Just talked to my brother in Athens, he was talking about flooding in his yard, and his house is atop a hill! He lives right under the I75 logo on that map.
BTW, I am from Cleveland for those curious where I lived in the mountains near Chattanooga.
Tstorms that are on the SW end of a broken line of seperated storms (not a solid squall line (derachio) that produces straight-line winds) are the most likely to rotate. Also, rotating storms are likely to "right-move" -- curve slightly to the right of a straight line as they move.
I was driving home from St. Louis yesterday afternoon/evening and rained like a mofo! I don't know if what you're showing is the same storm or not...but I'm glad I got home ok. Driving in that stuff was not fun!
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For Some it's the Path...not the Goal.