Head Coach Jeremy Pruitt Press Conference Transcript – Nov. 12, 2018

Head Coach Jeremy Pruitt Press Conference Transcript – Nov. 12, 2018

Jeremy Pruitt – Vols HC / Credit: UT Athletics

Opening Statement:
“I thought for the first time this year that our guys played with good effort throughout the game. We didn’t always execute like we would like to, and we definitely didn’t finish the game the way you want to. We had two fumbles in the fourth quarter and had a chance to finish the game and we didn’t. Luckily, we got some turnovers on defense, but there are lots of positives, but there’s a lot of things we can learn from and we need to improve on to get better this week.

“We are playing against a really good football team. These guys [Missouri] are 6-4 and really with the rain game against South Carolina where they had a pretty good lead and if they don’t get two penalties against Kentucky, they are probably 8-2 and they have played the two best teams in our league in Alabama and Georgia better than the rest of us. They are very well coached and balanced offensively. It starts with their quarterback and upfront they have a lot of experience. Missouri has really good tight ends and playmakers on the outside. They also play multiple running backs, take care of the football and make explosive plays. Defensively, they have been good against the run. They have good pass rushers and they give you multiple looks defensively. They have good guys on special teams, good specialists and good returners.

“We need to improve this week, eliminate mistakes from Saturday and eliminate negative plays offensively. We need to create explosive plays and hopefully find something in the run game. Defensively, we need to find some way to affect the quarterback. We have to able to stop the run against these guys and get off the field and hopefully we can create something positive on special teams.”

On Saturday being Senior Day:
“I think the seniors we have, most of them have graduated, and the few that have not are graduating this semester. That is why they came here is to get a degree. If you look back there are some really good times for this group and some times they probably wish they had back. In the last 11 months, these guys have really bought in and they have really tried to do what we’ve asked them to and we are thankful for that. Hopefully some of these guys behind them can follow their lead and the expectations and standards of how they went about their business.”

On discipline after the win against Kentucky:
“We have done a lot of things that a good football team doesn’t do during the game. We had a penalty after a touchdown, we turned the ball over in the fourth quarter and we intercept the ball and pitch it on the ground with a 17-point lead with two minutes to go in the game. We have to learn how to win to give ourselves a chance to win. We have to know how to handle it and those are some lessons we can learn from that.”

On setting a foundation:
“When you look at the big picture that is a big deal, but we are focused on trying to improve today and learn from the mistakes we made Saturday. Hopefully, we won’t make them again and focus on Missouri to find a way to play our best football.”

On what he saw on film:
“Defensively, I thought we did a really good job of keeping the quarterback in the pocket. We kept him from creating some big plays in the passing game and we kept our edges. We weren’t perfect by any means. We made a lot of mistakes in the game that we need to correct. We can’t continue to make mistakes. I do think our guys played hard defensively. We probably tackled a little better than we had in the past.

“Offensively, there are still a lot of negative plays. There’s plays that, whether we didn’t have the right splits at the receiver or maybe we’re pulling to a backer and he runs through and we don’t have eyes on him. So, there’s a chance we could’ve had maybe a 15-yard play and we got minus four. The quarterback works the wrong side of the field, we didn’t high-point a football, ball security. There’s lots of things. We had some penalties. We had plenty of things that we need to improve on, I can assure you.”

On Bryce Thompson’s injury:
“He got his bell rung. I’m not a doctor, so he’ll go through the standard precautionary deals. He came in and saw me today and he’s fine, so we’ll see.”

On Darrell Taylor’s performance:
“Well, twice they didn’t block him. When they don’t block you, you need to sack the quarterback. The other two times, we had them in long-yardage situations and I think that helped. It helped with them being behind the sticks. I think some of it had to do with not having explosive plays and having a little more ability to stop the run, to put them in some long-yardage situations. It’s much easier to rush the quarterback when they’re one-dimensional.

“Darrell has ability. We’ve been harping on him all year about consistency. He’s learning a new scheme and he’s got a lot thrown at him just like the other guys and he’s going to continue to improve in the duration of his career.”

On if there’s a difference between Darrell Taylor with his hand on the ground or standing up to rush the quarterback:
“No. It’s interesting, though. We play 3-4 (defense) and we stand up and then we play 4-3 (defense), so it depends on the plays that they run. Some of it depends on how comfortable our players are in a stance. We want them to play in a stance that they can be the most productive at, depending on the plays.”

