Tennessee
Terrence Cody on Rocky Block, Alabama-Tennessee rivalry & why he never got a victory cigar
It’s Alabama-Tennessee week, so highlights of Terrence Cody’s “Rocky Block” blocked field goal in 2009 are sure to be prevalent on various college football highlight shows.
Cody sees them, too. Sixteen years after his career-defining moment in the 2009 Alabama-Tennessee game, Cody was a guest this week on AL.com’s “Beat Everyone” podcast with Ben Flanagan.
“I actually do look forward to it,” Cody said of Alabama-Tennessee week. “One of the reasons, because every year they play the highlight. So I see myself on TV once again. I ain’t seen myself playing on TV in quite a bit of years. always brings back great memories to see that highlight and to see everybody still remembers it.”
The blocked field goal was actually the second for Cody in that game, which Alabama won 12-10 to preserve its run to its first national championship in 17 years. The 6-foot-4, 350-something-pound defensive tackle blocked a 43-yard field goal attempt by Tennessee’s Daniel Lincoln early in the fourth quarter, then repeated the feat on a 44-yard attempt on the game’s final play.
Cody came into that game at less than 100%, having sprained the AC joint in his left shoulder the previous week. Ironically, it was with that wounded arm that he blocked the field goal.
“We go out (on the field) and like the whole time in my head I’m just like, ‘I blocked one, you know, let’s get another one, let’s get another one,’” Cody recalled. “I hear the guys on the sideline, ‘TC, TC, go block another one. Block it again, block it again.’ And we call max block. And I just remember looking at Marcell (Dareus), I was like, ‘hey, like, we gotta go get this, man. We gotta go get this. Either you or me, we gotta go get this.’ And I remember lining up and for some reason, I just knew it.
“… . And as soon as the ball snapped, (we) literally just almost put the (snapper) on his back. And I I don’t remember if I felt (the ball) or anything. The only reason I knew I blocked it is because the crowd just went crazy.”
Immediately after blocking the field goal, Cody threw off his helmet and ran down the field. He said it was an emotional day for him, coming on the anniversary of the death of his father 11 years before.
Cody came to Alabama from Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College, and was an All-American for the Crimson Tide in both 2008 and 2009. However, being a Florida native, he said he didn’t understand the nature of the Alabama-Tennessee rivalry until he got to Tuscaloosa.
“I didn’t know much about the rivalry and stuff,” said Cody, who played five seasons with the NFL’s Baltimore Ravens and is now defensive line coach at Southwest Mississippi Community College. “I didn’t know much about it until I started paying attention on campus and seeing how everybody acted that week. And it’s a lot of hate. You’d think the Auburn rivalry, there’s a lot of hate, but this one, I think there is more hate in this rivalry than it is in the Auburn rivalry.
“And that whole week, it was like guys were just on edge. People were practicing pissed off. That’s how we approached the game, even though we were beat up going to that game. But we knew we had a mission that week and we just had to go out and execute. And we executed more than they did.
“Cody was already a celebrity in college football circles before the Tennessee game, earning the name “Mount Cody” for his massive size and ability to stuff opposing running games. But the “Rocky Block” took his fame to another level, eventually resulting in the play being immortalized in a Daniel Moore painting.
But despite his crucial performance in the win, Cody didn’t get to partake in an Alabama football tradition following the 2009 Tennessee game. He had so many media interview obligations in the immediate aftermath, that he missed out on the traditional victory cigar.
“So I get into the locker room, and there’s probably about 12, maybe 15 guys in the locker room still,” Cody said. “Everybody else is gone. And … trainers, they’re helping me take my shoulder pads, my jersey, all that stuff off. They wrap me up with some ice. So I’m getting wrapped up, and I’m seeing guys with cigars and stuff.
“So I’m like, ‘where mine’s at?’ He was like, ‘it should be in your locker.’ So I go to my locker, there’s nothing in there. And I’m like, ‘so the guy who wins the game don’t get a cigar? What are we doing? What’s going on?
“I wasn’t gonna smoke it. It was gonna be a memorabilia thing. So I’m looking around. I’m looking at guys smoking cigars, and they’ve got a couple extra cigars stuffed in their pocket. And I’m just like, ‘so F-me, huh?’ So I didn’t get a cigar for that game.”
You can watch the entire interview with Terrence Cody by clicking the link at the top of this post. You can watch other “Beat Everyone” episodes by going the podcast’s YouTube homepage.
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Tennessee
How Texas is preparing for rematch vs Tennessee softball pitchers in WCWS semifinals
OKLAHOMA CITY — Tennessee softball’s opponent for the Women’s College World Series semifinals is set.
The No. 7 seed Lady Volunteers (49-10) will face No. 2 Texas (49-12) at Devon Park on June 1 (noon ET, ESPN). Tennessee and Texas played each other in their WCWS opener on May 28. Tennessee won 6-3.
In the previous matchup, Tennessee used both of its top two pitchers, Karlyn Pickens (15-7, 1.58 ERA) and Sage Mardjetko (16-2, 1.06 ERA). Mardjetko started and allowed just one hit in the first four innings. Pickens finished the game, allowing four hits and three runs but still recording the save.
“Knowing we’ve got to make quicker adjustments, we’ve seen them already,” Texas infielder Katie Stewart said of potentially facing Pickens and Mardjetko again. “Still knowing they’re a really good pitching staff and they’re going to bring it. Just being ready for that. I think just going back, watching film, looking at how we got out and building off that.”
Stewart, the SEC Player of the Year and Texas’ leader in batting average, home runs and RBIs, went 0-for-3 in that first game.
Texas coach Mike White is hopeful that the Longhorns’ familiarity with Pickens and Mardjetko from just a few days prior will help them “pick up where they left off.”
