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Tag: Sheltons
JJ’s Country Music Minute: New Music Friday, Did Jelly Roll Hate Kane Brown?, Blake Shelton’s Biggest Mistake and More
Friday means New Country, and today you get the new album from Kane Brown called “The High Road,” featuring his hit “Miles On It” and his latest single “Backseat Driver.” Also, mom-to-be Lauren Alaina is out with her new single today called “Those Kind of Women.”
Another new single that I got excited about when I first heard about the collaboration is out today. Wherever you listen to music, go find “Place They Call Home” by Castellows featuring Flatland Cavalry.
One of the tracks on Kane Brown’s new album is “Haunted,” featuring Jelly Roll. In a recent interview, Kane told the story about how he believed Jelly Roll hated him, but now they are close friends, play a lot of Call of Duty together, and randomly Facetime each other at 3 am.
As much as Bailey Zimmerman beat himself up about his drunken performance and Crash My Playa and later apologized, some of his country peers are lifting him up and showing him grace. Morgan Wallen said, “I thought you sounded great,” Chase Rice said, “Been there” and Meghan Patrick complimented him for owning it and told him to learn from it and move on.
Blake Shelton is opening up about what he calls one of the biggest mistakes of his life. Blake says it’s the barbed wire tattoo on his left forearm. He swore when he got it in 2005 he’d never get another one; to this day, it’s the only tattoo he has.
Hey y’all, it’s JJ here with your weekly dose of country music news! Today we’ve got a jam-packed episode of New Music Friday, with some juicy gossip thrown in for good measure. Let’s dive in!First up, did Jelly Roll hate Kane Brown? Rumors have been swirling that the two country artists had some bad blood between them, but Jelly Roll set the record straight in a recent interview. He explained that there was some miscommunication between them, but that they’re all good now. Phew, crisis averted!
Next, let’s talk about Blake Shelton’s biggest mistake. The country superstar recently admitted that his biggest regret was not recording a duet with his fiancée, Gwen Stefani, sooner. Fans have been clamoring for a collaboration between the two for years, so here’s hoping they hit the studio soon!
And finally, let’s highlight some of the hottest new releases in country music this week. From Luke Combs’ latest single to Miranda Lambert’s upcoming album, there’s no shortage of great music to check out. So grab your cowboy hat and boots, and get ready to two-step the night away!
That’s all for this week’s JJ’s Country Music Minute. Stay tuned for more country music news and gossip next time. And as always, keep it country, y’all!
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country music, JJ’s Country Music Minute, new music Friday, Jelly Roll, Kane Brown, Blake Shelton, biggest mistake, music news, country music updates, country music gossip, latest country music trends
#JJs #Country #Music #Minute #Music #Friday #Jelly #Roll #Hate #Kane #Brown #Blake #Sheltons #Biggest #MistakeBen Shelton’s lights-out Grand Slam tennis evolves, from vibes to doing the math
MELBOURNE, Australia — Ben Shelton’s Australian Open equation is simple. Beat the best player in the world to get to the final, then beat either the second-best player in the world by ranking or one of the greatest men’s players ever.
He plays Jannik Sinner, the world No. 1 and defending champion, in the semifinals in Melbourne on Friday night. Alexander Zverev and Novak Djokovic contest the other semifinal. But even if he doesn’t win another match, Shelton, the world No. 21, has made one thing exceptionally clear to the tennis world the past two weeks: it’s one thing to beat him in a tour event, it’s a completely different thing to topple him at a Grand Slam.
The American has now played 10 majors, reaching the semifinals twice and the quarterfinals once. Shelton is 24-9 overall in Grand Slam main-draw matches and 18-4 on the hard courts of New York and Melbourne.
Shelton has been talking tennis math for a couple of weeks now, telling anyone who wants to listen that he backs himself in the best-of-five format more than any other. Grand Slam calculations form the basis of Shelton’s success in the biggest tournaments in tennis, in which he has a 72 percent win rate. He’s at 58 percent for all ATP Tour competitions, the majors included.
“For me, it’s really special to be playing at these big tournaments and playing my best tennis at the big tournaments,” he said Wednesday night after beating Lorenzo Sonego of Italy, 6-4, 7-5, 4-6, 7-6(4) in three and a half hours.
