Tennessee blasted by #1 Alabama 58-21

Tennessee blasted by #1 Alabama 58-21

Vols WR Jauan Jennings / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee fought back in the second quarter, scoring touchdowns on back-to-back drives, but the Volunteers fell to No. 1 Alabama, 58-21, on Saturday at Neyland Stadium.

“I think we learned a lot about our football team today,” UT head coach Jeremy Pruitt said. “There are some guys we had on our team that this game was way too big for them, and I think everyone was able to see that. It helps us, and we’ll move on with it. We play a good football team next week, so we have to go back to work tomorrow and get ready for South Carolina.”

Today’s “Third Saturday of October” matchup marked the 101st meeting between Tennessee (3-4, 1-3 SEC) and Alabama (8-0, 5-0).

Redshirt sophomore quarterback Jarrett Guarantano completed 5 of 10 passes for 63 yards before exiting the game with an injury in the second quarter. Redshirt senior backup quarterback Keller Chryst entered the game with 8:40 left in the first half and went on to complete 9 of 15 passes for 164 yards and two touchdowns.

Offensively, the Vols were led by redshirt junior wide receiver Jauan Jennings, who caught six passes for 102 yards, and sophomore running back Ty Chandler who had three receptions for 39 yards and a touchdown. Chandler also added 21 yards on the ground. His touchdown reception makes him the first Tennessee running back ever with TD catches in three consecutive games.

Alabama starting quarterback Tau Tagovailoa finished 19 of 29 for 306 yards and four touchdowns. Jalen Hurts entered in the third quarter and finished 2 of 3 for 21 yards with a rushing touchdown and an interception.

Tennessee’s two touchdowns during the second quarter were jumpstarted by back-to-back three-and-outs forced by the Vols’ defense. During those drives, the Crimson Tide were held to two yards and negative six yards, respectively. The back-to-back three-and-outs were the first the Tide had suffered with Tagovailoa running the offense this season.

To begin the game, Alabama went 58 yards down the field in nine plays to take a 7-0 lead. The Tide added another touchdown in the first quarter after recovering a forced fumble at Tennessee’s three-yard line.

Alabama totaled two more scoring drives in the opening frame on a 77-yard pass by Tagovailoa and a three-yard Damien Harris run.

In the final drive of the first quarter, the Vols got off eight plays for 33 yards, including a 20-yard pass from Guarantano to Jennings.

Tennessee’s defense came alive in the second quarter, forcing back-to-back three-and-outs. Guarantano then connected on a 30-yard pass to sophomore wide receiver Josh Palmer before exiting the game with an injury. Chryst entered with 8:40 left in the half and proceeded to find Chandler on consecutive throws of 10 yards or more, including a 10-yard touchdown pass. Sophomore kicker Brent Cimaglia added an extra point to make it a 28-7 ballgame.

Alabama answered with an eight-play, 43-yard drive of its own, capping it with a 2-yard touchdown run.

On UT’s following drive, Chryst marched the Vols 81 yards down the field in 1:58 for Tennessee’s second score of the night. The North Carolina native completed a 23-yard pass to Jennings before targeting him again for 40 yards. Chryst then threw to junior wide receiver Tyler Byrd for a 20-yard touchdown.

The Crimson Tide added a nine-yard touchdown to round out the half, scoring on nine plays in 2:01.

Alabama furthered its lead in the third quarter, scoring on a safety before going 54 yards in four plays for Tagovailoa’s fourth touchdown pass of the game.

Tennessee attempted a field goal with 6:07 left in the third quarter from 41 yards out but missed wide left.

With Hurts at quarterback for UA and under six minutes left in the third, junior defensive back Baylen Buchanan tipped a pass by Hurts that fell into the hands of Kyle Phillips, who then returned it 27 yards to the end zone. Cimaglia’s made PAT cut the Crimson Tide’s lead to 51-21. Phillips is the first opposing player to have a pick-six against Alabama since junior linebacker Daniel Bituli returned an interception 97 yards for a TD in 2017.

The Tide scored the final points of the game in their final drive of the third quarter on a 21-yard rush by Hurts.

