Hoops Preview: #22/23 Tennessee at No. 13/13 Kentucky

Hoops Preview: #22/23 Tennessee at No. 13/13 Kentucky

Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — No. 22/23 Tennessee (11-2, 1-0 SEC) makes the trip up I-75 for its first SEC road contest of the season, a Sunday matinee in Lexington at Memorial Coliseum vs. No. 13/13 Kentucky (11-2, 0-1 SEC). Tip-off is slated for 4:02 p.m. ET.

This will mark the 68th meeting between these programs, with the Lady Vols leading the series, 55-12.

Tennessee popped the top on the SEC portion of its schedule on Thursday night, overcoming a five-point, first-quarter deficit to topple Missouri, 77-66, at Thompson-Boling Arena in Knoxville. UT led by as many as 18 points in the contest. The win provided first-year Lady Vol head coach Kellie Harper a victory in her SEC debut.

Kentucky opened the season 10-0 but has suffered defeats in two of its last three games. On Thursday night, UK opened SEC play in Columbia, S.C., falling 99-76 to the No. 4/5 Gamecocks in a contest that was all Garnet and Black from the outset. Prior to winter break, Kentucky had fallen, 67-66, to No. 7 Louisville and won at California, 63-61.

Following Sunday’s match-up, Tennessee has a date at Ole Miss (7 CT/SECN+) on Thursday night, while Kentucky is at Alabama (7 CT/SECN+) that evening.

BROADCAST INFORMATION

  • Sunday’s game will be televised by ESPN2 with Courtney Lyle (PxP) and Carolyn Peck (Analyst) handling the call..
  • The contest also can be heard on Lady Vol Network radio stations and by audio stream, with Mickey Dearstone calling the action for the 21st season.
  • A link to the live audio stream can be found on each game’s Hoops Central page or the Lady Vol schedule on UTSports.com.
  • For a list of Lady Vol Network affiliates, please click on the Fans tab at the top of UTSports.com, select Vol Network and then click on Vol Network Affiliates in the black bar at the top of the page.
  • Air time for games on the Lady Vol Radio Network generally occurs 30 minutes prior to tip-off.
  • SECN+ games are online broadcasts and are available only on WatchESPN via computers, smartphones and tablets.
  • All of the games included in the ESPN package (ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU) and the SEC Network will be available through WatchESPN, accessible online at WatchESPN.com, on smartphones and tablets via the WatchESPN app, and streamed on televisions through Amazon Fire TV, Apple TV, Chromecast, Roku, Xbox 360 or Xbox One to fans who receive their video subscription from an affiliated provider.

HARPER VS. LVFLS

  • For the first time as Tennessee’s head coach, Kellie (Jolly) Harper will face her first opponent with former Lady Vols or UT staff on the other bench.
  • Harper (1995-99) was teammates at Tennessee with UK associate head coach Kyra Elzy (1996-2001) and assistant coach Niya Butts (1996-2000). The trio played on the second and third of UT’s three-consecutive titles in 1996, 1997 and 1998.
  • Elzy served a tenure on UT’s staff that included roles as assistant coach and associate head coach from 2012-16.
  • Kentucky head coach Matthew Mitchell was a graduate assistant at UT in 1999-2000.
  • UK assistant Amber Smith was a G.A. at Tennessee in 2013-14.
  • Tennessee associate director of sports medicine Jenna Kennedy earned her master’s at UK before being hired full-time at UT.

RECAPPING THE MISSOURI GAME

  • A dominant effort in the paint and an outstanding defensive second quarter helped the Lady Vols give Tennessee head coach Kellie Harper a victory in her Southeastern Conference debut Thursday night, as No. 22/23 UT defeated Missouri, 77-66, to open conference play.
  • Tennessee (11-2, 1-0 SEC) held the Tigers (3-11, 0-1 SEC) to three field goals and just seven points in the second period. And the Lady Vols outscored Mizzou 44-22 in the paint during Thursday’s triumph at Thompson-Boling Arena.
  • The Lady Vols lived up to their reputation as one of the nation’s top teams on the boards, out-rebounding the Tigers, 43-22. Tennessee pulled down 18 offensive boards and enjoyed a 19-4 edge in second-chance points.
  • Lady Vol junior Rennia Davis recorded her seventh double-double of the season and the 25th of her career Thursday, finishing with 19 team-high points and a game-high 12 rebounds.  Jazmine Massengill handed out a career-high 12 assists and also added seven points and six rebounds.
  • Tamari Key totaled 16 points on 8-of-11 shooting, and fellow freshman Jordan Horston scored 13.