To look at Shelton’s game on the surface, his version of big-time tennis is all vibes and thunder: the massive serve, the cranked forehands and backhands that get an extra scream of exertion when he gets his shoulders moving. It’s a force-of-nature approach to the tennis court that pulls his opponent and everybody watching into a cauldron of vibes.
That’s maybe how it was in his breakout runs, especially at the 2023 U.S. Open when he sprinted to the semifinals with his hang-up-the-phone celebration and forehands scudding down the sidelines. Not so much now. The massive serve is being turned into something trickier and more precise. The groundstrokes are earning the right to finish points rather than exploding them. He’s incorporating more spin on his forehand and working hard on varying his return game.
“You get a few more balls back,” his father and coach, Bryan Shelton, said walking through a tunnel under Melbourne Park with his son. “You start making a few smarter decisions. He’s doing things he wasn’t doing a year ago.”
It all goes back to the math. Big games, though, come with small margins, especially for Shelton the past couple of years. A few loose points lost to rocket forehands that just miss, or to an overhit return here and there, can get an opponent halfway to the finish line in a best-of-three match.
A couple more, and the match might well be over. In a best-of-five-sets match, especially given how much time he spends in the weight room and the running track, Shelton feels like he’s got all day to make up for a ropey patch because he kind of does, and so does everyone else, especially now that he has achieved a certain level of Grand Slam success over and over.
“I feel like I belong,” he said as he walked the corridor late Wednesday evening. “I feel like I deserve it.”
So does his father.
“You have kids?” he asked a little while before Shelton spoke. “It’s little things you work on paying tiny dividends here and there. Over time, hopefully, they add up.”
He wasn’t really talking about tennis. And then he was.
GO DEEPER
Ben Shelton, serve savant, wants to talk about the return
Shelton knew it was going to have to go this way — because of the math.
When he rolled to those Australian Open quarterfinals and U.S. Open semifinals in 2023, he felt that the dreamlike tennis he was living through could vanish at any moment. Back then his serve, his biggest weapon, had to be perfect, along with just about everything else. If he had a bad serving day or wasn’t nailing lines with his groundstrokes, he probably wasn’t going to win.
More importantly, he hadn’t yet figured out how to win not just without hitting 100 percent of Hail Marys, but without using 100 percent of his energy, physical and mental.
The past year, and especially the past few months, he and his father have focused on stringing together a safety net, because most of the time he and every other player will be far from a perfect version of themselves on the tennis court.
His biggest task has been trying to figure out how to get into more points on his opponents’ serves. In the corridor late Wednesday, he talked about the past. He might start a match returning well by standing deep, but when an opponent made an adjustment and standing deep stopped working, he had nowhere to turn.
“I wasn’t good at making the adjustments or changing up my position, giving guys different looks, and I feel like I can do that now,” he said.
“The best returners in the world, they can do so many different things, and sometimes that’s hitting the ball and roping into the baseline and sometimes that’s a deep, floating chip. Sometimes it’s a chip at the feet. That’s a lot of what I’ve been working on.”
Against Sonego, Shelton was desperate not to fritter away a two-set lead after finding himself in a fourth-set tiebreak. Shelton had scrambled Sonego early with a series of looping, spinny forehands that he’d practised all December in Florida. Then, Sonego surged. His winner total kept growing, from six in the first set and 14 in the second to 17 in the third and then 26 in the fourth. Shelton’s legs were fine, but his mind was fried from watching all those balls sail past him out of reach.
At 4-4, after some tight misses from the back by Shelton and at the net by Sonego, the Italian twisted a kick serve down the middle to Shelton’s forehand. He didn’t try to kill it: he hit a low chip short, drawing Sonego into the net, where he didn’t really want to be at that moment. Sonego looped an approach into Shelton’s backhand and he thundered it straight back. The volley sailed long. Shelton closed it out from there to set up his date with the world No. 1 and defending champion.
He’s a realist. Sinner has been in a class by himself, joined and surpassed intermittently by Carlos Alcaraz, for the past five months. Shelton knows his chances are what they are. But the match remains a huge opportunity to measure himself and his progress against the best there is on the biggest stage.
Shelton has beaten Sinner once, in October 2023 in Shanghai, just as the Italian was rounding into the form that carried him to the top spot in the rankings. He has not won a set against Sinner in four tries since then.
