Jimmy’s blog: After 3 games, are Vols ready for SEC play?

Jimmy’s blog: After 3 games, are Vols ready for SEC play?

By Jimmy Hyams

With three games under Tennessee’s belt, it’s natural to ask: Are the Vols ready for SEC play?

Based on what I’ve seen: No.

It’s not that I think Florida is special, but I see too many warts in Tennessee’s game to think the Vols are ready for the rigors of SEC play.

Before this season, I felt Florida was the most important game of the UT schedule. It would be a litmus test to see if the Vols could handle SEC competition, could end a nine-game losing streak in conference play, to vie for a bowl game.

If Tennessee can’t beat Florida, it likely can’t make a bowl trip.

If Tennessee can gig the Gators, the Vols could be headed to post-season play.

Tennessee’s 24-0 victory Saturday over inept UTEP was a nod toward a nice defensive effort. The Minors gained only 134 yards (39 passing), converted just two of 14 third-down tries and hardly threatened to score.

But the game continued to raise questions about the offensive line. And, for the first time this season, the Vols were sloppy with the ball and undisciplined when it came to penalties. UT had three fumbles and lost two, one on a muffed punt. UT also was assessed eight penalties.

“Are we ready (for the SEC) as a football team?’’ UT coach Jeremy Pruitt said post-game. “When you turn the ball over three times, don’t get any turnovers, make eight penalties, probably 10 — you don’t count the ones they declined — it would be hard to beat anybody in the SEC playing like that.’’

Yes it would. Even Florida, which got whipped by Kentucky last week as the Wildcats thrashed the Gator’s defense for over 300 rushing yards.

To date, Tennessee doesn’t look appreciable better than the team that went 4-8 a year ago.

That doesn’t mean they can’t improve in many areas. But they better do it fast.

Tennessee could easily have beaten UTEP by two more touchdowns, but a fumble at the goal line by Jeremy Banks as he stretched for the end zone, a muffed punt by Marquez Callaway and a touchdown nullified by a chop block proved costly.

Yet, there were some bright spots. Even though the Vols were stuffed at the line of scrimmage too often, they ran for 345 yards with 81 coming on a burst by Ty Chandler on the first play of the second half. Quarterback Jarrett Guarantano was efficient, hitting 12 of 16 passes for 168 yards and one score. And Brandon Johnson caught four passes for 51 yards after catching just two balls in the first two games.

Also, UT got a better pass rush, even though the sack total was only two. Minor quarterback Kai Locksley was running for his life much of the game, particularly on third down.

Speaking of third down, UT’s third-down defense has been outstanding with the exception of the second half against West Virginia (which converted 5 of 6 in the final two quarters). Take out the Mountaineers’ second half work and opponents are 4 of 32 on third downs against UT’s defense.

Pruitt credited the defense’s work on first and second down as well as long third-down tries by opponents. UTEP had third-and-at-least-8 on nine occasions. East Tennessee State had third-and-at-least-7 six times.

Another bright spot for Tennessee was a 4-yard touchdown reception by Jauan Jennings, who hadn’t scored since 2016.

If Jennings can find his 2016 form, he could form a strong receiving corps with Callaway, Johnson, Josh Palmer, Jordan Murphy and tight end Dominick Wood-Anderson.

Pruitt made one decision I didn’t agree with.

With 100 seconds left in the first half and the Vols clinging to a 10-0 lead, the team needed a spark to take into the locker room.

Rather than go with his best passer, Guarantano, Pruitt inserted backup Keller Chryst, who handed off three times, then threw an incompletion. The possession was thwarted by a Drew Richmond hold.

Pruitt said he wanted to give Chryst a chance.

But why not give your best quarterback a chance?

Guarantano isn’t exactly a veteran of running a two-minute offense. And he’s a much more accurate passer than Chryst. Guarantano gave you a better chance to be successful, and he needs the experience.

It just made more sense to go with Guarantano in that situation.

Of course, Tennessee shouldn’t have been up only 10-0 at that juncture.

Consider this: Last week, UNLV scored six touchdowns and a field goal on eight first-half possessions against the Miners. UT got a field goal and touchdown on six first-half possessions.

As Pruitt said, it would be hard for the Vols to beat any team the way it played against UTEP. But that doesn’t matter now.

It just matters how you play Saturday against the Gators in what promises to be a pivotal game for the Vols.


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Garth Brooks Sells More Than 84,000 Tickets in Less Than 3 Hours for Notre Dame Show

Garth Brooks Sells More Than 84,000 Tickets in Less Than 3 Hours for Notre Dame Show

Tickets for Garth Brooks’ first-ever concert at Notre Dame Stadium went on sale at 10 a.m. ET on Sept. 14.

