Category Archives: Current Events

Katy Perry and the material from the Prism Album!!!! Part 1

Katy Perry and the material from the Prism Album!!!! Part 1

Katy Perry – Roar (Official)

Katy Perry on Her Strict Evangelical Upbringing: ‘I Didn’t Have a Childhood’

By Alison Matheson, Christian Post Correspondent
May 5, 2011|2:37 am

Pop star Katy Perry isn’t shy when it comes to flaunting her body and strutting her stuff with sexually provocative routines and outfits.

Another aspect where the E.T. singer knows no shyness is talking about what it was like growing up with strict evangelical parents.

In an interview out in the latest edition of Vanity Fair magazine, Perry talks about the more constraining aspects of her upbringing.

Forget Dr. Seuss, the only thing Perry says her mother read to her was the Bible, and buying non-Christian music was also a no no.

“I didn’t have a childhood,” said Perry, who was formerly a Christian music artist under the name Katy Hudson before going mainstream.

She also said she feared Planned Parenthood.

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“Growing up, seeing ‘Planned Parenthood’, it was considered like the abortion clinic. I was always scared I was going to get bombed when I was there.”

When it comes to her beliefs nowadays, she’s pretty relaxed. Her husband, comedian Russell Brand, meanwhile, is interested in Hinduism.

“In my faith, you’re just supposed to have faith. At this point, I’m just kind of a drifter. I’m open to possibility,” she said.

With Brand, she’s happy to let him do his own thing and pursue his own spiritual beliefs.

“I come from a very non-accepting family, but I’m very accepting,” the popular singer said.

“Russell is into Hinduism, and I’m not really involved in it. He meditates in the morning and the evening and I’m starting to do it more because it really centers me. But I just let him be him, and he lets me be me.”

Right now, the singer said she is happy to soak in all the experiences life is throwing her way.

“My sponge is so big and wide and I’m soaking everything up and my mind has been radically expanded.”

Her parents have, in the past, expressed their disappointment with their daughter’s artistic style and messaging, but they’re still a family in spite of their strong differences.

“We coexist,” said Perry. “I don’t try to change them anymore, and I don’t think they try to change me. We agree to disagree.”

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Katy Perry performs song “Beast of Burden” with Rolling Stones

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“If you were here” played in the movie 16 Candles

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Phoenix Part 2

Phoenix – Trying To Be Cool (Live on SNL) Bankrupt! (2013)[edit] On April 5, 2011, the band posted a blog update on their website entitled “Songwriting…” that revealed CCTV stills of a studio in which the band was working.[19] The band has stated in interviews that the album is going to be a departure from the pop sounds […]

Lykke Li Part 2

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Lykke Li Part 1

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The Daylights (Music Group) Part 2

The Daylights (Music Group) Part 2 Uploaded on Mar 23, 2011 Maggie Mae’s on 6th Street in Austin, Texas. _____________________ Ep 8: “The Daylights” on Stripped Down Live with Curt Smith Uploaded on Oct 14, 2010 The Daylights perform live on our Streamin’ Garage stage. Hosted by Curt Smith of Tears for fears, ; Stripped […]

 

Dan Hampton at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 3

Dan Hampton at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 3

Before Dan Hampton got to speak at the touchdown club this week, Rex Nelson got up and spoke and when he talked about Bobby Petrino taking his Western Kentucky team into Knoxville, he asked, “How many of you think Petrino will get a victory in Knoxville?” To my surprise only a handful of people raised their hands out of 600 people.

I have written about Dan Hampton’s speech in Little Rock twice before but today I want to give you some background info on him from Wikipedia. 

Dan Hampton

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Dan Hampton
Dan Hampton.JPG

Dan Hampton in May 2008
No. 99
Defensive Tackle/Defensive End
Personal information
Date of birth: September 19, 1957 (age 55)
Place of birth: Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Career information
College: Arkansas
NFL Draft: 1979 / Round: 1 / Pick: 4
Debuted in 1979 for the Chicago Bears
Last played in 1990 for the Chicago Bears
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
Sacks 82
Games 157
Safeties 1
Stats at NFL.com
Pro Football Hall of Fame

Daniel Oliver Hampton also known as “Danimal” (born September 19, 1957) is a retired Hall of Fame American football defensive tackle who played twelve seasons for the Chicago Bears from 1979 to 1990 in the National Football League. He was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2002. Previously hosted pre- and post-game shows for the Bears on WGN Radio in Chicago.

High school

The son of Robert and Joan Hampton, Dan graduated from Jacksonville High School in Jacksonville, AR, in 1975. Hampton played football his junior and senior year. He suffered a disabling fall from a tree that kept him out of organized sports from grades 7-10. He participated in band, playing saxophone and five other instruments. He also played bass guitar and sang for a local band named “Sanctuary Woods.”Doug Matthews of Jacksonville filled his large shoes in that band after he left. Whenever he was in town he would come to where they were playing and sit in with them. He never forgot his roots. He was always just like he had never left. Jacksonville High School coach Bill Reed is credited for “rescuing” him from the band.[1]– Dan was also the bassist and vocalist for the band created by “Chicago Sports Profile Magazine” editor Lisa Levine after the success of the “Super Bowl Shuffle.” The band “The Chicago Six” played “off season” from 1987-1990. The alumni from the group includes Walter Payton (drums), Otis Wilson (lead vocalist), Shaun Gayle (sax & voice), Gary Nylund (guitar & voice), Curt Fraser (guitar & voice), Graham Watson (drums), and Jeffrey Abbott (keyboards). The band also performed on both local and national television.

College

Hampton played college football at Arkansas and was drafted in the first round of the 1979 NFL Draft by the Bears. He was part of a Razorback team that thumped the highly favored Oklahoma Sooners in the 1978 Orange Bowl by a score of 31-6. Several key Razorback players had been suspended for the game by Arkansas Head Coach Lou Holtz which left the team short-handed. The fired up Razorbacks charged from the locker room in a fashion that the media noticed. When asked why the team came out of the locker room in such a hurry the wry Hampton answered, “Coach Holtz said the last eleven out of the locker room will start.”

As a senior Hampton was an All-American as he logged 98 tackles (18 behind the line of scrimmige). He was also named the Southwest Conference Defensive Player of the Year in 1978. In addition, that same season, Hampton was named by the Houston Post the SWC Player of the Year.[2] As a junior he had 70 tackles (8 for a loss). In 1976, as a sophomore, Hampton made 48 tackles (2 for losses) and recovered two fumbles. As a freshman he had 21 tackles (4 for a loss). In his career he made a total of 237 tackles with 32 being behind the line of scrimmage and recovered six fumbles. He was a four-year letterman, a three-year starter at Arkansas and a two-time All-Conference selection. He was also a member of the Razorback All-Decade team of the 1970s. During his time at Arkansas Hampton played alongside Ron Calcagni, Steve Little and Ben Cowins.

