#25/21 Vols Down Indiana State, 42-7, in Home Opener

#25/21 Vols Down Indiana State, 42-7, in Home Opener

Vols RB John Kelly / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — The #25/21-ranked Tennessee Volunteers led from the first play to the last in a 42-7 victory over Indiana State on Saturday in the home opener at Neyland Stadium.

“Today was a good win,” head coach Butch Jones said. “I’m really proud of our players. They showed some mental toughness. With the short turnaround, I thought they did a very good job all week long of trying to prepare their bodies and their minds, so I’m really proud of them. I thought one of the keys to the game was third-down defense and being able to get off the field.”

Tennessee (2-0) wasted no time in taking the momentum when freshman Ty Chandler returned the opening kickoff 91 yards for a touchdown, and the Vols scored 28 unanswered points to start against the Sycamores (0-2).

Junior quarterback Quinten Dormady connected on 13 of 18 passes for 194 yards and two touchdowns, and sophomore running back Carlin Fils-aime rushed for his first two touchdowns of the season.

Junior running back John Kelly put together another standout game on the ground and in the air, rushing 18 times for 80 yards and catching five passes for a career-best 60 receiving yards.

After taking a 7-0 lead off Chandler’s race to the end zone, Fils-aime pushed into the checkerboard on a four-yard carry for his first of two touchdowns to cap an 81-yard drive, and the Vols led, 14-0, after the first quarter.

In the second quarter, Fils-aime broke away for a 30-yard touchdown run. With 53 seconds before halftime, Dormady connected with sophomore Brandon Johnson for a 19-yard touchdown as the Vols extended their lead to 28-0.

Indiana State found the end zone in the third quarter, but the Vols responded when Dormady found Marquez Callaway for a 37-yard touchdown, his third touchdown catch this season. Tennessee added another score in the fourth quarter; redshirt freshman quarterback Jarrett Guarantanorecorded his first career touchdown on an 11-yard pass to redshirt senior Jeff George to give Tennessee a 42-7 final score.

With a crowd of 99,015, the Vols shut down Indiana State for much of the game on the defensive end, limiting the Sycamores to 0-for-11 on third-down conversions and 215 total yards. Senior Cortez McDowell led Tennessee with eight tackles, three of them solo. Freshman Deandre Johnson forced two fumbles and had three tackles.

Tennessee opens Southeastern Conference play next Saturday against Florida on the road. The game is set to kick off at 3:30 p.m. Eastern and will be broadcast on CBS.

-UT Athletics

 

Troy Gentry of Montgomery Gentry Killed in Helicopter Crash

Troy Gentry of Montgomery Gentry Killed in Helicopter Crash

Troy Gentry of the band Montgomery Gentry was tragically killed in a helicopter crash near Medford, N.J at approximately 1 p.m.

Their concert at the Flying W Airport & Resort for tonight (Sept. 8) was canceled around 2 p.m. ET.

Our hearts go out to Troy’s family and loved ones. Troy Gentry was 50 years old.

Montgomery Gentry was formed in 1999. The duo found success with songs such as “My Town,” “If You Ever Stopped Loving Me,” “Something To Be Proud Of,” “Gone,” and “Back When I Knew It All.”

Gentry is survived by his wife and two daughters.

photo courtesy Average Joes Media

Don Williams Dead at 78

Don Williams Dead at 78

Don Williams, who parlayed a smooth baritone singing style into country music stardom, died on Sept. 8 following a short illness at age 78. “The Gentle Giant,” as he was often known, was a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame and won the CMA Male Vocalist of the Year award in 1978.

Born in Floydada, Texas, May 27, 1939, don was singing professionally by the time he turned 18. In 1964, he became the lead vocalist for the Pozo-Seco Singers pop trio, which enjoyed mild chart success. After splitting from the trio in 1970, Don briefly left the music business but resurfaced as a songwriter and solo artist for Cowboy Jack Clements’ JMI label in 1972. He scored several hits for that label, including “We Should Be Together,” which peaked at No. 5.

Courtesy CMA

Signing with Dot, which later became ABC/Dot, helped springboard Don to the next level of country stardom. His first single for the label in 1974, “I Wouldn’t Want to Live If You Didn’t Love Me,” reached No. 1. The follow-up, “The Ties That Bind,” hit the Top 5, but Don then ran off a string of four straight No. 1 singles, starting with 1975’s “You’re My Best Friend,” which became one of his best-loved tunes over the years. The hits continued through the 1970’s with the ABC/Dot and MCA labels with such favorites as “Some Broken Hearts Never Mend” and “Tulsa Time.”

In 1980, Don released his most popular hit, “I Believe in You,” which also became a smash in Australia, New Zealand and other countries overseas. Don was one of the first American country artists to achieve an international following, due in part to his pure and soothing baritone voice, relatable to any language or culture. Contemporary artist Keith Urban, who grew up in Australia, vividly remembers Don Williams records being played in his household. Keith, along with current stars like Garth Brooks, Alan Jackson and Alison Krauss, will often cite Don Williams as a major influence.