NOTES FROM THE LAST GAME

  • Massengill Dishing: Sophomore point guard Jazmine Massengill doled out a career-high 12 assists while committing only one turnover against Mizzou to make her way into the record book, tying for the sixth-most single-game assists in Lady Vol history. She has managed double-digit assists in two of the last three games, averaging 8.0 apg. during that span while turning the ball over only three times.
  • Hot Hands: Tennessee shot 50.0% from the floor against Missouri, marking the fourth time this season the team has hit at least half of its shots.
  • Key Settling In: Freshman Tamari Key set a new career high of 16 points in her first SEC action. After scoring in double figures in just two of the first six games, she has now made her way into double digits in four of the last seven contests.
  • Davis Climbing The Charts: Tennessee junior Rennia Davis posted her 25th career double-double (seventh this season) against Missouri with 19 points and 12 rebounds. She currently ranks 11th all-time for career double-doubles and third in the SEC among active players behind Unique Thompson (Auburn) and Ayana Mitchell (LSU) who have each recorded 31 in their careers. Her 19 points on the game moved her career total to 1,076, passing Isabelle Harrison and Cierra Burdick and tying with Peggy Evans for 40th all-time among Lady Vol scorers.

UT-UK SERIES NOTES

  • This marks the 68th edition of UT vs. UK, with the Lady Vols leading the series, 55-12.
  • UT has faced only two other teams as many times as the Wildcats – Vanderbilt in 82 meetings and Georgia in 68 games.
  • Tennessee is 21-8 vs. UK in Lexington and 10-0 at neutral sites. The Lady Vols are 9-0 in postseason games.
  • Tennessee is 20-6 all-time at Memorial Coliseum and 1-2 in Rupp Arena.
  • The Lady Vols own a 24-4 mark against UK in games played in Knoxville, with the Wildcats winning on Rocky Top in 1983, 1985, 2014 and 2019.
  • UT is 3-1 in overtime games vs. Kentucky, including 3-0 in Lexington and 0-1 in Knoxville, with the last OT contest in the series coming in 1994.
  • Since Feb. 16, 2014, a four-point Tennessee win in Knoxville, five of the past nine meetings have been decided by four or fewer points.
  • The Lady Vols’ last two trips to Memorial Coliseum resulted in one-point outcomes, a 73-72 Tennessee win on Jan. 29, 2015, and a 64-63 setback on Jan. 25, 2016.

ABOUT KENTUCKY

  • Kentucky was picked by the media and the SEC coaches to finish fourth in their preseason polls.
  • The Wildcats returned three starters, including consensus national freshman of the year Rhyne Howard, plus eight other players.
  • UK was 25-8 a year ago, finishing fourth in the SEC with an 11-5 mark.
  • Sophomore Rhyne Howard (21.5 ppg.) and transfers Chasity Patterson (12.0 ppg.) and Sabrina Haines (10.1 ppg.) pace the Big Blue attack. Patterson came from Texas and Haines from Arizona State.

RECAPPING UK’S LAST GAME

  • Rhyne Howard scored 28 points, but the 13th-ranked Kentucky women’s basketball team fell to No. 4 South Carolina, 99-72, on Tuesday night at Colonial Life Arena in Columbia, S.C.
  • Howard’s 28 points are the most she has ever scored in a Southeastern Conference game. Thursday was also the third straight game in which the sophomore from Cleveland, Tennessee had scored at least 25 points.
  • Kentucky (11-2, 0-1 SEC) got a career-high 15 points from Chasity Patterson and 13 points from Amanda Paschal. The Cats, however, faced a significant disadvantage in height, and the Gamecocks took advantage, outscoring UK, 60-24, in the paint and winning the rebounding battle, 40-20.