In 1991 he was elected to the University of Arkansas Sports Hall of Honor and the following year he was voted to the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame. In 1994 Hampton was voted to the All-Century team of the University of Arkansas. Hampton was named one of the state of Arkansas’ Top 50 greatest athletes in the 20th century.[3]

Mike Ditka remembers scouting Hampton while a member of the Dallas Cowboys coaching staff: “I watched Dan when he came out of Arkansas,” Ditka said. “I remember Coach [Tom] Landry saying what a great football player he was going to be.” [4]

NFL

Hampton was drafted by the Bears in the first round of the 1979 draft and on June 27, 1979, he signed a four-year $470,000 contract with the club that included a $160,000 signing bonus. In 1979 he was voted All-Rookie by the Pro Football Writers Association. The following year he was a Second-team All-Pro selection and was voted to his first Pro Bowl after recording 11½ sacks which lead the Bears. His fierce style of play earned him the nickname of “Danimal”.

He was selected to four Pro Bowls and was a key defensive member of the Bears’ Super Bowl XX win against the New England Patriots in 1985. Hampton was a versatile defensive lineman, making All-Pro at both defensive end and defensive tackle. In all, Hampton was 1st or 2nd team All-Pro in 1980, 1982, 1984, 1985, 1986, and 1988. His versatility likely cost him several post-season honors, for example, in 1986 he was an alternate for the Pro Bowl at both defensive end and defensive tackle. His playing both positions likely split the votes of his NFC peers. Hampton was also a 1st alternate for the Pro Bowl in 1988 and graded out as the top defender on the Bears that season, even though Mike Singletary was the NFL Defensive Player of the Year.[5]

During Hampton’s tenure in Chicago (1979–90), the Bears defense ranked #1 in the NFL in allowing the fewest rushing yards, the fewest rushing touchdowns, the fewest total yards, the fewest points and inflicted the most sacks.[6]

“A lot of times in football, it’s not so much the stat, but how you play the game. If that’s the measuring stick, then Dan Hampton played the game as well as anybody.”[4]
Coach Mike Ditka

In 1982 he had a tremendous year while playing defensive tackle, recording 9 sacks in the 9-game, strike-shortened season. He was also named NFL defensive player of the year by Pro Football Weekly. He played out his option after that season and became a free agent. On July 15, 1983, Hampton signed a deal that made him the Bears’ second highest-paid player (behind Walter Payton). Hampton signed three one-year contracts worth about $1 million (including bonuses), an average of about $333,000 per year. “Dan will be the highest paid defensive lineman in the league this year,” said Jim Steiner, Hampton’s agent. “I’m very happy,” said Hampton. “I’m glad to have the contract behind me so I can concentrate on training camp. I’m optimistic about this season and I didn’t want to miss any of the fun.” [7]

Hampton didn’t miss out on the fun. He was voted the NFLPA NFC Defensive Lineman of the Year in 1984 along with being consensus All-Pro and made his third Pro Bowl. Hampton also tied his own career-best of 11½ sacks in 1984. The Bears’ defense was the tops in the league and he was part of 1984 Bear defense that set the NFL record for most sacks in a season, with 72, and is the co-holder of the record for most sacks in a game with 12. The latter occurred against the Detroit Lions on December 16, 1984. Earlier in that season the Bears sacked Minnesota Viking quarterback Archie Manning 11 times, to tie the record for the second-most sacks in a game.

During the middle of the Bears 1985 Super Bowl run, Hampton signed a 4-year contract extension. On November 8, 1985, he signed a four-year deal worth $2.7 million. Hampton became the fifth highest-paid defensive lineman in the NFL when the contract began in 1986 with an estimated salary of $625,000. Hampton was making $325,000 during for the 1985 season. Also in the middle of 1985 Hampton moved from right defensive tackle to left defensive end, allowing William Perry to move into the starting lineup. Also that season, Hampton, feeling the “Bears Super Bowl Shuffle” was too cocky, declined involvement.[8]

Sports Illustrated ‘s Paul Zimmerman relates an anecdote that when he picked fellow Bear DT Steve McMichael for his All-Pro team in 1985 he was chided a year later by Buddy Ryan, then the head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles. Ryan told Zimmerman that he was disappointed in him and that he thought Zimmerman knew football. He then pulled out Bears films and showed Zimmerman that “Hampton was the cornerstone to our 46 defense by drawing constant double teams”.[9][10] That year he also was credited for inventing the ‘Gatorade dump” in which a coach is drenched with the drink after a victory, which was often credited with Harry Carson.[11]

Hampton remained at left defensive end in 1986 and was a First-team All-Pro. However, in the Bears 46 defense he would line up as a nose tackle and when the Bears lined up in a nickel defense, Hampton would play right tackle. Late in the 1987 season, Mike Ditka moved Hampton back to defensive tackle (where he played from 1982–1984), where he remained throughout the rest of his career.

In his 1987 book “Fatso”[12] Hall of Fame defensive tackle Art Donovan called Dan the best defensive lineman in the NFL and “the closest thing to Gino Marchetti I’ve seen”. Hampton’s play also caught the eye of John Madden, who named Hampton to his All-Madden team six times and to the 10th Anniversary All-Madden team.

Injuries

During his football career Hampton endured 10 knee surgeries (five on each knee) and had two more just after finishing his 12th NFL season in 1990. He is credited by the Chicago Bears as having 82 career sacks.[13] He had a career high of 11½ in both 1980 (as a DE) and 1984 (as DT). After his contract expired after 1989, Hampton signed a 1-year deal for $850,000 to play the 1990 season for the Bears. The final contract was incentive based, if Hampton played he got paid, if an injury forced him to the sidelines we would not. Hampton played 14 games—had he played all 16 he would have earned the full $1 million value of the contract. After the 1990 season Hampton was voted to the NFL All-Decade team of the 1980s.

Hampton, who missed 23 games in his career due to severe knee injures, was a positive force on the Bear defense. From 1983-90, in games Hampton missed the Bears only won 33% of the time. In games he played they won 75%. When he was in the lineup the Bears sacked the quarterback 3.6 times a game and only 2.3 times a game without him. When Hampton played the defense gave up an average of 14 points a game and allowed 23 points a game in the games he missed, all seemingly remarkable statistics.[1][14]

Retirement

Dan Hampton delivering a speech in 2002

Dan Hampton retired from the Chicago Bears after the 1990 season. In 1990 Hampton was the recipient of the George S. Halas Courage Award by the Pro Football Writers Association which is given to the player or coach who “has performed with abandon despite injury.” Other winners over the years have been Robert Edwards, Dick Butkus, as well as others.