In concert, Don engaged audiences with warmth and soft-spoken charm. Offstage, however, Don stood as the product of a different era, when artists generally did not engage in self-promotion. As such, he rarely granted interviews and seldom talked about himself.

Don scored the last of his 17 No. 1 career No. 1 singles in 1986 with “Heartbeat in the Darkness” for Capitol Records. He continued to tour both in the U.S. and abroad until announcing a Farewell Tour of the World in early 2006. After resuming touring in 2010, he retired permanently in 2016.

In 2010, Don was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame, but was unable to attend the ceremony due to an illness. During the induction program, Alison Krauss described Don’s unique voice as, “Somewhere between Santa and the Almighty.”

On May 26, 2017, a tribute album in Williams’ honor, Gentle Giants: The Songs of Don Williams, was released. The album features performances by Garth Brooks, Dierks Bentley, Lady Antebellum, Jason Isbell and many others.

As his fans and fellow singers will easily concur, Don Williams was a giant among artists.

photo courtesy Webster PR

Kenny Chesney’s St. John House is “Simply Gone” After Hurricane Irma, Creating “Love for Love City” Foundation to Help Island Residents

Kenny Chesney’s St. John House is “Simply Gone” After Hurricane Irma, Creating “Love for Love City” Foundation to Help Island Residents

In an interview on HLN’s Morning Express with Robin Meade this morning (Sept. 8), Kenny Chesney talked about how parts of the U.S. Virgin Islands have been devastated by Hurricane Irma, including the island of St. John, where the artist owns a residence.

Though Kenny was not there to experience the hurricane in person, he told Robin Meade that friends in the area described the damage as “biblical in nature.”

When asked about his house on St. John, Kenny said, “It’s just simply gone.” But the country star didn’t seem very concerned with his own property.

“That place and the people mean so much more to me than my house. I’ve always felt that music was medicine and I’m gonna do everything that I possibly can to try to relieve some stress from people that I’ve really grown to love over the years, who have meant so much to my life. This place, these islands, have meant so much to me. They’ve shaped me as a human being. It’s given me creativity. It’s given me a different way to look at the world, a different window to see the world through. And when you look through that window right now, as you can tell, it’s just devastation. It’s really odd to see such a beautiful place look like a war zone.”

Although Hurricane Irma is still on the move, Kenny and his team have already begun creating a new relief foundation called “Love for Love City,” a reference to St. John’s nickname, “Love City.” The details are still being finalized, but in addition to accepting donations, Kenny said that there will be a “musical connection” to help raise money.

Listen to the entire interview with HLN’s Robin Meade below. Check Kenny’s website for updates on how to donate to his forthcoming Hurricane Irma relief foundation.

https://youtu.be/IdpxEOur2yw

Kenny Chesney photo courtesy Sony Music Nashville; Hurricane Irma photo courtesy Kenny Chesney Instagram;

Jimmy’s blog: Knoxville QB Club sets speaker lineup

Jimmy’s blog: Knoxville QB Club sets speaker lineup

By Jimmy Hyams

A star-studded lineup of speakers, including Hall of Fame coach Frank Beamer and CBS analyst Rick Neuheisel, will be featured at Knoxville Quarterback Club this season.

The list of speakers includes four from CBS: former Arkansas and Ole Miss coach Houston Nutt, former Georgia quarterback Aaron Murray, Adam Zucker and Neuheisel.

Tennessee coach Butch Jones will make two appearances. Vols basketball coach Rick Barnes and athletic director John Currie are also on the schedule.

Two former Florida Gators will address the crowd: Chris Doering and Kevin Carter, both of the SEC Network.

Columnist Dan Wolken of USA Today will also speak.

Each week, a Tennessee assistant will address the gathering.

Membership costs $175, but $150 for senior citizens. To join, call Jeff Hagood at 865-525-7313, Charlie Morgan 680-1964 or Skip Wheeler at 719-0465.

You do not have to be UT letterman to become a member.

Here is the list of speakers:

Sept. 11                Butch Jones (UT head coach)

Sept. 18                Adam Zucker (CBS)

Sept. 25                Kevin Carter (SEC Network)

Oct. 2                    Houston Nutt (CBS)

Oct. 9                    Aaron Murray (CBS)

Oct. 16                  Frank Beamer (former Va. Tech coach)

Oct. 23                  Chris Doering (SEC Network)

Oct. 30                  Dan Wolken, columnist USA Today)

Nov. 6                   Rick Nueheisel (CBS)

Nov. 13                Rick Barnes (Vols basketball coach)

Nov. 20                Butch Jones

Nov. 27                John Currie (UT athletic director)


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

Jillian Jacqueline Has Plenty of “Reasons” to Be Excited About Her Upcoming Single [Watch]

Jillian Jacqueline Has Plenty of “Reasons” to Be Excited About Her Upcoming Single [Watch]

As singer/songwriter Jillian Jacqueline gears up for her debut project for Big Loud Records—which is currently in production—the 2016 CMT Next Women of Country alum has been busy this summer opening concerts for Dwight Yoakam and Billy Currington. She also has been busy releasing new songs, including “Reasons,” “Hate Me” and “Bleachers.”