THE LAST TIME WE MET THE CATS

  • The No. 13-ranked Tennessee Lady Vols fell, 73-71, to the 16th-ranked Kentucky Wildcats on Jan. 10. 2019, at Thompson-Boling Arena.
  • The Lady Vols (12-3, 1-2 SEC) trailed by two points after a pair of free throws from Meme Jackson with one minute remaining, but a three-pointer from Wildcats guard Jaida Roper put the game out of reach for the Big Orange.
  • Sophomore Rennia Davis added 12 points for Tennessee, while senior Cheridene Green dominated the glass with a career-high 15 rebounds.
  • Kentucky (15-2, 2-1 SEC) was propelled by a 27-point night from senior guard Maci Morris.

LAST TIME IN LEXINGTON

  • No. 7/7 Tennessee improved to 13-0 overall and 1-0 in the SEC on Dec. 31, 2017, defeating Kentucky (8-7, 0-1 SEC) 63-49 in front of 8,921 at Rupp Arena.
  • The victory was UT’s first in the venue in three tries. The Big Orange women lost to the Wildcats during the 2005-06 season and fell to USC there in the 1986 NCAA Final Four semifinals.
  • Senior Jaime Nared recorded her sixth double-double of the season, contributing 11 points, 10 rebounds and six assists. Mercedes Russell added 16 points, seven rebounds and four blocked shots, while freshman Rennia Davis just missed a double-double with 11 rebounds and nine points.
Lady Antebellum Announces “Ocean 2020 Tour” With Jake Owen and Maddie & Tae

Lady Antebellum Announces “Ocean 2020 Tour” With Jake Owen and Maddie & Tae

Lady Antebellum announced they will embark on a 40-date headlining tour, dubbed the Ocean 2020 Tour, which takes its name from their 2019 album.

Kicking off on May 21 in Albuquerque, the tour will make additional stops in San Diego, Chicago, Dallas, Nashville and more. Jake Owen and Maddie & Tae will serve as support.

“After our Vegas residency and working on this record for the past year we are itching to get back out on the road and see how the fans gravitate to some of the deeper cuts off of Ocean,” Charles Kelley said. “We’ve missed those huge crowd sing-alongs and we are looking forward to having Jake Owen and Maddie & Tae light up the stage every night. May can’t come fast enough.”

Ticket pre-sale begins on Jan. 24.

Ocean 2020 Tour

  • May 21 | Albuquerque, NM | Isleta Amphitheater
  • May 22 | Phoenix, AZ | Ak| Chin Pavilion
  • May 23 | San Diego, CA | North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre
  • May 28 | Sacramento, CA | Toyota Amphitheatre
  • May 29 | Mountain View, CA | Shoreline Amphitheatre
  • May 30 | Los Angeles, CA | Hollywood Bowl
  • June 13 | Holmdel, NJ | PNC Bank Arts Center
  • June 14 | Hartford, CT | Xfinity Theatre
  • June 18 | Gilford, NH | Bank of NH Pavilion
  • June 19 | Bangor, ME | Darling’s Waterfront Pavilion
  • June 20 | Mansfield, MA | Xfinity Center
  • June 25 | Cleveland, OH | Blossom Music Center
  • June 26 | Cincinnati, OH | Riverbend Music Center
  • June 27 | Atlanta, GA | Ameris Bank Amphitheatre
  • July 10 | Omaha, NE | CHI Health Center Omaha
  • July 16 | Bethel, NY | Bethel Woods Center for the Arts
  • July 17 | Pittsburgh, PA
  • July 18 | Indianapolis, IN | Ruoff Music Center
  • July 23 | Birmingham, AL | Oak Mountain Amphitheatre
  • July 24 | Charlotte, NC | PNC Music Pavilion
  • July 25 | Raleigh, NC | Coastal Credit Union Music Park @ Walnut Creek
  • July 31 | Jacksonville, FL | Daily’s Place
  • Aug. 1 | Tampa, FL | MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amp
  • Aug. 2 | West Palm Beach, FL | Coral Sky Amphitheater
  • Aug. 6 | Virginia Beach, VA | Veterans United Home Loans Amphitheater at Virginia Beach
  • Aug. 7 | Wantagh, NY | Northwell Health at Jones Beach Theater
  • Aug. 8 | Bristow, VA | Jiffy Lube Live
  • Aug. 15 | St. Louis, MO | Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre
  • Aug. 16 | Chicago, IL | Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre
  • Aug. 21 | Toronto, ON | Budweiser Stage
  • Aug. 22 | Detroit, MI | DTE Energy Music Theatre
  • Aug. 27 | Rogers, AR | Walmart AMP
  • Aug. 28 | Dallas, TX | Dos Equis Pavilion
  • Aug. 29 | Houston, TX | Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion presented by Huntsman
  • Sept. 4 | Philadelphia, PA | BB&T Pavilion
  • Sept. 5 |  Saratoga Springs, NY | Saratoga Performing Arts Center
  • Sept. 6 | Syracuse,NY | St. Joseph’s Health Amphitheater at Lakeview
  • Sept. 10 | Knoxville, TN | Thompson|Bowling Arena
  • Sept. 11 | Southaven, MS | Landers Center
  • Sept. 12 | Nashville, TN | Bridgestone Arena