Hampton was selected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2002. He was inducted with Washington Redskins head coach George Allen, Oakland Raiders tight end Dave Casper, Buffalo Bills quarterback Jim Kelly and Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver John Stallworth.

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Ethel Merman and Bing Crosby Sing “You’re the Top” which is great song written by Cole Porter

Ethel Merman and Bing Crosby Sing “You’re the Top” which is great song written by Cole Porter

________________

Ethel Merman and Bing Crosby Sing “You’re the Top”

You’re the Top

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

You’re The Top” is a Cole Porter song from the 1934 musical Anything Goes. It is about a man and a woman who take turns complimenting each other. The best selling version was Paul Whiteman‘s Victor single, which made the top five.

It was the most popular song from Anything Goes at the start with hundreds of parodies.[1][2]

The lyrics are particularly significant because they offer a snapshot as to what was highly prized in the mid-1930s, and demonstrate Porter’s rhyming ability.

Some of the lyrics were re-written by P. G. Wodehouse for the British version of Anything Goes.

People and items referenced in the song

The following is a list of many of the references made in the song:

P. G. Wodehouse anglicised it for the British version of Anything Goes. Amongst other changes, he altered two lines from “You’re an O’Neill drama / You’re Whistler’s mama!” to “You’re Mussolini / You’re Mrs Sweeny“)[3][4]

Versions of the song

The “Washington vs. the Bunny” (season one, episode five) episode of The Dick Van Dyke Show features a version of the song performed for Laura Petrie (Mary Tyler Moore) by her very young son Ritchie. In that version, Ritchie mistakenly alters the lyrics from “You’re the Mona Lisa” to “You’re the Mommy Lisa”.

The song played a major role in the M*A*S*H episode “The Joker Is Wild” whereupon the loser of a “jokeoff” in the 4077th had to sing the song without his bottoms (pants) in the mess hall. Alan Alda‘s character Hawkeye ultimately had to make good on said promise.

Also sung as the introduction by Paul Jones and arranged by Richard Rodney Bennett for the ITV series The Charmer starring Nigel Havers. Neil Patrick Harris and David Burtka did a version of the song at the 2011’s gala of The Trevor Project[5]

A personalized version of this song was featured in season seven of Gilmore Girls, sung by Edward Herrmann and Kelly Bishop to their onscreen granddaughter played by Alexis Bledel in honor of her graduation from Yale. It features such lines as: “You’re the top/You’ve graduated. You’re the top/Your grandparents are elated.”

Parodies

Porter biographer William McBrien wrote that at the height of its popularity in 1934 to 1935 it had become a “popular pastime” to create parodies of the lyrics.[2] Porter, who himself had called the song “just a trick” the public would get bored by[2] was flooded with hundreds of parodies with one reportedly written by Irving Berlin.[2] Despite the “ribald” nature of some of the parodies, McBrien believes few, including a “King Kong” parody were written by Porter or Berlin.[6]

References

  1. ^ Redmond, James (1981). Drama, Dance and Music. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 60. ISBN 978-0-521-22180-1.
  2. ^ a b c d McBrien, William (1998). Cole Porter : a biography (1 ed.). New York: Knopf. pp. 169–171. ISBN 978-0-394-58235-1.
  3. ^ “Mayfair, the Duchess of Argyll and the Headless Man polaroids”. Another Nickel In The Machine. Retrieved 13 February 2012.
  4. ^ Hoge, Warren (16 August 2000). “London Journal; A Sex Scandal of the 60’s, Doubly Scandalous Now”. The New York Times. Retrieved 13 February 2012.
  5. ^ “NPH and David Burtka singing Your The Top At Trevor Live”. YouTube. Retrieved 13 February 2012.
  6. ^ Noah, Timothy (18 June 2005). “Farewell to Berlin”. Slate Magazine. Retrieved 13 February 2012.

External links

From the movie “De Lovely” about Cole Porter:

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Dan Hampton at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 2

Dan Hampton at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 2

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nCPWDMKzVs4

Dan Hampton told about the  year with the Chicago Bears when they took on the Vikings and they sacked Archie Manning 11 times. 

In October on 1984 the Bears beat the Vikings but in the process Dan Hampton got to play against one of his childhood heroes. He remembered when Archie Manning played for the Ole Miss Rebels against Arkansas in the 1970 Sugar Bowl. Hampton’s father won the office pool for guessing the closest score of that game and he bought a color tv for Hampton’s family. That meant a lot to Dan. Then suddenly in the game Manning ran up the middle and Hampton crushed his helmet and broke his nose. Hampton looked down at Archie and his nose looked like a taco and Hampton thought “I just crushed my childhood idol Archie Manning’s nose and he was responsible for me getting that first color tv!!!” About 15 years later while playing golf in the St Jude Memphis Pro Am Golf Tournament Hampton saw Peyton Manning and they waved at each other. Then after getting in the golf cart and driving down the cart path he saw Peyton there standing with his finger pointing at Hampton and he said, “Hey you are the guy who broke my dad’s nose!!!”

Former Bears great could always handle pressure

By Jeremy Muck

This article was published today at 3:53 a.m.

dan-hampton-former-arkansas-razorback-and-the-nfls-chicago-bears-defensive-end-at-the-little-rock-touchdown-club-tuesday

Dan Hampton, former Arkansas Razorback and the NFL’s Chicago Bears defensive end at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Tuesday.

Dan Hampton knows a thing or two when it comes to pressure.

The former Arkansas Razorback played 12 years in the NFL and was a key member of one of the greatest defenses in professional football history, playing defensive tackle for the 1985 Super Bowl champion Chicago Bears.

So Hampton, 55, was pleased to see that the NFL has agreed to pay $765 million to settle lawsuits filed by thousands of former NFL players who developed dementia or other concussion-related brain disorders they say were caused by the violent collisions that fueled the sport’s rise in popularity and profit.

Hampton said Tuesday at the Little Rock Touchdown Club luncheon that the rise in chronic traumatic encephalopathy among former NFL players was impossible to ignore.

“We’ve been seeing this coming for five to 10 years with the CTE, the trauma to the brain,” the former Jacksonville High School football standout said of the class-action settlement, which was announced Thursday. “The NFL knows that there’s an800-pound elephant or gorilla, or whatever you want to call it. There’s something that has to be addressed.

