Post practice 2 with Tennessee quarterbacks coach Mike Canales
Post practice 2 with Tennessee quarterbacks coach Mike Canales
Post practice 2 with Tennessee defensive backs coach and special teams coordinator Charlton Warren
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee assistant coaches Bob Shoop, Larry Scott, Charlton Warren and Mike Canales spoke to reporters on Sunday after practice at Haslam Field.
The four assistants discussed what they have seen in these early days of camp in the ongoing position battles as well as the tenacity that they expect from their players.
Scott, who is in his first year as Tennessee’s offensive coordinator, described the aggressive mindset and the precision he is trying to instill in the Vols’ offense.
“Everything is done with intentness and purpose,” Scott said. “Everything you do – whether it’s your step, whether it’s your hand placement, whether it’s being 15 minutes early for a meeting, whether it’s your preparation, whether it’s hydrating when you need to hydrate, being places when we need you to be there – all of those things speak to being able to have a hard edge, having some toughness, and having the ability to focus in times when I need you to focus. All of those things go into play from on the field to off it.”
When asked about the ongoing quarterback battle, Canales shared the traits he is looking for in a starting quarterback and the qualities he is trying to shape.
“It’s getting guys to feel your energy, to feel you,” Canales said. “There’s a great example with Tom Brady on leadership, with Peyton Manning on leadership. You watch how they play and you watch clips of their highlights. Watching Peyton Manning, his offense felt him, his players trusted him and they felt his presence. That’s what I’m trying to generate in the meeting room, what I’m trying to generate on the field. Your players have got to be able to feel you, your energy, your enthusiasm and your passion. When they get that and they trust you, they’ll play their butts off for you, and that’s what we’re trying to do.
“A lot of the intangibles are going to be different things – their work ethic, how they come out. Are they on the field when they step across the white line? Are they ready to go every single day? That’s what we’re looking for. We want those guys to set themselves apart, be an example and never a distraction, understand it’s all about us because it’s going to take all of us to get this thing done.”
With the graduation of former starters Cameron Sutton and Malik Foreman, cornerback is a position where either a returning player will have a larger role or a newcomer will earn playing time. Shoop said that he does not view the opportunities there as competition, but rather as depth development.
“We need to get guys experience,” Shoop said. “It’s not just players one through 11, but 12 through 22 and 23 through 33. Justin [Martin] is our most improved guy in the spring, Shaq [Wiggins] brings a veteran presence and Emmanuel [Moseley] is as much of a leader as we have in the group right there. As for the three freshman corners, they show the skill set and the drive and the want to be really good. I’m very, very pleased with all of those guys.”
Warren said that mistakes early in camp are to be expected. He is looking for strong effort, energy and tenacity from the freshmen defensive backs.
“I’m looking for ballhawks,” Warren said. “And if you make a mistake, I guess I want you to make it going 100 miles an hour. I don’t want the guys to hesitate. I don’t want the guys to throw their hands in the air and say, ‘Coach, I don’t get it.’ I want you to figure it out on the run. When in doubt, run fast and we’ll figure it out from there.”
Defensive Coordinator Bob Shoop
(On Shaq Wiggins‘ presence on the team)
“We’re glad Shaq is here. He’s a veteran and obviously he’s played in big games at Georgia and Louisville. He’s coming off an injury. I haven’t thrown him in there and anointed him the next Darrelle Revis or anything like that but we’ve put him in a position where he’s learning how we operate and how Charlton [Warren] wants things. He’s a talented player and he has just got to continue to do the things that are synonymous with Tennessee football and our culture.”
(On Colton Jumper‘s growth)
“He’s more confident. Just the fact that he’s played in big games and had some success. He’s vocal and he has a great command for the entirety of the defense, not just what he does. He can solve and fix problems on the field like you’d hope a middle linebacker or safety would be able to do.”
(On Quart’e Sapp‘s offseason development)
“It’s exciting to me. He’s built his body up. He’s fast, he’s hungry, he’s eager. As a good of a player as he is, he’s an even better person. We all just want to see him have success and through the first two days I haven’t seen anything about any hesitation or tentativeness. It seems like he’s picked up right where he would’ve left off last year at this time. What some people fail to realize sometimes is that we lost Sapp and Austin Smith [last year], they didn’t play at all once SEC play rolled around. Those were big losses as well.”