It turns out the green-eyed songstress has plenty of “Reasons” to be excited about her breakup anthem: “Reasons” has garnered more than 10 million streams on Spotify, and Jillian will ship the tune to country radio in January.

“I’m very excited about how well ‘Reasons’ has done streaming,” says Jacqueline to Nash Country Daily. “When I wrote this song and sent it in, I thought that there was no way they were going to let me say ‘screw’ in a country song—but they did [laughing]. I’m really proud of this song because it’s super depressing in the lyrics, but it sounds really happy. As a songwriter, I feel like that’s a huge win when people want to sing along when they should be crying.”

Watch as Jillian performs “Reasons” at this week’s Nash Campus Spotlight session.

photo by Jason Simanek

Blake Shelton Lays the Cards on the Table in New Song, “I’ll Name the Dogs”

Blake Shelton Lays the Cards on the Table in New Song, “I’ll Name the Dogs”

As he prepares for the 13th season on NBC’s The Voice and the grand opening of his Ole Red restaurant and live music venue in Tishomingo, Okla., Blake Shelton has released a brand new song, “I’ll Name the Dogs.”

On his website, Blake describes the song as a throw-back. “It’s traditional country with fiddle and steel and I’ve got Jimmy Olander from Diamond Rio playing the guitar solo,” Blake said. “It brings the sound back a little more traditional for a minute, which I felt like needed to happen musically for me.”

The toe-tapping, upbeat tune and its love proposal lyrics are complemented by a clever wedding day-themed music video. Watch the video below.

Thomas Rhett Talks Having Babies, Winning Awards, Making His New Album, “Life Changes,” & More

Thomas Rhett Talks Having Babies, Winning Awards, Making His New Album, “Life Changes,” & More

Jim Casey talks with Thomas Rhett about how surprised he was to win the 2017 ACM Male Vocalist of the Year award, the challenges of recording a new album as his family doubled in size, the success of his No. 1 single with Maren Morris, the full-circle moment of making music with his dad, the diverse and nostalgic sound of his new album, Life Changes, and more.

Show Participants

  • Thomas Rhett
  • Jim Casey, NCD director of editorial

Show Notes & Links

https://youtu.be/THfc1R09Te8

The Writers Room, Ep. 113, 14 minutes
photo by Jason Simanek

Vol Report: UT Prepares to Face Familiar Faces on Saturday

Trey Smith – Vols / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee head coach Butch Jones, along with three assistants and two student-athletes talked to media on Thursday at the Ray and Lucy Hand Studio and Haslam Field.

After Thursday’s practice, just the second of the week following Monday night’s 42-41 double-overtime victory over Georgia Tech, Jones talked about how the No. 21/24-ranked Vols have put an extra emphasis on recovery with the short week between games.

“I think it challenges your players from an academic standpoint, from a physical standpoint and from a mental standpoint,” Jones said. “So far, I’ve really liked the way our players have managed it and the recovery from the game started in Atlanta.”

Jones also touched on how he’s been pleased with the response from the wide receiver group after losing junior Jauan Jennings, UT’s leading returning receiver, in the first half of Monday’s game.

“I like the leadership that has been provided by everyone,” Jones said. “They’ve been a pleasure to coach. We don’t have very large numbers there, so everyone is going to have a role in that room.”

Sophomore Marquez Callaway stepped up after Jennings went down, tallying four catches for 115 yards and two touchdowns after halftime to help spark the come-from-behind victory.

Tennessee & Indiana State Coaching Connections

When the Vols and Sycamores square off on Saturday afternoon at Neyland Stadium, there will be some familiar faces on each sideline for both coaching staffs.

Indiana State first-year head coach Curt Mallory was the defensive backs coach at Central Michigan while Jones was the team’s offensive coordinator in 2001.

UT associate head coach/defensive line coach Brady Hoke also has extensive experience coaching alongside Mallory. When Hoke was head coach at Michigan from 2011-14, Mallory served as his defensive backs coach.

Hoke has also worked with three other members of the Sycamore’s coaching staff. Assistant head coach/defensive line coach Mark Smith, offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach Jeff Hecklinski and offensive line coach Darrell Funk all coached under Hoke during his stops as head coach at Ball State (2003-08) and San Diego State (2009-10). Indiana State wide receivers coach Roy Roundtree also knows Hoke well after starring for him as a player at Michigan, earning All-Big Ten honors.

“We spent some time together over the summer up at Curt Mallory’s house and there’s a lot of good guys, really good football coaches and even better people (on the Indiana State staff)” Hoke said.

Despite the friendships between the two coaching staffs, Hoke said come game day it will be all business.

“It will be fun to compete,” Hoke said. “I talked to Mark Smith briefly yesterday and he’s the enemy, so we’re not going to talk until maybe right before the game and then we’ll compete like heck.”