Defensively, Tennessee was led by redshirt junior linebacker Quart’e Sapp, junior defensive back Nigel Warrior and Bituli with eight tackles apiece.

The Vols head to Columbia, South Carolina, next Saturday to face the Gamecocks at 7:30 p.m. ET. The game will be aired on SEC Network.

-UT Athletics

 

Jimmy’s blog: Alabama’s offense too much for undermanned Vols

Jimmy’s blog: Alabama’s offense too much for undermanned Vols

By Jimmy Hyams

As Alabama steamrolled Tennessee in the first half, media members scurried through the record books searching for record-breaking performances against the Vols.

Alabama scored touchdowns on six of its eight first-half possessions, held the Vols to minus-13 rushing yards in the first half and embarrassed UT 58-21 Saturday on CBS – the most points ever scored by an opponent at Neyland Stadium.

The most points ever scored against UT in the modern era was 62 at Florida in 1995.

Then, there was the 1896 campaign, when the Vols gave up 70, 64 and 60 points – but none of those games were in Knoxville.

The contest frustrated Tennessee coach Jeremy Pruitt, who made it clear he needs a different roster to compete with the elite in the SEC.

“I promise, we’ll recruit 25 other guys that will play the right way so we don’t have to play in another game like this,’’ Pruitt said at halftime, trailing 42-14.

During his post-game press conference, Pruitt said UT is playing just four seniors who do it the right way so “we could trade 25 (signees) for four and give us a chance.’’

Indeed, there is a considerable difference in the talent level of Alabama and Tennessee.

“You look at their sideline and you look at our sideline and they don’t hardly look the same,’’ Pruitt said.

No they don’t. Tennessee’s less talented team hardly had a chance against arguably Alabama’s most explosive offense in history. The Tide led 28-0 11 ½ minutes into the game. For all practical purposes, the outcome was decided.

To Tennessee’s credit, it fought back to cut the margin to 28-7 and stopped Alabama on consecutive drives, forcing punts. But an ill-fated onside kick game the Tide possession at the UT 43 and the Bama turned that into a touchdown.

About all that was left for Tennessee was to compete and try to make things respectable.

But not much pleased Pruitt against his former boss as coach Nick Saban ran his record to 15-0 against former assistants.

Pruitt didn’t like the way his line of scrimmage on offense and defense got whipped. He didn’t like UT’s inability to run the football. He didn’t like Ty Chandler catching a kickoff THEN calling for a fair catch, putting the ball on the UT 3-yard line and leading to safety. He didn’t like freshman cornerback Alontae Taylor throwing a punch in front of an official and getting ejected. He didn’t like the way his players blitzed.

“We called a blitz and our guy is tip toeing in there and they throw a touchdown pass,’’ Pruitt said. “When their guy blitzed, he didn’t tip toe in there.’’

Pruitt said Alabama probably could have scored 58 points without throwing a pass. When Bama did pass, it was usually a thing of beauty as Tua Togovailoa completed 16 of 26 passes for 256 yards and three touchdowns.

“For some guys on our team,’’ Pruitt said, “this game was way too big for them.’’

UT wasn’t playing with a full deck as several players were out with injuries – including linebacker Jonathan Kongbo (torn ACL) – and a couple of defensive backs. But Bama wasn’t at full strength either, having lost some players earlier and suspending defensive lineman Raekwan Davis for the first half after throwing punches in the Missouri game and disciplining running back Damien Harris for undisclosed reasons. Harris didn’t start.

But that hardly matter. Tennessee wasn’t going to beat Alabama if it played a near perfect game. It wouldn’t have won had UT played like it did in upsetting Auburn on the road.

But Pruitt had hopes his troops would simply play better and smarter.

Quarterback Jarrett Guarantano, brilliant against Auburn, struggled against Alabama, completing just 5 of 10 passes for 63 yards before exiting midway in the second quarter with what appeared to be a collarbone injury.

“Jarrett got hit probably every time he threw the football,’’ Pruitt said.

