No. 7 North Carolina State defeats No. 19 Lady Vols, 4-3

No. 7 North Carolina State defeats No. 19 Lady Vols, 4-3.

No. 7 North Carolina State (6-0) defeated No. 19 Tennessee (5-2), 4-3, Saturday at Goodfriend Tennis Center.

The Lady Vols won the doubles point ahead of singles competition.

Tennessee-North Carolina State tennis results

Singles
1. #92 Sofia Cabezas (TENN) def. #3 Amelia Rajecki (ST) 2-6, 6-4, 7-5
2. #27 Abigail Rencheli (ST) def. #91 Alana Wolfberg (TENN) 4-6, 6-0, 6-4
3. #40 Anna Zyryanova (ST) def. Catherine Aulia (TENN) 6-0, 6-4
4. #19 Sophie Abrams (ST) def. #115 Elza Tomase (TENN) 6-4, 4-6, 6-0
5. #100 Lauren Anzalotta (TENN) def. #116 Maddy Zampardo (ST) 7-6 (7-4), 1-6, 6-3
6. Gina Dittmann (ST) def. Esther Adeshina (TENN) 0-6, 7-6 (7-4), 6-4

Order of finish: 3,4,2,1,6,5

Doubles
1. Sofia Cabezas/Elza Tomase (TENN) def. #9 Anna Zyryanova/Sophie Abrams (ST) 7-5
2. #7 Amelia Rajecki/Maddy Zampardo (ST) def. Alana Wolfberg/Esther Adeshina (TENN) 6-3
3. Lauren Anzalotta/Catherine Aulia (TENN) def. #52 Gabriella Broadfoot/Abigail Rencheli (ST) 6-4

Order of finish: 2,3,1

PHOTOS: Tennessee-North Carolina State top 20 tennis match

Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

PHOTOS: Tennessee-North Carolina State top 20 tennis match

PHOTOS: Tennessee-North Carolina State top 20 tennis match

No. 7 North Carolina State defeated No. 19 Tennessee, 4-3, on Saturday at Goodfriend Tennis Center.

The Lady Vols won the doubles point against North Carolina State.

“The message I want to make sure our team understands is that we keep knocking on the door against great opponents, and now we have to barge our way through it,” Tennessee head coach Alison Ojeda said. “We gave ourselves a fantastic advantage by winning the doubles point. In my opinion, NC State is easily one of the best doubles teams in the country. They prove it year after year. There’s a very clear plan on how to defend what they do and I thought our girls did a fantastic job with that to win the point and give us a head start going into singles. We know they’re a big serving, big ball-striking team. We know that they’re used to being a top-five team in the country, and they strongly believe in everything they’re doing at every spot.

“I still think that our team came out ready to win. We competed hard, put ourselves in a great situation and came up a bit short.”

Below are photos of the Tennessee-North Carolina State tennis match.

Vols defeat North Carolina State in Hall of Fame Series

Vols defeat North Carolina State in Hall of Fame Series.

No. 10 Tennessee (8-3) defeated North Carolina State (7-3). 79-70, Saturday in the Hall of Fame Series at Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas.

The Vols led, 34-31, at halftime.

Three Tennessee players scored 10-plus points in the contest. Josiah-Jordan James totaled 23 points, seven rebounds, three assists and one block. Zakai Zeigler recorded a season-high 20 points. He also recorded eight assists and four steals.

Jahmai Mashack totaled 11 points, five rebounds, four assists, one steal and one block, while Santiago Vescovi scored nine points, all in the second half, for Tennessee.

Tobe Awaka recorded five points, 12 rebounds and two assists for the Vols.

D.J. Horne scored 16 points to lead the Wolfpack.

How to watch Tennessee-North Carolina State basketball game

How to watch the Tennessee-North Carolina State basketball game on Saturday.

No. 10 Tennessee (7-3) will play North Carolina State (7-2) on Saturday in the Hall of Fame Series.

Rankings reflect the USA TODAY Sports Men’s Basketball Coaches Poll.

