Vol Report: Vols Prep for Final Regular Season Game

Vol Report: Vols Prep for Final Regular Season Game

Vols defensive players / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee closed out practice on Wednesday evening at Haslam Field as the Vols continue to prep for their final regular season game at Vanderbilt on Saturday at 4 p.m. ET on SEC Network.

“It’s a great time of the year,” head coach Jeremy Pruitt said. “Growing up it was always big for the people in my community playing football on Thanksgiving. We are thankful for the men in our program and what they represent.”

The Vols will practice in the morning on Thursday, before releasing players to spend Thanksgiving with their families – if they live close by, or with assistant coaches, who all are hosting dinners, and Pruitt himself.

“We want to give guys the opportunity to go and spend time with their families if it’s close enough,” Pruitt said. “I think it’s important that everybody spends somewhere for Thanksgiving. Everybody in our program, from our equipment managers, to our trainers, to our players, to our coaches.”

The Vols will have an all-staff Thanksgiving lunch on Friday before leaving for Nashville.

PRUITT ANNOUNCES FOUR PLAYERS WILL REDSHIRT
The NCAA changed the redshirt rule in 2018 where players could play in any four games and still receive a redshirt. Previously, a player could only receive a redshirt if he did not play in a game or if he received a medical hardship waiver (could not play in more than 30 percent of contests and the injury had to occur in the first half of the season).

This season, however, a player could appear in any four games and still receive a redshirt.
Pruitt announced that four players reached the four-game limit and would redshirt: sophomore linebacker Kivon Bennett, freshman linebacker J.J. Peterson, freshman wide receiver Cedric Tillman and freshman defensive lineman Kurott Garland.

Several other Vols have not played in four games and could also receive redshirts.

“We’re not going to play any of those guys,” Pruitt said. “I’ve talked to them and I think moving forward it’s the best thing for those guys.”

SMITH GIVES BACK 
Despite being out indefinitely for the season, Tennessee sophomore offensive lineman Trey Smith has not changed his mindset or work ethic. Smith continues to look for ways to give back and spent the majority of his time this past Tuesday morning outside of the Thornton Center, helping collect coats with Knoxville Area Rescue Ministry (KARM) for those in need.

Smith took to Twitter last Friday to provide a message to the community and make them aware of KARM’s mission and its effort to supply as many coats as possible for those in need. KARM received over 1,000 coats since Smith’s message.

JOHNSON AND PHILLIPS EARN ACADEMIC HONORS 
Tennessee redshirt offensive lineman Ryan Johnson and senior defensive end Kyle Phillips were both named to the 2018 Google Cloud Academic All-District® Football Team, selected by CoSIDA, which recognizes the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the field and in the classroom.

Johnson and Phillips mark the 27th and 28th Academic All-District or Academic All-Americans presented by CoSIDA in Tennessee history. The Vols now have six academic All-District honorees in the last three years as the pair joins Parker Henry (2016, 2017), Todd Kelly Jr. (2016) and Dylan Wiesman (2016) as recent winners.

Head Coach Jeremy Pruitt Post-Practice Press Conference Transcript (Nov. 21)

Opening Statement:
“It’s a great time of the year, I know growing up it was always big for the people in my community playing football on Thanksgiving. I think over the years you appreciated it and it’s time you spend with you family.  You have your football family and we are thankful for the men in our program and what they represent. We are excited about playing this weekend and we have a huge rivalry game. We have a lot of respect for Coach Mason and what they have done at Vanderbilt. I think that both of us have a lot to play for…so our challenge is to get our guys to execute, play hard, play together and we are looking forward to this Saturday.”