Jones and Mallory also coached together at Central Michigan in 2001 where Jones was the offensive coordinator and Mallory was the defensive backs coach.

Trey Smith Looking to Build Off Solid Debut

Highly-touted freshman offensive lineman Trey Smith had a strong start to his Tennessee career on Monday night in the Vols’ win over Georgia Tech. The Humboldt, Tenn., native graded out as the team’s second best offensive lineman behind senior center Jashon Robertson.

Nobody has been more impressed with Smith’s play so far than offensive coordinator Larry Scott, who had some high praise for the freshman on Thursday.

“In everyone’s career at some point you are fortunate enough to come across a guy like Trey,” Scott said. “Of course, he is physically and athletically gifted, but his approach towards the game is something that is very rare. He’s mature in that way.”

Don’t except the strong start and praise to go to Smith’s head, as Scott said he’s already working hard to be even better in Saturday’s game against the Sycamores.

“He wants to learn how to prepare. Nobody is preparing harder for this week than he is right now. He is just that kind of kid. His mentality and maturity is very rare,” Scott said.

Tickets Available for UT-Indiana State Game

Fans can still purchase tickets for Saturday’s game between the Vols and the Sycamores. Tickets may be purchased online via AllVols.com or by phone by calling the Tennessee Athletics Ticket Office at 1-800-332-VOLS.

Quotes From Thursday’s Media Availability

Head Coach Butch Jones

(On Quinten Dormady’s performance against Georgia Tech)
“I thought he did some good things, but he has things to improve upon as well. We made the plays when we needed to. He put the ball in some locations he needed to, but on his footwork and his movement in the pocket he knows he needs to make the progression from game one to game two.”

(On getting Dormady more reps versus getting Jarrett Guarantano playing time)
“It’s getting Jarrett the ample reps that he needs to perform on Saturdays along with Quinten. The way we practice and our practice structure really allows for that to happen. We’re going to play both quarterbacks on Saturday.”

(On the quick turn-around from Georgia Tech to Indiana State)
“It’s been a challenge. It’s something I wouldn’t recommend very often. I think it challenges your players from an academic standpoint, from a physical standpoint and from a mental standpoint. So far, I’ve really liked the way our players have managed it and the recovery from the game started in Atlanta. We had a number of cold tubs brought in after the game and we actually did all of our recovery in the locker room at the stadium. I really like the way the players have responded in terms of the recovery and just the energy they brought.”

(On the receivers’ response to the absence of Jauan Jennings)
“I like the leadership that has been provided by everyone. Josh Smith has done a good job, but they are all leading. I think they are all young and they are all anxious and they all want to play. They hang on every word that you say. They’ve been a pleasure to coach. I spoke to Jauan today and he’s doing well and recovering, but again, we’re going to need everyone to step up. We don’t have very large numbers there, so everyone is going to have a role in that room.”
Offensive Coordinator Larry Scott

(On who stood out on offense during the game)
“We had some guys who really did some good things. Marquez Callaway stepped in and did some nice things and had some big catches. John Kelly was what we thought he would be when it was time to go. He put the ball on the ground and competed. It was good to see a young guy like Trey Smith play as many snaps as he did the whole game. Jashon Robertson did a really nice job in his first game at center. Brett Kendrick bounced over and played left tackle. We had some moving parts, but guys came through and did nice things. Josh Palmer had to get out there and play as a true freshman. We were able to get some young guys out there and play them with the cameras on in an environment like that, so that was a plus to definitely keep building on.”

(On the importance of getting Josh Smith back)
“It will help big time, especially with the experience that Josh brings to the table. He has played in some big games, and he can play multiple positions. It will be big for the [entire wide receivers] unit.”

(On the last time he saw a true freshman on the offensive line as good as Trey Smith)
“It’s been a long time. In everyone’s career at some point, you are fortunate enough to come across a guy like Trey. Of course, he is physically and athletically gifted, but his approach towards the game is something that is very rare. He’s mature in that way. He wants to learn how to prepare. Nobody is preparing harder for this week than he is right now. He is just that kind of kid. His mentality and maturity is very rare.”
Defensive Coordinator Bob Shoop

(On the defensive players playing a large quantity of snaps)

“We wish we would have played a few more players, or even maybe even more evenly. 96 snaps against the triple option is insane, 86 runs, I’ve never seen anything like that. Looking back, I wish maybe we would have, I mean hindsight is always 20/20. I probably wish we would have rotated players a little better.”

(Talking about the defensive players positioning on the ball)

“I think the thing everybody needs to understand about that game, that was as unbelievable chess match as I’ve ever seen. The first two series of the game were really the plays that generally speaking I think that they do a good job of showing how they would attack our configuration. Everybody asked about Jumper lining up deep, or this or that, but we took that away. They didn’t run any triple option after the first two series of the game, not one snap of triple option. We probably had three tackles for loss on those first two series of the game on triple option.”