All three of Texas’ runs came in the later part of the game, with the Longhorns scoring off a throwing error and a two-run homer hit by Leighann Goode.
However, he also noted that Tennessee has another talented pitcher in Erin Nuwer (15-1, 0.99 ERA), whom the Longhorns could face for the first time.
“Well, it won’t help us if they throw Nuwer at us,” White said. “They have another one that’s out there that’s pretty good. We’re not forgetting her as well.”
Nuwer hasn’t pitched since Game 2 of the super regionals against Georgia, when she allowed two hits, two hit-by-pitches but no runs in 1⅓ innings. Nuwer’s last start was a complete game against Northern Kentucky in regionals on May 15.
“They have the luxury of us having to beat them twice,” White said. “These pitchers are so good now, they’re able to study what we did, what they did. It becomes that cat-and-mouse game of strategy. That’s what we love about the game, is all the strategy, kind of pitching nuances of the game. It’s going to be a fun matchup.”
Tia Reid covers Jackson State sports for the Clarion Ledger. Email her at treid@usatodayco.com and follow her on X @tiareid65.
Tennessee
Nashville’s Eastpoint Neighborhood groundbreaking marks largest affordable housing project in Tennessee
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WTVF) — Nashville’s newest neighborhood is starting to take shape. The Fallon Company broke ground on the Eastpoint Neighborhood, which developers say is the largest affordable housing project and investment in Tennessee right now.
Mayor Freddie O’Connell says the mixed-use development is designed to benefit all families, accommodating incomes from $20,000 to $80,000 a year. In addition to housing, the development will include upgraded parks and green space, on-site childcare, and retail space.
“This is gonna be how we build Nashville’s next great neighborhood,” O’Connell said.
“We’ll have upgraded parks and green space, it will literally have on-site childcare here,” O’Connell said. “Basically all the ingredients that happen in a great neighborhood are going to be here.”
The development comes as many Nashville families struggle to make ends meet.
“They’re working jobs that are $10, $12 an hour jobs and they cannot afford basic living expenses,” Tony Turntine said.
Turntine and his family are success stories of UpRise Nashville’s free career training program. Through that experience, he has seen firsthand how getting to a better life requires studying, working, mentorship — and help with housing.
“The affordable housing that gives them an opportunity to come out of some of the really lower income neighborhoods they’ve been in and have better, quieter, more wholesome places to live,” Turntine said.
“If people can afford a better opportunity, we see everyone blossom from it. It’s a great day,” Al Brady with UpRise said.
Turntine says the tough choices Nashville families face are real.
“Whether I’m gonna pay the car out or whether I’m gonna get food for the kids,” Turntine said.
Now living and thriving in a new opportunity, Turntine has made it his mission to help others get there too.
“We’re living in a better neighborhood now — we actually just moved last weekend to a house twice the house of what we were in before,” Turntine said. “When you make different choices in life, that gives you different opportunities.”
Do you have more information about this story? You can email me at Amanda.Roberts@NewsChannel5.com
This story was reported on-air by Amanda Roberts and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.
101st Airborne veterans get Purple Hearts years after an insider attack
As we honor those who have served our country and made the ultimate sacrifice, it is also heartening to see the military right a wrong. Chris Davis brings us the moving story of a Purple Heart ceremony two decades in the making. It’s worth a watch.
A heartfelt thanks to all who bravely serve.
– Carrie Sharp
Tennessee
Emerging data centers: New TN law to protect ratepayers goes into effect in July
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WZTV) — A new Tennessee law aimed at protecting utility customers from the growing energy demands of data centers will take effect in July.
The legislation comes as more than 60 data centers power artificial intelligence and other cyber operations across the state, with about one-third located in the greater Nashville area. As the race to build and power AI infrastructure accelerates nationwide and globally, Tennessee lawmakers say they’re working to ensure ratepayers are not saddled with the added costs of serving these massive facilities.
“We want to have data centers. But we want to put guardrails around that to protect our ratepayers,” said state Rep. Ed Butler, R-Rickman, during a legislative committee hearing in March.
Under the new law, data centers must pay for any new infrastructure required to support their operations, including substations and other power-related upgrades. Utilities are prohibited from passing those costs on to residential and business customers.
“In the rural areas they’re putting a lot of these. And we have had a lot of increased utility bills,” said state Rep. Dennis Powers, R-Jacksboro, during the same March committee hearing on the legislation.
Powers questioned if data centers could be contributing to ratepayer costs. That question wasn’t clearly answered. Regardless, legislators voted the measure through, and Gov. Bill Lee signed it into law to help prevent that from happening.
“If there was a substation that was needed to be put in to provide power for this data center, then the data center would pay for the substation,” Butler said during the hearing.
As communities across Tennessee consider proposals for new data centers, and new laws to regulate (or contain) them, some local leaders remain opposed to bringing the facilities to their areas.
“I don’t think they fit in Robertson County, and definitely not in my community,” said Cedar Hill Mayor John Edwards, who is proposing a two-year moratorium on data centers in his city.
Electric providers and utilities are also preparing for future demand. The Tennessee Valley Authority reports data centers currently account for about 18% of its industrial power load, a figure that’s predicted to potentially double by 2030.
The new law also allows utilities, including TVA, to establish a separate customer or rate class specifically for data centers, providing an additional safeguard against shifting costs to other customers.
As energy demand continues to surge, state lawmakers say the goal is to ensure Tennessee stays competitive, while families and businesses do not see higher electric bills because of data center expansion.
Data center advocates, meanwhile, say many facilities generate much of their own power on-site and use advanced cooling systems that require little or no water.
If TVA moves forward with creating a separate customer or rate class for data centers, FOX17 will continue to follow those developments.
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