photo by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com

Sam Hunt Drops New Song, “Sinning With You” [Listen]

Sam Hunt Drops New Song, “Sinning With You” [Listen]

Sam Hunt dropped a new song, “Sinning With You,” on Jan. 3.

Co-penned by Sam, Paul DiGiovanni, Josh Osborne, and Emily Weisband, “Sinning With You” is expected to be featured on Sam’s upcoming sophomore album, which is slated to drop later this year.

“I’m thankful to have found some inspiration and have some music ready to put out in 2020,” said Sam to NCD in November.

The upcoming album’s lead single, “Kinfolks,” is currently Top 10 on the Billboard Country Airplay chart. Sam was arrested for driving under the influence and having an open container in Nashville on Nov. 21, 2019. His court date is on Jan. 17.

Listen to “Sinning With You” below.

photo by Curtis Hilbun, AFF-USA.com

VIDEO: Tom Allen on UT, “That #3 is a special kid.”

VIDEO: Tom Allen on UT, “That #3 is a special kid.”

Indiana head football coach Tom Allen and quarterback Peyton Ramsey broke down the Hoosier’s loss to the Volunteers in the TaxSlayer Gator Bowl in Jacksonville, Fla.

Our Jacksonville coverage is made possible by Kings of Real Estate.

Tom Allen, Peyton Ramsey – Indiana HC & QB / Credit: WNML Staff Photos
VIDEO: Tennessee Field Celebration

VIDEO: Tennessee Field Celebration

Tennessee Vol players celebrate at TIAA Bank Field after a 23-22 victory over the Indiana Hoosiers for the 2020 Taxslayer Gator Bowl.

Our Gator Bowl coverage is brought to you by Kings of Real Estate.

Video: 99.1 The Sports Animal’s Gator Bowl Review

Video: 99.1 The Sports Animal’s Gator Bowl Review

Hosts Eric Cain and Vince Ferrara recapped Tennessee’s stunning fourth quarter comeback victory over Indiana 23-22 in the 2020 TaxSlayer Gator Bowl in Jacksonville. Our bowl coverage is presented by Kings of Real Estate.

Eric Cain & Vince Ferrara – WNML / Creditr: 99.1 The Sports Animal
Vols Rally to Defeat Indiana in 75th TaxSlayer Gator Bowl

Vols Rally to Defeat Indiana in 75th TaxSlayer Gator Bowl

Credit: UT Athletics

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Tennessee rallied for 14 points in the final quarter en route to a thrilling 23-22 win over Indiana in the 75th TaxSlayer Gator Bowl at TIAA Bank Stadium.

With the victory, UT finishes the season 8-5 overall and 5-3 in the SEC to give second-year head coach Jeremy Pruitt his first bowl win.

After recovering an onside kick with 4:19 to play, freshman running back Eric Gray scored the game-tying touchdown on a 16-yard rush. Brent Cimaglia then put Tennessee ahead for good with the ensuing extra point.

“Our kids kind of kept on fighting,” head coach Jeremy Pruitt said. “Our coaches done a really nice job, and our fan base — all the orange was there when the clock struck zero, that was there when the game started, and we can’t say enough about our fan support and what they mean to everybody associated with this organization.”

Gray earned the Gator Bowl MVP award, pacing the Vols with 86 yards on the ground and 34 receiving yards while also recovering the aforementioned onside kick.