The contest will take place at Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas. Miami-Baylor (women’s) and California-Ole Miss (men’s) games are also part of the Hall of Fame Series.

Hall of Fame Series schedule:

  • 5 p.m. EST — Miami-Baylor
  • 7:30 p.m. EST — California-Ole Miss
  • 10 p.m. EST — North Carolina State-Tennessee

PHOTOS: A look at Rick Barnes through the years

Below is information in how to watch and listen to the Tennessee-North Carolina State basketball game at Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas on Saturday.

Grayson McCall expected to commit with Vols’ 2024 opponent

Coastal Carolina quarterback Grayson McCall is expected to commit with a Tennessee 2024 opponent.

Coastal Carolina redshirt senior quarterback Grayson McCall is expected to commit to North Carolina State.

“Coastal Carolina transfer quarterback Grayson McCall is expected to commit to NC State, a source tells On3 Sports,” Pete Nakos announced on Wednesday.

Tennessee will play North Carolina State on Sept. 7, 2024 at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina.

The 6-foot-3, 220-pound McCall appeared in 42 games at Coastal Carolina from 2019-23. He recorded 10,005 passing yards, 88 passing touchdowns, 14 interceptions, 1,113 rushing yards and 18 rushing touchdowns.

Student-athletes can enter the NCAA transfer portal from Dec. 2 until Jan. 2, 2024. Players can also enter the NCAA transfer portal from April 15-30, 2024.

READ: Updated Tennessee football NCAA transfer portal tracker

Reinhold Matay-USA TODAY Sports

Why did 4-star Elijah Groves pick North Carolina State?

Elijah Groves talks about his commitment to North Carolina State.

Elijah Groves committed to North Carolina State this past week, the four-star linebacker giving the Wolfpack another talented defensive player in what is a very solid class for the ACC program.

Groves is a 6-foot-4, 215-pound athlete from East Robertson (Cross Plains, Tennessee). He is the No. 130 recruit in the nation according to 247Sports.

“The way North Carolina State will use me, I really like that – the way they use Payton (North Carolina State linebacker Payton Willis) and after playing inside linebacker for my high school team our last couple of games, I really like that position way more than outside linebacker (or) defensive end,” Groves told USA TODAY High School Sports this week.

Willis, who had a standout season for North Carolina State, won the Butkus Award this week as the nation’s top linebacker.

“They see me playing that inside linebackers spot that will blitz and cover people as well,” Groves said.

He also held offers from Kentucky (where he had been committed), Purdue and Virginia Tech among other programs. North Carolina State, he said, distinguished themselves in his recruitment.

Groves committed to Kentucky in early July but opened up his recruitment on Dec. 5. One day later, he was committed to North Carolina State.

“The love they showed me, even after I committed to Kentucky,” Groves said.

“They never gave up on me and always called and texted me, checking on me, seeing how I’m doing and that just shows they’re not just coaches but they treat their players like sons also.”

5 stars: The best and worst of Notre Dame’s win over NC State

Who did well and who didn’t for the Irish against NC State?

For three quarters, [autotag]Notre Dame football[/autotag] was in a tussle with host [autotag]North Carolina State[/autotag], but the end result will not show that.

The Irish outlasted the Wolfpack, getting a 45-24 victory on the road to improve to 3-0. There was plenty of good and bad for Notre Dame, even with a double-digit road win. There were times the Irish struggled and dominated, even with a lengthy weather delay during the second quarter.

Find out below which Notre Dame players or units performed the best, five-stars, or the worst, one-star, in the Irish’s 45-24 victory against NC State.

North Carolina State’s brand new, $15 million videoboard just got wrecked by a thunderstorm

Hopefully NC State held onto the receipt

Saturday was a momentous day for the North Carolina State football program.

Not only was the school welcoming Notre Dame to campus for the second-time ever (and the first since 2016), but the home opener was the debut of the Wolfpack’s new, massive videoboard at Carter-Finley Stadium.

The new screen is 7,121 square feet and features 6.6 million pixels and 75 audio speakers making it the 11th largest in college football. The price tag? A cool $15 million.

