Chattanooga Times Free Press

UT basketball players await green light on new season

- BY DAVID PASCHALL STAFF WRITER

Josiah-Jordan James had the final chapter of his freshman year on the University of Tennessee basketball team written by the coronaviru­s outbreak.

The Volunteers had completed a 17-14 regular season and were roughly an hour away from tipping off as the eighth seed against ninth-seeded Alabama at the Southeaste­rn Conference tournament in Nashville when league commission­er Greg Sankey pulled the plug on the fiveday extravagan­za.

Perhaps Tennessee would have lost handily to the Crimson Tide and had its season come to a close. Perhaps the Vols would have advanced a game or two and earned an NIT invite and a shot at a 20-win season. Perhaps Tennessee would perform the unlikely feat of winning four games in four days to attain a third consecutiv­e NCAA tournament bid.

James will never know, nor does the 6-foot-6, 207-pounder from Charleston, South Carolina, have any idea when his sophomore season will start amid this unrelentin­g pandemic.

“I can’t really worry about that, because it is not in my control,” James said. “I can just take care of what I can take care of daily — getting better each and

every day and being here for my teammates — and that is all I have been worrying about. I think if we do have a season, there will be a lot of thought that goes into it, and it will be the right decision and safest decision if they decide to do that.

“If they decide to cut the season or not have a season, then that is something I will have to live with, and it will probably be the safest decision.”

While college football tries to avoid further cancellati­ons of games following the Big Ten and Pac-10 announcing their plans to stage league-only seasons, former Kentucky and Louisville basketball coach Rick Pitino, now at Iona College, is among those who already have floated the idea of a conference-only hoop season that would start in January.

Nine days before the 2019-20 college basketball season came to a screeching halt, James scored 16 second-half points to lead the Vols to a stunning 81-73 comeback triumph over Kentucky on “Senior Night” at Rupp Arena. Tennessee trailed by 17 points early in the second half, but a James 3-pointer with 6:47 remaining gave the Vols a 61-60 lead.

James averaged 8.2 points and a team-leading 42.6% in 3-point shooting during SEC play last season, but last season seemed like a decade ago when he recently conducted a Zoom meeting while wearing a mask.

“It’s definitely a new normal, and it took a little while getting used to,” he said. “For our group shooting, the managers are allowed to be on the floor with you. They have gloves. They are able to pass the ball to you and kind of take you through a workout with them.”

James has a morning lift and receives treatment before his group shooting with managers. He has an online class afternoons from 12:30 to 1:30 and then takes time to shoot at 3 o’clock and again at 7.

Two Tennessee basketball players several weeks ago tested positive for the coronaviru­s, but their names have not been revealed.

“We just sent them words of encouragem­ent each and every day, and, thankfully, that’s over,” James said. “It definitely put into perspectiv­e how real this is, because those are the closest people I know. It kind of sits in the back of my mind now every day, just taking the right safety precaution­s.

“Even though sometimes I don’t really feel like wearing a mask, I have to.”

Tennessee is receiving its share of preseason attention with the return of James, John Fulkerson, Yves Pons and Santiago Vescovi, and with the addition of a top-five signing class nationally highlighte­d by the top-20 talents of guards Jaden Springer and Keon Johnson. The Vols announced this past week that season tickets are now for sale, but what their front-to-back schedule looks like remains an unknown.

James is angling to become more of a leader as a sophomore, with the former top-15 national signee appreciati­ve of where he is during these uncertain times.

“I feel as safe as I can be,” James said. “I know that the staff here, not only in the basketball facilities but in our dorm hall, are taking the right safety precaution­s each and every day. There is nothing I should be afraid of, because I know they are getting the job done.

“Like I said, having two of our teammates be diagnosed with COVID19 definitely made it real for us.”

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