“For me, being a Tennessee boy and being here at Tennessee, it’s been unbelievable,” Gray said. “It’s been an unbelievable journey. I fell in love with the place early. It’s something I dreamed about. It’s something I dreamed about as a kid, playing college football, playing in a bowl game. Being MVP has been amazing. I just want to say all glory to God.”

Redshirt junior quarterback Jarrett Guarantano rebounced from a pair of interceptions earlier in the game to lead the Vols passing attack with 221 yards through the air.

True freshman linebacker Henry To’o To’o led the defense with eight tackles and a pass breakup while junior defensive back Shawn Shamburger made his first-career interception and posted a sack.

A scoreless first quarter was highlighted by Shamburger’s interception. Offensively, Ramel Keyton had 60 receiving yards on a pair of catches.

UT opened the scoring with a 23-yard field goal from Brent Cimaglia in the second quarter. The Vols drove 67 yards on 12 plays to go up 3-0 with 5:53 left in the first half.

Later in the quarter, Shamburger sacked IU’s Peyton Ramsey for a loss of 10 yards to force a punt. The sack set up a 14 play, 50-yard UT scoring drive, which was capped by a Cimaglia 32-yard field goal to put Tennessee ahead 6-0. Indiana ended the half with a 24-yard field goal to cut its deficit to 6-3 after intercepting Guarantano late in the second quarter.

After IU amassed just 69 total yards in the first half, the Hoosiers opened the second half with a 12 play, 69-yard touchdown drive to give them a 10-6 lead.

Ty Chandler returned the ensuing kickoff 47 yards to give the Vols great field position, but Jamar Johnson recorded a 63-yard pick-six to increase Indiana’s lead to 10. IU kicker Logan Justus missed the extra point, which would turn out to loom large later in the game.

True freshman Brian Maurer came in to play quarterback on the second drive of the third quarter and went 1-for-3  with 17 yards passing and eight yards on the ground to lead UT into field-goal range. Cimaglia connected on his third and final field goal of the game, a 43-yarder, to cut IU’s lead to seven.

Back-to-back field goals by Justus put the Hoosiers back ahead by 13 with 10:27 remaining in the game, but Tennessee would not be denied.

The Vols scored their first touchdown of game with 4:21 left in the fourth quarter on a Quavaris Crouch 1-yard plunge to cut the deficit to six. Guarantano and Jauan Jennings connected twice for 27 yards to set up the score. After the scoring drive, Paxton Brooks executed a perfect onside kick that was recovered by Gray at the 46-yard line. It marked the first time that the Vols had recovered an onside kick since Sept. 10, 2011 against Cincinnati.

“When they called it, we have it in the plan all week and we go through it in practice and execute it throughout the week,” Brooks said. “I felt confident in our ability to execute it in the game and the opportunity came.

“The coaches saw what they wanted to see in the formation that they lined up in, they called it and thankfully we got a lucky roll. The guys on the outside, credit to them; Eric and Nigel and all of the guys for getting their blocks and Eric for going and getting it. Credit to them.”

The recovery set up the Vols game-winning drive, which was capped by a 16-yard rushing touchdown by Gray to tie the game at 22. Cimaglia drilled the extra point to put the Vols up 23-22 with 3:51 remaining in the game.

The Vols defense stood tall with the game on the line, forcing a 51-yard field goal that missed wide right with 2:12 remaining, before holding the Hoosiers off one final time on their final possession when Ramsey’s pass attempt on fourth-and-10 fell incomplete.

 

UT Athletics

Tennessee Football – TaxSlayer Gator Bowl Quotes

Tennessee Football – TaxSlayer Gator Bowl Quotes

Jeremy Pruitt and Eric Gray Press Conference

JEREMY PRUITT: First off, what a fantastic ballgame. The players on both teams, the way they competed in the game, I can’t say enough about Indiana, Coach Allen and his staff and what a great job that they did. You know, and then you look at our guys, it took 60 minutes, but our guys continued to scratch and claw and just kept trying to find a way. You know, we kind of changed some things during the game a little bit on both sides of the ball, just trying to find something that was working.