(On fundamental takeaways from the defense for the future)

“Why we won the game I thought, wasn’t necessarily that we executed really well, I thought we did at times, but I thought our style of play was really good, the guys’ effort was outstanding throughout the course of the game. I think looking back, obviously tackling was the piece that was disappointing to me. I think we had 18 missed tackles, some on the perimeter I think. Same things showed up that might have shown up in the past, you know two long passes, one was a short pass and catch and one we didn’t rotate properly on the ball down the middle of the field that Searcy caught. A couple things like that, tackling and maybe even taking a step further back really on communication, I thought there were moments where we had things called in past situations that I didn’t do a good enough job getting across in the communication piece.”
Associate Head Coach/Defensive Line Coach Brady Hoke

(On if he would have liked to play more defensive linemen against Georgia Tech)
“I think you’d love to play as many guys as you can for multiple reasons, but sometimes the game dictates, sometimes the situations dictate. Going forward, if we can play more, we’ll play more, but the objective is to win the game and having your best players out there.”

(On the personal connections he has with some of the coaches on the Indiana State coaching staff)
“Well you know we spent some time together over the summer up at Curt Mallory’s [Indiana State Head Coach] house and there’s a lot of good guys, really good football coaches and even better people. It will be fun to compete. I talked to Mark Smith [Indiana State Assistant Head Coach/Defensive Line Coach] briefly yesterday and he’s the enemy, so we’re not going to talk until maybe right before the game and then we’ll compete like heck.”

(On who graded out well on film from Week 1)
“I thought Jonathan (Kongbo) played well, Darrell (Taylor) made some big plays, Kendal (Vickers) fought and he really probably had as much of big No. 71 over him most of the game. I thought all four of the guys who played mainly played okay. I mean we didn’t play as well as we need to, I can tell you, but I thought all four of those guys did okay.”

(On the performance of Kyle Phillips)
“I thought Kyle did a nice job. Kyle is a guy, I know I get stuck on those two interior guys, but Kyle is a guy that really is another starter as far as I’m concerned because he plays good football, he practices good football, he’s a guy you can count on.”
Senior Linebacker Colton Jumper

(On angle of final play)

“We were just kind of expecting three to four plays that they had been really successful with. So we kind of knew what they might be running. The thing is they had been getting just about three yards every single play during the second half. We knew we were going to have to pull something out. We got in the huddle and we were like, ‘hey, if we want to win this is how we are going to have to do it. It’s either they are going to win or we are going to win, whichever one it comes down to this play.’ ”

(On improving defensively from Week 1 to Week 2)

“Right now it’s all recovery, they ran 84 run plays or something crazy like that. So getting our bodies right, getting ready for Indiana State. Just going back to more of a normal offense compared to last week. Indiana State has some good stuff that they do, a lot of shifting, a lot of motioning, jet motion, stuff that we are going to have to get our communication piece down. Communication is going to be big this week.”

(On playing as many snaps as they did)

“It’s not that bad, once you get your second wind. Especially when you are running around that much, you just get tired. When that happens you got to make sure you keep your mental focus.”

(On Rock Gullickson pregame, postgame, and recovery)

“I’ve noticed a huge difference in what he’s doing. Especially I like our pregame warmup and how we’ve changed that up. I feel like I have a lot more energy, and not nearly as tired after that first quarter. We started doing this thing called cryotherapy, you get in a chamber that’s like negative 200 degrees and it sucks while you are in there, but you feel pretty good after.”
Redshirt Senior Punter Trevor Daniel

(On his 70-yard punt vs. Georgia Tech)

“I was just doing my job. It was a good game. I would have liked to have a little better hang time, but I have really good gunners. Evan Berry and Justin Martin, they got down there and got the job done.”

(On receiving the Ray Guy Award Punter of the Week)

“It’s a big honor, for someone whose job is to give the ball to the other team, to get recognition in a positive way, I feel like I’m doing something right.”

-UT Athletics

 

Vol Report: Indiana State Week

Vol Report: Indiana State Week

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee head coach Butch Jones and UT student-athletes spoke to reporters at Wednesday’s press conference in the Ray and Lucy Hand Digital Studio.

Jones discussed the No. 25/21 Vols’ thrilling 42-41, double-overtime win over Georgia Tech on Monday at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

“First of all, I am very proud of the way our players fought back and their mentality,” Jones said. “We found a way to win a football game after going through a lot of adversity, some of which we created for ourselves. Nonetheless, we were able to win the football game.”

Tennessee scored 35 of its 42 points in the second half and overtime. In rallying back from a 14-point defense against a Georgia Tech team that controlled the ball for most of the game, the Vols needed to execute when it mattered most. UT also benefited from game-changing plays like Rashaan Gaulden‘s forced fumble with 4:50 remaining in the fourth and Paul Bain‘s blocked field goal with time expiring in regulation.

“When you look at the turnovers, you are always concerned about that in any game,” Jones said. “We had zero turnovers on offense and took the ball away twice on defense, so we had a plus two turnover margin. We had a blocked kick. We were 5-for-5 in redzone efficiency. We knew we had to score touchdowns. We couldn’t kick field goals in the redzone. We only had two penalties. We talked about playing a clean game and how that would give us an opportunity to win.”