Offensive Coordinator and Tight Ends Coach Larry Scott
(On freshmen LaTrell Bumphus‘ progress at tight end)
“He’s a project of mine, and every time I got my hands on him in the camp situation, it’s enough to make me believe he can develop and grow into that position and be a true wide-tight end. You’re talking about a 6-4, 260-pound freshman that can run and bend like a 220-pound guy. This guy was tracking fly balls in center field for his baseball team, so that’s pretty athletic for a big man.”
(On presence of veteran leaders among young offense)
“It’s always good to have some veteran players returning with experience. Not only to have players with experience, but guys that have played at that level and been successful at that level. These guys are very good examples of what we want from the young guys, how to prepare, how to practice. It’s one thing to go play a game but the truth is at this level, you got to learn how to practice. They have to learn how to prepare, and learn how to do all the little things that add up to Saturday when it’s time to go pass the test. They’ve already passed it on Tuesday, already passed it on Wednesday… It’s a process, and when you have good leaders, you got good guys to follow.”
(On young players’ development and approach to camp)
“It happens with young players where at some point, their approach and their level of being prepared either exposes itself as they’re not doing it, and they’re not mature enough to handle it, or they do. And I think you always have to just let that play out over time as we keep going… Some of these guys are going to be exposed, and whether it’s positive or negative, it’s going to come out.”
Defensive Back Coach/Special Teams Coordinator Charlton Warren
(On how he has seen Micah Abernathy‘s improving technique)
“I tell you what, I really liked the fact that I didn’t have him in the spring due to injury. To see what he has done this summer and the extra work he has put in on his own, but to see him come out here and have a command of the defense in these early stages, and be able to get some guys lined up… He’s a guy that can play two or three positions, but he’s one of those veterans who is going to push everyone around him to be a better player. So I really like what I’m seeing from him.”
(On a potential starting line-up)
“There are no spots right now. Everyone is competing for a job. It doesn’t matter if you have played here for three years or three days, every practice matters. When we come to practice, the film of this fall camp will determine who will walk out with a one, two, and three, and that will be very fluid all throughout fall camp.”
Quarterbacks Coach Mike Canales
(On how the quarterbacks look behind the scenes and in the meeting room))
“I think they’ve been doing a great job because a lot of our meetings are like Jon Gruden’s Quarterback Camp. We get on the board, force them to get up on there and draw defenses, they have to talk what the defensive scheme is, they have to be able to explain it and they have to be able to talk the nomenclature of the defensive scheme and offensive scheme. They have to be able to tell me, like I’m a freshman, and that’s what I try to tell them; ‘You’re on the board, you have to explain it just like you’re a coach.’ And I think they’ve done a great job of doing that.”
(On how he handles the quarterback competition as a coach)
“Every day is a competition and I tell them, ‘Go out there and don’t compare, just compete. Just go out there and compete to be the best person that you were the day before. Don’t worry about beating someone else out or doing that. Just do your job on the field.’ Bill Belichick said it best – just do your job. One of our goals in our group is to lead, and then we want to make sure we’re an example and never a distraction. We want to make sure we get trust in our teammates, but we just have to go out and do our job. If we do our job and move the chains and move the ball and put the ball in the endzone, that’s leadership.”
-UT Athletics
Some images from Tennessee football fall practice 2
Practice 2 video of the passing game with the quarterbacks throwing to the tight ends and running backs for Tennessee football.
Practice 2 video of the quarterbacks and QB coach Mike Canales for Tennessee football.
Practice 2 video of some of the wide receivers for Tennessee football.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee head football coach Butch Jones and Team 121 officially kicked off fall camp with their first practice of the season on Saturdayafternoon at Haslam Field.
Jones was impressed with what he saw on Day 1 but hit on the importance of improving each day during camp.
“I thought it was a very, very productive start. Tomorrow, again, is a very critical day for us, but I’m pleased overall with the first day,” Jones said.
Jones also touched on the early impact of the newcomers and younger players on this year’s team.
“I think we’ve elevated our skill set, now you know it’s the maturation process of these youngsters and who can help us and making sure that we don’t put too much stress on them right away,” Jones said.
Along with the freshmen, graduate transfer cornerback Shaq Wiggins is also adapting to his new team. Jones said he expects the older players in the program to familiarize Wiggins and the other newcomers with the Tennessee culture and practice expectations.
“I know this about Shaq. He’s very prideful, he’s very willing and he wants to do it,” Jones said.
Wiggins captured All-ACC honorable mention honors as a redshirt sophomore at Louisville in 2015. He played in 21 games with the Cardinals and also made eight starts in 12 games as a true freshman at Georgia in 2013.