Less than three hours later, more than 84,000 tickets have been sold for $98.95, which is more than $8 million.

“Just when you think you have seen it all as an entertainer, today happens,” said Garth. “I can’t wait to see all of you in October.”

Garth’s concert will take place on Saturday, Oct. 20 at 7 p.m. ET.

According to a press release, a “few single seats” are left via Ticketmaster.

photo by Jason Simanek

Jimmy’s blog: McClain broke color barrier 50 years ago today

Jimmy’s blog: McClain broke color barrier 50 years ago today

By Jimmy Hyams

As time has passed, it’s hard for Lester McClain to wrap his mind around the fact that it was 50 years ago today that he broke the color barrier for Tennessee football.

On Sept. 14, 1968, McClain jogged onto “Doug’s Rug’’ to a standing ovation as the Vols opened the season at home against a strong Georgia team.

It was an ovation that McClain said was a “major step’’ in helping him be successful.

But it was also surprising to him, because as the first black to suit up for Tennessee, he wasn’t sure what to expect.

“It’s not like you’re Mickey Mantle who hits home runs and that gets you applause when you are coming up to bat,’’ McClain told UT’s sports information office. “I hadn’t done anything.’’

Actually, he had. He had the courage to become a pioneer, to face the flak that was sure to come, to endure unwarranted insults.

McClain will tell you his journey at Tennessee was worth it. How it started is intriguing.

McClain had played at a Nashville high school before transferring his senior year to Antioch High School, a school nearby to where he lived. Bill Garrett, a pharmacist whose dad was a long-time commissioner of agriculture in Tennessee, conducted early morning runs for the Antioch players and helped recruit McClain – it was legal for alums to recruit in those days.

Tennessee targeted two blacks in 1967 so they could be roommates. The first was Albert Davis of Alcoa, one of the top running back prospects in the nation. McClain was another.

“Albert was such a superstar,’’ McClain said during an interview with Sports Talk WNML. “He was Tennessee’s Herschel Walker before Georgia had theirs.’’

At the time, schools could sign 40 recruits. Davis was the 39th to sign, McClain the 40th.

“That was the beginning of a whole new world that no one ever planned,’’ McClain said.

But Davis didn’t qualify academically and went to Tennessee State.

Did that change McClain’s mind about attending Tennessee?

“My first thought about coming to Tennessee had nothing to do with anyone else,’’ McClain said. “… I never thought I needed someone else to be there. I just wanted to go.’’

In McClain’s first game as a Vol, he caught a key fourth-down pass from Bubba Wyche in the fourth quarter that helped UT rally from a 17-9 deficit to tie the game against Georgia.

“It meant a lot for me to be able to participate in that game,’’ McClain said.

It was UT’s first game on artificial turf – dubbed Doug’s Rug for UT coach Doug Dickey. Georgia wasn’t keen on playing the game with a new, unknown surface and even mentioned the word boycott.

McClain said the turf was good and bad.

“I thought the turf was great as for as speed of the game,’’ McClain said. “It seemed like you ran so much faster, and much quicker.

“The only thing bad was, if you fell and didn’t have sleeves or something covering your knees, any skin that went across that turf was left on the turf.’’

McClain said he was welcomed at UT by teammate Mike Jones, a Nashville native. But the key was the embrace he received from upperclassmen on the team.

“It was so positive,’’ McClain said. “It was going to be a success for me as a result of that kind of relationship.’’

During his UT career, McClain caught 70 passes for 1,003 yards and touchdowns, adding two rushing scores. He ranked fifth on UT’s all-time receptions list when he completed his career. And he was a member of the 1969 SEC championship team.

McClain caught a then-record 82-yard touchdown pass from Bobby Scott against Memphis State in 1969 on a pass McClain said wasn’t designed for him. He was running an underneath route, looked up and saw the ball coming his way.

“I was thinking to myself, `My God, is that the ball?’’’ McClain said. “It really was the ball. … I ran as fast as I could because I didn’t want to get caught.’’

McClain paved the way for Condredge Holloway, the artful dodger from Huntsville, Ala., to become the first black quarterback in the SEC. Holloway, who works in the UT athletic department, makes sure each Vol football player knows the McClain legacy.

“I’m blessed that I got to know him,’’ Holloway said. “And after knowing what he went through, you talk about me being the first black quarterback in the Southeastern Conference … without Lester McClain none of that happens.

“Everybody thinks that I went through a lot; he went through much more. There weren’t many black players on the team or in the league. Lester took the brunt for everybody and was a perfect gentleman, still is today. I have nothing but respect for Lester McClain, and I’m proud to call him my friend.’’