“This is probably a big step by the NFL to acknowledge the fact that they were culpable at some point. How much? We don’t know yet. It still has to be played out. They’re trying to do the right thing, and I applaud them for that.”

Hampton enjoyed success throughout his college and pro football careers. He played four seasons at Arkansas (1975-1978), earning All-America honors in 1978.

The Bears took Hampton fourth overall in the 1979 draft, and he went on to become a six-time All-Pro selection and a four-time Pro Bowl selection during his 12-year career (1979-1990).

The highlight of his career came in 1985, when he was a member of a fierce defensive unit that led the Bears to a 15-1 record and cemented their legacy as one of the greatest defenses of all time by defeating the New England Patriots 46-10 to win Super Bowl XX in New Orleans.

The Bears, who led the league in fewest points allowed (12.4 per game) during the season, set Super Bowl records for sacks (seven),fewest rushing yards allowed (seven) and margin for victory (36 points).

The Bears knew early during the 1985 season they had something special on defense when Chicago went to Irving, Texas, for a preseason game against the Dallas Cowboys. Chicago won the exhibition game, and Hampton left town with a word of warning.

“They better have that cart that carries people off gassed up, because we’re coming back in November,” he said.

Just as promised, the Bears returned to Texas Stadium in November. Former Cowboys defensive back Everson Walls said early in the week that the undefeated Bears hadn’t played anybody leading up to the game. The Bears defeated the Cowboys 44-0.

“Everson Walls was right,” Hampton said following the shutout. “We’re 11-0, and we still ain’t played nobody.”

The Little Rock Touchdown Club announced Tuesday that it has created the Dan Hampton Award, which will be given to the top defensive lineman in the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision. Hampton said he is flattered to have his name associated with such an award.

“It has a certain responsibility to it,” said Hampton, who was inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2002. “You want to be exemplary. I’m like, ‘Wow, this is really amazing.’ ”

Hampton credited coaches Bill Reed at Jacksonville High School, Lou Holtz at Arkansas and Mike Ditka with the Bears for turning him into one of the top defensive linemen to ever play the game.

“All I can think about is how lucky was I to play 12 years in the mecca of football … and play for the greatest football team of all time,” Hampton said. “Everywhere I was, I was associated with people that wanted to be special.”

Sports, Pages 24 on 09/04/2013

Print Headline: Former Bears great could always handle pressure

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Petrino wins first game against SEC opponent at Western Kentucky!!

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Bobby Petrino is a very good coach and I know there are those in Arkansas that are throwing stones at him for various reasons but what he did at Arkansas is just unbelievable. This latest story about him pressuring medical personnel to release players early in order to play sounds like the people at the Ark Times Blog just don’t understand how the system works. Coaches can make suggestions but the final decision is with the medical staff and the coaches understand that. It is not like the old days anymore.

This week against Tennessee I expect a very close game and when you look at the talent that Western Kentucky has this year then there is no way the score is going be 60-7 like it was four years ago when Western Kentucky last came to Knoxville. The fact is that Western Kentucky was more impressive last week than Tennessee was. Yesterday I made the prediction that the outcome of this game this week will be in doubt into the fourth quarter. We will just have to wait and see how much magic Petrino has!!!

 

Bobby Petrino, fired by Arkansas in 2012, wins his first game with Western Kentucky and is 9-0 in season openers.  (USATSI) Bobby Petrino, fired by Arkansas in 2012, wins his first game with Western Kentucky and is 9-0 in season openers. (USATSI)

Western Kentucky beats Kentucky in Petrino’s debut

CBSSports.com wire reports

Aug. 31, 2013

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Keshawn Simpson ran for a pair of 3-yard touchdowns and Antonio Andrews added his own 3-yard score as Western Kentucky beat Kentucky 35-26 Saturday night making coach Bobby Petrino a winner in his debut.

The Hilltoppers also beat their in-state rival for a second straight year, though they didn’t need overtime like they did last year in this win over the Southeastern Conference program. They outgained Kentucky 487-419 in total offense and held the ball for 35 minutes.

The loss ruined Kentucky coach Mark Stoops’ debut. Coordinator Neal Brown’s Air Raid offense struggled against a Western Kentucky defense returning seven starters from a bowl team that went 7-6 last season in the Sun Belt Conference.

Brandon Doughty was 27 of 34 for 271 yards and a TD, numbers that would have been better except for at least four drops including a would-be touchdown.

Petrino’s debut was everything Western Kentucky wanted from the coach’s first game. Arkansas fired Petrino in April 2012 for misleading school officials about a motorcycle accident that eventually revealed his mistress was a passenger and employed by the coach. He remains undefeated in season openers, improving to 9-0.

When Petrino has had more than a week to prepare for an opponent, he is nearly unbeatable with a record now 28-8 in such games. The former Louisville coach also now is 5-1 against Kentucky with his lone loss coming while at Arkansas. He’ll have a chance to go 2-0 against the SEC when the Hilltoppers visit Tennessee next.

The Hilltoppers decked the end zones with red banners to help make themselves at home in LP Field, home to the NFL’s Tennessee Titans. They also had plenty of fans also on hand too with a crowd of 47,623.

Western Kentucky took control from the start and scored on three of the first four possessions. Western Kentucky went 75 yards or longer on each of the TD drives with Simpson scoring on a pair of 3-yard runs, the second putting the Hilltoppers up 21-10 in the second quarter.

Andrews also had a 3-yard TD. But the senior running back who ran for 1,728 yards last season also lost two fumbles that Kentucky turned into 10 points to trail only 21-17 at halftime. Leon Allen replaced Allen and ran 10 times for 92 yards and a 14-yard TD early in the fourth quarter for a 35-17 lead.

The Wildcats had to settle for a 22-yard field goal by Joe Mansour off the first fumble recovered by Avery Williamson. Jalen Whitlow ran 50 yards the play after Andrews’ second fumble, and Jonathan George capped the 64-yard drive with a 5-yard TD to pull within 21-17 late in the first half.

Stoops put in Maxwell Smith after Western Kentucky went up 35-17. Smith drove the Wildcats to a 30-yard field goal by Mansour and he connected with Demarco Robinson on a 34-yard TD pass with 1:37 left. But Western Kentucky safety Jonathan Dowling stripped Ryan Timmons of the ball with 6:33 left, and the Wildcats’ last gasp ended when an onside kick attempt went out of bounds.

Petrino made sure the Hilltoppers got to kneel down and run out the last seconds. On fourth-and-2, he took a timeout, then had Doughty throw for a 17-yard completion to clinch the victory.