Credit: UT Athletics

Offensively we got a drive going there in the fourth quarter. We scored there. We get the onside kick and punch it in in three plays and kind of held on the entire — the rest of the way there.

But if you look at the way the game went, we probably messed it up about as bad as you can for the middle eight of the game. We get the ball with three minutes and 36 seconds to go in the second quarter, got a 3rd down there, we turned the ball over. Results in three points. Indiana gets the ball to start the second half, they convert several 3rd downs there. We have them in a 2nd-and-20, they make a good call, we don’t play the screen play correctly, and it turns into a 2nd-and-1, and they just kept — whether it was running the football or getting the ball out of the quarterback’s hands, lots of empty, lots of adjustments in the game. But they score there. Ty pops a return there. You think we’re fixing to get a little momentum, and then we throw a pick six. So there’s 17 points that didn’t go to the good guys in that stretch there.

But our kids kind of kept on fighting. Our coaches done a really nice job, and our fan base — all the orange was there when the clock struck zero that was there when the game started, and we can’t say enough about our fan support and what they mean to everybody associated with this organization.

Q. Jeremy, does this game kind of epitomize this team? And Eric, a year ago at this point you’re getting ready to play in the game down in San Antonio and in this game you’ve had such a huge impact. Talk about that growth.
JEREMY PRUITT: Well, I think you’re right. You really don’t find out a whole lot about yourself or a team until you face adversity. And we’ve faced a lot this year. A lot of it was self-inflicting, but still, it is what it is.

You know, I really think the assistant coaches on our staff, because of the men that they are and the character that they have, I really think the team kind of took on their personalities, stayed the course, looked in the mirror and said, how can I improve, how can I be my best. Wasn’t looking for excuses. We owned who we were and worked hard to improve, and I think that says a whole lot about our assistant coaches, everybody associated in our program, and the players on our team. You know, no quitters on that team.

ERIC GRAY: Yeah, I agree with Coach Pruitt, what he said. Earlier in the season he brought us all in after a game and said we’re going to turn it around after this. This is the last time we’re going to turn it around, and we all bought in. We all bought in and we said we’re going to put on more steam when we face adversity, we’re going to put on more steam and that’s exactly what we did, and it’s a great way to finish.

Q. Jeremy, why did you decide to do the onside kick in that situation? And then Eric, can you take us through that play from your perspective?
JEREMY PRUITT: Well, I think there’s four minutes and 34 seconds to go. We got three time-outs. It was something that we felt was there when we were breaking them down, and as the game went, we felt like it was there. We’ve probably repped it 500 or 600 times over the last six months. Had confidence in our players. So just felt like we needed to do it there, and Paxton laid down a great kick. Eric — we got three guys that’s going to block the three returners, and we got two guys getting the ball. Eric timed it right, and it was a great kick. Wasn’t much they could do based off how they were aligned.

ERIC GRAY: Yeah, that’s a big testament to Paxton, like he said. We’ve practiced it over and over a thousand times. We just never ran it. We saw that look on film all week. We saw that look when they backed their guys up and the hole was there. I was just I caught it when it was 10 yards.

Q. You talked about this game kind of reflecting what the season has been like for your team. What about for Jarrett on a personal level? You yank him in the third quarter and he comes back to lead two touchdown drives in the final seven minutes. What does that say about him to kind of reverse that mojo?
JEREMY PRUITT: Well, I played for a high school basketball coach. If you shot a shot and you missed it and you wasn’t the first one back on defense, he took you out of the game. I learned at an early age if I was going to shoot it I’d better at least get back fast on defense, right. The way I look at quarterbacks, Jarrett didn’t play good. You know, I have lots of confidence in him, but he didn’t play good, and if you don’t play good, we’ve got other good players behind him. We put Brian in. Brian didn’t play good. Probably threw three plays that should have been intercepted and they kicked a field goal, you know. It’s part of it. Nobody is entitled to anything around here. We have to earn it, earn every bit of it. Jarrett knows it, Brian knows it, everybody that’s associated with our program knows it.

It’s a performance-based industry, and we’ve got to perform. Jarrett performed pretty good when he came back in there, you know, and we needed him to.