Grad transfer Keller Chryst did a nice job in relief, completing 9 of 15 passes for 164 yards and two touchdowns. He wasn’t under as much duress as Guarantano, perhaps suggesting Chryst does a better job of recognizing blitzes or calling pass protections.

Chryst wasn’t the only bright spot for the Vols. Jauan Jennings caught six passes for 102 yards. Defensive Kyle Phillips broke several tackles in returning an interception 27 yards for a touchdown. And Tim Jordan ran hard to get 50 yards on 14 carries.

But it wasn’t nearly enough.

One play in particular caught Pruitt’s eyes.

Alabama backup quarterback Jalen Hurts scrambled 21 yards for a touchdown in the third quarter to give the Tide a 58-21 lead.

“It looked like we were running in slow motion,’’ Pruitt said.

Therein lies UT’s problem. The Vols aren’t fast enough or strong enough to compete with the better teams in the SEC.

But that doesn’t mean UT can’t win three of its five remaining games to earn a bowl bid.

You wonder if the Alabama beat down will strip this team of some confidence.

But if UT can play like it did at Auburn, it has a chance against each of its remaining foes.


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CMA Awards Announce First Round of Performers, Including Keith Urban, Carrie Underwood, Kenny Chesney & More

CMA Awards Announce First Round of Performers, Including Keith Urban, Carrie Underwood, Kenny Chesney & More

The Country Music Association announced its first round of performers for the 52nd annual CMA Awards: Kelsea Ballerini, Luke Bryan, Kenny Chesney, Dan + Shay, Old Dominion, Carrie Underwood and Keith Urban.

Hosted for the 11th consecutive year by Brad Paisley and Carrie Underwood, the CMA Awards will air live from Bridgestone Arena in Nashville on Nov. 14 at 7 p.m. CT on ABC.

Nominees are below.

Entertainer of the Year

Jason Aldean
Luke Bryan
Kenny Chesney
Chris Stapleton
Keith Urban

Female Vocalist of the Year

Kelsea Ballerini
Miranda Lambert
Maren Morris
Kacey Musgraves
Carrie Underwood

Male Vocalist of the Year

Dierks Bentley
Luke Combs
Thomas Rhett
Chris Stapleton
Keith Urban

Vocal Duo of the Year

Brothers Osborne
Dan + Shay
Florida Georgia Line
Maddie & Tae
Sugarland

New Artist of the Year

Lauren Alaina
Luke Combs
Chris Janson
Midland
Brett Young

Single of the Year (Awarded to Singer, Producer and Engineer)

“Broken Halos” – Chris Stapleton
Producers: Dave Cobb, Chris Stapleton
Mix Engineer: Vance Powell

“Drinkin’ Problem” – Midland
Producers: Dann Huff, Shane McAnally, Josh Osborne
Mix Engineer: Justin Niebank

“Drowns the Whiskey” – Jason Aldean (Feat. Miranda Lambert)
Producer: Michael Knox
Mix Engineer: Jeff Braun

“Meant to Be” – Bebe Rexha & Florida Georgia Line
Producer: Willshire
Mix Engineer: Serban Ghenea

“Tequila” – Dan + Shay
Producers: Scott Hendricks, Dan Smyers
Mix Engineer: Jeff Juliano

Album of the Year

From A Room: Volume 2 – Chris Stapleton
Producers: Dave Cobb, Chris Stapleton

Golden Hour – Kacey Musgraves
Producers: Ian Fitchuk, Daniel Tashian, Kacey Musgraves

Graffiti U – Keith Urban
Producers: Keith Urban, Dan McCarroll, J.R. Rotem, Josh Kerr, Jason Evigan, Greg Wells, Benny Blanco, Ed Sheeran, Johnny McDaid, Jesse Shatkin, Jimmy Robbins, Oscar Holter, Matt Rad, Eric Valentine, Ian Kirkpatrick, Mike Elizondo, Captain Cuts, Ross Copperman, Dann Huff, Peter Karlsson

Life Changes – Thomas Rhett
Producers: Julian Bunetta, Jesse Frasure, Dann Huff, Joe London, Thomas Rhett

The Mountain – Dierks Bentley
Producers: Ross Copperman, Jon Randall Stewart, Arturo Buenahora Jr.