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Dan Hampton at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 1

Dan Hampton at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 1 

Dan Hampton

I really enjoyed the Little Rock Touchdown Club today when Dan Hampton was our speaker. Hampton said that Jimmy Johnson was a great defensive coordinator for him to learn under when he played for Frank Broyles in 1975. Then when Lou Holtz came in and hired Monte Kiffin, Hampton said the defense even got better. Kiffin did no wrong according to Hampton “except he brought Lane into the world.” That comment got a laugh from the crowd.

Dan Hampton Award unveiled at Touchdown Club

Former Jacksonville, Arkansas and Chicago Bear defensive lineman Dan Hampton was on hand Tuesday at the Little Rock Touchdown Club as announced the creation of an award named for him.

The Dan Hampton Award will go to the top defensive lineman in Division I college football and will be handed out at the club’s annual banquet at the end of the season.

Hampton, who grew up on a farm in Cabot, spoke to the crowd of about 200 at the club’s weekly meeting at the Embassy Suites in west Little Rock.

The 2002 Pro Football Hall of Famer entertained the crowd with several stories of his travails in the NFL, including knocking out former New Orleans Saints quarterback Archie Manning on a sack and beating the Dallas Cowboys 44-0 in 1985.

The former All-Pro and Pro Bowler also told the crowd about his time with the Razorbacks, including being recruited by legendary coach and former Razorback Jimmy Johnson and how a crippling fall out of a tree kept him out of sports until his junior year at Jacksonville High School.

Hampton also called his former coach Lou Holtz a “motivation machine,” and lauded his time playing with a number of “Arkansas kids” that were his teammates.

Hampton, who said he loves returning to central Arkansas but rarely gets to, also urged the crowd to let their children play football, despite reservations they may have in light of the recent settlement between the NFL and its former players over concussion-related brain injuries.

“It’s a great way to learn,” he said.

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Cole Porter’s song’s “My Heart Belongs to Daddy”

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Cole Porter’s song’s “My Heart Belongs to Daddy”

My Heart Belongs To Daddy

Uploaded on Jun 20, 2010

Mary Martin became popular on Broadway and received attention in the national media singing “My Heart Belongs to Daddy”. “Mary stopped the show with “My Heart Belongs to Daddy”. With that one song in the second act, she became a star ‘overnight’.”[4] Martin reprised the song in Night and Day, (the Hollywood “biographical” movie about Porter) during the film in an audition as herself for Porter (Cary Grant).

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My Heart Belongs to Daddy

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My Heart Belongs to Daddy” is a song written by Cole Porter, for the 1938 musical Leave It to Me! which premiered on Nov 9, 1938. It was originally performed by Mary Martin who played Dolly Winslow, the young “protégée” of a rich newspaper publisher.[1]

In the original context, Dolly is stranded at a Siberian railway station, wearing only a fur coat, and performs a striptease while singing the song. Surrounded by eager Siberian men, she says that since she has met “daddy”, she will flirt with other men, but won’t “follow through”. “Daddy” is her newspaperman sugar daddy, introduced with the words, “I’ve come to care, for such a sweet millionaire”.

Later versions

Martin sang it again in the 1940 movie Love Thy Neighbor. Again she wears a fur coat, but the setting is a show within a show and the act is more conventional as she wears an evening gown beneath the fur. The words to the introduction are altered, the innuendoes being toned down. Her best-known movie performance is in the 1946 Cole Porter biopic Night and Day in which she plays herself. The film recreates Martin’s audition then segues into her performance in the original Siberian context. She again performs the striptease, discarding her muff and then the fur coat, while mustashioed Siberian men follow her every move, eventually fainting when she removes her coat to reveal a skimpy figure-hugging costume beneath.[2]

In Britain, the song was a hit for Pat Kirkwood who performed it in the 1938 revue Black Velvet. This led to her being dubbed “Britain’s first wartime star”.[3] The song was thereafter associated with her.[4]

Marilyn Monroe sings the song in the film Let’s Make Love (1960). The introduction is completely changed. She introduces herself as “Lolita”, who is not allowed to “play with boys”. A verse is added in which she invites a boy “to cook up a fine enchilada”. The lines do not conform to the rhyme scheme of the rest of the song, but have been used by many other performers since. Anna Nicole Smith recorded a virtual copy of the Monroe version in 1997.

Lyrical and musical features

Rhyming with “daddy” is difficult but Porter characteristically managed it well.[5]  One clever rhyme is

If I invite
A boy some night
To dine on my fine Finnan haddie,
I just adore
His asking for more,
But my heart belongs to daddy.

Finnan haddie is smoked fish, and this is one of many innuendoes which appear throughout the song. Sophie Tucker famously advised Mary Martin to deliver such sexy lines while looking towards heaven. Mary Martin’s stage persona was quite innocent and so the contrast between her naive manner and the suggestive lyrics accompanied by the provocative striptease made her performance a huge success.[6] Brooks Atkinson, the critic of the New York Times, wrote that Martin’s “mock innocence makes My Heart Belongs to Daddy the bawdy ballad of the season”.[7]

The original version contains four verses, all of which play on idiosyncratic rhymes with “daddy”. The first refers to a game of golf during which she might “make a play for the caddy”. The second is about the finnan haddie. The third tells of wearing green with a “Paddy” on St Patrick’s day. The final verse is about a varsity football match where one might meet a “strong under-graddy”. In the original version she ends up saying that her daddy might “spank” her if she was “bad”.

Referring to the melody, especially the passage of “da da da da”s, Oscar Levant described it as “one of the most Yiddish tunes ever written” despite the fact that “Cole Porter’s genetic background was completely alien to any Jewishness.”[8]

Notable recordings

Notes

  1. ^ Inc, Time (Dec 19, 1938), “Mary Martin is Broadway’s newest song star”, LIFE: 29
  2. ^ Roy Hemming (1999-03), The melody lingers on: the great songwriters and their movie musicals, ISBN 978-1-55704-380-1
  3. ^ Actress Pat Kirkwood dies at 86, BBC, 2007-12-26, retrieved 2010-05-19
  4. ^ Colin Larkin (1995), The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music, p. 2328, ISBN 978-0-85112-662-3
  5. ^ Pamela Phillips Oland (2001-06-01), The art of writing great lyrics, p. 50, ISBN 978-1-58115-093-3
  6. ^ Ethan Mordden (1988-06-23), Broadway Babies: The People Who Made the American Musical, p. 220, ISBN 978-0-19-505425-5
  7. ^ Ronald L. Davis, Mary Martin, Broadway legend, University of Oklahoma Press, 2008, p.42.
  8. ^ Oscar Levant, The Unimportance of Being Oscar, Pocket Books 1969 (reprint of G.P. Putnam 1968), p. 32. ISBN 0-671-77104-3.
  9. ^ Marc Shell (2005-06-15), Stutter, p. 292, ISBN 978-0-674-01937-9

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My Prediction: Petrino will keep the outcome of the Tennessee v. Western Kentucky game in Doubt until the fourth quarter!!!!

