OUR FANHOUSE TOOLBAR INTEGRATES THE LATEST SPORTS NEWS INTO YOUR WEB BROWSER AND INSTALLS IN SECONDS.
YOU CAN DOWNLOAD THE TOOLBAR HERE.

NCAA Football Tennessee Basketball

Latest Tennessee Basketball Stories

David Letterman Thinks Butler Deserves Another Chance Against Tennessee

David Letterman was born in Indianapolis, the home of Butler University, and that may be why he's convinced that Butler deserves another chance at playing Tennessee, the team it lost to in the NCAA Tournament on Sunday:

"The Tennessee Volunteers defeated the Butler Bulldogs, 76-71," Letterman said. "Apparently, there still is some time on the clock, so they're going to run the overtime over again. They found that they had let the clock run during a timeout mistakenly, and they think there's a good chance that Butler will be back in the Tournament."

I'm not sure it works that way, but I do like the way Letterman has maintained loyalty to his Indiana teams even after working in New York for three decades. He's no fair-weather fan.

Geno Auriemma Is Mad at ESPN

I thought Shelley Smith of ESPN did an even-handed job when she broke the news that the University of Connecticut women's basketball team committed a recruiting violation by taking Maya Moore on a tour of ESPN. UConn coach Geno Auriemma does not agree with me.

Auriemma said this on his weekly radio show:

"It's a story that has been rehashed by ESPN to serve its own purposes. ... Shelley Smith came up to talk to me to do a story on [Tennessee women's basketball coach] Pat Summitt and my relationship with her, why the series was canceled, and I flat out said, 'Go ask her. I didn't cancel it.' I didn't want to be involved in [that] story.

"And [Smith's] response was, 'OK, we're going to [report the violation].' ... What purpose does that serve? It's already been discussed and dealt with [last summer]. It's typical: 'Let's drum up some interest before the NCAA Tournament starts and hope these two meet in the finals so we can get boffo ratings' at the expense of Maya Moore."

The notion that this was done "at the expense of Maya Moore" strikes me as rather silly. No one is saying Moore did anything that any high school basketball player wouldn't do: She was offered a tour of ESPN and she accepted. What makes the story interesting is that it was Summitt, Auriemma's arch rival, who reported the tour to the NCAA. If Auriemma doesn't think that's newsworthy, he's wrong.

Tennessee Reports UConn for Recruiting Violation: Taking Maya Moore on ESPN Tour

Shelley Smith of ESPN.com is reporting that the University of Connecticut women's basketball team committed a recruiting violation by taking Maya Moore on a tour of ESPN.

The violation was brought to the NCAA's attention by UConn's arch rival, Tennessee, and Tennessee's conference, the SEC. Moore was heavily recruited by both schools and is now a star freshman at UConn.

ESPN acknowledges that it agreed to UConn's request to give Moore and her mother a tour. ESPN's headquarters in Bristol are located approximately 45 miles from UConn's campus. ESPN released a statement today saying, "To avoid future incidents, our tour policy will now prohibit high school athletes from receiving tours at the request of a college or university athletic official."

The tour was considered an impermissible benefit, although UConn says it did not receive any NCAA penalty for it. Tennessee had previously accused former UConn players of giving Moore car rides in violation of NCAA rules; the NCAA dismissed those accusations.

It's no secret that UConn coach Geno Auriemma and Tennessee coach Pat Summitt hate each other, and it's safe to say this won't do anything to change that. But it will add another layer of intrigue if UConn and Tennessee play each other in the NCAA Tournament.

Erin Andrews on Bruce Pearl Mauling: I Wasn't Surprised at All Because He's Very Passionate

In case you haven't seen it by now, Tennessee basketball coach Bruce Pearl grabbed ESPN sideline reporter Erin Andrews during a halftime interview last month:

That has become one of the most-discussed incidents of the college basketball season, and in an interview with the Chicago Tribune, Andrews gave her thoughts about it:

He gave me a big bear hug. I wasn't surprised at all because he's very passionate. But right when it happened, you could see the reaction on my face: Oh, God, this is going to be all over the place.

He texted me and said: "Thanks for doing the game. Great working with you.'' I said: "Absolutely'' and mentioned: "You know this is gonna get a ton of play on the Internet, don't you?'' He's like: "Oh, yeah.'' He gets it.
Via Sports by Brooks.

Bruce Pearl Mauls Erin Andrews

At halftime of last night's Tennessee victory over Memphis, Tennessee coach Bruce Pearl got a little too handsy with ESPN sideline reporter Erin Andrews:

Andrews asked Pearl, "Coach, what has Memphis done to Chris Lofton in the first half?"

Pearl responded, "Hold him. Drape him like this." At that point, Pearl proceeded to put Andrews in a bear hug, and a shocked Andrews said, "OK."

But she did manage to overcome her shock and ask him another question before concluding the interview.
Sorry, No Photos