Jones and the Vols now turn their attention to Indiana State. The Vols host the Sycamores on Saturday at Neyland Stadium with a 4 p.m. ET kickoff on SEC Network. Indiana State is coming off a 22-20 loss to Eastern Illinois in its season opener on Aug. 31.

Jones and Indiana State head coach Curt Mallory both coached on the 2001 Central Michigan staff. Jones was the offensive coordinator and Mallory was the secondary coach.

“Indiana State is going to challenge us with different things like shifts and motions,” Jones said. “They do a very good job, and I have a lot of respect for Curt Mallory, their football coach. He is a very close friend of mine. We coached together, and I know what he is all about. I know they will bring their A-game coming into Neyland Stadium.”

Vols Among Nation’s Best Over Last 20 Games

Tennessee is 16-4 over its last 20 games. UT is tied with Michigan, Wisconsin, Stanford and Washington for the nation’s fifth-best record over the last 20 games. Only Alabama (19-1), Clemson (18-2), Ohio State (17-3) and Oklahoma (17-3) have a better record over that stretch.

Tennessee moved up four spots to No. 21 in the Week 2 Amway Coaches Poll. The Vols stayed at No. 25 in the AP Top 25’s Week 2 poll.

Dormady Reflects On His First Start

Dormady, who had entered Monday’s game with 10 relief appearances in his UT career, earned the win in his first start. He completed 20-for-37 for 221 passing yards and two touchdowns. The Vols completed a 14-point comeback thanks to big plays on defense and special teams and the offense’s second-half surge. After halftime, Dormady went 12-for-17 for 169 yards with two touchdown passes to Marquez Callaway.

“Obviously there is a lot for us to improve on,” Dormady said. “We will get better in this short week. Fighting back hard and getting the victory was awesome.”

On Wednesday, Dormady discussed some areas that he thinks he can improve in for this week’s game against Indiana State.

“For me, it’s just making the easy throws,” he said. “That’s between me and the receivers by working on our timing. I think that getting back out there today, we will get things fixed. We just need to focus on making the routine plays.”

Tickets Available for UT-Indiana State Game

Fans can still purchase tickets for Saturday’s game between the Vols and the Sycamores. Tickets may be purchased online via AllVols.com or by phone by calling the Tennessee Athletics Ticket Office at 1-800-332-VOLS.

Quotes From Wednesday’sMedia Availability

Butch Jones

(Opening statement)
“First of all, I am very proud of the way our players fought back and their mentality. We found a way to win a football game after going through a lot of adversity, some of which we created for ourselves. Nonetheless, we were able to win the football game. If you really go back and look at some of the nuances of the game and situational football, Rashaan Gaulden made one of the key plays of the game with his turnover. We got the football with 4:50 left on the clock, and we had to drive the ball 93 yards for a game-tying touchdown. When we took the field on offense, we knew that could possibly be our last possession.

“When you look at the turnovers, you are always concerned about that in any game. We had zero turnovers on offense and took the ball away twice on defense, so we had a plus two turnover margin. We had a blocked kick. We were 5-for-5 in redzone efficiency. We knew we had to score touchdowns. We couldn’t kick field goals in the redzone. We only had two penalties. We talked about playing a clean game and how that would give us an opportunity to win.

“We had some individuals step up in some critical moments to make some big time plays. Now, where do we go. This week is paramount in terms of continuing to improve our football team. A lot of teams can make great improvements from week one to week two, and that is what we need to see. We need great improvements from all facets, starting off with special teams. Obviously, we have to do a much better job of tackling on defense. On both sides of the ball, we need to work on third down conversions and our overall physicality at the line of scrimmage. Those are a lot of things for us to continue to improve on as a football team.

“Indiana State is going to challenge us with different things like shifts and motions. They do a very good job, and I have a lot of respect for Curt Mallory, their football coach. He is a very close friend of mine. We coached together, and I know what he is all about. I know they will bring their A-game coming into Neyland Stadium. I think we found out in college football that you have to show up and be ready to play your best each and every week. The mental part, recovery part and physicality part are all things that this young football team needs to grow up and mature in. They have done a very good job to date. We are going to need to have a great couple of days of preparation here.”

(On preparations talks in the SEC about the Hurricane Irma and the story behind the turnover trash can)

“First of all, with the inclement weather and hurricane coming, that is something that we are all watching. In terms of getting a call from the conference or anything, we have not received that, but I know we will have a plan in place. Our thoughts and prayers go out to everyone with what is coming and could happen.

“The trash can is something we have done for a year now. We had it last year. It’s never meant anything disrespectful towards the opponent. It’s just having a heightened awareness for turnovers and having some fun with it. Our kids enjoy it. If you go around the country, pretty much everyone does something like this, whether it’s a heavyweight belt or a chain. There are a lot of schools who use trash cans. We felt we needed to hunt the ball better and get turnovers. We celebrate turnovers. We do a thing called shots on goal. We chart in practice and games how many ball disruptions that we have. It’s something that is creating habits.”