Beating a Austin Peay team that went 2-9 last year is not a major accomplishment but taking on a tougher Western Kentucky team that just got finished playing and beating another SEC team is quite another thing. Especially since Bobby Petrino has those Western Kentucky ballplayers really believing in themselves. My Prediction: Petrino will keep the outcome of the Tennessee v. Western Kentucky game in Doubt until the fourth quarter!!!! Who will win? I think Tennessee will pull it out because of the home field.

_________________

Photo by Randy Sartin / USA Today Sports Images

By David Climer, The Tennessean

KNOXVILLE – Say this much for Tennessee:

The Vols know how to make a new football coach feel right at home.

Of course, UT has had a lot of practice over the last few years.

In 2009, Lane Kiffin began his UT tenure with a 63-7 rout of Western Kentucky. In 2010, Derek Dooley looked like a coaching genius when the Vols blitzed UT Martin 50-0.

Never mind that Kiffin bolted for Southern Cal after a 7-6 season and currently is trying to survive a fourth season with the Trojans. Dooley won a grand total of 16 games in three years with the Vols and now is double-dipping, cashing monthly installments on his $5 million buyout from UT while also coaching wide receivers with the Dallas Cowboys.

With that as background, the Butch Jones era began on Saturday with a 45-0 victory over outmanned Austin Peay. Considering everything the Vols program has gone through, it was a welcome reversal of fortune.

Jones took it all in. A couple of hours before kickoff, he high-fived his way down Peyton Manning Pass as he led the players to Neyland Stadium on the Vol Walk.

“Our fans are outstanding,” he said. “That Vol Walk was incredible.”

Yes, Kiffin said similar things after his debut. For three years, Dooley gushed about the passion of UT fans. And we all know what happened to those two guys.

Somehow, though, Jones’ words don’t ring hollow. He seems in tune with Tennessee’s history and traditions.

As is his style, Jones didn’t miss an opportunity to use his postgame press conference as a recruiting pitch. Elaborating on the experience of his first Vol Walk, he said:

“That’s a difference-maker. If you’re a student-athlete, where else would you want to play football but the University of Tennessee – to represent this great state and the opportunity to play in front of the best fan base in the country.

“We’re going to get it right. It’s going to take some work, but this is truly a special place.”

Time will tell. For now, though, the season opener was a continuation of the honeymoon period Jones has enjoyed since signing on with the Vols on Dec. 7. He now has a 1-0 record to go with his victories in recruiting and public relations.

It’s going to get tougher, much tougher, moving forward. The Vols step up in competition next Saturday against Western Kentucky. Then the fun really begins. Back-to-back games at Oregon and Florida are a scheduling death wish. The October run of Georgia, South Carolina and Alabama is a nightmare.

With that in mind, UT should bank every victory it can. Credit the Vols for taking care of business on Saturday.

With all due respect to Austin Peay, this was one of the worst teams to play at Neyland Stadium in recent memory. The Governors, under new coach Kirby Cannon, went 2-9 last year and were picked dead last in the Ohio Valley Conference in a preseason poll of the league’s coaches and media relations directors.

Even with the roster shortcomings Jones inherited, the result was inevitable. It’s the kind of pay-for-play mismatch that should be outlawed. The Govs received $450,000 for a pound of flesh. Do the math. At 45-0, that’s $10,000 per losing point.

Austin Peay’s next payday comes on Saturday at Vanderbilt.

How bad was it? Two plays into the second quarter, UT led 28-0 and had outgained Austin Peay 199-15. By halftime, it was 42-0 and the Vols had scored touchdowns on all six of their possessions.

When it came to the final score, it was just a matter of how much compassion Jones had for an overmatched opponent. As it turned out, he’s a pretty compassionate guy. He flooded the field with reserves in the second half.

But even with down-the-line players on the field, Jones and his staff didn’t stop coaching. Jones was visibly upset when things got a bit sloppy here and there.

“It definitely makes you lock in and play with effort,” senior offensive tackle Ja’Wuan James said.

Even with reserves on the field after halftime, UT pitched a shutout and limited Austin Peay to 211 yards. Considering how lousy the Vols’ defense was last season, it was a step in the right direction.

“It was nice to come out and play a good defensive game,” said UT defensive lineman Daniel Hood, who had a first-quarter interception when he deflected a screen pass and grabbed it.

For one game at least, all was well with Tennessee football.

_____________

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Cole Porter’s songs “De-Lovely” and “Let’s misbehave”

Cole Porter’s songs “De-Lovely” and “Let’s misbehave”

‘At Long Last Love’: Let’s Misbehave/De-Lovely

Uploaded on Apr 1, 2009

Burt Reynolds and Cybil Shepherd give an extraordinarily charming performance of Cole Porter’s songs in Peter Bogdanovich’s absolutely wonderful tribute to the golden age of film musicals, ‘At Long Last Love’.

_____________________

De-Lovely

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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De-Lovely
De-LovelyPoster.jpg

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Irwin Winkler
Produced by Simon Channing Williams
Written by Jay Cocks
Starring Kevin Kline
Ashley Judd
Jonathan Pryce
Kevin McNally
Sandra Nelson
Allan Corduner
Peter Polycarpou
Music by Cole Porter
Cinematography Tony Pierce-Roberts
Editing by Julie Monroe
Studio Winkler Films
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date(s)
  • July 2, 2004
Running time 125 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $20 million
Box office $18,396,382

De-Lovely is a 2004 musical biopic directed by Irwin Winkler. The screenplay by Jay Cocks is based on the life and career of Cole Porter, from his first meeting with Linda Lee Thomas until his death. It is the second biopic about the composer, following Night and Day.