On playing another experienced quarterback:
“They do a really good job on offense. They’re very balanced. I think it probably starts with their run game. They’re committed to running the football. They have lots of different variations when they do that, and I think their quarterback gets them in and out of plays because of his experience. They stay out of negative plays. He can make all the throws. He’s got a good understanding of what they’re doing. He’s very well coached, doesn’t make many mistakes. With any good quarterback, you have to do a good job disguising. You need to force them into some long yardage situations. They throw a lot of balls on first downs so to stay ahead of the chains and a lot of boots, a lot of quick gain to get the ball out of their hand. We have to find a way to get pressure, get our hands up, bat some balls. I think that would be with anybody.”

On what he’s seen from Jarrett Guarantano and Marquez Callaway in practice:
“They practiced every day.”

On Joejuan Williams and what he does well for Vanderbilt:
“I think all their guys on defense are very aggressive. I like the way they play. They play fast. They play with passion. They’re physical, play together. They get after the football. He plays a lot into the boundary. I think he’s a physical guy, probably has a lot of experience, has some length to him. He’s got ball skills so if you make a mistake, he can make you pay.”

On the early signing period:
“I think based off the calendar it has sped everything up. Obviously, we had official visits some in the spring and summer, so the calendar has moved up, I would think for us and this signing class. We didn’t have a staff here until December 8th or 9th so we should be ahead in this recruiting cycle, but you have to recruit every day of the year and everybody in your program has to recruit. That’s something you have to balance along with coaching and we’re doing that.”

On if he likes the signing day being in December:
“I don’t think it matters whether I like it or not. I don’t make the rules, so I just kind of follow the rules and figure out a way to try to take advantage of it.”

On if he plans to be more involved in offensive play calling on Saturday:
“Offensive play calling? I’m not calling any plays. You want me to call the plays? You know I used to call the plays, but it was like Wing Right, 28 Sweep and Wing Right Nine 28. You all don’t want to see us out there running the Wing-T because if I was out there calling the plays we’d be running the Wing-T and the Split-Back Veer so it’d be a short game.”

On Jeremy Banks and Kingston Harris practicing on defense this week:
“No, we’re not going to play Kurott Garland in this game. He’s played four games and he’s really improved over the course of the season. He’s playing probably five to eight snaps in a game so to figure out a way to not force this kid into losing a year, we decided to move Kingston to defense. Jeremy has one of those nagging ankle injuries, kind of like Jauan (Jennings). They’re everywhere, the high ankle sprain. Right about when he gets well, he tweaks it again, so he’ll probably be questionable for the game.”

On how playing in just a few games can help in development:
“I think this rule is great for guys like that. We have four or five guys that have played in four games and they’ve prepared to play every week in some role. Some of them have played on special teams. It’s something that you have to make a decision based off their role, is it worth an entire year? We talked through some of that about some of our guys.”

On Ty Chandler’s status:
“Ty practiced. He practiced. He tweaked his knee there to start practice a little bit. He’s been kind of day-to-day and Ty’s a tough guy and he’s a little bit banged up, but he’ll be ready to go.”

On how Derek Mason has sustained the competitiveness at Vanderbilt:
“I really just met Derek, since I really got to Tennessee, in the head coaches’ meetings and things like that. Just kind of looking, watching his teams play, I think they play the right way. They’re very competitive, they play hard, they never quit, and I think they do a really good job on both sides of the ball. I’ve coached against them and they have always been very well coached, fundamentally sound and he’s done a really good job.”

On the decision to move Jeremy Banks back to linebacker:
“Jeremy would have stayed at linebacker probably if we hadn’t got some guys hurt. We moved him back [to running back] but when you got the ball and you got 11 guys trying to tackle you, it’s hard to play with kind of a bad ankle. We’ve got some guys banged up at linebacker and we obviously have some depth issues, probably all over our team, so just trying to find the right guys and just making smart moves.”

On Vanderbilt running back Ke’Shawn Vaughn’s success:
“I think he’s a really good back. He’s got good size, he’s got good speed, good vision, has balance, he’s a physical runner, he finishes off his runs, has lots of runs after contact, he can make you miss, and they have a really good scheme. They’ve got a quarterback that can stretch the field, they’ve got some playmakers on the outside, and some of the things they do in the run game make you play from sideline to sideline.”