Vocal Group of the Year

Lady Antebellum
LANCO
Little Big Town
Midland
Old Dominion

Song of the Year (Awarded to Songwriters)

“Body Like A Back Road” – Zach Crowell, Sam Hunt, Shane McAnally, Josh Osborne
“Broken Halos” – Songwriters: Mike Henderson, Chris Stapleton
“Drowns the Whiskey” – Songwriter: Brandon Kinney, Jeff Middleton, Josh Thompson
“Drunk Girl” – Songwriter: Scooter Carusoe, Tom Douglas, Chris Janson
“Tequila” – Songwriter: Nicolle Galyon, Jordan Reynolds, Dan Smyers

Musical Event of the Year

“Burning Man” – Dierks Bentley feat. Brothers Osborne
“Dear Hate” – Maren Morris (Feat. Vince Gill)
“Drowns the Whiskey” – Jason Aldean (Feat. Miranda Lambert)
“Everything’s Gonna Be Alright” – David Lee Murphy (with Kenny Chesney)
“Meant to Be” – Bebe Rexha & Florida Georgia Line

Music Video of the Year (Awarded to Artist & Director)

“Babe” – Sugarland (Featuring Taylor Swift)
Director: Anthony Mandler

“Cry Pretty” – Carrie Underwood
Director: Randee St. Nicholas

“Drunk Girl” – Chris Janson
Director: Jeff Venable

“Marry Me” – Thomas Rhett
Director: TK McKamy

“Tequila” – Dan + Shay
Director: Patrick Tracy

Musician of the Year

Jerry Douglas, Dobro
Paul Franklin, Steel Guitar
Dann Huff, Guitar
Mac McAnally, Guitar
Derek Wells, Guitar

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Jimmy’s blog: Alabama offense scores at staggering rate

By Jimmy Hyams

How good is Alabama’s offense?

It is so good, it scores a touchdown every 10.7 offensive snaps. Auburn scores a TD every 23.1 snaps. Tennessee every 22.6 snaps.

And that number for the Crimson Tide is a bit skewed because its first-team offense is usually on the bench in the fourth quarter.

How good is that Bama offense?

Its starting quarterback has thrown 21 touchdown passes, 0 interceptions and no passes in the fourth quarter.

Its top three wide receivers each average over 18 yards per catch, with the leader at 27.1.

It’s top two running backs average at least 6.4 yards per carry.

It has scored a touchdown on its first possession of all seven games, twice on the first play, once on the second play.

It is averaging 53.6 points and 567 total yards per game.

Alabama’s offense is so good, Tennessee coach Jeremy Pruitt said the Tide has had to try not to score 100 points in a game.

“Keeping those guys from making explosive plays will be a monumental task for our guys,’’ Pruitt said.

Alabama will make explosive plays against anyone. The key is to limit the 20-yard gains to no more than five in a game.

Tennessee did that against Auburn, but Auburn’s offense doesn’t compare to Alabama’s.

What are the keys to competing against perhaps Nick Saban’s best team?

Vols quarterback Jarrett Guarantano must play exceptionally well. He did so against Auburn, hitting 21 of 32 throws for 328 yards and two touchdowns.

UT’s receivers must make big catches, like they did against Auburn.

UT must make splash plays. The Vols had 10 plays of 18 or more yards against Auburn.

UT’s run defense must stiffen like it did against Auburn after the first drive, allowing the Tigers only 68 rushing yards on their last 10 series, and just 10 in the second half.

UT must convert on third down. The Vols were 10 of 19 against Auburn and Guarantano was 8 of 8 on third-and-8-or-more yards for 168 yards with seven first downs. You wouldn’t expect that conversion rate against UTEP, much less Auburn. And certainly not Alabama.

It’s interesting to note UT has not done well converting on third-and-short, making 9 of 22 when needing 3 or fewer yards. Yet, UT has converted at least 16 times on third-and-7 or more.

Tennessee gained confidence and momentum in defeating Auburn.

The concern for the Vol Nation is whether Alabama destroys both this Saturday.