Plot

As he is about to die, Porter’s life flashes before him in the form of a musical production staged by the archangel Gabriel in the Indiana theater where the composer first performed on stage. From the start, Linda is aware of Cole’s gay feelings, but her love for and devotion to him are strong enough for her to overlook his romantic flings outside their marriage. After a while, she can no longer ignore the innuendos in his songs and their relationship grows strained. Cole is photographed in an amorous embrace with another man in the rest room of a gay nightclub, and both he and Linda are blackmailed into paying a heavy settlement to suppress publication of the pictures. When he shrugs off the blackmail, she finally goes to Paris, leaving him bereft. Not until he is injured in a horseback riding accident that seriously cripples him does she return to his side, willing to forgive but still finding it difficult to cope with his extramarital affairs. Eventually she is diagnosed with emphysema, and as she prepares herself and her husband for her impending death, she attempts to forge a relationship between him and her interior decorator so he’ll have a companion following her death, which deeply affects him. The eventual amputation of his right leg adds to his deep depression, affecting his creative output. Porter becomes increasingly reclusive, as well as becoming more dependent on alcohol.[1][2]

Cast

Production

Although Porter was a passable singer at best, director Irwin Winkler cast Kevin Kline, winner of two Tony Awards and two Drama Desk Awards for his musical performances on Broadway, as the composer. He stayed in character by limiting his vocal range. Most of his singing was recorded live on the set, and the actor played the piano himself in the scenes where Porter plays.

According to Winkler’s commentary on the DVD release of the film, he had considered numerous actresses for the role of Linda when Ashley Judd‘s agent advised him she was interested in the part. Winkler was certain her salary demand would exceed that allowed by the budget, but the actress was so anxious to portray Linda she was willing to lower her usual asking price. Judd is twenty years younger than Kline, although the composer’s wife was eight years older than he.

Filming locations included Chiswick House and Luton Hoo.

The film premiered at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival.[3] It was shown at the CineVegas International Film Festival, the Sydney Film Festival, and the San Francisco International Lesbian and Gay Film Festival before going into limited release in the US.

Soundtrack

A soundtrack album of music from the film was released on June 15, 2004.

Track Listing (Europe)
  1. It’s De-Lovely” performed by Robbie Williams
  2. Let’s Do It (Let’s Fall In Love)” performed by Alanis Morissette
  3. Begin the Beguine” performed by Sheryl Crow
  4. Let’s Misbehave” performed by Elvis Costello
  5. Be a Clown” performed by Kevin Kline, Peter Polycarpou, and Chorus
  6. Night and Day” performed by John Barrowman
  7. Easy to Love” performed by Kevin Kline (American release omits this track)
  8. True Love” by Ashley Judd and Tayler Hamilton
  9. What is This Thing Called Love?” performed by Lemar
  10. I Love You” performed by Mick Hucknall
  11. Just One of Those Things” performed by Diana Krall
  12. Anything Goes” performed by Caroline O’Connor
  13. “Experiment” performed by Kevin Kline
  14. Love for Sale” performed by Vivian Green
  15. So in Love” performed by Lara Fabian and Mario Frangoulis
  16. Ev’ry Time We Say Goodbye” performed by Natalie Cole
  17. “Blow, Gabriel, Blow” performed by Jonathan Pryce, Kevin Kline, Cast, and Chorus
  18. In the Still of the Night” performed by Kevin Kline and Ashley Judd
  19. You’re the Top” performed by Cole Porter

Reception

The film grossed $13,337,299 in the US and $5,059,083 in other markets for a total worldwide box office of $18,396,382.[4]

Critically, the film had a mixed reception. It garnered a score of 53 from Metacritic[5] and a 48% rating from review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes.[6] Roger Ebert gave the film 3.5 out of a possible four stars. He wrote, for his review in the Chicago Sun-Times, that De-Lovely “…brings […] a worldly sophistication that is rare in the movies”.[7]

Larry King said “Far and away the best musical biography ever made.”

In his review in The New York Times, Stephen Holden called the film “lethally inert” and “lifeless and drained of genuine joie de vivre” and added, “It didn’t have to be like this. In their highly stylized ways, All That Jazz (Bob Fosse‘s morbidly manic screen autobiography), Ken Russell‘s surreal portraits of composers or any of Federico Fellini‘s libidinous self-explorations have delved deeply into the muck of artistic creativity. Sadly, the daring and imagination required to go below the surface are nowhere to be found in De-Lovely.”[8]

Ruthe Stein of the San Francisco Chronicle said, “The movie never gels – despite Kline’s nuanced performance, the stars’ exquisite period clothes designed by Armani, and, of course, Porter’s great songs. Director Irwin Winkler’s highly stylized technique is difficult to connect with emotionally. His film also suffers from shockingly sloppy editing for a studio production. If nothing else, the composer . . . deserves a movie that has rhythm. But De- Lovely lurches along like a car with a missing spark plug.”[9]

In Rolling Stone, Peter Travers rated the film three out of a possible four stars and commented, “In voice, manner, patrician charm and private torment, Kevin Kline is perfection as legendary composer Cole Porter . . . At its best, De-Lovely evokes a time, a place and a sound with stylish wit and sophistication.”[10]

Steve Persall of the St. Petersburg Times graded the film C- and observed, “The movie is actually an ugly compilation of clashing cinematic styles occasionally salvaged by musical numbers that essentially are part of the problem. You can’t make a good movie about a 1930s composer using a 1970s film conceit while hiring 21st century recording artists to perform Porter’s classic songs. A tribute CD, maybe, but not a movie . . . [it] plays like a cabaret review rather than a motion picture, a sublime collection of songs linked by scripted banter barely scratching the surface of its subject. Not delightful, not delicious, just disappointing.”[11]

Awards and nominations

See also

References

External links

Let’s Misbehave

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

“Let’s Misbehave” is a song written by Cole Porter in 1927, originally intended for the female lead of his first major production, Paris. Although it was discarded before the Broadway opening in favor of Let’s Do It, Let’s Fall in Love, the star of the Broadway production, Irene Bordoni, did a phonograph recording of it which was labelled as from the production of Paris. It was included perhaps most famously in the 1962 revival of Anything Goes. It was a notable hit for Irving Aaronson and his Commanders.

This version was used in two Woody Allen films: at the opening and close of the 1972 film Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex* (*But Were Afraid to Ask), and at the close of the 1994 film Bullets Over Broadway. The song is featured in a prominent dance sequence by Christopher Walken in the Steve Martin musical Pennies From Heaven (1981).

It is used in the closing credits of Johnny Dangerously (1984), and sung by Elvis Costello in the 2004 movie De-Lovely.

The song is featured (sung by Cybill Shepherd) in the 1975 film At Long Last Love and in the 2008 film Easy Virtue, and the title is one of the film’s taglines.

Cole Porter‘s original version was also featured on The Simpsons Season 15, Episode 15, entitled “Co-Dependent’s Day“.

Most recently, a 1928 recording of the song by Irving Aaronson and his Commanders appeared in the 2013 film The Great Gatsby.

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7 SEC Teams listed in top 20 list of most all time wins in College Football!!!!!

Butch Jones Postgame Media Session (8/31/13)

It was the 800th victory for the Tennessee Vols football program which is an amazing figure. All Tennessee fans should be proud of that. You will notice that both Arkansas and Tennessee are listed in the top 20 of all time football wins.