(On defensive line adjustments)
“I don’t think I’ve ever been through a game where they had well over 80 rushing attempts. We have spoken about that as a staff, and we need to play more players, particularly on defense and the defensive front. It’s about your consistency and performance, and it starts in practice and earning the trust of the coaches and your peers. That’s something that we’ll continue to coach, but moving forward, we’re going to have to play a significant amount of others. I think some of it is experience, some of it is the first game. I think the game from a defensive stand point was completely different, so you need some maturity. You also need some experience to go through what those individuals were going through on a down-by-down basis, so as we continue to move forward and the season progresses you’re exactly right. We’re going to have play a lot more individuals. Depth could be an issue, but we do need to play more up front.”
(On other players stepping up)
“Well, I think you could feel the energy behind John Kelly. He played with great passion and energy. He ran behind his pads, and I thought he really gave us a spark offensively. Trey Smith did some really really good things up front, not just from a physicality standpoint but from an energy stand point. I mean we score one touchdown, and he’s high stepping and running to the end zone, and that’s what we talk about. I thought Jashon Robertson played as good of a game as he played since he’s been here. I thought Quinten Dormady did some really good things for us. We didn’t start the game the way we wanted to. Defensively, we started the game fast, and we generated a couple three-and-outs. Our defense gave us great field position, and we weren’t able to take advantage of the field position. It comes to growing and developing a football team. We have to catch the football on the perimeter. Dropped passes are like turnovers in our offensive, it stifles momentum. And then defensively, I give our defensive front a lot of credit for what they endured and what they went through and the amount of plays that they played, but it was a big spark to get Daniel Bituli in for his first significant playing time, and he took advantage of those repetitions. Rashaan Gaulden continues to play very well for us in the back end. We thought Nigel Warrior did some very good things for us, and then obviously Trevor Daniel, what can I say about him and the value he brings to this football team, having the ability to flip field position like we’re able to do. Trevor Daniel had a very good game, as well.”

(On Daniel Bituli and Darrell Taylor stepping up)
“Darrell Taylor had over 5,000 plus yards running in this football game, and that’s pretty remarkable for a defensive lineman. He was all over and there are some things we ask them to do whether it was fill in the triple option or the counter and some things like that, but again, he made the play he needed to. Again, everything is about consistency and preparation in your performance, Darrell has been doing that since spring football, and he’s really continue to grow and develop. I think it’s also a great indicator that we were able to redshirt him his freshman year, and so we had the luxury of not being able play him. I think he’s reaping the benefits that year, in terms of a redshirt. In terms of Daniel Bituli, he works very very hard. His opportunity presented itself, and that’s what we talk about all our players about all the time as when you get that opportunity to perform whether it’s one play, whether it’s thirty plays, whether it’s fifty plays. You get an opportunity to put your identity on video, go take advantage of it. Both those individuals you just brought up definitely took advantage of their playing time, and we’re going to need those kinds of effort from them moving forward.”

(On ESPN’s analysis of the UT sideline during the game)
“No that’s not a gameday glitch. We’ve never had our backup quarterbacks on headsets. We’re only allowed so many headsets, if they are a student athlete the rules are a little bit different. A lot of schools actually use dummy headsets. That’s something that deals with the communication between coaches. I thought our quarterbacks did a nice job with Coach Canales on the sideline with some of the in game and halftime adjustments we were able to do. That is something that we practice all the time. If you guys remember being out at practice last week, we had the benches on the defensive sideline. We did that because we knew seven or eight minutes would run off the clock before our offence would go back onto the field. In terms of managing the two-quarterback system, they will continue to compete. There are a lot stories out there surrounding Jarrett, but let me tell you, Jarrett is a good teammate. He always has been. He is a competitor and he wants to be out there. He also has a tremendous amount of respect for everyone in this program. We want him to be able to compete. We found out after week one, with all of the injuries across the nation, your always one snap away from going into the game.”

(On his assessment of the offensive line after week one)
“It is still ongoing. I think our pad level was much better. If you look at how we ran the football, we were very efficient. I thought walking off the field at halftime that we had way too many negative yardage football plays. It seemed like there were many times we were at second and twelve, but we only had two negative yardage plays the entire game. We still must get much more physical on both the offensive and defensive lines. We showed great progress upfront. We must do a better job at using our hands. As we go from Game 1 to Game 2 those are some of the fine details we need to improve on. We talked about having the will to win, and I think our football team showed our will to win.”

(On Jauan Jennings and Drew Richmond)
“Drew will be ready to play. I’m excited to get him back into practice and competing. He will be available for the game. In terms of Jauan’s injury, it is indefinite and that’s all I can say at this time. I really can’t get into specifics.”