Q. Eric, on that play, have you fielded onside kicks before? How much onside kick experience do you have?
ERIC GRAY: Well, in practice I feel like I’ve had like 500 reps of the onside kick because we’ve repped it so much. But I’m just glad that I caught it when it was 10 yards.

Q. Following up on JG, when you decided to put him back into the game, did you have a conversation with him about wiping the clean slate? Take us through that decision and then maybe some of the conversations you had with Jarrett before inserting him back into the game.
JEREMY PRUITT: Let me tell you, Jarrett, he’s got thick skin, okay. He’s been through the wars. He knows the expectations that we have, that he has for himself. So sometimes as a quarterback it helps to go over there and watch it from the sideline for a couple of series, you know. Maybe you see a little something that you didn’t see before, you kind of gather yourself, get your composure, figure out what I need to do to play better, and that’s what we did. It’s really no secret.

When the game was on the line, that’s who we wanted in the game. You know what? He came through. He came through, like he has the last six games.

Q. Can you talk about just this senior group that you’ll look back on in a couple years from now, talk about their play and especially over the last six to seven weeks, it just seems like y’all hit a switch. Can you talk about that, especially with this group?
JEREMY PRUITT: You know, I think everybody that’s been coming to the games, they see what kind of football players these guys are. These guys all had phenomenal years. You know, what I like to say is what I think about them as people. When you talk about trusting somebody, these guys are easy to trust because they’re dependable. You can count on them. They have character. They represent the university and themselves, their family in the right way. They’re really, really good football players, and we’re going to miss them, you know, and these guys are going to have an opportunity to play some more football, and I hope they get to play for a long time.

But I’ll never forget them. I’ll never forget them because they hung in there when they didn’t have to. They hung in there when it wasn’t easy to do, which says a whole lot about them.

Q. Earlier you discussed how your assistants grew throughout the season. How would you say that you grew as a coach during the season that started inauspiciously and finished with a win in January?
JEREMY PRUITT: Well, one thing, you realize you don’t have all the answers. Fortunate enough — I’ve been fortunate enough to hire really good staff and using these guys. There’s lots of good coaches on our staff. Probably delegating, letting these guys, starting with defensively, letting Coach Ansley and Coach Rumph, Coach Sherrer, Coach Rock kind of doing their thing on defense and kind of just helping them along the way, not butting in, letting Jim and Tee and those guys do it on offense. You know, offensively I’ve got a lot of really good plays to run after the play is over with. You know, so it’s probably not a whole lot of fun to be on that headset, especially the first three quarters tonight.

Q. You’ve got a freshman MVP here and obviously a bowl game win. How much can a win like this, especially the way it ended, how much momentum does that take you into the off-season and into next season?
JEREMY PRUITT: You know, it’s something for these guys that are coming back, the example that the seniors that are leaving here, that they’ve set. Most of those guys have graduated, and if they haven’t graduated they’re going to graduate soon. So first off, doing the right things academically, which is something that’s important to everybody in our program.

You know, but we’re excited about the future of our program because of guys like Eric Gray. You don’t have to spend a whole lot of time with Eric Gray to figure out that he’s made the right way. He’s got the right stuff inside of him. You see it out there on the field. Just hang around him a little bit off the field; you’ll appreciate him that much more.

Q. On that onside kick, were you tempted at times earlier this year to try that same kick? You said you’ve been working on it for a while. Were there other games where it popped into your head? And Jaylen McCollough, I know you haven’t seen film yet, but it looked like he was all over the place today making plays.
JEREMY PRUITT: Well, I’m kind of a go-for-it guy. I look at myself a little bit as a long shot. It hadn’t been that long ago I was coaching high school ball, lining off the field, washing the uniforms and things like that, and now I’m the head coach at the University of Tennessee. If it looks like it’s there, you might as well take it is the way I look at it. That’s kind of the way we coach, you know, rather get them before they get us.

You said he was all over the field? See, that’s the thing about coaching. Right before I walked in here, I said, Jaylen, I don’t remember much except them catching that ball on you right there at the end. No, Jaylen is a guy, much like Eric, high character, winner, competitor, tough, smart. You know, these guys have a lot of the same qualities as these seniors that just walked out the door, and that’s the type of guys we’re looking for in this program.