Here is a list of all time wins dated at the end of last season:

 

Rank

Team

Win

Loss

Tie Games Pct.

PF

PA

Delta

1

Michigan

903

317

38

1258

0.733

31187

14407

16780

2

Texas

867

337

34

1238

0.714

29972

16167

13805

3

Nebraska

866

353

41

1260

0.704

31206

16484

14722

4

Notre Dame (IN)

865

302

41

1208

0.733

30462

15166

15296

5

Ohio St.

837

316

53

1206

0.716

28510

14745

13765

6

Oklahoma

829

313

53

1195

0.716

32447

15394

17053

7

Alabama

827

321

43

1191

0.712

28646

13566

15080

8

Tennessee

799

354

54

1207

0.684

27065

15796

11269

9

Southern California

786

319

54

1159

0.701

28092

15109

12983

10

Georgia

760

402

54

1216

0.647

25743

16866

8877

11

Louisiana St.

744

393

47

1184

0.648

25367

15596

9771

12

Penn St.

723

365

43

1131

0.658

28436

15598

12838

13

Auburn (AL)

721

414

47

1182

0.630

24308

16519

7789

14

West Virginia

708

463

45

1216

0.601

25254

18871

6383

15

Syracuse (NY)

699

497

49

1245

0.581

25462

18966

6496

16

Virginia Tech

697

440

46

1183

0.609

23945

16600

7345

17

Georgia Tech

696

468

43

1207

0.594

25079

17928

7151

18

Texas A&M

693

452

48

1193

0.601

25324

17107

8217

19

Pittsburgh (PA)

684

500

41

1225

0.575

23849

19248

4601

20

Arkansas

682

464

40

1186

0.592

24349

17805

6544

UT Vols’ Malik Foreman ‘excited’ to bounce back with interception

Tennessee head coach Butch Jones got solid play from several freshmen in the Vols’ win over Austin Peay on Saturday.

Tennessee head coach Butch Jones got solid play from several freshmen in the Vols’ win over Austin Peay on Saturday.

Photo by C. B. Schmelter /Chattanooga Times Free Press.
  • photo

KNOXVILLE — The third time was the charm for Malik Foreman.

After Austin Peay’s sputtering passing game twice picked on the Tennessee freshman cornerback, the Kingsport Dobyns-Bennett High School product exacted a measure of redemption for himself.

With the Governors’ threatening to end the Volunteers’ shutout bid, Foreman stepped in front of a Jacob Sexton pass inside Tennessee’s 10 on the first play of the fourth quarter.

“He was definitely excited,” safety Byron Moore said after Tennessee’s 45-0 season-opening win. “Coach got on him a little bit. He messed up a little bit, but he was able to still make a play on the ball. He was definitely happy [to make] the first pick.”

Foreman is the first true freshman to intercept a pass in a season opener since Dwayne Goodrich, who memorably returned an interception for a touchdown in Tennessee’s title-game win against Florida State in 1998, did it against UNLV in 1996.

On the play, the freshman kept his eyes on Sexton as he dropped into zone coverage, read where the ball was going and stepped in front of the pass as it appeared the Austin Peay receiver kept running when he should have stopped his route.

Earlier in the game, the Govs found success throwing at Foreman, a second-team corner who’s next in line in case either one of Tennessee’s starting corner tandem of Justin Coleman or Cam Sutton, also a freshman, are unavailable.

In the second quarter, there appeared to be a missed coverage on Foreman’s side, which allowed Darryl Clack to get free for a 35-yard gain. In the third quarter, the 6-foot-6 Clack outjumped Foreman for a 33-yard reception. Foreman’s interception ended that drive.

“They’re very, very young and inexperienced, but very talented,” first-year coach Butch Jones said of his freshman corner tandem of Sutton and Foreman. “They’re extremely competitive. They have great competitive character, and I think that showed in Malik tonight.

“As we move forward, we’re going to be tested even more. Will there be growing pains? Absolutely, but I thought today was a good fundamental start for our entire team.”

Shutout talk

Tennessee’s defense proclaimed itself a confident bunch entering the season, and Jones said he could sense it in a unit that stumbled through last season’s debacle.

The coach said his defense has worked “exceptionally hard,” and it paid off in the program’s first shutout since November 2011, when the Vols blanked Middle Tennessee State 24-0.

“We didn’t have too many calls,” Moore said, “so we were just lining up and playing football.”

Defensive tackle Daniel Hood, who deflected and intercepted a pass in the first quarter and added another big hit to blow up a screen pass, said the Vols are more comfortable in the 4-3 scheme, which Tennessee abandoned last season.

“We really didn’t know quite what [Austin Peay] would do, so we kept things pretty simple and played our techniques and it worked out well for us,” he said. “I think it’s one of the few [shutouts] we’ve had since I’ve been here. It was nice to come back and bounce back from what we had done last year and play a good defensive game.”

Running Rajion

Tailback Rajion Neal found no shortage of running room on Saturday night on the way to a 141-yard performance in the first game of his senior season. His 47-yard touchdown run on the Vols’ opening possession was a career long, and he surpassed the 100-yard mark on his eighth carry.

All of his production came in the first half, and the total tied Arian Foster’s first-half performance against Vanderbilt in 2005 for the sixth-best in a first half in Tennessee history.

“I think that’s every running back’s dream, to run behind one of the most experienced offensive lines in the SEC,” he said. “They definitely gave me a great push and great reads. They just jump-started me the whole game and gave me something to work with every time.”

Penalty free

Tennessee and Army were the only teams in the country to play a penalty-free game during the season’s opening weekend, and the Vols registered their first flagless game since the 2007 SEC championship game loss to LSU.

“You win the game in your preparation throughout the course of the week,” Jones said. “I knew that we had done all that we could do. We had exposed them to just about every situation.

“I was more concerned that we had overprepared them, but I could tell at the walk-through this morning that they had their look in their eye and they were ready.”

Contact Patrick Brown at pbrown@timesfreepress.com.

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Nick Saban Streeter Lecka We finally found a Top 25 in which the SEC is more dominant than the USA Today Coaches’ Poll: the post-Signing Day recruiting class rankings. ________   I have to say the SEC is really doing well these days. Everyone expects Alabama is going to be on top on most years […]

SEC has 7 teams in top 12 in football recruiting, Ark is last in SEC!!!

It is really troubling to me that my Arkansas Razorbacks are 14th in the SEC in football recruiting this year and there are only a couple of days left till signing day. Alabama came in and got our best running back from North Little Rock high and I was told yesterday that Hunter Henry of […]