POST-PRACTICE QUOTES
Head Coach Butch Jones
(Opening statement)
“I thought it was a productive first day, a typical first day. Only so much you can do in helmets, but also you can get a lot out of it in terms of assignment on linemen, technique, retention of the fundamentals for the older guys from the spring into the summer, but also retention of knowledge and situational football and then, for the newcomers, retention of the schemes that are going in. Right now, things are going to start to accelerate because, for the youngsters it’s not just offense and defense. Now you start putting in special team’s schemes and the fundamentals and details that go along with that too. So, I thought it was a very, very productive start. Tomorrow, again, is a very critical day for us. But I’m pleased overall with the first day.”
(On how Khalil McKenzie is coming along)
“I like everything I see from him, and not just on the field but in a leadership role as well. For a defensive lineman right now it’s just all about your technique and the use of your hands and the fine details. We’ll know more obviously when the pads go on.”
(On the progression of the passing game)
“A lot of work still to do, which you would expect, but also really excited. I thought our receivers did some really good things. I liked what the quarterbacks did, you could tell they’re progressions, they were quicker from spring. Their decision making process was much better, but again we don’t have the pads on. When all of a sudden you got a live rush coming at you, some things change. I was also encouraged by our wide receivers and our youngsters there as well.”
Junior QB Quinten Dormady
(On what he gained most from the 7-on-7 work during the summer)
“I think that it was just a good fundamental base for being able to translate it out here. We got some good work in in the summer with the receivers. For us to be able to do that, I thought it was a good building block. That’s how you build is by getting reps, so the more reps we got this summer, the more that was going to help us out here today. I think that did translate.”
(On the possibility of a dual-quarterback system)
“We’re here to win a championship, whatever we have to do to get there. I think that as an overall team and our offensive unit, people are definitely willing to do that. Whatever happens, we’ll go with it and do our best to try to get us back to the top.”
(On the camaraderie in the quarterback room)
“We have good camaraderie. The room is fun and energetic. We get a lot accomplished throughout our meetings and the camaraderie in the quarterback room is really good.”
Redshirt Freshman QB Jarrett Guarantano
(On how the first day of practice went)
“It was a pretty good day. All the guys came out here with high energy and were very excited. It was a very productive day, and I think we got better.”
(On how the receivers performed during the summer and on the first day of camp)
“I think we have a great set of receivers. Latrell Williams is definitely someone that came on. Josh Smith was back and had a great practice today. Brandon Johnson is able to create separation from the outside. Marquez Callaway is able to go up and get it. Jeff George is 6’6″. Jauan Jennings is Jauan Jennings. The freshmen who just came in have been working their tails off and are doing a great job.”
Redshirt Senior DL Kendal Vickers
(On how having experienced defensive tackles is good for developing young offensive linemen)
“I think when I was a freshman, I had Zach Fulton and Ja’Wuan James to go against and James Stone, Tiny [Richardson] and all of those guys. Every time you get to learn something from those guys, it’s always a bonus. I just try do the same thing, give them a tidbit of what I see and I want to get feedback from their perspective as well. It’s always good learning from each other.”
(On how different UT’s two defensive tackles are)
“I think there is a lot of versatility between all of us. Kahlil can play the 1, the nose, the 3 technique, the 2i and me as well. I had to play it all last year because it seemed I was the only D-tackle left. There’s a lot of versatility between the guys and I think it’s going to help us be better.”
Junior DL Reginald McKenzie Jr.
(On his message to the freshmen)
“I told them to focus on the details and the little stuff. Get better little bit by little bit. You don’t have to bite off the whole thing at once. Just take it step-by-step. The first game isn’t until Sept. 4. We are in July still. Come out tomorrow and work on something you messed up today. It’s all about continuous improvement.”
(On getting back out on the practice field)
“Everybody is hungry. Everybody was ready to be back out there. There were guys flying around and screaming. Guys were doing flips during practice. Everyone was excited and ready to be back out here.”
Senior LB Cortez McDowell
(On the first day of fall camp)
“It’s just good to be back out here on the field with my team. There are a lot of guys that are out here for the first time. There are a lot of older guys out here teaching the younger guys the way we’re supposed to be out here and teaching them how we’re supposed to practice and prepare. It was a good first day to be back out here with everybody.”
(On his mindset and how it has changed from last season)
“It changed a lot. I’m one of the older guys, one of the three seniors in our room. It’s on our shoulders now to be leaders in our room and for our team. It’s just a different mindset to come in and work every day.”
-UT Athletics
Post practice 1 with Tennessee head football coach Butch Jones
Post practice 1 with Tennessee senior linebacker Cortez McDowell