On the plan for guys who are in the redshirt range of games:
“We’re not going to play any of those guys. I’ve talked to them and I think moving forward it’s the best thing for those guys. I mean you look at Cedric Tillman, I mean he’s a guy that’s played in four games and he’s took tons of reps this fall, so just being fair to him down the road… J.J. (Peterson) is the same deal, got in here the second week of the season. Four years from now, they’ll have a choice. I look back and think about guys, their fifth year and how they developed as players. Last year, there was a guy, Levi Wallace, that played that was a former walk-on. I think now he’s playing for the Buffalo Bills and really didn’t become a starter until his last year. Another guy was Ryan Anderson. I can remember when he was a young kid, he was gripping because he was getting redshirted, but he sure was proud that senior year, his fifth year. I don’t remember what round he got drafted in, but he probably improved his draft stock by four or five rounds and you don’t get that money back.”

On what the plan is for the team on Thanksgiving tomorrow:
“We’re going to practice. We’ll obviously practice early. We want to give guys the opportunity to go and spend time with their families if it’s close enough. I think it’s important that everybody spends somewhere for Thanksgiving. Everybody in our program, from our equipment mangers, to our trainers, to our players, to our coaches – when you look at it, probably how many people in this building that work under this program, I don’t know, we’re probably from all over the country – coach (Brian) Niedermeyer is from Alaska. We’ve got some guys from Miami, Florida. Coach Oz (Joe Osovet) is from Jersey, so you have your football family and we appreciate our football family, we’re thankful for it, we’re all thankful for the opportunity and we enjoy being around each other. I told them as much as my wife cooks, if they eat at their coaches or eat at their parents house and they want to come back to my house tomorrow night, come on back because I don’t need all that food in the refrigerator.”

On what he’s seen from the offensive line this week in practice:
“I think our guys have worked hard every week. They’ve worked hard to understand what we’re trying to get done. When you play offensive line, it’s one of the toughest positions to play because lots of times when one guy moves or two guys move on the defensive side, it doesn’t just affect one guy, it affects all five of them and possibly a tight end and maybe even a fullback or something, so they’ve got to work together. At least the group that we’ve got playing now have played together for the last couple of weeks. The longer you play together, you get more comfortable, which creates some confidence. This will be another week and it will be a big challenge for those guys.”

-UT Athletics

 

No. 5 Vols Finish Strong to Top Louisville, 92-81

No. 5 Vols Finish Strong to Top Louisville, 92-81

Vols G Lamonte Turner / Credit: UT Athletics

NEW YORK — A 24-13 run during the final nine minutes of play Wednesday lifted No. 5 Tennessee to a hard-fought 92-81 victory over Louisville in the NIT Season Tip-Off at the Barclays Center.

The Volunteers (4-0) now face second-ranked and unbeaten Kansas in the championship game Friday at 9 p.m. ET on ESPN2.

Grant Williams finished with 24 points, nine rebounds, four assists and three blocks. It marked the first time in the junior’s career that he’s scored 20 or more points in three consecutive games.

Five Vols reached double-digit scoring in the game. Admiral Schofield recorded 20 points and six rebounds, including 11 points in the second half to fuel the Vols’ offense. Lamonte Turner made his season debut and chipped in 13 points.

Williams and Schofield both reached a significant milestone in the first half, eclipsing the 1,000-point mark for their collegiate careers. They became the 49th and 50th players, respectively, to achieve the feat at Tennessee.

Jordan Bone and John Fulkerson both added 11 points each. Bone tallied six assists, a block and a steal in the outing, while Fulkerson was a perfect 4-for-4 from the field off the bench for UT.

After a 3-pointer by Louisville (3-1) tied the game at 68-68 at the 9:30 mark, the Vols rattled off a 17-2 run to take a commanding 85-70 lead with 5:12 left in the game. The 15-point lead was Tennessee’s largest in the game and proved to be insurmountable.