I think it would be better for UT if it faced anybody but Bama this weekend. I think UT could beat any of the remaining teams on the schedule this week, other than Alabama.

Having said that, each of the last five games on UT’s schedule are winnable. I think UT will take three of those and become bowl eligible.

That will demonstrate Pruitt’s program is not only going in the right direction, but it could influence some key recruits to stick with the Vols or jump on the UT bandwagon.

Last week: 4-2 (2-3 on SEC best bets).

Message to self: Stay away from over-under. We were 2-0 with LSU taking points against Georgia and Alabama giving points against Missouri. But 0-3 with over-under on Georgia-LSU, Florida-Vanderbilt, Tennessee-Auburn.

Last week, we called Florida struggling to beat Vanderbilt, Texas A&M nudging past South Carolina and Alabama routing Missouri. We missed on UT upset of Auburn and LSU blowing out Georgia.

My picks for this week:

Alabama 42-13 over Tennessee. Tide takes control in first half but Vols play it close in second half.

Arkansas 40-34 over Tulsa. Golden Hurricanes kept it close against Texas and South Florida and will press a Hogs’ team that lost a heart-breaker to Ole Miss.

Missouri 44-37 over Memphis. Missouri is appreciably better at home than on the road. Memphis fell to Tulane 40-24 but lost by just one to Central Florida and Navy.

Kentucky 34-20 over Vanderbilt. A fresh Kentucky team led by Benny Snell takes it to a Vandy team that blew a 21-3 first half lead at home against Florida.

LSU 27-20 over Mississippi State. LSU is coming off emotional win over Georgia and wants to avenge 37-7 loss to State last year. State QB Nick Fitzgerald won’t run all over LSU like he did Auburn.

Auburn 24-23 over Ole Miss. Does Auburn have the will to win? If not, Tigers might miss a bowl. Ole Miss offense has struggled against good defenses.

Best SEC bet:

Forget what I said earlier, take over 55 in the Arkansas-Tulsa game.


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Cody Johnson Talks Small-Town Texas Roots, Success as an Indie Artist, New Single, Upcoming Major-Label Debut Album & More

Cody Johnson Talks Small-Town Texas Roots, Success as an Indie Artist, New Single, Upcoming Major-Label Debut Album & More

Jim Casey talks with Cody Johnson about:

  • growing up in the small town of Sebastopol, Texas
  • learning the drums from his father at a young age
  • the advantage of having a background in drums
  • being surrounded by gospel music from his family members
  • early musical influences, from Elvis to Billy Joe Shaver
  • gaining respect from his Texas/Red Dirt contemporaries like Wade Bowen, Cory Morrow and Cody Canada
  • releasing six independent albums
  • signing a major-label record contract with Warner Brothers Nashville in June
  • having success with his major-label debut single, “On My Way to You”
  • releasing his upcoming major-label debut album, Ain’t Nothin’ to It, on Jan. 18, 2019
  • making music that translates to his live show
  • working with producer Trent Willmon
  • covering Charlie Daniels’ “Long Haired Country Boy” on the new album

Show Participants:

  • Cody Johnson
  • Jim Casey, NCD editor in chief

Vols’ Scrimmage vs. Alabama Moved to Sunday

Vols’ Scrimmage vs. Alabama Moved to Sunday

UT Baseball / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – The Tennessee baseball team’s fall scrimmage against Alabama has been moved to Sunday at 12:30 p.m. ET at Lindsey Nelson Stadium due to impending weather in Saturday morning’s forecast.

First pitch between UT and Alabama is set for 12:30 p.m. ET. Admission and parking for the game will be FREE.

In place of the originally scheduled game against the Crimson Tide on Saturday, the Vols will play an intrasquad scrimmage from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. ET. College football games will be broadcast on the videoboard and fans will also have the opportunity to meet Tennessee’s players following the scrimmage.

Concessions will not be available for either scrimmage, but fans are welcome to bring their own food and drinks into the stadium.

Following Sunday’s game, the last chance to see Tennessee in action this fall is during its three-game intrasquad Orange and White Fall World Series, which is scheduled to take place from Oct. 31 through Nov. 2 at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.

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