And it lasted all of one quarter before the skies opened up and proved the technology was no match for mother nature. Seriously, a huge thunderstorm passing through sent NC State searching the fine print of the scoreboard’s warranty terms.

That’s just awful, horrible luck. And maybe a lesson in design and engineering. Here’s hoping they can get it fixed — or at least exchange it for a new one.

North Carolina State is blocking Stanford and Cal to the ACC

Naturally, Florida State and Clemson would be against this move. North Carolina? Maybe. But why #NCState? This is fascinating. #ACC

Our friends at Fighting Irish Wire are looking on with interest at the ACC, where Notre Dame has been pushing for Stanford and California to be invited to the conference.

Some national commentators have thrown out some very interesting (read: wild) ideas about Notre Dame and what the Irish should do. Fighting Irish Wire is chuckling at how often — and how badly — the national college sports media world wants Notre Dame to join a conference, when that just isn’t happening.

However, as much as national pundits and personalities might be erroneous and tiresome with their constant insistence that Notre Dame should join a conference, they do have a point in this regard: Why should Notre Dame have a vote on ACC matters when the Irish aren’t a full member in football? It does seem reasonable enough that the ACC should insist on full football membership before granting Notre Dame a vote.

That brings up the larger question, though: Why aren’t more ACC schools voting against Notre Dame’s push to have Stanford and Cal join the conference? The conference has 15 votes with Notre Dame included. The conference needs 75 percent of schools — at least 12 of the 15 (11 isn’t enough) — to approve the Stanford-Cal plan.

Currently, 11 schools are in favor, four are not.

We can understand why Florida State and Clemson would vote no. Why would they want to give Notre Dame anything it wants? Those schools are unhappy with the ACC to begin with. They don’t want Notre Dame to get its way. Moreover, adding Stanford and Cal probably means FSU and Clemson have to split ACC revenues with even more schools. The ACC gets stronger without making concessions to FSU and Clemson, which aren’t getting nearly as much TV money as they should be.

That makes sense.

It makes some sense that North Carolina is also voting against the Stanford-Cal plan, though this one is a little more tricky. Does UNC privately want to go to the Big Ten? If it does, voting no makes sense.

It’s the fourth school voting against the Stanford-Cal plan that is eye-opening. North Carolina State is the fourth no. What really is fascinating about all of this is N.C. State is voting no whereas in-state neighbor Wake Forest is voting yes. Another North Carolina-based school, Duke, is voting yes.

Nine other ACC schools — Boston College, Syracuse, Louisville, Virginia, Virginia Tech, Pittsburgh, Miami, Georgia Tech — are joining Notre Dame in voting yes as well.

What is it about North Carolina State that is making the Wolfpack oppose this plan while other ACC schools are approving it? Is this the way the 15 ACC schools think, or are the 11 “yes” votes voting yes only because they want to make Notre Dame happy on the surface but secretly oppose the plan and know that four schools will never allow it to happen?

It’s very intriguing.

Let’s look at ACC and national reactions to the revelation that North Carolina State has joined Florida State, Clemson, and North Carolina in opposing Notre Dame’s Stanford-Cal plan in the ACC:

Twitter reaction after Cannon Peebles transfers to Tennessee baseball

A look at Twitter reaction after Cannon Peebles transfers to Tennessee baseball.

North Carolina State freshman catcher and designated hitter Cannon Peebles transferred to Tennessee on Tuesday.

The 5-foot-11, 198-pound Peebles started 39 games for the Wolfpack in 2023.

He recorded a .352 batting average, 12 home runs, 50 hits, 50 RBIs, 30 runs and 27 walks as a freshman.

Peebles led all North Carolina State hitters with a .348 batting average and a .742 slugging percentage in ACC play, while tying for first with seven home runs.

He produced a .330 batting average or better from both sides of the plate in 2023.

PHOTOS: A look at Tony Vitello through the years

Following Peebles’ transfer to Tennessee, Vols Wire looks at the social media buzz listed below.