He will try to believe that doesn’t matter, just as he did before he faced Lorenzo Musetti in the third round. Musetti had won both of their previous matches. People were asking him how that was going to go.
“I don’t really care who is on the other side of the court,” he said after he had beaten Musetti, who had never played him in a Grand Slam.
“If I’m healthy and I’m feeling good, I always feel like I can go the distance, five sets. That’s half the battle, trusting in your ability to make it all the way to the end.”
What’s the other half? Sinner, and then maybe Djokovic. It’s the last weekend of a Grand Slam and there are only four players left. It’s just math.
(Top photo: Mark Avellino / Anadolu via Getty Images)
Ben Shelton, a rising star in the world of Grand Slam tennis, has been making waves with his electrifying performances on the court. Known for his lights-out play and killer instincts, Shelton has quickly become a fan favorite among tennis enthusiasts.But Shelton’s success on the court is not just a result of his natural talent and athleticism. In fact, Shelton’s game has evolved significantly over the years, from relying on his instincts and vibes to incorporating a more analytical approach to his game.
Shelton, who has always been known for his aggressive style of play and powerful serves, has recently started incorporating more strategic thinking into his game. By studying his opponents’ strengths and weaknesses, analyzing match statistics, and doing the math to determine the best strategies to employ on the court, Shelton has been able to take his game to the next level.
This evolution in Shelton’s game has not only made him a more formidable opponent on the court, but it has also garnered him respect from his fellow players and fans alike. With his lights-out play and newfound focus on strategy and analysis, Shelton is definitely a force to be reckoned with in the world of Grand Slam tennis.
So next time you see Ben Shelton on the court, remember that his success is not just a result of his natural talent, but also his dedication to constantly evolving and improving his game. And who knows, maybe one day Shelton will be lifting that coveted Grand Slam trophy above his head, all thanks to his dedication to doing the math.
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- Ben Shelton
- Grand Slam tennis
- Evolution of tennis
- Tennis vibes
- Tennis statistics
- Tennis strategy
- Ben Shelton tennis career
- Tennis Grand Slam tournaments
- Tennis player Ben Shelton
- Tennis performance analysis
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Gwen Stefani shares Blake Shelton’s favourite Christmas dish
Gwen Stefani recently got candid about her family’s Christmas celebrations together.
For those unversed, Gwen Stefani is the mother to three children, Kingston, 18, Zuma, 16, and 10-year-old Apollo, as well as her husband, Blake Shelton.
In a new interview with Hello Magazine, the Don’t Speak singer admitted that her family loves spending the holidays together.
Gwen revealed that she spent Christmas with her family and added, “We’re always trying to create traditions, just as my parents did for us when I was a kid. One of them is making Christmas marshmallow wreaths. Blake really loves those – they’re addictive.”
During the same chat, she expressed her thoughts on performing alongside her band for the first time since 2015.
It is pertinent to mention that Gwen had her much-awaited reunion with No Doubt group members at Coachella after she performed with her band at the festival.
Speaking of the reunion, the songstress recalled, “Performing at Coachella and feeling all that love for us after all this time was kind of overwhelming.
“We hadn’t done anything together for so long, so to do that and be there for each other, with all of our families, meant so much to me,” she added.
Although the band hadn’t jammed in almost a decade, she noted, “It had been so long, but it was as if we had never been apart.”
Gwen Stefani recently took to social media to share a glimpse into her holiday traditions with boyfriend Blake Shelton. In a heartwarming post, the pop star revealed that one of Blake’s favorite Christmas dishes is her famous homemade lasagna.“I love making lasagna for Blake during the holidays,” Gwen wrote. “It’s his absolute favorite and always brings a smile to his face. It’s become a special tradition for us to enjoy this dish together each year.”
Fans of the couple were delighted to hear about this sweet tradition, with many expressing their love and admiration for the pair in the comments. It’s clear that Gwen and Blake’s love for each other extends beyond just their music and careers, and that they cherish their time together during the festive season.
As we all prepare to celebrate the holidays with our loved ones, it’s heartwarming to see celebrities like Gwen Stefani and Blake Shelton sharing their special moments and traditions with us. Here’s to hoping that their love and joy continue to shine bright this Christmas season.
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