UT shot 54 percent (34-of-63) from the floor during the game and dropped 44 points in paint compared to 28 by Louisville. The Big Orange stepped up on defense during crunch time and was able to convert 14 turnovers into 23 points. The Vols also recorded eight blocks and five steals.

Tennessee had the hot hand to start the game, going 9-of-10 from the field over the first eight minutes. Louisville stayed in the game, though, knocking down four 3-pointers to keep it a 20-16 UT lead at the 12-minute mark.

Both teams sustained their strong shooting the entire first half. The Vols shot an impressive 56 percent (18-of-32) from the field, while the Cardinals knocked down 45 percent (14-of-31) of their attempts. Seven 3-pointers fueled UL’s offense, but Williams dropped 17 points on 7-of-11 shooting to give Tennessee a 45-40 lead at the intermission.

WILLIAMS, SCHOFIELD ECLIPSE 1,000-POINT MARK: Grant Williams and Admiral Schofield both reached a major milestone in the first half of Wednesday’s game, scoring the 1,000th point for their careers. Williams took a pass in the paint and made a layup at achieve the feat, while Schofield knocked down a pair of threes to surpass the mark. Williams was the 49th Tennessee player to reach the milestone, and Schofield became the 50th.

VOLS VS. ACC: With the victory over Louisville, Tennessee has now won five of its last six games against ACC teams. The Big Orange already had one victory against the conference this season, defeating Georgia Tech at home, 66-53, on Nov. 13. UT hosts Wake Forest on Dec. 22 as its third and final game against an ACC opponent during the regular season.

UP NEXT: Tennessee is off for Thanksgiving before returning to the Barclays Center to face second-ranked and unbeaten Kansas in the NIT Season Tip-Off championship game Friday at 9 p.m. ET (ESPN2).

-UT Athletics

 

Jimmy’s blog: Tennessee must find a way to stop Vandy’s balanced attack

Jimmy’s blog: Tennessee must find a way to stop Vandy’s balanced attack

By Jimmy Hyams

For only the second time in his coaching career, Tennessee’s Jeremy Pruitt’s last regular-season game won’t have a league championship or playoff implication on the line when the Vols visit Vanderbilt on Saturday.

That’s frustrating to him. And it’s frustrating to the fan base.

“I think we’re heading in the right direction,’’ Pruitt told the Knoxville Quarterback Club earlier this week. “We’re not going near as fast as I want to go, probably not near as fast as you want to go.

“But I promise you, we share the same disappointments and we’re going to work as hard as we can to get it where it’s supposed to be.’’

Where it’s not supposed to be is where it is now. Vanderbilt has won four of the last six games against the Vols. During a 52-game stretch (1960-2011) Vanderbilt won four times against UT.

Vanderbilt enters the game as a 3-point favorite. If The Commodores win for the fifth time in seven years, much of the goodwill Pruitt has built this season will be forgotten by many in the Vol Nation.

Because if you have enough talent to beat ranked opponents Auburn and Kentucky, surely you have enough talent to beat Vanderbilt.

Vanderbilt is led by quarterback Kyle Shurmur, who has been Tom Brady-like in the past two games against UT, passing for 416 yards two years ago and four touchdowns last year. He is second all-time in school history to Jay Cutler in passing yards and total offense.

Ke’Shawn Vaughn is one of the SEC’s most underrated running backs. He has 976 yards and 10 touchdowns in 11 games. He has averaged over 155 rushing yards in the last three games, but he had just one 100-yard game in the first seven.

Receiver Kalija Lipscomb is having a banner year with 73 catches for 800 yards and nine touchdowns.

Vandy has a balanced attack, averaging 162.8 rushing yards and 228.6 passing yards. Teams with balance – like Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina and Missouri – have given the Vols fits.

I don’t see UT’s defense slowing down Vandy and I don’t think the Vols can win in a shootout.