Q. When you look back — you talked about looking back at the senior class, but this freshman class, did you anticipate them being as ready as they were and kind of the progression Eric, Henry, obviously Roman made a play tonight, got to the quarterback, several guys out there making plays that were freshmen?
JEREMY PRUITT: You know, when we recruit, there’s certain criteria that we look for for critical factors for every position. But probably the most important thing is the makeup. Who are they? What kind of student are they? Are they a leader? Do they got character? Are they dependable? And that’s something that we have questions about when it comes to recruiting everybody, and we feel like we’ve recruited some really good student-athletes in this past class.

Q. We saw you after the game lean over to Jauan and he was grasping that trophy and you asked him for a picture. Looked like he didn’t want to give the trophy to anybody else. What has your relationship been like with him throughout his career and your career at Tennessee, and I wanted to ask Eric, being from Tennessee, choosing to stay at Tennessee, now MVP of a bowl game in your freshman year, how do you sum up how this season has been for you?
JEREMY PRUITT: Can I talk about Jauan first? So the first time I ever met Jauan Jennings he comes in my office and we’re going to decide and create a plan to see if he’s going to be able to get back on the team. I think everybody knows this, pretty well documented. But anyhow, so we lay out a plan, and it’s a pretty tough deal. There’s lots of things — and Jauan done absolutely every bit of it to do it. But by the time he left my office, he was trying to negotiate what position he was going to play, and I said, dude, you’re not even on the team yet, all right, so let’s just see if we can make it to this first thing before we start talking that way. But that’s the way Jauan is. You know, he’s always in there trying to represent.

ERIC GRAY: For me, like you said, being a Tennessee boy and being here at Tennessee, it’s been unbelievable. It’s been an unbelievable journey. I fell in love with the place early. You can’t — it’s something I dreamed about. It’s something I dreamed about as a kid, playing college football, playing in a bowl game. Being MVP has been amazing. I just want to say all glory to God.

 

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Additional Player Quotes

Sophomore kicker Paxton Brooks

On the onside kick call:

“When they called it, we have it in the plan all week and we go through it in practice and execute it throughout the week. I felt confident in our ability to execute it in the game and the opportunity came. The coaches saw what they wanted to see in the formation that they lined up in, they called it and thankfully we got a lucky roll. The guys on the outside, credit to them; Eric and Nigel and all of the guys for getting their blocks and Eric for going and getting it. Credit to them.”

On what he felt when Eric got the ball:

“The feeling is relief. We had four last year that we were very close to getting. All of those were tough. This year, we work it every week in practice and for it to pay off really felt great. I knew it, I had full faith in Eric and those guys. I knew he was going to recover it. As soon as I hit it, I knew he was going to be there.”

 

Henry To’o To’o, Fr. LB

On what kept the team confident:

“We didn’t have the start that we wanted, but we worked. Coach Pruitt emphasizes us working hard and every day we come to practice and come to film, we’re going to work. All that excitement just came from all that hard work we put in during the season.”

On what how the defense felt when Tennessee came within one possession:

“We were locked in (on the sideline). We were tuned in. We knew we had a chance and we knew we just needed one stop. We needed a stop to get our offense back on the field to score and that’s what we got.”

On why the team remained confident when it was trailing:

“We’ve been through worse. We’ve been down, we’ve been down and out. We’ve been in a time where everybody counted us out and nobody believed in Tennessee football and that motivates us. That makes our defense want to come back and come harder.”

Daniel Bituli, Sr. LB

On the future of Tennessee football:

“The team is in really good hands. There are a bunch of hungry guys and guys that want to go out there and compete, guys that are here to win games. I’m excited to see how much they grow these next couple of years.”

On if he is comfortable leaving things in the hands of freshman Henry To’o To’o:

“I’m comfortable doing it (leaving the team in Henry To’o To’o’s hands). Not only him, but we have a bunch of young guys that are playing for us right now. We have a bunvh of guys that we recruited that are going to come in and step up just like he did this year. So I’m really excited about the future of this team.”

Trey Smith, Jr. OL

On what led to the Vols’ comeback win:

“Showing the fight and resiliency, being down a touchdown and a half, being two possessions down with five minutes left in the fourth, that’s insane. Some teams would quit, but we never yielded, we just kept going. We kept sticking to the plan.”

 

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