On how they can get the offensive line to be more consistent:
“Not having mental errors, to start with. Some of it is being in the right run of looks. If they have four guys and we have three to block them, that’s not a good look. We don’t need to be running plays into that. There was times Saturday where we got some push and we finished and there was times where we didn’t. Some of it has to do with the backs hitting the holes. The thing about offense, one guy can have a breakdown and it affects the other 10 guys. Defensively, 10 guys can have a breakdown and if you have one guy that can erase that, it can make up for it sometimes. There’s two different sides of the ball there.”

On practice translating to the game and if he knows what he’s going to get come game day:
“No, I don’t think so. I think when you practice the right way and you create the right habits, you do that over a long period of time. You’ve watched us play over the last 10 games. We’ve been really different in all 10 of those games. Some of them we’ve played the right way for certain periods of time, some of them we haven’t. We’re looking to be able to play the right way for 60 minutes. We’re still searching for a four-quarter game.”

On the physicality at the line of scrimmage during the Kentucky game:
“I think our guys are…Some of this is about learning to strain and create the right habits and doing it over and over. I don’t think there’s any team in the country that goes out there and doesn’t want to be physical. Sometimes, the way the other team plays can change the way you think. I thought our guys played the right way from that standpoint. We need to execute a little better on both sides of the ball and I think if we continue to do, that’s something to build off of.”

On how much the extra practice would help if Tennessee were to be bowl eligible:
“The only way you can get better at something is to repeatedly do it over and over, so you get extra practices, you get an extra game. So, I think if you go about your business the right way and work hard during those practices, you have a chance to improve.”

On what Drew Lock has done to help Missouri turn it around:
“Well, just watching him, with the exception of I think Kentucky and Alabama, they’ve scored 29 or more points every game. I don’t know what kind of rough start you’re referring to, but they’ve been pretty productive offensively.”

On Missouri’s offense:
“They’re very balanced offensively. I think Derek’s [Dooley] done a fantastic job with what they’re doing offensively. They’ve been able to run the ball. They’ve been committed to it. Done a really nice job protecting the quarterback and they have lots of experience up front. They have big men, have a good scheme so we’re going to have to play well to have a chance.”

On what’s the first thing he wants to learn about an opposing offense:
“You want to know who they are, what kind of personnels do they play with, what’s their best plays, how do they create explosive plays, who’s their best playmakers. I think that’s what you have to do with everybody. What personnel are they putting in the most? So, you have to know where to spend most of your practice. How do you create negative plays? We have a system we go through weekly of whether it’s their base plays, it’s second and seven plus, it’s red areas, third downs, short yardage, goal line, two minute, two-point plays, four minute get the ball back. So, you kind of have your scenarios that you go through and what did they do. That’s it.”

On his relationship with Derek Dooley:
“I’ve never worked with Derek. We both worked for Coach [Nick] Saban at different times. I know that some of the guys I’ve worked with have a whole lot of respect for him, what kind of coach that he’s been when they worked with him on the staff. I’m watching what they’re doing offensively and they’re doing a really good job. They’re physical in the run game. They protect the quarterback. They create explosive plays. They give you multiple looks. So, it’ll be a tremendous challenge for us.”

On Tennessee’s secondary on Saturday:
“Well, we need to clean up technique in the back end. There’s probably several times maybe there was guys open Saturday, but we had some good pass rush. We need to clean up back there. It was good getting Micah [Abernathy] back and I think we’ll have Trevon [Flowers] back this week so gives a little more competition back there, a little more depth which makes everybody better. It should help with some on special teams. We just have to work on fundamentals and continuing to improve and play the ball, keep them cut off.”

 

UT Athletics

Davis, Westbrook on Naismith Watch List

Davis, Westbrook on Naismith Watch List

Credit: UT Athletics

ATLANTA, Ga. — The Atlanta Tipoff Club has released the 50 names on the 2019 Women’s Citizen Naismith Trophy Watch List, and UT sophomores Rennia Davis and Evina Westbrook are among the candidates.

The midseason 30 team will be announced on Feb. 11, 2019, and then the competition will be narrowed down to 10 national semifinalists on March 4, 2019. The four finalists will be named on March 22, 2019, and the winner of the 2019 Citizen Naismith Trophy for Women’s Player of the Year will be announced on April 6, 2019.