Vanderbilt 34, Tennessee 27.

Lasts week: 11-0

Overall: 86-15

Alabama 34-10 over Auburn

Missouri 44-20 over Arkansas

Florida 24-20 over Florida State

Georgia 30-20 over Georgia Tech

Kentucky 37-17 over Louisville

LSU 23-20 over Texas A&M

Mississippi State 34-30 over Ole Miss

Clemson 31-13 over South Carolina


Sponsored by Big Kahuna Wings: The wings that changed it all

Trey Smith Gives Back, Assists ‘Coats for the Cold’

Trey Smith Gives Back, Assists ‘Coats for the Cold’

Trey Smith – Vols OL / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Trey Smith is out indefinitely for the Tennessee football team, but that hasn’t changed his mindset or work ethic off of the field.

The sophomore from Jackson, Tenn., wants to give back.

Smith spent the majority of his Tuesday morning outside of the Thornton Athletics Student Life Center, as he helped collect coats with Knoxville Area Rescue Ministry (KARM) for people in need.

“I just want to let people know there’s help on the way and you will be warm this winter,” Smith said. “No one should go a winter being cold.”

Smith took to Twitter last Friday to provide a message to the community and make them aware of KARM’s mission and its effort to supply as many coats as possible to people in need.

On Tuesday, Smith helped man a coat drop-off box from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Thornton Center along with other student-athletes and the Thornton Center Staff.

KARM hosts the annual event, ‘Coats for the Cold,’ in support of collecting thousands of new or used coats in the area. KARM invites the community to donate men’s, women’s and children’s coats at KARM and Prestige Cleaner locations across the state during drive weeks every November.

KARM received over 1,000 coats since Smith’s initial twitter message.

“I love this city,” Smith said. “The state of Tennessee, that’s my home. I’m always going to live here; I’m always going to stay here. I love being here. Just being in Knoxville presently, I always want to give back to the community, doing anything I can, because they’ve been so gracious to me.”

For Smith, it’s about giving back to a community that has supported him so much since arriving on Rocky Top in the spring of 2017 as an early enrollee.

“It warms my heart, honestly,” Smith said about seeing the community giving back. “Just seeing that people have care for others, and how they’re generous to actually come out here and help donate to a charitable cause.”

Smith, who captured National Freshman All-America honors in 2017, has made just as big of an impact off of the field in Knoxville as he has on the field.

 

UT Athletics

Levi Hummon Talks Nashville Roots, Inspirational Parents, New EP, Upcoming Tour Dates & More

Levi Hummon Talks Nashville Roots, Inspirational Parents, New EP, Upcoming Tour Dates & More

Jim Casey talks with Levi Hummon about:

  • being born and raised in Nashville
  • watching the city change over his 27 years
  • growing up with a successful songwriting father, Marcus Hummon
  • being influenced by all genres of music, including the Ramones and the Clash
  • the homegrown singer/songwriters coming out of Nashville, including Thomas Rhett and Tucker Beathard
  • studying sculpture and painting in college before transitioning to music
  • building a songwriting catalog by co-writing with his dad
  • stepping away from his record deal with Big Machine
  • finding his voice, both literally and figuratively
  • releasing his new six-song EP, Patient
  • opening shows for Dwight Yoakam, Kelsea Ballerini, Sam Hunt and more
  • hitting the road, including a stop at War Memorial Auditorium on Dec. 6 for the Nashville House Concerts
  • the non-profit his mother Becca Stevens started called Thistle Farms

Show Participants:

  • Levi Hummon
  • Jim Casey, NCD editor in chief

Vols Making Huge Gains with Help of Strength & Conditioning Staff

Vols Making Huge Gains with Help of Strength & Conditioning Staff

Credit: UT Athletics

Tennessee’s strength and conditioning staff does more than train student-athletes physically, they serve as mentors on and off the field.