The feeling is mutual. McClain calls Holloway “one of the most fascinating guys’’ he’s known. And Holloway the player was worth the price of admission.

“You would go to the game to see Condredge play,’’ McClain said. “When the ball was snapped, you found yourself standing up. You couldn’t sit in your seat and watch him when the ball was snapped because something fantastic was about to happen.’’

McClain is a member of the Tennessee Athletics Hall of Fame and was recently inducted into the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame.

“I cannot explain how wonderful that experience was,’’ McClain said. “It was a special occasion.’’

McClain said he is forever “thankful for the opportunity’’ Tennessee gave him.

But he also has a regret. Men like Dickey and then-athletic director Bob Woodruff and then-UT president Andy Holt declared in the 1960s it was time to end segregation with Tennessee football. Woodruff and Holt are deceased.

“People making those decisions for me to have an opportunity to come (to UT) really had an impact on my life, my family,’’ McClain said. “I appreciate those things.

“I regret I didn’t go back and thank those people. Maybe I was too young to understand really what it meant, and by the time I truly understood the dynamics of what it took to put it together, some of those people were not alive anymore.

“I have a greater appreciation today for what’s happened than ever before in my life.’’


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Listen to Brett Young’s New Lead Single, “Here Tonight,” From Upcoming Sophomore Album

Listen to Brett Young’s New Lead Single, “Here Tonight,” From Upcoming Sophomore Album

California native Brett Young released the first single, “Here Tonight,” from his upcoming sophomore album, Ticket to L.A., which is slated to drop on Dec. 7.

Brett co-penned 10 of the 13 tracks on Ticket to L.A., including “Here Tonight,” which he wrote with Ben Caver, Justin Ebach and Lady Antebellum’s Charles Kelley.

“‘Here Tonight’ is about those moments, if you’re lucky enough to have them in your life, that are so good that you wish they could last forever,” Brett says. “It’s very light—intentionally—and sonically it’s very upbeat. That doesn’t exist as much on the first album, so I wanted to showcase a bit more versatility this time around. I think it’s the perfect way to cap off the summer.”

The upcoming record follows the 2017 release of Brett’s self-titled debut album, which spawned four No. 1 hits, including “Sleep Without You,” “In Case You Didn’t Know,” “Like I Loved You” and “Mercy.”

Listen to “Here Tonight” below.

Ticket to L.A. is available for pre-order now.

Ticket to L.A. Track Listing and Songwriters

  1. “Ticket To L.A.” (Brett Young, Zach Crowell, Jon Nite)
  2. “Here Tonight” (Brett Young, Ben Caver, Justin Ebach, Charles Kelley)
  3. “Catch” (Brett Young, Ross Copperman, Ashley Gorley)
  4. “1, 2, 3 – Mississippi” (Brett Young, Justin Ebach, Jon Nite)
  5. “Let It Be Mine” (Ross Copperman, Shane McAnally, Jon Nite)
  6. “Where You Want Me” (Brett Young, Jessie Jo Dillon, Shane McAnally)
  7. “Used To Missin’ You” (Brett Young, Jon Nite, Jimmy Robbins)
  8. “Change Your Name” (Ross Copperman, Matt Jenkins, Jon Nite)
  9. “Chapters” feat. Gavin DeGraw (Brett Young, Ross Copperman, Gavin DeGraw)
  10. “The Ship And The Bottle” (Nicolle Galyon, Chase McGill, Jon Nite)
  11. “Reason To Stay” (Brett Young, Jon Nite, Jimmy Robbins, Emily Warren)
  12. “Runnin’ Away From Home” (Brett Young, Zach Crowell, Hillary Lindsey)
  13. “Don’t Wanna Write This Song” (Brett Young, Zach Crowell, Sean McConnell)

 

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Watch Abby Anderson “Play It Forward” by Covering Trisha Yearwood’s “Walkaway Joe”

Watch Abby Anderson “Play It Forward” by Covering Trisha Yearwood’s “Walkaway Joe”

Abby Anderson, 21, stopped by the Nash campus last week to chat with Elaina Smith for her Women Want to Hear Women podcast (you can listen here).

One of the podcast’s segments—“Play It Forward”—beckons the featured artist to perform a song from another female’s catalog.

For her Play It Forward, Abby covered Trisha Yearwood’s “Walkaway Joe,” a tune Trisha took to No. 2 on Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in 1992.

Watch Abby’s performance below.

Jimmy’s blog: Odds-makers make some odd picks

Jimmy’s blog: Odds-makers make some odd picks

By Jimmy Hyams

Folks that set the lines in Las Vegas make a lot of money, make no mistake.