Davis and Westbrook are the Lady Vols’ top-two returning players, with each earning SEC All-Freshman Team accolades in 2017-18 after entering the starting lineup on day one. Davis averaged 12.0 points and 7.6 rebounds per contest as a rookie, while Westbrook chipped in 8.4 points, 4.3 assists and 2.8 rebounds. They helped the Lady Vols to a 25-8 overall record and 11-5 mark in the SEC.

Westbrook is off to a fast start as a sophomore, pacing No. 11/12 Tennessee to a 97-49 season-opening victory over Presbyterian on Sunday with career highs of 20 points and seven steals to go along with five assists, four rebounds and a block. Davis was held out of the opener due to a foot injury, but she was good for 17 points, nine rebounds, four assists and a pair of steals in the 128-59 exhibition win over Carson-Newman on Nov. 5. Westbrook had 11 points, eight assists and four steals in that contest.

“These 50 talented candidates are the ones to watch, and the competition for the 2019 Women’s Citizen Naismith Trophy will heat up as more players enter the competition throughout the season,” said Eric Oberman, executive director of the Atlanta Tipoff Club. “We are excited to watch these women play as they have another great year of college basketball ahead of them.”

Overall, 11 players on the Women’s Watch List represent the ACC, and the SEC is a close runner-up with 10 candidates included. Notre Dame, the 2018 NCAA Women’s Basketball Champion and a program looking for a second Women’s Citizen Naismith Trophy win, leads the pack with five players appearing on the Watch List, followed by UConn, which has won more Citizen Naismith Trophies (10) than any other school and Baylor and Oregon with three candidates apiece.

“The Citizen Naismith Trophy celebrates the accomplishments of student-athletes who demonstrate through their play the inner drive and passion that mirrors that of our company’s founding members,” said Eric Horowitz, managing director U.S. and travel retail, Citizen Watch Company of America, Inc. “We are looking forward to watching these 50 talented women play this season as they compete for the Women’s Player of the Year honor.”

ABOUT THE ATLANTA TIPOFF CLUB
Founded during the 1956-57 season, the Atlanta Tipoff Club is committed to promoting the game of basketball and recognizing the outstanding accomplishments of those who make the game so exciting. The Atlanta Tipoff Club administers the Naismith Awards, the most prestigious national honors in all of college and high school basketball. Named in honor of Dr. James Naismith, inventor of the game of basketball, the family of Naismith Awards annually recognizes the top men’s and women’s college and high school basketball players and coaches.  Other Naismith Awards are presented to the men’s and women’s college basketball defensive players of the year, as well as lifetime achievement awards to basketball officials and outstanding contributors to the game. UCLA’s Lew Alcindor received the first Citizen Naismith Trophy in 1969, while the late Anne Donovan (Old Dominion) was the inaugural women’s recipient in 1983.  Corporate partners of the Naismith Awards include the Citizen Watch Company, Werner Ladder and Bona.

ABOUT CITIZEN
Citizen, a pioneer in watchmaking and innovative technology since 1918, promotes excellence and creativity with a deep-rooted respect for craftsmanship. Citizen advocates “Better Starts Now,” searching for and accomplishing goals that are cause driven. In this respect, Citizen aligns with organizations and personalities that reflect the values of the brand including the Billie Jean King Leadership Initiative, Naismith Awards, National Merit Scholarship, and Good360.

 

UT Athletics

Luke Combs Tops Billboard Country Chart for Fourth Straight Week With “She Got the Best of Me”

Luke Combs Tops Billboard Country Chart for Fourth Straight Week With “She Got the Best of Me”

Luke Combs’s reign atop the Billboard Country Airplay chart continues as “She Got the Best of Me” is No. 1 for the fourth straight week.

The last song to accomplish the four-week feat was Dustin Lynch’s “Small Town Boy” in September/October 2017.

“She Got the Best of Me” is Luke’s fourth consecutive No. 1 single on the Billboard Country Airplay chart, following previous No. 1 tunes “Hurricane,” “When It Rains It Pours” and “One Number Away.”

The four No. 1 singles are featured on Luke’s 2017 debut album, This One’s For You, and the 2018 deluxe follow-up, This One’s For You Too.

Luke is the only solo country artist in history to score four consecutive No. 1 singles on the Billboard Country Airplay chart with his first four singles. While Luke is the first solo country artist to achieve the four-for-four feat, two duos have accomplished the coup: Florida Georgia Line and Brooks & Dunn.

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