redshirt then the senior pair of Santiago Vescovi and Josiah-Jordan James insisted Phillips would help the Vols. He did early as a freshman then his role diminished later in the season.
Vescovi’s reasoning was Phillips was so active he could play immediately. That is what earned Phillips trust. That remains part of the process.
“It gets down to the more consistency you get doing certain things, you earn trust,” Barnes said. “Not only I think with your coaches and your teammates, but most importantly with yourself. You realize I have this down now and I can take another step.
“We have watched Cade do that.”
Phillips is averaging 7.4 points and 4.8 rebounds in 18.3 minutes per game, a stellar stat line as he splits time between UT’s two forward positions. He is tied for the team lead with 20 offensive rebounds, which is more than his 18 defensive rebounds. He has nine blocks and only nine fouls, a great ratio to possess.
Barnes expects that an expanded offensive game is out there for Phillips. That’ll be a process. The immediate focus is handling success well as it keeps coming.
“Cade is going to do everything he can,” Barnes said. “He has got a little bit of a stubborn streak where when he messes up, he wants to come back and fix it right away.”
On second thought, it’s something else — and something central to Phillips perfecting his role as he develops.
“It is probably more of a competitive spirit,” Barnes.
Mike Wilson covers University of Tennessee athletics. Email him at michael.wilson@knoxnews.com and follow him on X @ByMikeWilson or Bluesky @bymikewilson.bsky.social. If you enjoy Mike’s coverage, consider a digital subscription that will allow you access to all of it.
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