But if you think their spreads are pin-point accurate, think again.

I’ve been convinced for years that odds-makers in Vegas don’t have any better idea of the final margin in a college football game than many of us fans.

The first two weeks of the season, I took the pregame.com line listed in the local paper and compared it to the final scores. If the spread was within 7 points and the correct winner was picked, then that was a win for Vegas.

The first week of the season, counting just FBS teams, pregame.com was 10-22 given my parameters, with four double-digit favorites losing.

But that was Week One, when no one knows for sure just what each team has. Opening weekend can be the toughest to forecast.

So I did the same thing for Week 2. The results: 11-33 with four double-digit favorites losing (Florida, Arkansas, Purdue, North Carolina). Six times, the spread wasn’t within 20 points of the final score. And 14 times, the favorite lost.

This is not to suggest you can cash in against Vegas lines, but it does suggest how hard it is to pick college football games. And it makes me feel better when I make my picks.

Before I get to my picks, 14 observations:

  1. There is a greater distance between Georgia and the No. 2 team in the East than Alabama and the No. 2 team in the West.
  2. Florida’s defense allowed Kentucky to rush for more than 300 yards, a stunning figure, raising serious questions about the Gators defense.
  3. Arkansas blew a 27-9 second half lead against a Colorado State that was allowing 44 points per game. The Hogs didn’t score in the final 22minutes of the game.
  4. Despite a 59-3 win over ETSU, Tennessee still must improve its offensive line, pass rush and pass defense.
  5. Six SEC players are averaging over 135 rushing yards per game: Nick Fitzgerald of Mississippi State, Scottie Phillips of Ole Miss, Benny Snell of Kentucky, Treyveon Williams of Texas A&M, Nick Brossette of LSU and Kylin Hill of Mississippi State.
  6. Four players with at least 10 carries are averaging at least 10 yards per carry: Keytaon Thompson of Mississippi State, Asim Rose of Kentucky, Hill and Phillips.
  7. Only three SEC quarterbacks are averaging at least 300 passing yards per game (Jordan Ta’amu of Ole Miss, Drew Lock of Missouri and Kellen Mond of Texas A&M) and only four are averaging at least 230 per game.
  8. Four quarterbacks are averaging at least 10 yards per attempt and five are hitting over 70 percent.
  9. Missouri receiver Emmanuel Hall is averaging 171 receiving yards per game and 24.4 yards per catch. Hall is from Nashville and was not recruited by Tennessee.
  10. Seven SEC receivers are averaging at least 20 yards per catch.
  11. All 14 SEC teams are averaging at least 30 points per game, eight average at least 40.
  12. Four SEC defenses are allowing less than 10 points per game and Alabama is not one of them.
  13. Five SEC offenses are averaging over 550 total yards per game, two average less than 360.
  14. Five SEC defenses allow less than 300 yards per game, while Ole Miss gives up 557.5 – 164.5 more than No. 13 Arkansas.

Here is a thumbnail recap of last week:

Hit or near hits: We picked Alabama 47-7 over Arkansas State, the Tide won 57-7. … We had Clemson over Texas A&M 23-17, final was 28-26. … We forgot to mention our pick of Ole Miss 47-27 over Southern Illinois was just for the first half; the Rebels romped 76-41. … We picked LSU by 34 over Southeastern Louisiana, the Tigers won by 31. … We picked Auburn to win by 47 over Alabama State, Tigers won by 54. … We picked Missouri by 28 over Wyoming, the fighting Derek Dooleys won by 27.

 

The misses:

Colorado upset Arkansas, which blew a 27-9 third-quarter lead. … Kentucky (a 13-point underdog) upset Florida to snap a 31-game losing skid to the Gators. … We picked the Vols to score 40 against ETSU; we failed to figure in basically three non-offensive touchdowns in a 59-3 romp. … We picked Georgia 27-24 over South Carolina, Dawgs won 41-17. … We picked Vanderbilt by 7 over Nevada, Dores won by 31. Vandy athletic director David Williams was so stunned, he resigned.

Last week: 10-2

Overall 23-3

SEC Picks

Kentucky 40-10 over Murray State

Notre Dame 27-17 over Vanderbilt

Auburn 23-17 over LSU

Arkansas 30-27 over North Texas

Florida 37-30 over Colorado State

Alabama 52-30 over Ole Miss

Georgia 47-7 over MTSU

Mississippi State 44-20 over Louisiana-Lafayette

Missouri 30-20 over Purdue

Texas A&M 38-20 over Louisiana-Monroe

Tennessee 44-13 over UTEP


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