(On message to QB Jarrett Guarantano after not playing)
“The message is always the same. You’re always one snap away and you have to be ready. It’s the first game that he’s really been in that situation, and Quinten (Dormady) went through the same thing in his process as well behind Josh (Dobbs). I think that sometimes you’re antsy, you’re ready to play, you have some anxiety, you’re going through everything in your mind. We always tell them, ‘you’re one snap away.’ We knew this game, like we talked about last week, the nuances of this game would be completely different. We knew our possessions would be very limited. Then all of a sudden we have a couple of receivers go down and we have a couple of O-linemen go down and they were able to come back in the game. These are the little things that was really encouraging. We have a big play down in the red zone area, and then Marcus (Tatum) has to go out for a play or two, and Venzell Boulware goes in there and does a very good job, and all of a sudden Jack Jones has to go from left guard to right tackle the next play, and we were able to do that. Always in first games, you’re worried about that type of substitution, the substitution patterns. Can they handle that? I thought our players adapted and adjusted very well.”

(On logic behind icing Georgia Tech kicker before potential game-winning field goal)
“You’re kind of a by-product of your experiences. When I was at Cincinnati, (Bengals head coach) Marvin Lewis and I did an in-depth study on when to ice the kicker. We did a four-year study of college football and professional football, and usually what happened was if you’re going to ice an inexperienced kicker, you would wait right to when they snapped the football and you call a timeout. If it was an experienced kicker, you’d just call timeout immediately. So we’re playing at Louisville, and we’re going to call a timeout to ice the kicker regardless. The young man was struggling, so I did our study and I called timeout right when he snapped the ball, but when he snapped the ball, he snapped the ball over the holder’s head, and everyone went crazy. That was the topic: ‘if you wouldn’t have called timeout, they wouldn’t have won the football game,’ because the next play, they had a perfect snap and he made the kick. I knew we had two timeouts. Sometimes, you want the kicker thinking you’re going to ice him and you don’t call timeout. Sometimes, you may only use one timeout, sometimes you’re going to use two timeouts. It was kind of a gut-feel thing at that moment to use two timeouts.”

(On health statuses for Kendal Vickers, Evan Berry, Shy Tuttle, and Josh Smith)
“I would say right now at this point in time, all of them are questionable. They’ll be available for some part of practice today. Some, we’ll keep in for treatments and just get them out there for team periods. I’ll know a little bit more later in the week, but there is a possibility that they could play. Again, I think our training staff has done a really good job. The game ends, and I don’t even remember what time it is. We went and we set up ice tubs in the locker room after the game, the NormaTec’s. We tried to do all of our recovery in Atlanta at the stadium. By the time we get back here, it’s Tuesday morning. Then all day long, we’ve been pounding the treatments in the training room. Our kids have done a very good job, and same thing this morning. So I’ll know a little bit more as the week progresses.

(On what position Daniel Bituli will play in Week 2)
“The advantage now is he knows both Sam (outside linebacker) and Mike (middle inside linebacker). Again, he’s going to come in and compete, and you can never have enough competition. So he will play more Mike against a traditional offense.”

(On junior transfer Paul Bain’s development and field-goal block on Mondaynight)
“I just remember him coming here with his family and wanting to be a part of our football program. Obviously, (he’s) a good person, really strong character. I think it’s a great story, a young man who has two jobs to make ends meet. This program is very important to him and the sacrifices that he and his family have made to be a part of this football program. Here’s an individual on a national stage to get the opportunity on a field goal block to go in there, and delivers and responds. It was really rewarding in the team meeting yesterday when we showed the clip, and just the amount of respect he has from his teammates was a pretty neat thing to see. I have a tremendous amount of respect for him, his family and the sacrifices they’ve made.”

(On how other receivers stepped up following Jauan Jennings injury)
“I think the first individual that we’re going to rely on even more than we did Mondaynight is Josh Palmer. He’s one of those individuals that we’ve seen it all throughout training camp, and we’re going to need his productivity. So him, Marquez Callaway, when Latrell Williams was in there he did some good things and that was Latrell’s first game, Brandon Johnson is an individual who’s been very consistent, and moving forward we’re going to give Jeff George a great opportunity to show what he can do. Again, we’re down numbers there, we’re very limited there now, so we’re going to have to move some individuals around. We’re going to go ahead and play Jordan Murphy as well. It’s going to be a very young group. Josh Smith will be back out at practice today, so I think his maturity, him being a veteran in our football program hopefully will help the maturation of that young core. As the game progressed, I thought they got better and better, but at the end of the day, when that ball is in the air, we have to own that ball in the air. We have to be able to catch the football and you saw the difference in halves. When we were able to make plays, we were able to spark the entire football team.”

Junior QB Quinten Dormady

(On how his first start went)
“Obviously there is a lot for us to improve on. We will get better in this short week. Fighting back hard and getting the victory was awesome.”

 (On what can he improve on the most going from game one to game two)
“For me, it’s just making the easy throws. That’s between me and the receivers by working on our timing. I think that getting back out there today that we will get things fixed. We just need to focus on making the routine plays.”

(On how does the short week affect the team) 
“I don’t think it is affecting us too much, we just need to make sure our guys are in the training room getting healthy again.”

-UT Athletics

 

Weather

  • Forecast
  • Currents
  • Planner