The five-man staff consists of head strength and conditioning coach Craig Fitzgerald and assistant strength coaches A.J. ArtisMike FarrellByron Jerideau and Shaq Wilson. Together, they oversee the Volunteers’ performance and are involved in everything from academic support, to helping with recovery and treatment, to helping with nutrition. They’re available around the clock for student-athletes whether it be needing someone to talk to, strength and conditioning related or to be a hype man.

“When we’re on the road, we’re getting the guys to and from their rooms to the meals, getting them to the walkthroughs, getting them on the bus, charging them up,” Fitzgerald said. “At Auburn at 6:20 a.m. in the morning if you were in the hotel that day, you would have heard the strength staff going around waking each player up with a whistle and banging on the door and high-fiving them. Our players count on that and I think our strength staff, meaning our assistants, really deserve a lot of credit for motivating the players throughout a long season.”

UT’s assistants’ ability to motivate stems from their college playing experiences. The entire staff, including Fitzgerald, have all played and excelled in Division I football.

“I always tell the guys, ‘I’m just teaching you stuff that I wish I knew when I was in college,'” Jerideau said. “It’s things from nutrition to recovery to hydration to strength. It’s just a matter of understanding that I’ve been where they’ve been. The things that they’re going through right now, I’ve been through it when I was in college, so if they have questions, ask me and ask this staff because we understand what they’re going through and how their bodies are feeling and where their head is.”

Any way the staff can support the players, be available for them and help their performance, they try to do it.

“We all love mentoring our players and that’s really important for us,” Fitzgerald said. “That’s why I came back to college, left the NFL and that’s why I recruited this strength staff to be a part of this. I wanted these guys around the players. Obviously, for performance reasons and injury prevention there’s none better than these guys to do it, but more importantly is mentoring these players into being men.

“They’re coming here as young men. Their parents are handing them off to us and the football coaches and we’re taking them for a time. We want to leave them in a higher place than when they came because they’re going to be older and they’re going out into the real world. We want to make sure they’re ready to do that.”

That mentoring starts the second Tennessee’s student-athletes step on campus and the impact is evident.

“You see them develop, you see them grow,” Artis said. “We’ve only been here for 10 months but from month one to month 10, you see those guys who were missing classes, they’re not missing classes any more. There’s a growth and maturity as athletes and as a team. I feel like the team has gotten tighter as the whole staff has been here.”

The team has also gotten stronger under Fitzgerald’s staff, continuing the training that was started back in January.

“So, off-season training was full activity,” Fitzgerald said. “It’s running. It’s conditioning. It’s agility and speed work. It’s specific position drills that we do and it’s the weight room. It’s really all inclusive.”

During the season when the coaches take over, the staff takes a step back from the running, movement pattern, agility and position work and focuses more on strength.

“We have to keep punching the clock in the weight room,” added Fitzgerald. “Really the key to success to being a strong football team is being strong at the end of the year. The strength staff really has to make sure the players are at their strongest point at the end of that 12-13 weeks so when they play those games at the end of the year, they can really make a difference as far as the outcome of the game. You want to be a team that makes small improvements every week. Over 12 weeks, that can add up to huge gains.”

Taking on the philosophy that each week is a knew season and that you need to attack that one week for that one game, keeps an edge for Tennessee’s players.

“You’re starting to see it build as we’re getting better and better each week,” Wilson said. “They’re understanding the process, they’re trusting it and they’re learning how to finish the right way.”

A key to that is how the workouts are built. Between power cleans, squats and bench presses, players are doing under hurdles, core, lower back and rotator cuff work in addition to other injury prevention training. The result is performance enhancement due to an increase in strength and power over time.

“It’s just the beginning of where we want them to go,” Farrell said. “We knew it was going to be a process. Just to see them face a challenge and then rise to the occasion is something that’s been fun to be around. There’s teams out there that I don’t think love football as much as our team loves football and aren’t willing to sacrifice like our team is. To see that and be a part of that is really all you can ask for as a coach.”

 

UT Athletics

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